Name release: Fatal crash, Napier

Source: New Zealand Police

Police can now name the man who died in hospital after being struck by a car on McGrath Street, Napier, on 26 December.

He was Carl Louis Duncan. Our thoughts are with his family and loved ones during this difficult time.

Enquiries into the circumstances of the incident are ongoing and Police are still wanting to speak with any witnesses, or people who provided assistance to Mr Duncan before emergency services arrived.

If you can help, please contact Police via 105 and quote file number 251227/1644.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre. 

Auckland Southern Motorway, Randwick Park blocked

Source: New Zealand Police

The southbound lane of Auckland’s Southern Motorway at Randwick Park is blocked between Hill Road and Takanini following a crash this afternoon.

Police were called to a collision involving a car and a motorbike around 12.30pm today.

Early indications are that one person has been seriously injured.

Emergency services are still at the scene.

Diversions are in place and motorists are advised there will be delays in the area.

Nominations open for new election in Papatoetoe subdivision

Source: Radio New Zealand

An Auckland judge had upheld a petition in the Manukau District Court calling for a judicial inquiry following allegations of fraud in an Auckland local body election RNZ / Liu Chen

Nominations are open for a new election in an Auckland local body after previous results have been voided by a judge.

In December, Judge Richard McIlraith in the Manukau District Court voided October’s election results for the Papatoetoe subdivision of the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board after ruling there were irregularities.

His inquiry identified 79 voting papers cast without voters’ knowledge.

The Auckland Council said nominations for a new election were open until midday 28 January, with four seats to be filled.

Voting will be open in March and results will be announced in April.

To be nominated, candidates must be eligible to stand as at 1 August 2025, the date of the close of nominations for the now voided election, according to the council.

Candidates must also be New Zealand citizens, 18 years of age or over, on the New Zealand electoral roll, and have signatures from two voters enrolled in the Papatoetoe subdivision area, it said.

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

SH1 bridge blocked in Canterbury after crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Patrice Allen

The Rakaia Bridge at State Highway 1 in Canterbury is blocked following a crash.

Emergency services were called to the crash involving a truck and a car about 12.40pm.

Police said no injuries had been reported.

“The bridge is expected to be blocked for sometime while emergency services work at the scene,” police said.

“Motorists are advised to avoid the area where possible and expect delays.”

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

Rakaia Bridge blocked, SH 1, Bankside

Source: New Zealand Police

The Rakaia Bridge, State Highway 1, Bankside is blocked following a crash this afternoon.

Police were called to the two-vehicle crash, involving a car and a truck, around 12:40pm.

Thankfully, no injuries have been reported.

The bridge is expected to be blocked for sometime while emergency services work at the scene.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area where possible and expect delays.

ENDS

ManageMyHealth investigating possible cyber breach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied

The personal health portal ManageMyHealth is investigating reports of a cyber breach.

The service connects patients with clinicians and allows people to access their medical records.

ManageMyHealth said it was aware of claims that had been made online of a cyber breach and was working with its partners and the relevant authorities to investigate them.

It said it would provide updates when further information was available.

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

Police locate firearm and drugs during routine traffic stop, Kawakawa, Far North

Source: New Zealand Police

Police have arrested and charged a man after a routine traffic stop led to locating a firearm, ammunition, methamphetamine, another offensive weapon, and drug paraphernalia.

On Tuesday 30 December, around 10.10pm, Police clocked a vehicle exceeding the 50km/h speed limit on State Highway 11, Kawakawa.

The vehicle was subsequently stopped by officers, who found that the vehicle had been reported stolen the week prior.

Upon speaking with the driver, he advised Police of a firearm that was in the vehicle which resulted in officers conducting a warrantless search.

During the search, officers located and seized a firearm, ammunition, methamphetamine, another offensive weapon, and drug paraphernalia.

A 24-year-old man was arrested and has been remanded in custody, due to re-appear in Kaikohe District Court on 13 January 2026.

He is facing charges of unlawfully possessing a firearm and ammunition, possessing methamphetamine and utensils for using methamphetamine, possessing an offensive weapon, possessing opiates, and receiving stolen property.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

Can the ‘Scandinavian sleep method’ help couples find peace?

Source: Radio New Zealand

It begins with two people, one blanket, and two very different ideas of what’s a comfortable sleeping temperature. By midnight, one partner is hot and sweaty while the other is freezing. Sounds familiar? You’re not alone.

It’s no wonder many couples are curious about the “Scandinavian sleep method”, which is having a moment on social media.

But what is it? And could it end your nightly drama as TikTok suggests?

With the Scandinavian sleep method, each person can choose the type and amount of bedding that suits them best.

Giulia Squillace

What is the Scandinavian sleep method?

