Waka Ama Sprint Nationals growing with 800 more paddlers than previous year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Rau Oranga o Ngāti Kahungunu Waka Ama Club, J16 Men compete at the Waka Ama Sprint Nationals. Supplied/Waka Ama Aotearoa NZ

This years Waka Ama Sprint Nationals have seen 800 more paddlers take to the water than last year, which organisers say reflects the growth of the sport in Aotearoa.

The week long competition wraps up on Saturday at Lake Karapiro in Waikato.

Waka Ama Aotearoa New Zealand (WAANZ) chief executive Lara Collins told RNZ there are 4700 kaihoe at this years competition and she believes its the largest event Lake Karapiro has had.

There are some 100 waka ama clubs from Kaitaia to Invercargill in Aotearoa, with four or five new clubs getting started in 2025, she said..

“We’re just seeing an increase of clubs, an increase of paddlers and just a general wave of more people participating in Waka Ama, whether that’s competitively or socially, or just for their hauora (health) in their life. It’s certainly more than just a sport. It is a way of life for lots of people, and it’s very cool that lots more people are wanting to do it.”

There are also some 900 taitamariki paddlers, aged between five and 10 competing at Nationals, she said.

“There’s a lot of little kids running around, which is so, so good… They’re the future of our sport, and it’s just great to see so many kids happy, having a great time, and all of their whānau, because for every cute five, six, seven-year-old that’s here, they bring with them four or five or six whānau members to watch them.”

Collins said managing the growth of the sport is a good problem to have and WAANZ is working to ensure they can manage it in a way that ensures the capacity of the sport is sustainable.

WAANZ chief executive Lara Collins (left). RNZ / REECE BAKER

Spots at World Champs in Singapore up for grabs

The event is also a qualifier for the 2026 International Va’a Federation World Sprint Championships happening in Singapore in August.

“So we have a number of… club teams that are trying to qualify to go to the World Club Championships in Singapore. And that just adds another level of competition here at the event and a little bit more excitement,” Collins said.

Six teams in each age category, from Junior 16 to Master 75, can qualify for the World Championships and in for singles racing three people in each age category can qualify, she said. There are also three spots available in the double hull W12 per age division.

“We will end up with a New Zealand contingent of around about 600 paddlers going to Singapore in August, which is quite a huge contingent of people to be sending overseas. And it’s a great experience for those paddlers that are going and for some of them, really life-changing to be representing Aotearoa and their club and their community at a World Championship.”

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

Longest ever lull in nuclear testing – but record already on shaky ground

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Brad Lendon, CNN

Firework displays in North Korea, as the state held a rally days after its last test of a nuclear weapon on 3 September 2017. KCNA VIS KNS / AFP

The world passed a nuclear milestone this week. And, perhaps surprisingly given the recent run of saber-rattling from the likes of Russia and the United States, it’s a positive one.

“As of today, the world has gone eight years, four months, and 11 days without a nuclear test … From now on, every day without a nuclear explosion will set a new record,” Dylan Spaulding, senior scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), wrote in a blog post Wednesday noting the milestone.

Wednesday’s (local time) watershed means the planet has seen its longest period without a nuclear explosion since the dawn of the nuclear era on 16 July , 1945, when the US exploded an atomic device in Alamogordo, New Mexico – the Trinity test – leading up to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, near the end of World War II.

North Korea conducted the world’s last nuclear test on 3 September 2017.

The previous longest period without a test was from May 30, 1998, when Pakistan conducted its last test, to 3 October, 2006, when North Korea conducted its first.

Spaulding cautions how fragile this “winning streak” has become, given threats by US President Donald Trump to resume nuclear testing.

“Reopening this Pandora’s box is both unnecessary and unwise,” Spaulding wrote.

“Unrestrained tests lead to competition, instability, and a degree of uncertainty that can scarcely be afforded on top of our existing global precarity,” he wrote.

In another warning sign, Trump has said he’s willing to allow the expiration on 5 February of a US-Russia treaty that caps the number of deployable nuclear weapons each side has.

Russia maintains the world’s biggest stockpile of nuclear weapons with more than 4300, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. The US has about 3700, with Moscow and Washington together accounting for 90 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons, the SIPRI says.

Decades of nuclear testing

Since the Trinity test, the world has seen 2055 nuclear tests by eight nations, according to the Arms Control Association.

The US has conducted the most tests – 1030, followed by Russia/USSR, 715; France, 210; China and the UK, 45; North Korea, six; India, three; and Pakistan, two.

