Live: Twelve confirmed dead in Bondi Beach shooting

Source: Radio New Zealand

Twelve people were killed when gunmen opened fire at a Jewish holiday celebration at Sydney’s Bondi Beach on Sunday.

Australian officials described as a targeted anti-semitic attack.

One of the suspected gunmen was also killed, and a second is in critical condition.

Authorities said far more people would have been killed were it not for a bystander, identified by local media as fruit shop owner Ahmed al-Ahmed, 43, who was filmed charging a gunman from behind, grappling with him and wresting a rifle from his hands.

Follow the latest updates in the liveblog at the top of this page.

Police work at the scene of the Bondi Beach shooting. AFP / Saeed Khan

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

How long until robots take care of your home, family?

Source: Radio New Zealand

When people doubted that a humanoid shown by Chinese smart EV company Xpeng was in fact a robot, the makers cut it open on stage last month.

Although some doubt still lurks around it, the topic of humanoids and their place among us has been brewing, with Elon Musk this year saying Tesla’s focus will be on robots.

Tesla recently released a progress video of the Optimus Gen. 3 robot, which the makers claim will be able to perform about 4000 household tasks and hope to launch commercially next year.

He Xiaopeng, cofounder and chairman of Chinese electric vehicle maker Xpeng, launches Xpeng’s next-gen Iron humanoid robot in southern China’s Guangdong province on 5 November, 2025.

AFP / Jade Gao

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

Shots fired at Bondi Beach in Sydney – reports

Source: Radio New Zealand

Bondi Beach. File photo. David Gray / AFP

Sydney police are urging the public to stay away from Bondi Beach after reports of multiple shots fired in the area.

Police said they were responding to a developing incident at Bondi Beach.

“Anyone at the scene should take shelter. Police are on scene and more information will be provided when it comes to hand.”

Emergency services have also arrived at the scene.

– more to come

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

Emergency expert pushes messaging rethink after Hong Kong fire tragedy

Source: Radio New Zealand

Firefighters spray water on flames, as a major fire engulfs several Hong Kong apartment blocks.

For decades, the message for people caught in emergencies like fires remained the same – stay calm, don’t panic, wait for instructions.

According to a leading crowd-safety researcher, this sensible-sounding mantra is entirely wrong and, in some disasters, has likely cost lives.

Speaking to RNZ’s Sunday Morning, University of Melbourne associate professor Milad Haghani said disasters from London to Hong Kong showed a recurring pattern – authorities downplay danger, people hesitate and precious minutes are lost.

Official messaging had been shaped by outdated psychology, movie tropes and a deep mistrust of the public’s ability to cope with danger, said Haghani, who specialises in crowd safety and evacuation modelling, among other subjects.

Lessons in fire

Haghani was prompted to speak out, after the recent Hong Kong tower fires, now the deadliest building fire of the century.

The blaze killed at least 159 people, many of whom were inside their apartments, as flames raced up the exterior of the building.

He said the disaster echoed the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire in London, where 72 people died, after being advised to “stay put” in their flats.

Designed decades earlier for fires contained within single units, that guidance proved deadly, once flames spread externally through combustible cladding.

Many complied with the official advice – and died.

Fire engulfs Grenfell Tower, a residential tower block in west London. DANIEL LEAL/AFP

In both cases, residents were re-assured, soothed and urged not to overreact.

Hesitation kills

Research consistently showed that delay was one of the biggest predictors of death in fires and other emergencies, said Haghani.

“The delay that people exercise in reacting to the evacuation alarm correlates directly with their chance of survival.”

Yet official messaging often discouraged speed and urgency.

“The thing is that, when you say ‘stay calm’, the nuance gets lost.

“The way people interpret that is often, ‘I shouldn’t overreact’.”

Modern buildings, shorter survival windows

One issu- is that very few understand how little time there is to escape.

“Using vintage furniture, the time that it takes for a unit, for an apartment to get to the flash over state where everything catches on fire and survival becomes impossible is between 20-25 minutes.”

In modern apartments, this window was often only 4-5 minutes.

Sprinklers helped, but they were not universal. Combined with faulty alarms, blocked stairwells or poor materials, delays became deadly.

Panic is not to fear

The idea that crowds descended into chaos during evacuations was deeply ingrained, but Haghani said it simply didn’t match reality.

“The idea that people run over each other… panic and harm each other is, I’m afraid to say, kind of fallacy.”

In fact, research consistently showed that people behaved altruistically in emergencies, helping strangers, assisting the vulnerable and making rational decisions under pressure.

This applied, not only to fires, but also in shootings, stabbings and crowd crushes.

In these situations, who lived and who died is often determined in the first 3-4 minutes.

“The way people have reacted to the situation, in that early phase, is the biggest determinant of the number of people [who] survive.”

What we do wrong

Besides moving quickly, what could the public do to improve the odds of survival during a disaster?

Haghani’s research highlighted an issue in the way families typically evacuated. In real emergencies, families tended to move side by side, forming wide clusters or “polygons” that slowed everyone down.

“When we form those polygons, there is a lot of space that becomes unusable.”

Haghani’s experiments found that evacuation became significantly faster when families moved in single file, what he calls a “snake” or “platoon”, rather than shoulder to shoulder.

This could be done by holding hands, or gripping the clothes of those in front and behind.

The golden rule

For Haghani, the core issue was not public behaviour, but the tendency of authorities to withhold information.

