Authorisation under regulation 12(b) of the Cremation Regulations 1973 to authorise Medical Referees to permit cremations to be carried out without complying with Regulation 7

Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

Publication date:

Summary

This notice authorises Medical Referees to permit cremations to be carried out without complying with the requirement in regulation 7(1) of the cremation regulations for a medical or nurse practitioner to complete form AB or to see and identify the body after death for the purpose of completing form B in situations when:

  1. the death is not unexpected; and
  2. the medical history and current conditions of the decease are known by a medical or nurse practitioner undertaking their role in accordance with section 46B(2) or 46B(3) of the Burial and Cremation Act (the Act); and
  3. the deceased had been a resident in one of the following settings prior to their death, where a registered nurse is available on site:
    • residential care facilities
    • rest homes,
    • other long term-in-patient facilities.

This authorisation comes into force on 1 January 2026 and will expire on 30 April 2026.

Further guidance can be found on the Health New Zealand website.

Text of authorisation notice

  1. Pursuant to regulation 12(b) of the Cremation Regulations 1973 (the Regulations), I, Hon Matt Doocey, Associate Minister of Health, for the reason of there being a shortage in the medical workforce servicing aged residential care settings, authorise Medical Referees to permit cremations to be carried out without complying with the requirement in regulation 7(1) for a medical practitioner or nurse practitioner to complete form AB or to see and identify the body after death for the purpose of completing form B in situations when:
    1. the death is not unexpected; and
    2. the medical history and current conditions of the deceased are known by a medical or nurse practitioner undertaking their role in accordance with section 46B(2) or 46B(3) of the Burial and Cremation Act 1964 (the Act); and
    3. the deceased had been a resident in one of the following settings prior to their death, where a registered nurse is available on site:
      • Residential care facilities,
      • Rest homes,
      • Other long term-in-patient facilities.
  2. This authorisation is subject to the following conditions:
    1. the Medical Referee must receive advice from a trusted source who has seen the body and has a reasonable level of assurance of the cause of death; and
    2. the Medical Referee must record the identity, contact details and occupation of the trusted source; and
    3. the trusted source must verify:
      1. The identify of the deceased; and
      2. That the deceased died of natural causes; and
    4. the Cremation Authority must confirm whether there is a biomechanical aid in the body.
  3. For the avoidance of doubt, this authorisation does not exempt a medical practitioner or nurse practitioner from their performing their obligations under section 46B of the Act.
  4. The authorisation comes into force on 1 January 2026 and will expire on 30 April 2026.

Dated at Wellington this 18th day of November 2025

Hon Matt Doocey
Associate Minister of Health

Minimum legislative information

Title Authorisation under the Cremation Regulations 1973
Empowering Act and provisions   The cremation regulations are made under Burial and Cremation Act 1964. Under regulation 12b of the Cremation Regulations, the Minister of Health may in the event of an epidemic or for other sufficient reason, permit cremations to be carried out, or authorise Medical Referees to permit cremations to be carried out, in any place, without complying to regulation 7 of the Cremation Regulations.
Replacement empowering Act and provisions N/A
Maker name Minister of Health
Administering agency Ministry of Health
Date made 18 November 2025
Publication date 1 January 2026
Notification date Not notified
Commencement date 1 January 2026
End date (when applicable) 30 April 2026
Instrument classification Principal 

Wild weather hasn’t dampened NZ’s New Year celebrations

Source: Radio New Zealand

Fireworks at the Sky Tower in Auckland at midnight. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

New Year’s celebrations are well underway – despite the dreary weather in many regions.

Christchurch children have been the first to welcome the New Year, with a mock countdown with confetti cannons at 7pm at North Hagley Park.

The alcohol-free event included performances by headline act Kora and DJs, before what was described as an “epic” fireworks display.

Dunedin was embracing its Scottish heritage, with a piper to see in the New Year at a party in the Octagon.

In Auckland, half a tonne of fireworks launched from the Sky Tower for New Year.

Six months of planning and design work took just five minutes to show off when 3500 individual shots were launched at midnight.

Another severe thunderstorm warning that had been issued for areas around Auckland ended at 10pm.

