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Principals must decide if exams are necessary in alert level 3

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

New rules leave it to principals to decide if their students should sit exams in alert level 3 regions.

The Education Ministry directive sets strict conditions and is being applied by Auckland schools offering the Cambridge International Exams and the International Baccalaureate.

The ministry has been granting exemptions for schools wanting to bring small groups of students back to class during alert level 3 and since mid-September it had approved 16 of 17 applications from schools wanting to do so for exams.

It said the directive issued this week clarified the rules for running exams during alert level 3.

The directive said principals could apply for an exemption to offer exams only if in their opinion it was necessary to bring students on-site to sit exams in person.

It said students must be in bubbles of 10 and their bubble could not change for the entire examination period. During exams students must sit at desks 1.5 metres apart, and different bubbles could share the same space but must remain two metres apart at all times including outside of school grounds.

Auckland Year 13 student Stella Lynch welcomed the new rules though she said they would not allow some of her practical exams to take place.

“Definitely more reassured than I was a couple of weeks ago. It’s nice to know that some sense of normalcy can be reflected in terms of our exam series. However, I’m a little bit worried about some of the components that have had to be missed – they make up quite a big percent in terms of weighting for our final mark,” she said.

Stella said the rules about bubbles and distancing seemed difficult.

“I’m skeptical about that. I’ve been trying to run the numbers with my little sister and we were giving each other different scenarios like ‘well if this happens how will it work’ and I’ve got friends who we sit chemistry together but then we go apart to sit an accounting exam and a physics exam. I don’t understand quite how those bubbles are going to work,” she said.

Macleans College principal Steve Hargreaves said his school had a bubble of seven students sit a Cambridge exam earlier in the week thanks to a special exemption from the ministry and that experience showed the school would struggle to meet the new directive’s distancing requirements.

“Even keeping seven students apart despite the fact we had crosses on the footpath two metres apart and two supervisors with seven students it was still really difficult to make it work. And we know that as soon as they go around the corner from school the emotion of exams, having not seen friends for eight weeks, we know they are going to cluster in groups.”

Hargreaves said the directive also had a key clause that would prevent the school from offering exams at alert level 3 – a requirement that the principal believed it was necessary to conduct exams in person and on site.

He said he could not attest that the exams were necessary because there was an alternative.

“There’s a well-used alternative to exams that Cambridge provides called school-assessed grades. They’ve been used around the world in the last 18 months with tens of thousands of students so I can’t say that it is necessary. It might be preferable for some people, they might think that that’s of benefit to them but is it necessary? Well it’s not because we have an alternative.”

Auckland Grammar School headmaster Tim O’Connor said exams would go ahead at his school.

“Cambridge examinations can’t be sat online. The response from our community has been of overwhelming support that these examinations are taking place because everyone gets a fair crack at it rather than being awarded assessed grades from previous work.”

O’Connor said the rules for running the exams were very strict.

“That’s a logistical nightmare. One of our worst days we’ll have 104 classrooms being used, it’s in a morning and an afternoon session so 50 in the morning 50 in the afternoon type of thing. So that’s over 1000 students and you’re talking about 104 invigilators.”

But parent Carole Smith said it was an unnecessary risk.

“We know with the Delta variant that it is incredibly contagious and I’m not confident that especially kids, we’re talking about 16-17 year olds, will stick to their own bubbles. They’ll see their mates and go up to them and all the rest of it so I think it’s quite frankly a recipe for disaster,” she said.

Education Ministry associate leader pathways and progress Pauline Cleaver said under alert level 3 there was flexibility for Auckland senior secondary school students to sit exams onsite if the governing body of the school could provide evidence and attest in their application that they would meet public health requirements.

She said the latest direction further clarified the process, and the required public health conditions.

“We are not considering NCEA exams at this time because they’re not scheduled to start until November. Work is underway, led by NZQA in partnership with the Ministry, about the implications of different public health requirements for the running of national NCEA examinations,” Cleaver said.

Covid 19 Delta outbreak: 71 new cases today as virus spreads in Auckland

Deputy Prime Minister Grant Robertson and Director of Public Health Dr Caroline McElnay are giving the latest update on the government’s Covid-19 response.

Watch the 1pm briefing live:

There were 55 new cases of Covid-19 reported in the community yesterday, 53 of those were in Auckland along with two cases from a single household in Waikato that have not yet been linked to earlier cases.