This is a sleeping arrangement for couples who share a bed. But rather than sharing bedding, each has their own blanket or duvet.

This allows couples to continue sleeping together while meeting each person’s individual needs. It offers a balance between sleeping together and sleeping apart.

As the name suggests, the Scandinavian sleep method is said to be popular in Scandinavian countries. It reflects the preferences of many couples who value both intimacy (sharing a bed) and personal sleep comfort (their own blanket or doona).

Now many couples from non-Scandinavian countries say trying the Scandinavian sleep method has been a game-changer for their sleep.

Does it really work?

Most research on how couples sleep focuses on broader factors. These include the sleep environment (whether it’s safe, quiet or dark), temperature and routines, rather than whether couples share a blanket.

In the absence of research specifically testing “two blankets vs one blanket”, it is hard to check if the Scandinavian sleep method is scientifically valid.

However, this method has many aspects that align with healthy sleep practices. So there’s reasonable evidence to suggest it could reduce the type of sleep disturbances you can get from sharing a blanket with your partner.

‘I’m hot, you’re cold’

The body’s internal clock manages daily rhythms in core body temperature, which drops when you fall asleep. And different bedding materials can influence your sleep by affecting your skin and body temperature.

For instance, different fibre types can affect how quickly you fall asleep or the amount of deep sleep you get. Blankets that are too hot and raise your body temperature can also affect your sleep.

But nighttime body temperature patterns can vary with age, body composition, hormones, and whether you’re a morning or evening person. These contribute to whether you’re a hot sleeper or a cold sleeper, and can explain why you need different types of bedding from your partner.

Hot sleepers generally prefer lightweight, breathable fabrics, whereas cold sleepers tend towards heavier, insulating fabrics that trap heat.

Individuals may also prefer different bedding for other reasons. Someone with heightened sensory awareness or skin sensitivities might favour more natural, smooth fibres. Or they may opt for weighted blankets to provide a calming effect that helps reduce anxiety or sensory processing issues.

With the Scandinavian sleep method, each person can choose the type of bedding that suits them best.

Read more: What are cooling blankets? Can they really help me sleep?

‘My feet are cold’

For female-male bed partners, gender differences in nighttime core body temperature patterns can lead to one person shivering while the other sweats under the same cover.

Women’s hands and feet often have lower skin temperatures, as their body prioritises keeping their internal organs warm. This can explain why women might want to tuck their hands and feet in under the doona or blanket, while their male partner is happy to stick theirs out.

Women may also reach their lowest nighttime body temperature earlier in the night than men. As women age and transition to menopause, they might experience hot flushes and night sweats, which often disturb sleep.

These differences in temperature regulation mean men and women usually have varying preferences for their ideal temperature for sleeping.

‘I was almost asleep!’

If you have insomnia, your sleep can be disturbed by your partner’s noise or movement. Your sleep can also be disturbed by your partner’s influence over the sleep environment – whether they watch TV or use their phone in bed, or if they sleep with the lights on.

Female partners report being disturbed more often by their male partner’s movement than the other way around.

So separate bedding may help minimise someone’s sleep being disturbed when partners go to bed and wake at different times. And as each person has their own bedding, it would also avoid the disturbed sleep that would arise when one person “hogs the blanket”.

What’s the verdict?

For couples who have poor sleep due to conflicting comfort needs – whether it’s blanket-hogging, different temperature preferences, restlessness or misaligned sleep schedules – the Scandinavian sleep method seems to offer a practical and affordable solution.

It allows you to manage your microclimate to suit your body’s needs.

But sleeping with a separate duvet or blanket can make it harder to make the bed and make bedtime cuddles more tricky. Unless you have a queen-size or bigger bed, they might also be tough to balance on the bed without one sliding off.

While the Scandinavian sleep method appears promising, it certainly isn’t a game-changer. Until there is research evidence, it should be best regarded as a practical “sleep hygiene hack” rather than a scientifically tested sleep method.

*Yaqoot Fatima is a Professor of Sleep Health at the University of the Sunshine Coast. Fatima receives funding from MRFF, NHMRC and Beyond Blue.

*Danielle Wilson is a Research Fellow and sleep scientist at the University of the Sunshine Coast

*Nisreen Aouira is a Research Program Manager of Let’s Yarn About Sleep at the Thompson Institute, University of the Sunshine Coast.

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

Max Verstappen named top driver of the year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Red Bull F1 driver Max Verstappen. PHOTOSPORT

Max Verstappen may have been beaten for the Formula 1 title this year but he has been voted the top driver of the year by his peers.

The Dutchman came up just short in his quest for a fifth successive world title, finishing two points behind McLaren’s Lando Norris.

