Kiwi surgeon Dr Rowan Schouten behind international cricketers’ returns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Orthopaedic spine surgeon Dr Rowan Schouten performs a back proceedure. Supplied/Dr Rowan Schouten

Season-ending and sometimes career-threatening, a serious stress fracture can lead athletes from around the world to call on a Christchurch-based surgeon to get them back playing.

Referrals from some of cricket’s biggest names and a successful track record has made orthopaedic spine surgeon Dr Rowan Schouten a trusted ‘go-to guy’, when the careers of not only Black Caps, but Australian, Indian or European athletes are on the line.

Operating on cricketers’ backs is a minor part of Schouten’s public and private surgical role at St George’s Hospital, but it can have major consequences for a player’s livelihood.

Schouten operates on 2-3 cricketers a year.

“When you think we do 200-300 operations a year, it’s a very small niche market as far as our workload goes, but it’s been an interesting role that’s sort of built up over the last 10 years or so.”

While mostly involved with cricket, Schouten has contributed to other sports.

“We know the spine struggles to tolerate hyperextension loading in a lot of sports,” he said. “Stress fractures are not something that are isolated to cricket.

“We see it in dancers, we see it in other sports, like gymnastics and tennis and volleyball, basketball, but certainly cricketers, they’re probably the highest incidence of stress fractures among all athletes.”

Patient zero: Shane Bond

NZ bowler Shane Bond in action during his man of the match performance against Australia. PHOTOSPORT

Former Black Cap Shane Bond started it all and continues to be a big supporter of the surgeon’s work.

After years off the field with stress fractures in the middle of his international career, Bond was faced with early retirement or surgery.

The fast-bowler turned to Schouten’s mentor, Dr Grahame Inglis, who successfully pioneered a surgical technique, involving cables and screws, that got Bond back on the park.

Before Inglis retired, he sat Schouten down and shared his technique, and the reasons and indications why he would consider surgery.

Together, Inglis and Schouten operated on “a bunch of New Zealand cricketers in the same setting and then things started to go international, just before he retired”.

Former Black Cap Shane Bond, right, sends injured cricketers like Kyle Jamieson to Dr Rowan Schouten. Photosport

The Australians were the first overseas athletes to be “open to the idea of surgery for some of their trouble making fractures” and from there, others were on board.

“A lot of the cricketers around the world, when they have an injury, they reach out to others that have had similar,” Shouten said. “Shane is highly regarded, highly respected, coached throughout the world, so a lot of them contact Shane and then he brings that connection through to us.

“We’ve operated on over 25 professional cricketers worldwide now and it’s not an operation that’s done by a lot of people.

“Technically, it’s not a challenging operation, but it’s having that track record that is appealing and encourages people to come from other parts of the world to do it.

“There are other people around the world that were doing the surgery, in fact, but a lot of them all at the same time, they either retired or they were injured, and couldn’t operate.

“Out of sheer luck, we became the go-to for the world and, as a result, we’ve got some results that are now encouraging enough for other people to take the trip.”

Jasprit Bumrah of India. photosport

While Schouten does not talk about individuals, Indian fast bowlers Jasprit Bumrah, Prasidh Krishna and Mayank Yadav, as well as Australians Jason Behrendorff, James Pattinson, Cameron Green and Lance Morris, are among those publicly linked by their national body to the New Zealand doctors.

Black Caps Matt Henry and Kyle Jamieson are also on the list.

Australian tennis players and UK rugby players have sought Schouten out, as did an ice hockey player who did not require surgery, but wanted advice about how to manage load.

Treating an athlete is a team effort and Schouten said imaging from Pacific Radiology allowed him to make decisions about whether to operate or not.

NZ Cricket high performance physiotherapist Dayle Shackel helps manage rehab and recovery of all the international players, who spend two weeks in Christchurch afterwards, before check-ups become virtual.

Schouten has slowly modified and “tweaked” the technique over time, but the “essence of it is still the same”.

“Technology has changed quite a lot, even in the last 5-10 years,” he said. “We have computer navigation in theatre that helps us put everything that we need to insert accurately.

“There’s also a few other elements of the surgery that we’ve added in more recent years that I think are important for its success and to make sure that we deload that part of the spine that is so vulnerable to stress fractures.

