Watercare delays Onehunga treatment plant opening two years

Source: Radio New Zealand

Watercare’s Onehunga Water Treatment Plant. Watercare/Supplied

Auckland water supplier Watercare has pushed back the re-opening of a water treatment plant contaminated by so-called “forever chemicals” by another two years.

The Onehunga plant was shut three years ago, after detections of low levels of per and polyfluoroalkyl substances – or PFAS – that accumulate in the body, and are linked to cancer and immune problems.

Watercare had expected to re-open the facility in 2027, under a $40 million upgrade to remove the contaminants.

On Friday, it said the project to install granular-activated carbon filtration would begin construction in 2027 and take until 2029.

“We are currently in the detailed design phase,” said head of water Sharon Danks. “This will ensure the treatment plant can consistently meet New Zealand drinking water standards.

“As part of the upgrade, a new ultraviolet disinfection system will be added to provide an additional barrier against microbiological contaminants.”

Nationwide, the rules do not require regular monitoring for PFAS and Watercare does not do routine testing.

“We continue to look at global trends and learnings from PFAS monitoring and testing,” Danks told RNZ.

The chemicals, which were invented in the 1930s and used in the US atomic-bomb-making Manhattan Project, have a virtually indestructible carbon-fluorine bond and now number more than 12,000 different types. They are the subject of lawsuits and clean-ups in the United States and Europe.

New Zealand has not followed other countries in drastically reducing the thresholds at which they are considered safe.

At times, tests at Onehunga in 2023 and last year found the sort of low levels that had closed the plant in 2022.

‘Strong position’

Onehunga community’s water supply comes from the metropolitan water network.

In summer 2023, the agency activated its consent to take more water from the Waikato River to make up for the 18 million litres a day lost at Onehunga.

However, Dans said Auckland’s water supply was currently in a “strong position”, using its full dams to maximise production at the Ardmore and Huia water treatment plants.

“Over summer, as water demand increases, we will increase production at our Waikato Water Treatment Plant, which treats water from the Waikato River,” she said.

Its second Waikato treatment plant was offline and not needed to supplement supply.

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

Country Life: Finding opportunity on a rural main street

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tabu’s pink door must remain closed as part of regulations around adult stores RNZ

It’s not a dead end but an opportunity. So says Country Life‘s guest this week, who moved from the big smoke to a small village on State Highway 1 between Wairarapa and Hawke’s Bay.

And it’s safe to say Ian Turner’s is probably one of the more unusual shops to be found on a rural town’s main street.

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

Country Life:Tangihau Angus’ record-breaking bulls

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tangihau Angus hopes these yearling bulls might set another record come next year’s sale. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

Dean McHardy might just be seeing more than three decades worth of work starting to pay off.

For the past 35 years, he’s been the general manager at Tangihau Station – a 6500-hectare sheep and beef farm west of Gisborne – and in charge of its breeding stud, Tangihau Angus.

“If they’re suited here, they’re going to be pretty much suited for anybody in New Zealand,” he told Country Life as he checked on the latest yearling mob of bulls which will go under the hammer next year.

Last year, the stud broke the New Zealand on-farm sale record in 2024 with a bull – Lot 2 – selling for $135,000.

Then at this year’s sale in June, it took the record for the highest priced bull in New Zealand across all breeds with Lot 16 which sold for $161,000.

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Tangihau Angus was founded in 1949 as a result of the difficulty they had in sourcing bulls that suited Tangihau’s specific terrain and climate.

Last year’s top bull was sold to Keith Higgins, of Oregon Angus in Masterton. Before that the record had been held for more than 30 years by a bull which sold for $155,000 in 1992.

Tangihau Angus also had the highest bull sale average in New Zealand for the season at $24,880 and it also sold a charity bull for $16,000 which helped raise funds for a new bus for the local school, Rere School.