Those tests have occurred in places ranging from Pacific atolls to deserts in the US and China to the Russian Arctic, often with heavy tolls on human and environmental health.

Widespread nuclear testing stopped in the late 1990s, when the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty was opened for signature.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz (6R) stands with officials in front of the nuclear-capable missile Hatf VI (Shaheen II) prior to its test fire at an undisclosed location on 29 April 2006. AFP / ISPR

Though it’s never come into force – mainly because the US signed but never ratified it – nations have largely abided by its conditions, with the exception of North Korea, which has been regarded as a rogue state and put under United Nations sanctions.

And since that 2017 test at North Korea’s Punggye-ri test site, much of the world has been on watch for Kim Jong Un to conduct another, given his enormous investment in a missile program that has given him weapons capable of reaching the continental US.

But in recent months, attention has turned to Washington and Moscow as Trump and subsequently Russian leader Vladimir Putin have threatened to restart nuclear testing in their countries.

The US last tested a nuclear weapon on 23 September, 1992. And Russia last exploded a nuclear device in 1990, when it was still the Soviet Union.

New threats to test

During a visit to South Korea in October, Trump vowed to begin testing US nuclear weapons “on an equal basis” with Russia and China, saying he had instructed the Defense Department to begin immediate preparations for such testing.

A week after Trump’s announcement, on November 5, Putin directed the Russian military to begin preparing for weapons tests.

Nuclear weapons tests are conducted to gauge the effects of new advances in the bombs or to ensure existing weapons will still work if fired.

Trump has vowed to begin testing US nuclear weapons “on an equal basis” with Russia and China. JIM WATSON / AFP

Spaulding and other scientists say it’s all unnecessary. That’s because the nuclear powers now have the technology to conduct “sub-critical” tests, which can mimic a nuclear process right up to the point of detonation.

“Advanced nuclear states are technically well beyond the point of exploring whether their weapons will detonate reliably,” he wrote.

Any US testing now brings into question whether Washington has been a reliable steward of its huge nuclear arsenal, according to Spaulding.

“While the Trump administration may view a test as a contribution to deterrence, it may actually have the opposite effect by projecting an irreconcilable lack of confidence in the US stockpile,” he said.

START treaty to lapse

The fears of renewed nuclear testing are being exacerbated by the impending lapse of the New Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (START), implemented in 2011, which limits the number of nuclear warheads the US and Russia can deploy to 1550.

According to a report this week from the Union of Concerned Scientists, those numbers could spike quickly after 5 February.

“Within weeks, the United States could field another 480 nuclear weapons at bomber bases. Within months, it could load almost 1000 additional nuclear warheads onto submarines. And within years, it could load an additional 400 nuclear warheads onto land-based missiles. Russia could do the same, increasing the stakes of political tension and the possibility of deeply catastrophic miscalculations,” the UCS said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin. MIKHAIL METZEL / POOL / AFP

“Both Russia and the United States already have more than enough nuclear weapons to devastate each other many times over. Adding more to the mix increases the chances of an accident, and the consequences of miscalculation or escalation,” said report author Jennifer Knox, a policy and research analyst at the UCS.

START has been on shaky ground since 2023, when Putin suspended Russian participation in it, citing among other reasons US support for Ukraine in the aftermath of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of its neighbour.

Moscow has stopped allowing verification inspections, and the US has reciprocated.

But the Russian leader last September offered to extend observance of START’s limits by a year after 5 February.

Trump, however, seems inclined to let it lapse.

“If it expires, it expires,” he said. “We’ll do a better agreement,” he told The New York Times earlier this month, while indicating China should be part of any new pact.

So in this record-setting week, there is more unease than celebration among those who watch nuclear proliferation closely.

“While the world has quietly broken a record for the longest period of time without a nuclear test, it is clear that this stability is fragile,” the UCS’s Spaulding wrote.

CNN

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

Auckland councillors in the dark over government’s housing intensification rethink

Source: Radio New Zealand

Housing Minister Chris Bishop confirmed to RNZ that the coalition is considering weakening housing intensification laws. RNZ / Kate Newton

The housing minister has confirmed the coalition is taking another look at housing intensification plans in Auckland after pushback from critics.

Last year, Auckland Council approved the initial phase of a new plan to accommodate an extra 2 million new homes in the coming decades.

The move was in response to the government agreeing to let the council opt out of medium-density rules that apply to most major cities.

This was in exchange for setting up zoning for 30 years of growth, which Auckland Council went on to calculate as an extra 2 million homes.