“When players get back, not only do they have a fracture that’s a bit more robust from all the surgery, but also the loads that are going through that spine are not as significant.”

Bodies not made for cricket

Bowlers at all levels put their bodies through stress of varying degrees. John Davidson / www.photosport.nz

“It’s a tough gig, being a fast bowler, certainly from a spine perspective. When you think of each of these injuries taking 6-9 months to get back, it can be quite a big burden on these cricketers and their careers.”

A survey of New Zealand male fast-bowlers in domestic cricket a few years ago found “45 percent of them said they’d had a lumbar stress injury at one part of their career”.

“I was talking to Cricket Australia recently as well and they have good data on all their contracted players over the last 12-plus years. When you single out the male fast-bowlers that they have been looking after, they said 39 percent of them had had a lumbar stress injury over that time.”

A stress fracture does not happen out of the blue.

“They’re not one-off traumatic events,” Schouten said. “What happens is you load your spine and you get almost like a bruising of the bone to begin with.

“Then, if you continue to load it, that bruising then accumulates and builds up, and then you get some micro damage and eventually the micro damage, if you continue to load the spine, results in a full fracture.

“It’s a cumulative problem. Often, though, you don’t get symptoms until the very end of that sequence, but you can often see that the stress is brewing on MRI scans.”

As a preventative measure, some cricket governing bodies around the world, like the England & Wales Cricket Board, have their fast-bowlers get Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans at intervals throughout their season to see whether any stress is building up.

“Then you can make decisions about whether you select them for a particular tour or whether you ask them to rest for a particular period.

“The key risk factor for stress fractures is how much bowling the players do.

“These days, when you see the amount of cricket that’s being played, and the number of series and the number of formats being played, then quite quickly your workload can escalate significantly into dangerous territory.”

Schouten said overseas bowling loads were mapped out to make sure players did not reach dangerous levels “or they don’t have big spikes in workload”.

“They know that certain types of bowling actions puts people at risk of stress factors, so there’s even thoughts and analysis goes into bowling action, and how that can be improved to reduce the risks.”

Surgery is not for everyone

The “vast majority” of cricketers, playing at all levels of the game, who have stress fractures, do not require surgery, Schouten said.

“A 16-year-old playing schoolboy cricket is a different scenario than an international whose career is on the line and the timing’s important. When they’ve got big contracts coming up or World Cups to play, it’s a slightly different scenario.

“The need to operate on a professional cricketer for stress fractures is very limited and it is normally resolved non-operatively to start with, through a six-month rehab period.

“It’s only the ones that re-occur that we start to consider surgery, those trouble-making ones that keep people sidelined repeatedly for sequential 6-9 month periods.

“[With] surgery, we’ve had some success, but it’s not bulletproof and we need to recognise some of those players who, even post-surgery, have had recurrences.”

Schouten said those players were not completely healed by surgery were a reminder that the bowling action was stressful for the lumbar spine and that surgery was not the only part of the solution, as it “still requires a whole lot of effort from the players to keep themselves conditioned and to manage their workloads appropriately”.

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Wastewater overflow prompts warning for Waiwhakaiho River, Bell Block Beach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jordan Tan / 123rf

Although the volume of the overflow was small, it had the potential to reach an unnamed tributary of the Waiwhakaiho River. Supplied / NPDC

New Plymouth residents are warned to not swim at Waiwhakaiho River and Bell Block Beach, after an overflow of the council’s wastewater system.

New Plymouth District Council said the overflow was discovered at 11am Saturday and was stopped 15 minutes later.

“Our team has responded, and are correcting and monitoring the situation.”

Although the volume of the overflow was small, it had the potential to reach an unnamed tributary of the Waiwhakaiho River, it said.

“Permanent warning signs east and west of the Waiwhakaiho River mouth and at Bell Block Beach have been changed to warn against swimming, and will be in place for 48 hours.”

The cause of the overflow was a blockage in the line coming into the wastewater treatment plant, the council said.

The location of the signs and other current water quality warnings can be viewed on New Plymouth District Council’s Can I Swim? page.