Tangihau Station stud and general manager Dean McHardy has been breeding bulls on the property for 35 years now. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

The bulls are sold via on-farm sales each June, with a custom sale barn built to hold up to 300 people. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

When McHardy first started, there were 65 stud cows. It’s now calving 240.

Next year marks the sixth on-farm sale. Earlier it had run combined sales in Gisborne.

“Of course there’s five other breeders who got five other lots of bulls that they can all hear and smell and upset them at times, so it’s perfect here.”

Running them at the station also means less transport stress for the stock and allows potential buyers to see where the animals have been raised.

Tangihau U418 sold for $161,000 to Oregon Angus in Masterton with owner Keith Higgins totally thrilled with the prized Angus bull. supplied

From the station peak at an elevation of about 650 metres above sea level, McHardy explained the farm was very steep which means the bulls have to be “good on the ground”.

Calves are born on the flats and after a few days walked up to the hill country where they are reared.

“We get snow up here and so we can go from snow to drought. Snow in the winter doesn’t sort of stay for long, but it does snow.

“You can see why we need to breed cattle with positive fats. They’ve got to carry their own hay barn with them here. We can’t feed out. It’s too steep. We can’t get tractors or anything out around here.”

Dean McHardy says the latest mob of bulls are coming along nicely. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

McHardy said it was a “slow process” breeding better cattle, having been selecting for the right qualities for 30 of his 35 years as manager.

It can take several years selective breeding to achieve results for a specific trait – be that colour, backlines, or feet type. He’ll focus on fixing one before turning to other qualities.

His focus has been on breeding to the “middle of the road” rather than chasing extreme EBV (estimated breeding value) traits.

He wants “big barreled” bulls – “just good functional cattle”.

“The structural soundness, the depth that we’ve been bringing. The nature – nice and quiet. I think it all helps and [they’re] very good meat value.”

Located, about 45km west of Gisborne, Tangihau Station operates over 6653-hectares. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

Tangihau Station recently rolled out wearables for part of its commercial herd. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

It’s these qualities which other stud breeders and commercial buyers are wanting to introduce into their own herds, McHardy said.

He hopes to sell up to 70 bulls next year – up from 48 this year. And of course he’s hoping to see more records set.

With the yearling bulls already weighing about half a tonne, he was quietly hopeful it would be a good sale day come June.

“They’re coming along well. They’re right up with last year.”

Learn more:

    You can learn more about Tangihau Angus, here.

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

Country Life: Sheep Dog test Aussie v NZ

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ben Millar and King competing in the Trans Tasman Sheep Dog Trials test for the Wayleggo Cup. Megan Ellis

It is spelt “Wayleggo” but pronounced “Wal-a-go” and in dog trialling and shepherding it is an age-old New Zealand call for a sheep dog to leave the sheep and come back to its master.

“Wayleggo” originated in New Zealand and is short for “come away and let go”, the phrase used by shepherds and musterers to call their dogs back from working stock, according to the NZ Sheep Dog Trial Association.

The Wayleggo Cup is the dog trialling equivalent of the Bledisloe in rugby.

It’s been competed for since 1985 and just like the All Blacks, the New Zealand dog trials team has dominated the competition, winning 21 of 37 competitions over the past 40 years. Last year, however, the Aussies won on home soil, so this year it was their turn to cross the Tasman and try and retain the cup on Kiwi soil.

In October the event was part of the  Ashburton A&P show with four handlers and dogs from each country and two days of competition.

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The love for the sport can be seen in the efforts competitors go to just to compete. Queenslander Barry Knight drove from Toowoomba to Perth to compete and be selected for the Australian test team, a journey not for the faint-hearted.  

“We travelled to Western Australia,” Knight said.

“The round trip was about 10,000km, driving the ute all the way with a trailer and driving all the way back – five days each way and three days there.”  

So, with a potential commitment of two weeks for one event, young shepherds don’t often compete because they can’t afford the time off.

Barry and his 26-year-old son Bailey are the first father and son to compete for the Australian test team.