“The golden rule is to tell it as it is,” he said. “If the threat is real, there should be somebody who has the courage behind that microphone to say that you guys need to get to safety as quickly as possible.”

He pointed to the Astroworld Festival crowd crush in 2021, where organisers and police exchanged messages warning that “somebody is going to die today”, yet chose not to stop the show or alert the crowd, resulting in the death of 10 people.

“That could have been easily prevented by simple messaging to people, interrupting the gig and telling people, ‘Look, there is a real risk of a crowd crush. We are going to cancel, or we are going to delay the show’.”

The same pattern appeared in Hong Kong, where residents were wrongly assured of safety, and in Grenfell, where people obeyed instructions that sealed their fate.

“It’s one of the silent killers… this idea that we need to withhold information in cases of emergencies.

“People are, in fact, capable of making good decisions for themselves… [if] given true information.”

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

King Charles shares personal experience with cancer

Source: Radio New Zealand

King Charles.

Britain’s King Charles has recorded a personal message about his experience with cancer.

It is being broadcast live on the UK’s Channel 4.

A statement from the Royal Family said the message was part of Stand Up To Cancer 2025, a joint campaign from Cancer Research UK and Channel 4.

It will air at 9am NZ time, 8pm Friday in the UK.

“In his message, the King will stress the importance of cancer screening programmes in enabling early diagnosis and will reflect on his own recovery journey,” the statement said.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Aussie band quits Spotify in protest, AI doppelgänger steps in

Source: Radio New Zealand

Imagine this: a band removes its entire music catalogue off Spotify in protest, only to discover an AI-generated impersonator has replaced it. The impersonator offers songs that sound much like the band’s originals.

The imposter tops Spotify search results for the band’s music – attracting significant streams – and goes undetected for months.

As incredible as it sounds, this is what has happened to Australian prog-rock band King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard.

Fans have taken to social media channels to vent their frustration over the King Gizzard imposter.

Reddit

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

Netflix is buying Warner Brothers: Is it the end of the cinema?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Netflix has announced its planned acquisition of the American media company Warner Bros with a deal valued at US$82.7 billion (NZ$142.43 billion).

The acquisition has provoked criticism from film fans, creatives and the US government, including concerns for the future of filmgoing.

News of the acquisition was also followed by a hostile bid – a bid that goes directly to shareholders, not the board – from the multinational media conglomerate Paramount Skydance.

Warner Bros has had a very successful run of auteur-led films recently, such as Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another and Ryan Coogler’s Sinners.

Warner Bros. Pictures

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

Not just pizza: Italian cuisine makes UNESCO list

Source: Radio New Zealand

UNESCO has recognised Italian food is more than pizza, pasta and gelato, adding the range and ritual of the famed cuisine to its list of intangible cultural heritage.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, whose hard-right government has championed “Made in Italy” products as part of her nationalist agenda, hailed the recognition that she said “honours who we are and our identity”.

“Because for us Italians, cuisine is not just food or a collection of recipes. It is much more: it is culture, tradition, work, wealth,” she said in a statement.

Nunzia, prepares homemade orecchiette pasta in the street at Bari Vecchia, Apulia, on 11 June, 2024.

AFP / Piero Cruciatti

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

Immunologist urges measles vaccination check before holiday travel

Source: Radio New Zealand

The measles virus, the US CDC says measles is very contagious and can be serious, and anyone who is not protected against the virus is at risk. Supplied/ US CDC

A New Zealand-based Tongan immunologist says vigilance around measles spread is particularly important as families prepare to travel over the Christmas period – both within the countries they live and across the region to visit loved ones.

Dr Chris Puli’uvea said, unlike Fiji, New Zealand’s vaccination rate for children is 82 percent. For Pacific children aged one to five, the vaccination rate sits around 80 percent.

Health NZ has recorded 30 cases of measles in New Zealand in recent weeks, including 11 in Auckland and eight in Wellington.

With local health authorities working to increase the rate to the herd-immunity level of 95 percent, Puli’uivea, a senior lecturer at the Auckland University of Technology, is encouraging open conversations around vaccinations and disease protection.

“It’s important for our different layers of communities to be able to have these conversations, reach out and talk to someone who’s had it before and what their experiences were like,” he said.

“I’m sure you could [also] find out experiences of those who haven’t had the MMR vaccine and some of the troubles that they’ve had to face as well.”

Read more:

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

Fire kills 12 in south China residential building

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ

A fire that broke out in a residential building in southern China killed 12 people, state media reported Wednesday.

The blaze at the four-storey building in Shantou, Guangdong province, erupted around 9.20pm local time on Tuesday, and was extinguished just after 10pm, the local fire department said in a statement.

It comes after a huge blaze last month engulfed several high-rise residential towers in Hong Kong, neighbouring Guangdong, killing 160 people.

“The building on fire was a four-storey self-built reinforced concrete structure,” the Chaonan District Fire and Rescue Team said, adding that the blaze had affected an area of 150 square metres.

“Investigations into the cause of the fire and aftermath handling work are being conducted in an orderly manner,” it said.

Initial reports on Wednesday morning had said eight were killed, with four injured taken to hospital.

State media outlet Xinhua later said a total of 12 people had been killed.

The deaths come after China launched a campaign against fire hazards in high-rise buildings following the Hong Kong blaze last month.

– AFP

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