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Kiwi Kate Hawley crowned inaugural Costume Designer of the Year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mia Goth as Elizabeth in Frankenstein. Ken Woroner/Netflix

The British Fashion Council has named a New Zealander Kiwi Kate Hawley as its inaugural Costume Designer of the Year.

The Fashion Awards will take place in the United Kingdom on 1 December, where Hawley has flown from Wellington to attend.

Hawley has been recognised for her work as a costume designer for the Netflix film Frankenstein, which was released last month.

“It feels more than a little fabulous and, admittedly, a little overwhelming,” she said.

Hawley studied at the Wellington School of Design, before being trained at London’s esteemed Motley School of Theatre Design.

Mia Goth as Clarie Frankenstein and Christian Convery as Young Victor in Frankenstein. Ken Woroner/Netflix

“I will always be grateful to New Zealand for the opportunities that were afforded me that might not have been so easily created elsewhere.

“I have a long list of those to thank, but it has also been many years of learning, being inspired by so many wonderful people around the world – and through my working life.

“Every experience, individual, culture… every project shapes my approach to costume design.”

Before Frankenstein, Hawley had worked for director Guillermo del Toro on Crimson Peak and Pacific Rim.

She was also a costume designer for the television series The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and worked for director Peter Jackson on The Hobbit trilogy, as well as The Lovely Bones.

She worked for director Doug Liman on Chaos Walking and Edge of Tomorrow, director Chris Sanders on The Call of the Wild, director Christian Rivers on Mortal Engines and director David Ayer on Suicide Squad.

“Although this is the first time a costume designer has received this award from the British Fashion Council, I am very conscious of the legendary director-designer partnerships that came before and impacted our culture in the past – and indeed have inspired me greatly.”

Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein. Ken Woroner/Netflix

The British Fashion Council said Hawley was acclaimed for her innovative, narrative-driven approach to costume design.

“Her ability to create costumes that define character, elevate story and resonate beyond the theatre are especially visible in Frankenstein, where she blends historical authenticity with a contemporary eye, and incorporates technical research to inform custom patterns and fabrics.”

Hawley was also awarded the Special Achievement in Costume Design Award at the Middleburg Film Festival in the United States last month and has been nominated for Best Costume Design at next year’s Astra Film Awards in Los Angeles.

She told RNZ that Frankenstein was director del Toro’s passion project.

“All of us are elevated under his vision and artistry. He wanted to push each and every department to their maximum – to elevate the craft of filmmaking – so we did.”

Hawley said del Toro was her inspiration for the costume design in the film.

“It’s all there in the script – themes of religion, mythology, nature unbound.

“If every part of the process has the same intention and energy of what you’re trying to do, then it’s working, and that’s how Frankenstein always felt.

“With Guillermo [del Toro], there was love in every part of the process.”

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Puddle ball: Auckland FC lose unbeaten A-League tag

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rain-soaked Auckland FC captain Francis De Vries gestures during his side’s loss to Newcastle Jets. Photosport

Auckland’s unbeaten run in this year’s A-League season has ended with a 2-1 loss to Newcastle Jets in farcical conditions at Go Media Stadium.

A huge downpour with 20 minutes to go saw players frequently overrunning the ball, which was stopping in huge puddles, with Auckland FC goalkeeper Michael Woud pleading with officials for the game to be halted, because of the amount of water in his goal area.

Referee Alireza Faghani consulted with the captains in the 83rd minute, but then waved play on. There were no further goals and bottom-placed Newcastle took a shock victory over last year’s premiership plate winners.

Auckland FC were the only unbeaten team heading into the match, but they were outgunned on the day by the visitors, who shocked the locals, with Will Dobson smacking in a goal in just the third minute.

The Aucklanders levelled the score, with Louis Verstraete slamming the ball past goalkeeper James Delianov in the 14th minute, but the Auckland fans were silenced in the 42nd minute, when Lachlan Rose latched onto a pass from Dobson and scored to make it 2-1.

Auckland FC fans brave the rain during the A-League match against Newcastle Jets. PHOTOSPORT

The rain started to fall about the 30-minute mark, but halfway through the second half, it became a downpour and visibility was low, as players struggled to control the sodden ball.

Auckland had plenty of scoring chances, including Jesse Randall’s near equaliser in the 73rd minute, but they couldn’t capitalise on them.