Barry has a small farm and Bailey is a plumber which highlights the fact that most competitors in dog trialling across the Tasman are not farmers.   

The Knight family has a love of characterful names for their dogs. Barry’s heading dog is six-year-old Mavis and Bailey’s is eight-year-old is Duncan, named after the Slim Dusty song ‘I Love To Have A Beer with Duncan’.

Aussie sheep dog Duncan competing in the Wayleggo Cup in Ashburton Megan Ellis

Another first for the Australian team is the presence of Jessica Kimpton who is the only woman in this year’s competition. 

She is one quarter of the Aussie team, matching the proportion of women on the Australian dog trialling circuit.

Kimpton said she seldom had any pushback from the male competitors

“They’re good, and even if they weren’t, they’d just have to suck it up,” she laughed.

“We actually see a lot more women in Australia being out there on the trial course. While it’s still male dominated, about 25 percent of triallists now would be women.”

She is an animal trainer for movies and while training her dogs she discovered dog trialling as a sport and loves it.  

Jessica Kimpton competing with Stitch in Wayleggo Cup – the Test between New Zealand and Australia at Ashburton Megan Ellis

She said the bond between handler and dog is vital to be a top competitor.

“Some dogs just have ‘it’,” she said. 

“We don’t know how to describe what ‘it’ is, but some dogs are just so talented, and you get this relationship with them where it’s almost like you’re reading each other’s minds and when you are out in the trial field, the rest of the world, just melts away, and it’s just you and your dog, and every now and then you’ll glance at each other and you just know what the other one needs.”

The sheep showing no respect for the heading dog in the Wayleggo Cup Trans Tasman Test in Ashburton. Megan Ellis

Commentator Tony Jackson farms 101,000ha in Queensland. 

He musters his 23,000 sheep and 3000 cattle using helicopters covering more than 30,000ha a day. He said the land is not as productive as that which New Zealand farmers enjoy and the pests are next level, kangaroos and dingoes.

“Every town has roo shooters who make a living out of harvesting kangaroos for the pet food market and for human consumption.

“They go out shooting and are shooting 50 kangaroos per night. That’s a Toyota load. And you’re looking at around about $25 a roo and if  you shoot 50 of them, you make a good living.”

The New Zealand and Australian Teams line up before the 37th Test in sheep dog trials in Ashburton Mark Leishman

It is the tenth year in the New Zealand team for team captain Mark Copeland and he is excited about the future of dog trialling.

“There is a lot of good young talent and particularly good talented women coming through.

“They’re putting the men to the sword, as it were, running very, very good well-trained dogs.”

“We’ve been trialling since what, 1860 or something, and you’re trying to get better and develop a better dog and it doesn’t always happen, so you go again and you go again and again.

“There’s no other sport that I can think of that involves three mammals. Some you can teach… others you can’t.”  

As for the result of the test? After leading the first day by just 10 points, the Australians made no match of it, retaining the Wayleggo Cup by 60 points and taking the cup back with them to Australia.   

So next year will be a big one for the Kiwi test team as they try and stop the Australians from winning a three-peat on their own turf.  

Learn more:

  • Find out more about the Trans Tasman Test here and here

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

Live: FIFA World Cup 2026 draw – who are NZ All Whites grouped with?

Source: Radio New Zealand

The World Cup draw will take place on Saturday morning (6am NZT) in Washington DC, with the updated match schedule, including stadiums and kickoff times, to be released Sunday morning.

The 23rd edition of the cup will be the first to feature 48 teams, and will be hosted by the US, Mexico and Canada. It kicks off on 11 June, with the opening two games in Mexico, and finishes on 19 July with the final in New York.

A new rule in the draw aims to maintain competitive balance in the expanded 48-team format. It means top-ranked Spain and No.2 world champions Argentina are in opposite halves of the bracket, with the same applying to No.3 France and No.4 England.

If the top four seeds win their groups, those countries won’t meet until the semi-finals for the first time in the tournament’s history.