The storms, with very heavy rain, were detected around just after 5.50pm on Wednesday, mainly in areas north-west of the city

“When it comes to lightning or thunder we just hold off for a little bit longer, but when it comes to 12 midnight we have to fire,” Rob McDermott from Pyrostar International earlier told RNZ.

SkyCity warned in advance that it had plans if wind speeds exceeded safety limits, but McDermott was confident they would not be needed.

“The forecast is saying that this rain is going to stop a couple of hours before midnight, the wind is dropping, it already has dropped, this morning it was about 40km/h and at the moment it’s around 20 or 25, we’ve got a limit around about 30km.

“So we’re going to be well and truly within that limit and we will fire at midnight,” McDermott said.

But there were things to see before then.

For the first time, photos of special moments through the year sent in by the public were shown on the tower in the hours before.

“From milestone birthdays to first smiles, the images capture the moments that shaped 2025 and highlight what mattered most,” SkyCity said.

As the photos were projected, the final testing of the fireworks got underway.

The final work was done from early Wednesday morning until mid-afternoon.

“We had a team of five pyrotechnicians and eight from SkyCity riggers helping us up there so everything is preloaded on the ground and then we take it up in the morning,’ McDermott said.

It had involved 1.6 tonnes of equipment and 14 kilometres of cabling.

“Not a bad morning’s work,” McDermott said.

He said the world was watching at midnight and nothing could go wrong.

“We’ll head up there about 9 o’clock and we’ll just check the coverings and we’ll retest so we can retest all the electrical circuits.”

The Sky Tower lights up for New Year’s Eve. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

Not just the Sky Tower

Auckland’s Harbour Bridge also burst into life at 9pm, with a brand new, dynamic light and sound show in the minutes before midnight.

“Roaming performers” would also feature along Queenstreet and the waterfront ahead of the clock ticking over.

Roads in the central city around the Sky Tower and Wynyard Quarter were closed from 10pm-1am.

The Wynyard Quarter pedestrian bridge was also upright, with no pedestrian access, from 11.45pm-12.15am.

NYE crowds in central Wellington. RNZ / Ruth Hill

‘Courtenay Carnival’

Further south, New Year celebrations in Wellington also went off with a bang, despite the dreary weather.

Courtenay Place, the capital’s entertainment strip, had been transformed into “Courtenay Carnival” for the evening, with multiple stages showcasing live performances, street eats and parades.

The area between Cambridge Terrace and Tory Street, including parts of Blair and Allen Streets was closed to vehicles, with Wellington City Council encouraging people to walk, bike or use public transport to attend the festivities.

Courtenay Carnival, earlier in the evening. RNZ / Barry Guy

The waterfront was the setting for the main event, with covers band Electric Avenue kicking off the entertainment at Whairepo Lagoon at 8pm and the Kids Countdown and fireworks at 9.30pm.

Orchestra Wellington took to the stage at 10pm, ahead of the countdown to 2026 and fireworks at midnight.

Steve and Vanya were seeing in the new year in the capital.

“Hopes and dreams for 2026 really is just, like, everybody just needs to calm the farm and, you know, be a bit more chill and kind to each other,” Steve said.

Vanya agreed: “Kind to each other, that’s the one, yeah.”

New Year’s Eve celebrations in central Wellington. RNZ / Ruth Hill

Other revellers on the streets of the capital were also happy to share their hopes for the new year.

“Hopeful for happy kids, more grandchildren and love. Keeping strong friendship relations going well, solid foundation with hubby,” a woman said.

“Oh, just carry on being cool and having fun and yeah, nothing major, staying alive,” one man told RNZ.

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

Wild weather won’t dampen NZ’s New Year celebrations

Source: Radio New Zealand

NYE crowds in central Wellington. RNZ / Ruth Hill

With less than two hours left of 2025, New Year’s celebrations are well underway – despite the dreary weather in many regions.

Christchurch children have been the first to welcome the New Year, with a mock countdown with confetti cannons at 7pm at North Hagley Park.

The alcohol-free event includes performances by headline act Kora and DJs, before what’s described as an “epic” fireworks display.

Dunedin is embracing its Scottish heritage, with a piper to see in the New Year at the party in the Octagon.