However the Red Bull driver has been voted driver of the year for the fifth time in a row.

Formula 1 asked all the drivers to vote to rank the top ten of 2025.

Scores were given based on the current F1 points system, with the top driver on each list earning 25 points down to one point for the driver in 10th. Those totals are then combined to create an overall top 10.

Drivers were allowed to vote for themselves.

Verstappen’s impressive finish to the season, when he won six of the last nine Grands Prix, helped him to top spot from Norris with Mercedes driver George Russell completing the podium.

McLaren’s Oscar Piastri was fourth.

Seven-time World Champion Lewis Hamilton failed to make an appearance in the top 10 for the first time since this ranking began (2018) after a difficult debut season with Ferrari.

New Zealander Liam Lawson did not make the list but his Racing Bulls team-mate Isack Hadjar ranked tenth.

Four drivers did not participate in the anonymous poll: Hamilton, Nico Hulkenberg, Lance Stroll and Yuki Tsunoda.

2025 F1 Drivers’ Driver of the Year

1/ Max Verstappen

2/ Lando Norris

3/ George Russell

4/ Oscar Piastri

5/ Charles Leclerc

6/ Carlos Sainz

7/ Fernando Alonso

8/ Alex Abon

9/ Oliver Bearman

10/ Isack Hadjar

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

Authorities urge violence-free night in Auckland, New Year’s events cancelled elsewhere

Source: Radio New Zealand

An Auckland councillor is urging calm as revellers prepare to ring in the 2026 new year. AFP / NurPhoto

An Auckland councillor is urging calm on the city’s streets as well as in homes on Wednesday evening as revellers prepare to ring in the 2026 new year.

It comes after two straight nights of violence in the city involving group brawls.

Three people were put in hospital in the early hours of Sunday morning from three separate assaults around the central city.

There was mass disorder on the Karangahape Road night strip and an estimated crowd of more than 50 people.

Police have made a fresh appeal for help from the public and any footage.

But violence came again that night, again involving a group of people, this time in the South Auckland suburb of Wiri.

Police were called to Wallson Crescent to reports of several people fighting.

Ahead of Wednesday night, Police told RNZ New Year’s Eve was a big night for officers across the country.

In Auckland, huge crowds will flood the central city around the Sky Tower and around the Viaduct to see the fireworks set off at midnight.

The five-minute display will have 3500 fireworks – or 500 kilograms – launched from levels 55, 61 and 64 up to 240-metres above the ground.

There were 14 kilometres of cables and wires to make it happen.

“A significant amount of planning goes into deployment of officers to areas where we’re likely to see large numbers gathering and celebrating,” a spokesperson said.

“And this of course includes the Auckland CBD and K Road area.”

Police said they would have sufficient resources to respond to any issues, but were urging everyone heading out to do so safely.

“Nobody wants to wake up in a hospital or a police cell on New Year’s Day,” Police told RNZ.

Alf Filipaina, an Auckland councillor for the Manukau Ward, also pressed for people to be safe and keep the night free of violence.

Alf Filipaina. Auckland Council

“There are a lot of ways of getting rid of any stress that builds up during your party that you’re having, and violence is not one of them,” he said.

“Violence has no place at a family function or with friends, and even if you go out with friends and family to a bar, to a nightclub, the same thing, violence has no place anywhere around New Year and it has no place anywhere during the year,” he told RNZ.

“May 2026 bring what you want with you, and your family and friends,” Filipaina said.

Eagle helicopter redeployed to planned boy racer gatherings

Police said they had a clear message for Gisborne and the wider Eastern District – reckless and anti-social behaviour on the roads would not be tolerated.

They said they were aware of planned group gatherings.

“We won’t stand for it,” Eastern District Commander Superintendent Jeanette Park said.

Police had sent the Auckland-based Eagle helicopter to give aerial support and rapid responses across the region.

“Anyone intending to cause disruption or operate a vehicle in a dangerous or unsafe manner can expect a stern response from Police who have zero tolerance for dangerous driving,” Police said.

They also cautioned that watching unlawful street racing only encouraged those doing it.

“It is also incredibly dangerous,” Park said.

Police’s Eagle helicopter. Supplied / NZ Police

Strong police presence in Hawke’s Bay

Police said they will have a strong presence in the traditional holiday hotspots across Hawke’s Bay, including beaches, after the big day.

“We all have a responsibility to ensure our friends and loved ones are safe this summer, so keep an eye out and report any concerns you have,” Area Commander Inspector Lincoln Sycamore said.

He said Police would also be targeting unsafe drivers.

“Alcohol continues to be a factor in a number of crashes across the region, and we will continue to set up checkpoints and breath test drivers,” he said.