Coming off a 1-1 draw with Brisbane last week and now a loss, the Aucklanders will face a buoyant Wellington Phoenix in the second New Zealand derby, after their 2-1 win over Adelaide United on Saturday. The Phoenix are yet beat Auckland FC.

Auckland captain Jake Brimmer said the conditions did not cost his side victory, it was their own effort.

“I think that one hurts the most out of everything,” he told Sky Sport. “I think we generally played well tonight, but didn’t take our chances and that cost us.”

Brimmer said it was difficult with the ball just stopping on the wet pitch.

“That’s no excuse, both teams had to deal with it and unfortunately we were second best on the night.”

Jets captain Kosta Grozos did not mind playing during the downpour.

“In the weather, the boys certainly enjoyed that one, it was fun.”

He said his team were a tightknit group and deserved the win.

“It means the world. Coming off some bad losses, this just makes up for it.”

The Jets move up from 12th to 10th after their win, while Auckland are in third place and the Phoenix sixth.

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Biosecurity New Zealand escalates response to yellow-legged hornets

Source: Radio New Zealand

Biosecurity New Zealand North commissioner Mike Inglis said surveillance efforts were working. Biosecurity NZ

Another yellow-legged hornet queen has been found in Auckland’s North Shore, as Biosecurity New Zealand escalates its attempts to eradicate the invasive insect.

To date, 27 queen hornets, seven workers and 17 nests have been successfully located and removed from the Glenfield and Birkdale areas, Biosecurity NZ said.

Genetic testing indicated the hornets were closely related, suggesting a small, contained population.

Biosecurity New Zealand North commissioner Mike Inglis said the fact they were finding more hornets showed surveillance efforts were working.

The organisation had further expanded its surveillance and on-the-ground search operations across the North Shore.

“In recent weeks, we’ve put in five times as many traps – now more than 600 – across a 5km radius from detection sites, and property-by-property searches under way within 200m of confirmed finds,” Inglis said. “We are adding additional traps, as more hornets are found.

Biosecurity teams had so far searched more than 2100 properties and continued to search across the region.

“Those ground searches are paying dividends, with many of the nests and queens being detected through those intensive ground sweeps.”

Genetic testing indicated the hornets were closely related, suggesting a small, contained population. Biosecurity NZ

Teams from Auckland Council, Pest Free Kaipātiki, Plant & Food Research and Kiwifruit Vine Health had joined in the search.

Electronic tracking gear had also been purchased from the Netherlands to aid in the hunt, following advice from countries that had successfully managed hornet incursions.

“That technology arrived in New Zealand this week,” Inglis said. “Under the guidance of a UK expert, we plan to use the technology to trace nests, if worker activity increases over summer.”

The trackers would be attached to captured free-flying worker hornets, so that on release, they could be followed back to the hive.

Other recent Biosecurity response activities included:

  • Using different trap designs and lures (sugar and protein-based)
  • Ongoing inspections of beehives close to detection sites, along with ground surveys in reserves and residential areas
  • A national advertising campaign launched this week, urging the public to report suspected sightings
  • Continuing to raise public awareness by visiting markets, schools, local businesses, libraries and community centres

Biosecurity stressed that ongoing vigilance by the public and beekeepers was the best detection method.

“We’ve had more than 4000 public notifications so far – an incredible contribution – and we’re very keen for this to continue,” Inglis said.

Biosecurity New Zealand wanted to hear from anyone who had a suspected hornet specimen, had located a possible nest or taken a clear photo.

Sightings could be reported:

  • Online at report.mpi.govt.nz
  • By calling Biosecurity New Zealand’s exotic pest and disease hotline on 0800 80 99 66
  • More information can be found at mpi.govt.nz/yellow-legged-hornet-2025

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One new measles case identified in Wellington, bringing total to 22

Source: Radio New Zealand

One new measles case in Wellington. Supplied/ US CDC

Health New Zealand has confirmed one new case of measles in Wellington, which it says is linked to an earlier case.

This brings the number of known measles cases to 22 since 8 October 2025, with 21 no longer infectious.

New locations of interest have been identified in Wellington.