The council’s Plan Change 120 set out the process for doing this, but the government has since come under pressure from proponents of heritage homes who have raised concerns about further intensification in character areas that were already seeing major development.

Housing Minister Chris Bishop confirmed to RNZ on Friday afternoon the coalition was now considering weakening housing intensification laws in a move that could decrease the 2 million figure.

“The government is considering a range of options around housing capacity targets for Auckland, and as minister of housing I will have more to say soon,” he said.

It was understood this would not affect housing intensification around major public transport hubs, like the Auckland City Rail Link (CRL) that is due to open later this year.

National under Judith Collins’ leadership originally supported the medium-density residential standards, but signalled a backdown under Christopher Luxon, who said changes were needed.

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown. Jessica Hopkins / RNZ

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown said he had not had any direct contact with government ministers recently and certainly had not had any phone calls about scaling back intensification laws.

“Nobody in the government has rung me back and said we’re going to be taking this back… they’re leaking to the press down there in preparation for it, but nobody in the government’s rung me to say that they’re going to do that.”

Brown said he supported intensification and believed there had been “scaremongering and nonsense going on” around the 2 million homes figure.

“I still remain of the view that intensification, where we’ve got good public transport and all of the infrastructure in place already, makes sense.

“I think that some people have oversold the worry about things. The people in those suburbs which [are] apparently upset are already facing rules where every section can have three-storey houses right up to the boundary, which would be a lot worse for them than having a multi-storey one every so often.”

The mayor said he expected to be briefed on any updates when he saw government ministers later this month.

The council’s Policy, Planning and Development Committee chair Richard Hills said he had heard rumours of the government relenting all summer but had “no clarity at all” – and it was unclear how a change would fit into the consultation process.

Richard Hills. LDR/SUPPLIED

“Unless you are spending millions of dollars on putting a new plan out again, I am not sure what the law change the government will be doing would enable… coming in halfway through a process without talking to us, again, leads to even more confusion.”

Another councillor, Christine Fletcher, welcomed the potential change as “the only sensible thing to do”, saying the 2 million extra homes approach was “blunt and ill-considered and it did not take into account physical and social infrastructure”.

“I think that the majority of Aucklanders will welcome this. There will obviously be some activists who will criticise the government… but slow and steady is the way to actually win this particular race.”

She said people were not opposed to intensification, but it had to be done properly.

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Name release: Fatal crash, Hamurana

Source: New Zealand Police

Police can now release the name of the person who died following a crash in Hamurana, Nort of Rotorua on Tuesday 13 January.

He was 21-year-old Te Peeti Melahkai Raki, of Hamilton.

Two people remain in hospital following the crash.

Police are continuing to investigate the crash, and are still seeking any CCTV footage or dashcam video of a silver Lexus sedan, carrying the registration DZS7, on State Highway 1 and State Highway 5, between 4pm and 5:30pm on 13 January.

Anyone with information is asked to make a report online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update Report”, or by calling 105. Please use the reference number 260113/9655.

Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

ENDS

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Homicide investigation launched, Marewa

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute to Detective Inspector Marty James:

Police have launched a homicide investigation following the death of a man in Marewa this morning.

Emergency services were called to Savage Cres just before 11:10am after receiving reports a man had been assaulted.

Upon arrival, the man was located with critical injuries. Despite the best efforts of first responders, he died at the scene a short time after.

A 26-year-old woman was taken into custody at the scene, and is due to appear in the Hastings District Court tomorrow (17 January) charged with murder.

Savage Cres is currently cordoned off while Police conduct a scene examination and work to establish the circumstances leading up to the assault.

ENDS

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Corrections to trial ‘hospital hub’, current model of hospital escorts ‘no longer fit-for-purpose’

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ Herald / Greg Bowker

Corrections are set to trial a pilot for a “hospital hub” with the current model of hospital escorts “no longer fit-for-purpose,” according to the CEO.

The news comes after a prisoner was on the run for more than a week after escaping while in a hospital escort in Auckland.

In an email sent to staff on Friday and seen by RNZ, Department of Corrections chief executive Jeremy Lightfoot said the Director of Physical Health and Chief Nurse within Pae Ora, Ben Storey, had joined Custodial Services for the next 12 months as Corrections Lead of Hospital Hub.

“Those of you who work in custody will know how resource intensive prison escorts to hospitals can be, as well as the risks they can pose. Considerable time is often spent in the Emergency Department or out-patient waiting rooms.”

  • Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

Corrections was also aware that other patients could find it “intimidating” to be next to a person in handcuffs, Lightfoot said.