Chris Wood with the All Whites in March 2025. Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz

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The Detail: 2025 in sport

Source: Radio New Zealand

This year, NZ sport has been filled with highs and lows. Supplied

The country’s biggest sports teams delivered everything from turmoil to triumph in 2025, with a mixed bag of results across rugby, league, netball and cricket, and off-field drama often dominating headlines.

For a country that breathes sport as deeply as it breathes air, 2025 has offered both triumphant exhilaration and heartbreaking exasperation.

The past year has reminded Kiwi fans that dominance is never guaranteed, and that rebuilding, resetting and resilience will be themes across many of the nation’s sporting codes, namely rugby, league, netball, football and cricket.

Sports commentator and journalist Rikki Swannell breaks down the highs and lows – on and off the field – for The Detail.

“I would probably say inconsistent, that’s the word that comes to mind,” Swannell replied, after being asked to sum up the sporting year. “It’s been a little bit inconsistent and perhaps, at times, a little unconvincing.”

Let’s start with the All Blacks.

The side endured another uneven year, showing moments of brilliance – think lock Fabian Holland (just named World Rugby Breakthrough Player of the Year), halfback Cam Roigard and loose forward Ardie Savea – but they also struggled for consistency, as their rebuild continued under intense public scrutiny.

“They lose [to England], there’s no Grand Slam, and then you look at a year where they suffered a record defeat to South Africa at home and then they were beaten by Argentina for the first time ever away,” Swannell says.

“I would say inconsistent and the other word, though, too… is unconvincing. We are year two into Scott Robertson’s reign as coach and it doesn’t feel like they’ve progressed.

“There’s probably – and I know I have seen the word bandied around a little bit – stagnation. They haven’t really gone forward.

“Yes, injuries are a part of that as well, but it’s hard to almost see where they are going at the moment and that’s probably the concerning factor for any All Blacks fan.

“Even some of those wins that they had weren’t thoroughly convincing and it’s hard to see exactly where they are heading.”

Is Robertson the right man for the top coaching job?

“He’s the man for the job, whether he’s the right man for the job… I would be very surprised if he’s not the retained All Black coach, though, until the next World Cup. It’s just not the New Zealand way to do that, they will back him.”

All Blacks coach Scott Robertson. www.photosport.nz

Will Scott Barrett remain the All Blacks captain?

“That might be Scott Robertson’s biggest decision… the fact of the matter is, when Ardie Savea has worn that captain’s armband, the All Blacks have been a better side.”

She says the All Blacks’ upside is that a core of younger players have emerged as genuine long-term leaders.

The challenge? Converting potential into consistency.

If the All Blacks’ troubles were on the field, the Silver Ferns’ drama was almost entirely off it.

The ongoing coaching saga – standing down Dame Noeline Taurua for more than 50 days, then re-instating her last month – became one of the year’s biggest sporting stories, raising uncomfortable questions about leadership, communication and the direction of the netball programme.

“Massively damaging,” says Swannell, who has covered netball as a journalist or commentator for more than 20 years. “Every sport has their dramas, but this one for netball, on the back of what hasn’t been a great year anyway.

“There’s been issues around their broadcast deal, uncertainty around their competition and clearly some not great morale going on at headquarters, with a high turnover of staff as well.

“Then you add this on top of it and the handling of the situation, and it all adds up to a pretty grim year for Netball New Zealand, saved by their players.”

Dame Noeline Taurua. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The women in black enjoyed a 2-1 series win over England, thrashed South Africa 3-0, beat the Scottish Thistles twice and secured two wins over Australia, only to lose the Constellation Cup by one goal in series-decider time.

When they take to the court again next year, will Dame Noeline Taurua be front and centre?

“The path forward, to me, is really still very murky and there’s still a lot that has to change for her to come back in.”

Another code courting off-field headlines and drama this year – cricket.