Wellington locations of interest

    [L1]Saturday, 22 November – New World Wellington City, Wakefield St (6.05-7.35pm)

    [L2]Monday, 24 November – BP 2Go, Berhampore (12.40-2.10pm)

    [L3]Thursday, 27 November – New World Newtown (8.55-10.20am)

Any new locations of interest will be updated on the Health New Zealand website, as they are confirmed.

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Researchers link Māori housing inequities to 180 years of restrictive building laws

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s first building code banned raupō homes in the cities. Alexander Turnbull Library, Mrs Scott Collection.

For centuries, Māori built homes that were warm, dry, sustainable and centred on whānau.

Homelessness, damp houses and overcrowding were not part of te ao Māori.

Two researchers say the systems that displaced Māori from their kāinga still shape housing inequities today and the solutions lie in restoring Māori autonomy over how communities build.

Professor Deidre Brown (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Kahu) has spent more than two decades researching Māori architecture.

She is a professor at Te Pare School of Architecture and Planning at Waipapa Taumata Rau University of Auckland, and co-director of MĀPIHI, the Centre for Māori and Pacific Housing Research.

A few years ago, she and other Māori academics sat down to ask what issues most affected Māori and “what are the skills that we can bring to the table that might help?”.

“We all agreed housing was the No.1 critical issue that we could actually make a positive contribution to,” she told RNZ.

The rōpū went on to interview 30-40 stakeholders – from Kāinga Ora and the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development to Māori housing providers, marae, iwi, community groups and architects.

“We asked them, what are the challenges and opportunities in Māori housing?” she said.

Their work identified 130 interrelated factors influencing housing outcomes, with affordability as one.

MĀPIHI was formed from that research, with a mission “to increase the quality and supply of housing for Māori and Pacific people”.

Professor Deidre Brown has spent more than two decades researching Māori architecture. Adrian Malloch

Alongside Deidre Brown is architectural designer and new academic Savannah Brown (Ngāti Whātua, Ngāti Hine, Ngāti Wai, Ngāpuhi), who is in the fourth year of her PhD examining how colonial building laws affected whare Māori – specifically in the Ngāti Whātua rohe.

She said the threads connecting traditional building systems and today’s policies were clearer than many people realise.

“I’ve always been interested in traditional whare Māori,” she said.

“Working in practice opened my eyes to the complexity, cost and barriers in today’s building system – legislation, codes, standards. When I compared that to how streamlined traditional building was, it made me want to understand what happened.”

From autonomy to restriction

Before colonisation, kāinga were self-determined, sustainable and organised at hapū level.

“We manaaki [look after] people,” Deidre Brown said. “The idea of someone being houseless or without whānau is outside our tikanga – it’s not part of our way of thinking.

“There was always provision of shelter.”

She said, because Māori had self-determination over their own lands, they always had dedicated areas for gathering materials like raupō, nikau and timber, and knowledge about harvesting in ways that kept those resources renewing.

“It’s what we’d now call the circular economy.

“Our people, our Polynesian navigators, they got here by knowing how to put things together and how to make them stay together.

“We had our own building technologies as well and they were highly socialised within our communities. People knew how to build.”

Architectural designer and new academic Savannah Brown is in her fourth year of completing her PhD. RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

Savannah Brown said whare were built in response to demand – “a growing hapū, a new baby or a new whānau forming”.

Both researchers said misconceptions about traditional Māori houses – that they were cold, dirty or unsafe – came from colonial writers.

“Colonial authors claimed Māori housing made us ‘sick’, but evidence shows the opposite,” Deidre Brown said

She recalled her brother visiting a whare at Taupō Bay in the 1950s, a traditional whare with dirt floors.

“He remembers it as the cleanest house he’d ever seen.”

Savannah Brown said many early texts carried “white-superiority undertones”, using words like “savage” or “inferior”, yet the materials were climate-adapted and regionally specific.

“We evolved our architecture for centuries and post-contact legislation disrupted that progression.”

A mother and infant sitting outside a raupō house in Taranaki. Raupō whare, Taranaki. Parihaka album 1. Ref: PA1-q-183-25-2. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand

1842: A turning point

One of the earliest disruptions, the pair said, was the Raupō Houses Ordinance, passed in 1842 – just two years after the signing of Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

It imposed a £20 annual tax on existing raupō houses in the main centres and a £100 fine for anyone building a new one.