In Auckland, half a tonne of fireworks are set to launch from the Sky Tower for New Year.

Six months of planning and design work will take just five minutes to show off when 3500 individual shots are launched at midnight.

But another severe thunderstorm warning has been issued for areas around Auckland, which is set to end at 10pm.

The storms, with very heavy rain, were detected around just after 5.50pm on Wednesday, mainly in areas north-west of the city

“When it comes to lightning or thunder we just hold off for a little bit longer, but when it comes to 12 midnight we have to fire,” Rob McDermott from Pyrostar International told RNZ.

SkyCity warned in advance that it had plans if wind speeds exceed safety limits, but McDermott was confident they would not be needed.

“The forecast is saying that this rain is going to stop a couple of hours before midnight, the wind is dropping, it already has dropped, this morning it was about 40km/h and at the moment it’s around 20 or 25, we’ve got a limit around about 30km.

“So we’re going to be well and truly within that limit and we will fire at midnight,” McDermott said.

But there are things to see before then.

For the first time, photos of special moments through the year sent in by the public will be shown on the tower in the hours before.

“From milestone birthdays to first smiles, the images capture the moments that shaped 2024 and highlight what mattered most,” SkyCity said.

As the photos are projected, the final testing of the fireworks gets underway.

The final work was done from early Wednesday morning until mid-afternoon, with just the last tests to go.

“We had a team of five pyrotechnicians and eight from SkyCity riggers helping us up there so everything is preloaded on the ground and then we take it up in the morning,’ McDermott.

It’s involved 1.6 tonnes of equipment and 14 kilometres of cabling.

“Not a bad morning’s work,” McDermott said.

He said the world was watching at midnight and nothing could go wrong.

“We’ll head up there about 9 o’clock and we’ll just check the coverings and we’ll retest so we can retest all the electrical circuits.”

Not just the Sky Tower

Auckland’s Harbour Bridge also bursts into life at 9pm, with a promise of a band new dynamic light and sound show in the minutes before midnight.

“Roaming performers” will also feature along Queenstreet and the waterfront ahead of the clock ticking over.

Roads in the central city around the Sky Tower and Wynyard Quarter will be closed from 10pm-1am.

The Wynyard Quarter pedestrian bridge will also be upright, with no pedestrian access, from 11.45pm-12.15am.

‘Courtenay Carnival’

Further south, New Year celebrations in Wellington are also set to go off with a bang, despite the dreary weather.

In the capital, the Kids’ Countdown has just finished at Whairepo Lagoon, with a short burst of fireworks.

Orchestra Wellington is due to take the stage now, ahead of the countdown and major fireworks display at midnight.

Courtenay Place, the capital’s entertainment strip, has been transformed into “Courtenay Carnival” for the evening, with multiple stages showcasing live performances, street eats and parades.

The area between Cambridge Terrace and Tory Street, including parts of Blair and Allen Streets is closed to vehicles, with Wellington City Council encouraging people to walk, bike or use public transport to attend the festivities.

The waterfront is the setting for the main event, with covers band Electric Avenue kicking off the entertainment at Whairepo Lagoon at 8pm and the Kids Countdown and fireworks at 9.30pm.

Orchestra Wellington takes to the stage at 10pm, ahead of the countdown to 2026 and fireworks at midnight.

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

How this clever film proves romance isn’t about choosing ‘the one’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Opinion – In the new rom-com Eternity, Joan (Elizabeth Olsen) faces an impossible choice: spend forever with the steady husband she’s loved for years, or reunite with the dreamy first husband she married back in her carefree youth.

In this afterlife, everyone gets one shot at choosing where – and with whom – they’ll spend eternity, guided (and occasionally harassed) by an overworked Afterlife Coordinator on a strict deadline. Once the decision is made, it’s final. A few souls try to wriggle out of their choice, but escapees are hunted down and flung into the void. Not a place where anyone wants to be.

Joan can pick the dependable but unglamorous Larry (Miles Teller) or her youthful love, Luke (Callum Turner) who died a war hero. Everyone in this post-life holding area is restored to the physical age when they were happiest. Troublingly for Larry, Joan is the age she was when she married Luke, and when she kissed him goodbye before his fateful posting overseas.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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

18 Māori recognised for 2026 in New Year Honours list

Source: Radio New Zealand

Professor Thomas Charles Roa has become a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori language and education RNZ / Pokere Paewai

The Minister for Māori Development is praising those named on the New Year Honours list.