NZ cricket chief executive Scott Weenink faces allegations of working to “actively undermine” a bid by a private consortium to establish a new T20 franchise competition.

An open letter, signed by several former Black Caps test and one-day players, has also just been shared, detailing concerns around the proposed league.

“I have a feeling we are probably going to end up talking about cricket off the field, just like we have with netball this season, and I think Netball New Zealand are going to be the happiest people going about it,” Swannell says with a laugh. “Someone else taking the spotlight, hey, hold my beer.

“It’s not necessarily the sort of thing that will affect the team on the field, in the way that the Netball New Zealand thing has – that direct impact of coaching.”

This year, the Warriors flirted with the top four, but ultimately couldn’t cling on. While fans appreciated the fight and the flashes of brilliance, the campaign left the club sitting in that awkward space between promise and payoff.

Swannell says “a couple of massive injuries” and inconsistency contributed to an ultimately frustrating campaign.

So, is a title window emerging? Possibly, but unlikely for now – “but they still have the capacity to surprise”.

The Black Ferns missed the Rugby World Cup final, falling short against an increasingly competitive international field.

The semi-final loss to Canada stung, not just because New Zealand wanted to win, but because the side had become a symbol of how inspirational women’s sport could be.

“I hope it’s a really good wake-up call for New Zealand Rugby about the level of planning and resources, and everything that goes into these World Cup campaigns, and what other squads and nations are doing.

“You only have to look at England, because they are miles in front with their resourcing of the women’s game, of where we need to be, and what the Black Ferns need to do to grow and be back to the top of the world.”

2025 Women’s Rugby World Cup: New Zealand Black Ferns performing the haka ahead of the match against France, 2025. ©INPHO/Billy Stickland / PHOTOSPORT

Amid the turbulence, the New Zealand Sevens sides – men and women – delivered a late-year lift, with standout wins in Dubai last weekend.

It wasn’t just a result – it was a reminder of the code’s ability to fuse speed, skill and composure under pressure.

“[Black Ferns Sevens vice-captain] Jorja Miller is just on a whole different stratosphere than any other sevens player and probably any other female rugby player in the world with some of the things she does.”

In March, the All Whites sealed direct qualification for the 2026 FIFA World Cup and it’s just been confirmed that the team will play two matches here next March, as part of a four-team international tournament.

All the games will be staged in Auckland.

“There’s nothing like seeing New Zealand football playing on that stage.”

While he’s not in a Kiwi team or playing a Kiwi code, it would be remiss not to mention Formula One star Liam Lawson, who will remain on the Formula One grid in 2026, Red Bull confirmed this week.

“He’s probably the most talked-about Kiwi athlete anywhere in the world this year.”

Taken together, 2025 was not a year of dominance for our sports teams – it was a year of discovery.

New Zealand’s biggest teams were pushed by stronger global competition, deeper professionalisation across rival nations and scrutiny from a public accustomed to winning.

In every patch of turbulence, there were glimpses of what might come next.

Check out how to listen to and follow The Detail here.

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

Reinstatement of Mariameno Kapa-Kingi raises questions for Te Pāti Māori voters – experts

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mariameno Kapa-Kingi.

An interim high court ruling has reinstated Mariameno Kapa-Kingi as a member of Te Pāti Māori. Anneke Smith / RNZ

The reinstatement of an expelled MP raises serious questions for Te Pāti Māori voters ahead of next year’s election, political experts say.

An interim high court ruling has returned Mariameno Kapa-Kingi as a member of the party, after she was ousted alongside Tākuta Ferris in early November, following a period of internal conflict.

She will now attend this weekend’s Annual General Meeting.

Associate professor in politics at Victoria University, Lara Greaves, said voters might be unwilling to back a party in such an unstable state.

“A lot of their voters and a lot of Māori voters would, I think, be fairly tolerant of there being like internal conflict or there being instability, but this has just been like the most unstable we’ve seen a political party really ever be,” she said.

“This one’s been spectacular, this blow-up.”