“The current model for hospital escorts is no longer fit-for-puporse. It’s not good for our custodial officers (the overtime hours required can potentially create a health and safety issue), the people being escorted, or other patients. We need a more coordinated and planned approach to managing prisoners in hospital.”

Department of Corrections chief executive Jeremy Lightfoot RNZ / Diego Opatowski

Storey would be working alongside Custodial and Pae Ora teams as well as external stakeholders “to develop new operating models,” Lightfoot said.

“He’ll be analysing our data to better understand where, why, and for how long our people are in hospital. This will help us build a stronger picture of our resourcing requirements to support hospital escorts.”

There was also the potential to secure a physical location to coordinate teams while based in the hospital.

“The focus will be on ensuring our custodial officers are well resourced and equipped, with the safety of our people and the community prioritised. We are also considering introducing a new roster to manage escorts in a more planned way.”

Lightfoot said it was intended there would be a pilot of a hospital hub at one of the Auckland hospitals.

“Auckland has been chosen given the high number of prisoners across the Auckland-based prisons that can be in hospital at any one time (on some days upwards of 30 Auckland based officers are undertaking escort duties).

“The lessons learned from the pilot will be applicable across the entire network. This is a critical piece of work, and we will keep you posted on progress.”

A Corrections spokesperson told RNZ the work was not connected to any particular incident, and that triaging would still be determined by medical staff at hospitals.

Commissioner of Custodial Services Leigh Marsh said in a statement public safety was the top priority. Each year Corrections carries out tens of thousands of prisoner escorts between prisons, courts, specialist medical facilities and rehabilitation providers, he said.

“Corrections is exploring what improvements can be made to ensure the health and safety of our staff, strengthening our prison operations and maintaining public safety.

“This will involve us looking at data to clearly understand where, why, and for how long prisoners are in hospital. From there we will be looking at whether we need to develop new operating models for our hospital escort process. This will not involve a reduction in the number of staff carrying out hospital escorts.”

Marsh said the purpose was to ensure corrections officers carrying out hospital escorts were well resourced and equipped, with staff and public safety paramount.

“Some of the options to be explored include how we better coordinate services and having a dedicated roster for hospital escorts to reduce the reliance on overtime.

“This work has only just started and Corrections will be working with stakeholders, including our unions on these potential opportunities.”

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Man charged after family harm incident in Masterton

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

Police have arrested a 25-year-old man following a family harm incident in Masterton.

Officers were called to a River Road address late Thursday afternoon and found a woman unconscious and bleeding.

She was taken to Wellington Hospital in a serious condition.

The man was due to appear in Masterton District Court on Friday, charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

“A scene examination is underway at the River Road address and residents can expect to see a continued police presence in the area while further enquiries are made,” Detective Inspector Jamie Woods said.

“We want to reassure the members of our community that there is no risk to public safety following this isolated incident.”

Anyone with information that could help police was urged to contact them via 105, quoting file number 260115/7089, or provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

Family Violence

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Watch: Mourners gather to remember Sir Tim Shadbolt at funeral

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mourners have queued under umbrellas to pay their respects to Sir Tim Shadbolt, whose funeral service begins in Invercargill.

The 78-year-old former mayor of Waitematā and Invercargill died last week.

The funeral service will be held at Invercargill’s Civic Theatre from 2pm with doors open from 1pm. The service will also be livestreamed on the Invercargill City Council’s website.

People gather to pay their respects to Tim Shadbolt. Katie Todd

An RNZ reporter at the service says plenty of people were already lined up outside the theatre before the doors opened at 1pm

After the service, people are expected to line the streets for the funeral procession that will travel via the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal at Invercargill Airport, before a private ceremony at Eastern Cemetery.

Tributes have been flowing in for Sir Tim since his death, describing him as a colourful and charismatic character who championed local politics and his city.

He was made a Knight Companion of New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2019 New Year’s Honours List for his services to local government and the community.

Supplied/LDR – ODT/Stephen Jaquiery

After the service, the funeral procession would leave for the Invercargill Airport – home to the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal, via Tay Street and Clyde Street, before making its way to Eastern Cemetery for a private interment.

Mayor Shadbolt stands in front of his portrait in November, a piece that is titled Seriously. Stephen Jaquiery / ODT

Anyone who wants to pay their respects is invited to line the streets for the procession.

Sir Tim first came into the national spotlight as a student activist in the 1960s, drawing attention to issues including apartheid and the Vietnam War.

He donned the mayoral chains for the first time in Waitematā in 1983, holding them for six years.