Sycamore also warned that Police beat teams will be doing routine patrols in retail areas “right into the New Year”.

St John’s busiest night of the year

Tonight is the busiest night of the year for ambulance crews who at the same time have been grappling with increasing violence, aggression, threats, abuse and physical harm.

St John recently told RNZ that it was completely unacceptable.

Its vehicles had also been damaged.

“We empower our staff, if they feel unsafe, to leave the scene and get away from the scene,” St John general manager for ambulance operations Stu Cockburn said.

“They’re just there to help people at their time of need and certainly the last thing they need is to be verbally or physically abused.”

Last New Year’s Eve, St John responded to 570 incidents between the hours of 10pm and 6am.

Demand for ambulance services was already going up each year, and call-outs on Wednesday night would come off the back of St John crews having their busiest ever winter.

Trust urges safe New Year

Walk Without Fear Trust, established after the death of MMA fighter Liufau Vake after an unprovoked attack outside an Auckland bar, urged people to look after each other.

“If things start to get heated, pull your mates back. De-escalate. Walk away,” chairperson Eugene Bareman said.

He said celebrations too often ended in preventable tragedy fuelled by alcohol.

“One reckless moment can change lives forever. There’s no honour in violence, and no excuse for a street violence. Make it uncool. You’re not ‘the man’ if you’re brawling drunk on the street,” he said.

Bareman said the Trust wanted 2026 to start “the right way”.

“No families grieving. No lives lost. Just people making it home to the ones who love them,” he said.

Weather scuppers New Year events

Festival goers at Rhythm and Vines are off to a soggy start after the region was wiped with heavy rain. Lucy Parkinson

In Tauranga, forecast bad weather has led the council to cancel community celebrations in Matua, Pāpāmoa, Mount Maunganui, Greerton, and central Tauranga.

“I know this will disappoint many families, children, and the council staff and volunteers who have been working hard to make it happen,” Bay of Plenty MP Tom Rutherford said on Facebook.

“It’s never an easy call, but public safety must always come first, and this is absolutely the right decision given the conditions,” he said.

Tauranga City Council was still hoping to set off fireworks at 9.30pm and midnight if the weather was good enough.

If it was, there would be five fireworks displays at Mount Maunganui, Pāpāmoa, Matua, the city centre and the Waimapu Estuary harbour area.

“This means you can enjoy the spectacular from where you’re already celebrating or from a safe elevated vantage point,” it said.

Celebrations in Te Marae o Hine – The Square in Palmerston North had also been called off because of severe winds.

It included all entertainment and two fireworks displays.

“We are really sorry to have to make this call, especially knowing how many people were looking forward to celebrating together,” Palmerston North City Council said.

“While this is not how we hoped to welcome in the New Year, the safety of our community, performers, crew and everyone involved has to come first.”

The forecast – rain, thunderstorms and warnings

“I think maybe it’s best to kind of split the North Island and South Island up,” MetService meteorologist Alanna Burrows told RNZ.

“So really the North Island is looking like a showery day for a lot of areas, it could be a bit cloudy to start with for kind of the Hawke’s Bay, Wairarapa regions but that will break up, and we have got showers for a lot of regions,” she said.

“It’s quite active and mobile and we do actually have a moderate thunderstorm risk for quite a large area of the North Island”

Burrows said that could mean heavy rain and strong gusts of up to 80 kilometres an hour.

“So that moderate risk area is kind of stretching down from Northland, Auckland all the way through Waikato, Waitomo, west of Taupo down to kind of Wellington, Wairarapa.”

There was good news in store for sodden festival-goers at a muddy Rhythm and Vines.

“The wind is kind of changing to a north-westerly direction for the North Island, so we are going to see some sheltering for like Wairoa, Gisborne through the afternoon so they will probably escape the showers and it’s kind of looking like mainly fine for them, perhaps the chance of a shower but they’re not in that thunderstorm risk area, so that is quite a good place to be,” Burrows said.

Showers would eventually ease for some of the southern North Island.

“So if you drew a line kind of from Whanganui across to Hawke’s Bay, south of that, you will start to see them clearing in the evening.”

But the top of the South Island was different again.

“It’s quite a wet day for Nelson and Marlborough with periods of rain and we do have a heavy rain warning out and a heavy rain watch,” Burrows said.

The orange warning stretched from 6am Wednesday to 6am on New Year’s Day.

“But that is kind of like a story of two halves, so the east of the South Island, that’s kind of where we’re going to see most of our rain and cloudy conditions and the western side is going to be a bit nicer to start with, but that kind of flips through the afternoon so then we get rain developing in the west and actually clearer spells in the east,” she said.

“So it’s going to become drier through the afternoon for Christchurch and Dunedin.”

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