Eighteen Māori have been recognised for 2026, and include Companions, Officers, and Members of the New Zealand Order of Merit, as well as recipients of the King’s Service Order and Medal.

Tama Potaka, who is also the Minister for Māori Crown Relations, said they demonstrate deep and enduring commitment to Māori advancement and community leadership across Aotearoa.

“I’m particularly inspired and motivated by those Māori leaders and people working in the iwi, hapū and whānau space who are doing some wonderful work in maintaining and uplifting our identity, but also continuing our traditions and our tikanga through to our mokopuna,” he said.

Minister for Māori Crown Relations Tama Potaka RNZ / Mark Papalii

However, Potaka said they did not work alone.

“I think it’s wonderful that we’ve been able to honour and recognise people through this New Year’s list, and no doubt there will be further worthy people that are honoured and awarded in the King’s Birthday list coming up in six months, but for this moment, just to reflect on and thank the many recipients of honours and recognition for their contributions to their own whānau, and particularly for New Zealand as a whole.

“I do also recognise that within nearly everybody that’s been awarded an honour and award today and recognised for their massive contribution, there are often wives and husbands and children and parents and spouses and cousins that are behind them, and whilst individuals do get awards and recognition, often that comes with stronger whānau and stronger communities behind them.”

Renowned Māori academic appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit

Professor Thomas Charles Roa has become a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori language and education.

Tom Roa, who is a Professor of Māori and Indigenous Studies at the University of Waikato, has been a tireless advocate for te reo Māori.

Professor Thomas Charles Roa Supplied

He is a founder of Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori movement in the 1970s.

His leadership has shaped Māori language revitalisation and educational excellence, Potaka said.

Roa said he was honoured to be recognised, but should not be the only one.

“There are so many people who have been a part of my journey,” he said.

“I enjoy that saying, ‘I see as far as I can see because I stand on the shoulders of giants.’ I’ve had the pleasure of being mentored, being taught, and learning at the feet of giants.

“One in particular, who I think should have been made a Sir, is Koro Wētere.

“I’ve also spent time with people like Sir Pita Sharples, Sir Tīmoti Kāretu, and Dame Pania Tyson-Nathan, who I very much look up to, and I like to think that I follow their example.”

Māori leadership, language, and service recognised

Rod Drury has become a Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to business, the technology industry, and philanthropy.

Supplied

Leith Pirika Comer has become a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori, governance, and education.

Rachel Emere Taulelei has become a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to business, Māori, and governance.

Professor Beverley-Anne Lawton has become a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to women’s health.

Christina Cowan has become an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori, particularly blind and low vision people.

Te Warihi Kokowai Hetaraka has become an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori and art.

Waihoroi Paraone Hoterene has become an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori and Māori language education.

Roger Bruce Douglas Drummond has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to rugby and Māori.

Dr Lorraine Shirley Eade has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori, governance and the community.

Hori Te Moanaroa Parata has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to conservation and Māori.

Andrew Ruawhitu Pokaia has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori and education.

Arihia Amiria Stirling has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to education and Māori.

Kāren Eirene Johnson has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to education and human rights.

Gail Henrietta Maria Thompson has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori and conservation.

Helena Audrey Tuteao has become a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to people with disabilities and Māori.

Mark Joseph Harawira has become a Companion of the King’s Service Order for services to Māori education, arts and conservation.

Bonita Joanne Bigham has received the King’s Service Medal for services to local government and Māori.

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

Mega strike, police scandals and bye-bye Census: The biggest stories from 2025

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ’s biggest news stories 2025. RNZ / Quin Tauetau

The year 2025 felt like the year of the strikes.

Over the past 12 months, we saw an abundance of industrial action across the public sector, including one of the largest strikes in New Zealand history.

Geopolitical tensions, weather extremes and contentious policy changes also dominated the headlines.

Scandals rocked the police force, free school lunches were criticised, and New Zealand said good-bye to seven decades of the Census.