He tried his luck again in 1992, standing for mayor in Auckland, Waitākere and Dunedin.

While he was unsuccessful in those races, he breezed into the top job the following year during a by-election in Invercargill.

He also dabbled in national politics, becoming the New Zealand First candidate for the Selwyn by-election in 1994 – less than a day after joining the party.

Sir Tim served in Invercargill until 1995, but was re-elected in 1998 and held onto the mayoral chains until an unsuccessful tilt in 2022.

Tim Shadbolt with a group of protesters outside the Auckland Town Hall in 1973 Te Ara / Public Domain

With the city in decline, he championed the Zero Fees scheme at the Southland Institute of Technology, in a bid to attract more to the south and keep more young people in the region.

Major buildings including Stadium Southland were built during his term, and others including the Civic Theatre were refurbished.

On the screen, he competed on Dancing with the Stars, broke the world record for the longest television interview – just over 26 hours – and made cameo appearances in the 2017 remake of Goodbye Pork Pie and The World’s Fastest Indian.

He became known as the man who put Invercargill on the map, with Invercargill Airport officially naming the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal last year to mark his legacy.

In a statement announcing his passing, his partner Asha Dutt said they lost the cornerstone of their family and the man who devoted himself to promoting Invercargill for almost 30 years.

“Tim was a kind-hearted man who cared deeply about the people around him. He was a champion for the underdog and an active political campaigner from his student days of anti-war protest, his activism for Māori rights, and his fight to keep the Southern Institute of Technology and Zero Fees autonomous.

“Tim will be remembered with gratitude, respect, and affection for his commitment to the south and his passion for life.”

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Could NZ have the best Elvis impersonator in the world?

Source: Radio New Zealand

What began as a casual rendition of ‘Blue Hawaii’ has led Wellington performer Taurean Kenny Mill to a win at the Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist’s preliminary round.

One of the region’s youngest Elvis tribute artists, Mill took home the honour last week in Australia and will travel to the USA later this year for the semi-final.

Growing up, Elvis was always part of the soundtrack at his home. Mill’s family were fans, but it wasn’t until a casual karaoke session that his path crystallised. After hearing the then 17-year-old sing, established Elvis tribute artist John Lancaster suggested he “do some more Elvis”.

For the next year or so, Lancaster trained Mill toward the Elvis Down Under competition at Upper Hutt’s Cosmopolitan Club.

Becoming Elvis requires mastering the physical vocabulary – the mannerisms, the choreography, the vocal flourishes – alongside the look, he says.

While many newcomers opt for the early rockabilly era, Mill has thrown himself headfirst into Elvis’s 1970s period. The pros tell him it’s a bold choice for a first-timer.

“The voice is definitely up there, it’s the top mark in the judging sheets, and mannerisms and choreography – that’s sort of my big three,” he says.

“So I sing from my stomach, maybe tuck a bit of chin in and try to get that sort of muffled Elvis sound. That’s just sort of a technique that I do.”

Even walking into the RNZ studio, Mill arrives in full character. He’s dressed in a lava-red puff shirt beneath a black jacket – something, he says, Elvis might have worn before heading onstage – paired with flared bell-bottoms, boots, and replica rings. Among them is a copy of the four-leaf clover ring Elvis famously wore during the final year of his performing life.

Mill has his costumes shipped from Canada, though his ultimate ambition is to source replicas from an American store that once designed outfits for the King of Rock ’n’ Roll himself.

Along the way, he’s found camaraderie within the tribute circuit.

“It’s actually quite a big brotherhood – a lot of us Elvis guys together. Everyone’s very supportive of each other.”

The Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist semi-final round is set for August this year in Memphis, Tennessee.

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

Man arrested following family harm incident, Wairarapa

Source: New Zealand Police

A 25-year-old man has been arrested following a family harm incident in Masterton on Thursday.

Police were called to the River Road address at around 5pm.

Detective Inspector Jamie Woods says upon arrival, a female was located unconscious and bleeding. She was transported to Wellington Hospital in a serious condition.

“The 25-year-old is due to appear in the Masterton District Court today (16 January) charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

“A scene examination is underway at the River Road address and residents can expect to see a continued Police presence in the area while further enquiries are made.

We want to reassure the members of our community that there is no risk to public safety following this isolated incident.”

Police are not seeking anybody else in relation to this incident.

If anyone has information that could assist our investigation, please contact Police via 105, either over the phone or online at 105.police.govt.nz.

Please quote the file number 260115/7089.

Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

ENDS

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