Yesterday, the government announced the current Covid-19 alert level 3 response in parts of Waikato and Northland will remain for another five days. The areas will remain at the current level until at least Monday. Auckland continues to remain at step 1 of level 3.

In Northland, there have been no reported cases since two women travelled there from Auckland and tested positive for the virus.

Today, two women who travelled from Auckland to the South Island have been arrested in Blenheim and charged with failing to comply with a health order.

Police and the Ministry of Health are investigating how they were able to leave Auckland.

Top virologist says Delta defeated, predicts 6+ months of COVID quiet for Israel

By Nathan jeffay, Times of Israel

Israel has defeated the Delta variant of the coronavirus and can expect six to eight months of COVID quiet, according to a leading virologist.

Dr. Rivka Abulafia-Lapid told The Times of Israel on Tuesday that the fourth wave is coming to an end, that Delta is highly unlikely to generate another wave, and that the strong spread of a new variant is improbable.

This is mostly due to the allocation of booster shots across age groups in Israel, which, given the functioning of the immune system, are likely to deliver longer-lasting protection than the initial two shots, she said.

“My estimate is that once we have three vaccines, protection will last for a year,” said Abulafia-Lapid, a senior doctor at Hadassah Medical Center and part of the Hebrew University’s faculty. “There should be good memory in the body for around a year that can fight off COVID infection in many cases.”

She was slightly more conservative in predicting how long the boosters will protect the broader public — including those who have not had a booster shot — and said that she expects them to keep existing variants under control and prevent the wide spread of other variants for around six to eight months.

“We should expect new variants, but not now because populations are vaccinated well,” she said.

Abulafia-Lapid, who is an immunologist as well as a virologist, based her predictions on the performance of vaccines for other diseases. She said: “With the initial shot you give the immune system a ‘first teaching,’ giving it the memory to fight a specific virus. With the second shot you ‘remind,’ and the third time the effect of the shot is even stronger.”

She gave the example of the human papillomavirus vaccine, which is given in Israel at birth, at two months and at six months; the hepatitis B vaccine, which is given at birth, one month and six months; and the rotavirus vaccine, which is given at two months, four months and 18 months. In each of these cases the third shot confers long-lasting protection, she said.

The drop in coronavirus cases in recent weeks is now allowing hospitals to breathe easier, as they witness a sharp decrease in serious cases. The number of new serious COVID cases per day in Israel has almost halved over the last two weeks — from just over 60 two weeks ago to 32 on Sunday.

Deaths have fallen from a seven-day average of 25 a month ago to 13 now, and the number of active cases, 25,127, is less than a third of what it was in mid-September.

Dr. Yael Paran, deputy head of epidemiology at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, shared Abulafia-Lapid’s optimism that the fourth wave is over and Delta vanquished.

“I think we’re seeing the end of the fourth surge, and it’s the result of three million taking a booster,” she said, adding: “This is a decrease that we believe will continue.”

She said that the effect of the boosters has been gradual, and is now convincing. “We saw the progression each time that boosters were offered to a new age group,” she said. “Two to three weeks later the number of infections dropped, and then the number of hospitalizations decreased.”

Ending a wave of infection and defeating a specific variant aren’t synonymous, and a specific variant can inflict two or more waves. But Paran thinks, like Abulafia-Lapid, the the fact Delta spread is slowing despite its highly contagious nature suggests that Israel has created an effective buffer against the variant.

 PTOA Leader says he lost faith in MP Tapueluelu after he broke plates at party meeting

In a heated exchange of e-mails leaked to Kaniva News, Party Leader Sēmisi Sika accuses Tongatapu 4 MP Māteni Tapueluelu of breaking glasses and plates at a party meeting and frightening a fellow MP.

MP Tapueluelu (L), MP Sēmisi Sika. Photo/ Sēmisi Sika (Facebook)

Hon Sika said he lost faith in Tapueluelu after the incident.

MP Tapueluelu was contacted for comment.

When contacted by Kaniva to confirm the authenticity of the documents, Sika did not deny the e-mails were real and said: “Believe it or not that’s our pathway to November 18. I hope it is all for the good.”

Tapueluelu, the son-in-law of PTOA founder the late Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pōhiva, is also in conflict with MP Siaosi Pohiva, son of ‘Akilisi.

Tapueluelu is known to be disappointed with Sika because of his slowness in releasing  his own PTOA Party candidate list.

Sika has made it clear the list is not ready,  but Tapueluelu was not satisfied.