Here are some of the biggest stories that made headlines around the country:

The disgraced former top cop and a police cover-up

Former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming had a dramatic fall from grace, but not without taking several top cops with him.

The first signs of trouble emerged in December last year when media reported McSkimming was on leave amid separate investigations by police and the Independent Police Conduct Authority.

The investigations related to allegations of sexual misconduct by McSkimming from a former non-sworn female police employee.

Police then began a second criminal investigation related to McSkimming’s use of his work electronic devices, which were discovered during the initial investigation.

After being placed on leave at the end of 2024, McSkimming resigned in May before he could be dismissed, following recent allegations of ‘a very serious nature’.

In August, the media revealed McSkimming was facing eight charges of possessing objectionable publications, including child sexual exploitation and bestiality material over a four-year period.

He pleaded guilty and was sentenced in December to nine months’ home detention.

But the troubles didn’t stop there.

A damning report by the Independent Police Conduct Authority was dropped in November, finding serious misconduct at the highest levels of police over how they handled accusations of sexual offending by McSkimming.

The allegations arose from an affair between McSkimming and a woman who was a non-sworn police employee at the time.

Jevon McSkimming and Andrew Coster. RNZ

The IPCA report said when police did eventually refer the woman’s claims to the authority, several months after it was recommended, they do so, senior police attempted to influence the investigation.

The fallout was widespread and included resignations from former top cops and public apologies.

School lunches fiasco

The government’s cuts to the free school lunches have been a topic in the media all year.

Schools, students and parents have complained about lunches being late, too hot or too gross.

If that wasn’t enough, Libelle Group, the major provider of the school lunches, was placed into liquidation in March.

The school lunches seemed to quieten down in the news until the start of December, when a school complained they received mouldy meals. After a week of back-and-forth between the school, the lunch provider, and Minister responsible for the lunches, David Seymour, NZ Food Safety found that the rotten lunches were most likely caused by a mix-up by the school.

The lunches a Whangarei school received with their packaging already coming off and burnt. Supplied

Trump Tariffs

This year, US President Donald Trump sent the world into a frenzy after announcing “reciprocal” tariffs on nations worldwide, sparking trade wars and causing turmoil in global stock markets.

Each nation received a tariff number that will apply to most goods. New Zealand initially received a baseline tariff of 10 percent; however, that was increased to 15 percent in August. However, there are some exemptions.

US President Donald Trump holds up a chart while speaking during a “Make America Wealthy Again” trade announcement event at the White House on 2 April, 2025 in Washington, DC. CHIP SOMODEVILLA / Getty Images via AFP

Tom Phillips and the Marokopa children are found

An investigation that not only gripped the nation but made waves across the world was the search for Tom Phillips and his children.

For four years, the group evaded authorities in the dense bush of the rural community of Marokopa.

On 8 September, it all came to an end when Phillips was killed in an early morning shootout with police. His children were safely found in a remote campground.

One of the campsites where Tom Phillips and his children lived. RNZ / Supplied / Police

Gaza ceasefire

Almost exactly two years after the Gaza war began, a ceasefire was reached.

The truce stopped two years of devastating warfare in Gaza triggered by the 7 October, 2023 attack in which Hamas-led gunmen killed and took Israeli hostages, escalating the unresolved conflict in the Middle East.

The fragile ceasefire has seen Israeli hostages released and detained Palestinians freed.

However, it hasn’t stopped the humanitarian crisis in Gaza as the population faces high levels of food insecurity, made worse by winter storms.

A new displacement camp set up by the Egyptian Committee in Nuseirat, Gaza Strip on 11 November 2025. AFP / Eyad Baba

Te Pāti Māori

This year, Te Pāti Māori has been riddled with internal conflict, resulting in the party ousting one-third of its caucus.

The party was a smashing success last election, growing its caucus from two to six members and claiming all but one of the Māori seats.

In June, Parliament dealt its harshest ever punishment by suspending co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer for 21 days, and Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke for seven.

The trio were sanctioned for their haka during the first reading of the Treaty Principles Bill in November 2024.

Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

Then, later in the year, allegations of intimidation and financial mismanagement exposed rifts within the party.