Political scientist & Victoria University of Wellington Associate Professor Dr Lara Greaves

Political scientist & Victoria University of Wellington Associate Professor Dr Lara Greaves RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Te Pāti Māori has acknowledged the judge’s decision and said it looked forward to bringing the issue to its members at this weekend’s meeting.

Greaves said says the blow-up was almost certain to be a topic of conversation among attendees.

“The thing for Kapa-Kingi is that that shows a lot of courage to show up to a party that’s tried to boot you out like that, so I think most people could probably empathise with someone in that sort of work situation, having to show up, but yeah it definitely does seem like Kapa-Kingi and Ferris are, they’re sticking to trying to change the party internally.”

In his ruling, Justice Paul Radich said there was an argument that Kapa-Kingi’s expulsion was based on “mistaken facts” and “procedural irregulaties”. The matter would be revisited at a full hearing in February.

Former Māori Party MP Te Ururoa Flavell said the decision was significant.

“There’s enough there, even in his statements, to suggest that the processes that were used were questionable and, therefore, it’s a bit of an indictment on, of the process that’s been used thus far.”

Te Ururoa Flavell Māori Party Co-leader

Former Māori Party MP Te Ururoa Flavell. RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

Flavell said the party had its work cut out for it to restore confidence among voters.

“A lot of damage has been done in what’s happened over these last couple of months, between individuals, for the party as a whole. I think our people and indeed those who are supporters of the Māori Party want this issue put to bed as smartly as possible and for the MPs to focus on the current issues of the day.”

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

Review: Wake Up Dead Man best of the Knives Out series

Source: Radio New Zealand

TV murder mysteries like Hercule Poirot, Morse, Midsommer Murders and our own Brokenwood Mysteries have been a regular fixture everywhere for years – everywhere but the United States, it appears.

Their best-known whodunits were long ago – shows like Columbo, Murder She Wrote and of course Scooby Doo.

So, when Rian Johnson introduced his detective Benoit Blanc – Daniel Craig with a faintly ridiculous New Orleans accent – solving murders in wealthy people’s mansions, it was more of a novelty at home than it was, say, here.

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

Is Fanny Osborne our most impressive forgotten artist?

Source: Radio New Zealand

After years researching Fanny Osborne’s life, writer and curator Kate Waterhouse still finds it really hard to understand how the acclaimed botanical artist “fell off the landscape”.

That said, she hadn’t heard of Osborne herself until her Australian mother-in-law – a fan of female botanical artists – mentioned flying in to see an Osborne exhibition in Auckland.

Intrigued, Waterhouse investigated Osborne, and discovered that the woman behind the beautiful watercolours had raised 13 kids without electricity on Great Barrier Island: “I was like, ‘Holy crap. How on earth did she do that there?'”

Watercolour of a Kōwhai flower by Fanny Osborne.

Watercolour of a Kōwhai flower by Fanny Osborne.

Auckland Museum

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

NZTA relaxes weekend Transmission Gully closure for Kāpiti Food Fair

Source: Radio New Zealand

Contractors backfilling concrete next to the southbound lane after drainage has been installed.

Contractors backfilling concrete next to the southbound lane after drainage has been installed. Supplied / NZTA

The Transport Agency (NZTA) will not be shutting the northbound lanes of Transmission Gully down this weekend as planned, due to a large Kāpiti fair.

NZTA has been spending $32 million fixing up the $1.25 billion motorway just over three years after it opened because chip sealing was never completed.

Six kilometres of road would be rebuilt where water was seeping into the pavement, and there was 18km of chip sealing work to be done.

Some of that work was set to take place this weekend, shutting down northbound lanes of the road – but that was scrapped due to the Kāpiti Food Fair on Saturday.

The event was expected to attract over 10,000 people from the wider Wellington region.

NZTA warned there would still be some lane closures in place and that people should factor in longer travel times.

Drivers could also use State Highway 59 as an alternative route.

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