The plant raupō (Typha orientalis), also known as bulrush, is a common wetland plant in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Māori used raupō to build whare, including domestic dwellings and some early official buildings, by using the leaves and stalks for walls and thatching, and the pollen for other purposes.

The law was framed as a fire safety measure, but Deidre Brown was doubtful.

“There’s been research suggesting the government was concerned Māori builders were undercutting the new settler builders, because Māori could build out of raupō,” she said. “The ordinance was more about protecting newly arrived British carpenters.”

Savannah Brown said she read the original document at the National Archives and “touching it was profound”.

“Realising this single piece of paper marked the beginning of the decline of traditional Māori architecture.”

A Māori home of 1900 – Two boys and a young man outside a raupō hut. Photographer: Spencer, Charles, 1854-1933 / Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections 1285-09995

The ripple effects of this legislation were quick, they said. Use of traditional materials dropped, hapū lost access to wetlands and forests, as land was taken or drained, and rangatahi (young people) moved away from their kāinga, taking labour and expertise with them.

Through the early and mid-20th century, Māori home ownership declined sharply. Instead of homes being free to build and live in, and homelessness being “virtually unimaginable”, whānau Māori found themselves at the “bottom of the housing heap”, living in low-quality accommodation in the cities.

Government-built state houses helped some whānau, but the designs reflected European nuclear families, rather than Māori communal life.

“They just weren’t built for the bigger Māori families,” Deidre Brown said. “Six, maybe eight kids, lots of aunties and uncles coming in and out, bringing kai with them.”

Standard layouts placed bathrooms next to kitchens, breaching tikanga, and put houses at the front of sections, leaving little room for pōwhiri, visitors or tangihanga. Even hallways worked against whānau life.

“It prevented the singing and storytelling that went on in a traditional whare moe.”

Later, Māori were excluded from government mortgage support for decades – access began only in 1959.

In the 2023 census, Māori home ownership had fallen to 27.5 percent, and, according to the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development’s latest insights report for June 2025, more than 60 percent of those experiencing homelessness identify as Māori.

“When legislation stopped us building for ourselves, autonomy disappeared,” Savannah Brown said.

Iwi architects and researchers at MĀPIHI are creating housing that is both culturally grounded and affordable. Karl Drury

Rebuilding autonomy

Both researchers said Māori-led solutions already existed and they may be the key.

Te Māhurehure Marae in Auckland’s Pt Chevalier and Ngāti Toa were among those creating papakāinga that wove housing into marae life, natural environments and cultural practice.

“They’ve done away with front yards and back yards, [and] people are closely linked to their wharenui,” Savannah Brown said.

“They have kura kaupapa, a community vegetable garden [māra kai], and they’re creating their own supply chain. In many ways, it’s like what their ancestors had in the 19th century, but using modern technologies.”

Savannah Brown said capability within whānau was key, but smaller hapū often struggled, as rangatahi moved to cities.

She also believed systems needed reform. One of her research areas was the possibility of a Māori building authority.

“There are huge misunderstandings at council level around tikanga Māori and whenua Māori,” she said. “Some processes become absurd… like marae having to seek resource consent from themselves.”

Both told RNZ that they hoped more Māori entered architecture to help shift the sector.

“Housing sits at the centre of wellbeing,” Deidre Brown said. “The more Māori we have in this sector, the better for our people.”

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Air NZ’s Airbus A320 aircraft return to normal service

Source: Radio New Zealand

About 6000 aircraft from the Airbus A320 family were affected by the issue. 123RF

Air New Zealand’s Airbus A320 aircraft are returning to normal operations, after receiving software updates during a global recall.

About 6000 aircraft from the Airbus A320 family were affected, after a recent incident revealed that intense solar radiation could corrupt elements of the planes’ flight control systems.

Air New Zealand chief safety and risk officer Nathan McGraw said 27 flights were cancelled during the weekend and thanked customers travelling over the weekend for their patience.

“We know changes to travel plans are frustrating and we are grateful for the understanding shown to our teams, as they worked to minimise disruption, complete the updates as quickly as possible and keep people moving wherever they could,” he said.