It resulted in the party expelling MPs Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris, only to later reinstate Kapa-Kingi after she applied for a temporary court order.

The death of Pope Francis

Pope Francis, the 266th head of the Catholic Church, died aged 88 on 21 April.

He died of a stroke and heart failure, following a long illness.

Pope Francis died aged 88 on 21 April 2025. MARIKA KHABAZI / RNZ

Cardinal Robert Prevost was elected in a surprise choice to be the new leader of the Catholic Church in May, taking the name Leo XIV, and becoming the first US pontiff.

Mega strike

This year has seen an abundance of strikes, from healthcare workers, teachers, firefighters, to journalists, many Kiwis have walked off the job seeking better pay and working conditions.

In the last 12 months, there’s been a swathe of industrial action, including a megastrike – one of the largest strikes in New Zealand’s history.

Protesters take part in October 2025’s ‘mega strike’ in Auckland. Marika Khabazi / RNZ

The industrial action in October involved of more than 100,000 primary and secondary teachers, primary principals, teacher aides, nurses, doctors, ACC workers, and other healthcare workers.

There has been some progress, but many major disputes remain unresolved and a significant number of pay negotiations are due to kick off in the New Year.

After 70 years, the Census has been scrapped

For many decades, one night every five years, every person in this country was asked to pick up a pen and answer a series of questions about themselves and the house they lived in.

The Census – a survey that attempts to count every single person in a population – has offered fascinating insights into New Zealand’s changing face over the years.

But 2023 has turned out to be the last year that the government will ask every person in the country to participate in the Census. The government announced the end of the Census, which had existed for 70 years, in June.

It will be replaced with a combination of administrative data from other government agencies and smaller annual surveys that a sample of the population will complete.

The Census – a survey that attempts to count every single person in a population – has offered fascinating insights into New Zealand’s changing face over the years. RNZ

Bondi terror attack

In December, Australia saw its deadliest terror incident and the second-deadliest mass shooting in modern Australian history.

On 14 December, two gunmen opened fire on Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, targeting a Hanukkah celebration.

The gunmen shot at the crowd, killing 15 people, the youngest being a 10-year-old girl.

One of the gunmen died at the scene, and his son – the other gunman – was taken to the hospital and charged with 59 offences, including one terrorist act and 15 counts of murder.

Police and Australian intelligence agencies declared it an Islamic State-linked terrorist incident.

Mourners gather by floral tributes at the Bondi Pavilion in memory of the victims of a shooting at Bondi Beach on 15 December. AFP / Saeed Khan

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

Wild weather won’t dampen Auckland’s New Year fireworks

Source: Radio New Zealand

Fireworks from the 2023 display. BBC screenshot

Half a tonne of fireworks set to launch from the Sky Tower for New Year in Auckland are being put through their final paces.

Six months of planning and design work will take just five minutes to show off when 3500 individual shots are launched at midnight.

But another severe thunderstorm warning has been issued for areas around Auckland, which is set to end at 10pm.

The storms, with very heavy rain, were detected around just after 5.50pm on Wednesday, mainly in areas north-west of the city

“When it comes to lightning or thunder we just hold off for a little bit longer, but when it comes to 12 midnight we have to fire,” Rob McDermott from Pyrostar International told RNZ.

SkyCity warned in advance that it had plans if wind speeds exceed safety limits, but McDermott was confident they would not be needed.

“The forecast is saying that this rain is going to stop a couple of hours before midnight, the wind is dropping, it already has dropped, this morning it was about 40km/h and at the moment it’s around 20 or 25, we’ve got a limit around about 30km.

“So we’re going to be well and truly within that limit and we will fire at midnight,” McDermott said.

But there are things to see before then.

For the first time, photos of special moments through the year sent in by the public will be shown on the tower in the hours before.

“From milestone birthdays to first smiles, the images capture the moments that shaped 2024 and highlight what mattered most,” SkyCity said.

As the photos are projected, the final testing of the fireworks gets underway.

The final work was done from early Wednesday morning until mid-afternoon, with just the last tests to go.

“We had a team of five pyrotechnicians and eight from SkyCity riggers helping us up there so everything is preloaded on the ground and then we take it up in the morning,’ McDermott.

It’s involved 1.6 tonnes of equipment and 14 kilometres of cabling.

“Not a bad morning’s work,” McDermott said.

He said the world was watching at midnight and nothing could go wrong.

“We’ll head up there about 9 o’clock and we’ll just check the coverings and we’ll retest so we can retest all the electrical circuits.”

Not just the Sky Tower

Auckland’s Harbour Bridge also bursts into life at 9pm, with a promise of a band new dynamic light and sound show in the minutes before midnight.

“Roaming performers” will also feature along Queenstreet and the waterfront ahead of the clock ticking over.

Roads in the central city around the Sky Tower and Wynyard Quarter will be closed from 10pm-1am.

The Wynyard Quarter pedestrian bridge will also be upright, with no pedestrian access, from 11.45pm-12.15am.

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

Police dog and handler injured in Whangārei while pursuing suspects

Source: Radio New Zealand

A police dog and handler have been injured in Whangārei. RNZ / REECE BAKER

A police dog and its handler have been injured on Wednesday afternoon while pursuing suspects in Whangārei.

Northland District Commander Superintendent Matthew Srhoj said “a vehicle of interest” was stopped just after 2pm.

“The driver has taken off and police followed at road speed to [the suburb of] Tikipunga where the vehicle was abandoned and occupants fled on foot.”

Several police teams were involved in tracking them, including a dog unit.

“Unfortunately a police dog and its handler both suffered minor injuries but are on the mend.”

Four people were arrested, including a 19-year-old, who is facing driving charges, and a 48-year-old man, who is charged with obstruction.

Two youths have been referred to Youth Aid.

Police said enquiries were “ongoing”.

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

Auckland motorway reopens after crash closes road for most of afternoon

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

The southbound lane of State Highway One near Takanini was closed following a crash between a car and a motorbike for several hours n Wednesday afternoon.

Police said early indication suggests one person has been seriously injured in the crash at about 12.30pm.

The lanes between Hill Road and Takanini were closed, but reopened shortly before 6pm.

However heavy traffic is still causing significant delays.

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

‘The Wire’ actor Isiah Whitlock Jr. dies aged 71

Source: Radio New Zealand

Isiah Whitlock Jr., whose singular delivery of a tagline in The Wire gave the world one of the most iconic phrases of the century, has died at the age of 71.

Whitlock “passed away today peacefully in NYC after a brave battle with a short illness”, his manager, Brian Liebman, told CNN. “Isiah was a brilliant actor and even better person.”

Whitlock had a storied career spanning more than three decades in both TV and film. He appeared in a number of Spike Lee movies, including Da 5 Bloods, BlacKkKlansman and The 25th Hour.

He got his start in TV on Cagney & Lacey in the 1980s and went on to appear often in police procedurals, from Law & Order to NYPD Blue. Most recently on TV, Whitlock played a police chief on The Residence, a Netflix murder mystery starring Uzo Aduba.

Whitlock will be most remembered for his unforgettable role in The Wire, David Simon’s HBO crime drama, which is widely recognised as one of the best series of all time.

Whitlock appeared on all five seasons of the show as R. Clayton “Clay” Davis, a crooked Maryland state senator. He quickly became known for his unique reaction to events, delivering an elongated “s**t” that catapulted straight into the American lexicon.

Whitlock reveled in the attention that his delivery received. “I was in, I think, Grand Central Station and far away I heard someone say it and they’d be kind of smiling,” he told an interviewer in 2008. “I’m glad people enjoy it.”

In 2014, he started a YouTube series teaching people how they, too, could perfectly say it. Whitlock said he got the phrase from his late uncle Leon, who delivered it in a way that would always make people laugh.

“Do I get tired of it? No,” he told the AP in 2020. “If it makes you feel good, so be it,” he said with a smile.

Whitlock also had a recurring role on Veep, playing General George Maddox, a defense secretary who toys with a primary run against Vice President Selina Meyer, played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Whitlock grew up in Indiana, the fifth of 10 children, and studied at the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco before moving to New York, where he lived for decades.

“He was loved by all who had the pleasure to work with or know him,” his manager said. “He will be greatly missed.”

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