McGraw said the airline expected no “ongoing impact” from the weekend’s disruption.

Jetstar cancelled about 90 flights, but confirmed earlier today that all software upgrades had been made and the planes had returned to service

Air New Zealand’s affected customers are able to make one free change within seven days of their original travel date, hold the value of their fare in credit for 12 months or request a refund, including for non-refundable fares.

Jetstar said their teams were working on options and were contacting affected customers directly.

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Severe thunderstorm warning issued for Auckland, surrounding regions

Source: Radio New Zealand

The thunderstorms were also expected to be accompanied by heavy rain. MetService

A torrential downpour has literally rained on the Auckland’s parade, as MetService issued a raft of alerts, including a severe thunderstorm warning for the region.

As thousands headed home from the annual Santa Parade in Queen Street, they had to dodge a downpour that may have even greater implications around the city.

The thunderstorm warning applied to Auckland City, Kaipara, Waikato, Hauraki, Waitakere, Franklin, Rodney, Gulf and Albany, and was expected to settle in between 4.30-5pm, MetService said.

The thuderstorms were also expected to be accompanied by heavy rain.

“Torrential rain can cause surface and/or flash flooding about streams, gullies and urban areas, and make driving conditions extremely hazardous,” MetService warned.

Weather data from MetService. MetService

Parts of the lower South Island were also due some rain and strong winds.

A heavy rain watch was in place for areas in Tasman, Canterbury, Otago, Southland and Fiordland from earlier on Sunday and into the evening.

A strong wind watch was also in place for Wellington, parts of Canterbury and areas of Southland into the evening, and in some areas, into the early hours of Monday morning.

More to come…

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Tongan rugby league star Eli Katoa aims for return as he recovers from brain surgery

Source: Radio New Zealand

Eli Katoa has posted photos from his time in hospital after surgery for a brain bleed. Instagram/Supplied

Tongan rugby league star Eli Katoa says his recovery from brain surgery is going well and he hopes to return to the sport.

The Melbourne Storm second-rower will miss the 2026 NRL season [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/sport/577662/tonga-rugby-league-star-eli-katoa-has-surgery-after-suffering-seizure-activity-during-kiwis-test-match, as he recuperates from the surgery for a brain bleed.

Katoa, 25, collided with a teammate before a Pacific Championships test against the Kiwis at Eden Park on 2 November and then suffered two more headknocks during the match. He was taken to hospital after seizure activity and had surgery overnight.

The former Warrior has posted on [embed: https://www.instagram.com/p/DRob5puEib-/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=b4564489-44a8-45ad-9406-1f62e882f94b Instagram] that he is now back at home “and I’m in a good place now”.

“My recovery is going well and hopefully I can keep ticking all of the boxes that I need!

“And to the Storm fans, in God’s timing, ‘I’ll be back soon’.”

Eli Katoa has posted this photo of partner Tuitofa Aloua helping him down hospital stairs. Instagram/Supplied

Katoa posted a photo of partner Tuitofa Aloua helping him walk down hospital stairs and said: “To my girl, this woman has been amazing, strong and sticking by my side through it all.

“I appreciate you and I love you so much.”

He also thanked fans for their messages and prayers, and the Storm club and the Tongan rugby league community for their support.

Eli Katoa is attended by a trainer, after his injury in the test against the Kiwis. NRL Photos/Photosport

Katoa had not had a head injury assessment for the knock he took in the lead-up to the match. He passed an HIA for the first injury in the test and continued playing, but left the field after the second.

After the match, former Kiwis and Warriors star Shaun Johnson was critical that Katoa was even allowed to play.

“I don’t get how it can even get to that point,” he said on his Play on Sport Show podcast. “There’s going to be fallout over this.

“There’s going to be some heads that will roll, because I do not know how Eli Katoa was actually even allowed to take the field.”

Tonga coach Kristian Woolf defended team doctors, saying everything was “done by the book”.

“We’ve got two very experienced doctors there,” he said. “They’ve done their usual HIA.

“He’s passed all that and passed all that well. My job is not to question doctors.

“They were both comfortable with that and comfortable with him coming back onto the field, so I don’t think there’s anything to worry about there in terms of the process.”

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