He accused Sika of being two-faced and conspiring with Siaosi, to betray the Core Team. Sika denied this vigorously and said Tapueluelu lied too much, was disrespectful and no longer trusted by party members.

Last week Siaosi released his candidate’s list which included Sika. Sika quickly denied his assent to being on the list.

However, MP Mo’ale Finau alleged on Facebook they agreed with Sika and Siaosi to have their names on Siaosi’s list while at the same time they were still members of the PTOA Core Team.

This was the second time Siaosi’s list was released. The first version of the list named New Zealand-based Tongan lawyer Sione Fonua as candidate for Tongatapu 2, the constituency currently represented  by Sika.

Other candidates named in the list, including MEIDECC Minister Poasi Tei, have also denied  being candidates.

The e-mails make it clear that Tapueluelu wants Sika to resign as party chair.

“I accept your proposal to replace the Chairman as I have asked you (PTOA members) to replace me since last year when we had issues with MP Siaosi Pohiva in which I could not be able to control both of you,” Sika replied.

He denied he was involved in any conspiracy and accused the Tongatapu 4 MP of holding a grudge against Siaosi.

“Leave Siaosi Pohiva’s Party alone, your hatred against MP Siaosi is a big problem to us,” Sika wrote.

Tapueluelu said party members were concerned at reports that Sika had defected (“heke”).

Sika said the party was still struggling to find replacements for Siaosi and MP Saia Piukala.

Tapueluelu replied: “Can you see the cost of your failure to announce the candidate list and make it formal? You are no longer trusted and we will shift to whoever can take care of the team. Clearly you cannot provide that anymore.”

But Sika said: “Siaosi and Saia broke away because they did not want to work together with you. Most of the members of the party’s core team have raised with me their concerns about your aggression and disrespectfulness seen during our meetings. I cannot control you and MP Siaosi during most of our meetings.”

Sika claimed that Tapueluelu had broken glasses and plates at a meeting because he was “disappointed.”

Sika said he lost trust in Tapueluelu after the plate breaking incident. He said two MPs,  Hon. Peni Fifita and Hon. Semisi Fakahau were dissatisfied and that MP Losaline Ma’asi  was shaking and frightened.

Covid-19 update: 55 cases in the community today

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

There have been 55 new community cases of Covid-19 reported in New Zealand today.

Figures supplied by the Ministry of Health show 53 of those are in Auckland and two in Waikato. There are no new cases at the border.

Of today’s new community cases, 29 are epidemiologically linked and 26 are yet to be linked.

There are 75 unlinked cases from the past 14 days. Of yesterday’s 43 cases, 10 are yet to be linked.

The total number of cases in this outbreak is 1719.

There are 32 people in hospital including six in ICU or HDU. One is being ventilated.

Speaking at today’s government briefing, Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield said the two new community cases in Waikato today are members of the same household in Hamilton, and are being transferred today to a local quarantine facility.

“At this stage, the cases are unlinked but interviews will be carried out today to help determine any links to known cases. Two workplace exposure events have been identified but Hamilton residents are encouraged to please keep checking the Ministry’s website for any locations of interest.”

He said vaccination rates in Waikato remained high yesterday, with 7434 people getting a dose.

Dr Bloomfield said the ministry had been advised that the Auckland cases included a teacher in an Auckland early learning service centre

This person has had one dose of the vaccine and “their infectious period has been assessed as commencing on 8 October”.

“At this stage, there are 11 close contacts including six children who are in two separate bubbles of three each who were being supervised by that person. All contacts have been identified.

“So this is an exposure event rather than a location of interest and the early learning service centre therefore won’t be listed on our website as a location of interest.”

There are 16 epidemiologically linked subclusters. Of these, four are active, one is contained and 11 are dormant. There are also 14 unlinked subclusters. Of these, four are active, one is contained and nine are dormant.

Dr Bloomfield said a total of two patients and two staff members at the Dialysis Unit adjacent to North Shore Hospital have now tested positive for Covid-19 after a previously reported exposure event.

“Staff are also undergoing rapid antigen testing before the start of each shift, with all results this morning again negative.

“A number of staff in the unit are considered close contacts and have been stood down as a precaution.”

Staff there are now undergoing rapid antigen testing before the start of each shift, Dr Bloomfield said.

There have been no detections of Covid-19 in wastewater sampling in the past 24 hours.

The number of active contacts being managed is 2336.

A total of 25,799 tests were taken in the past 24 hours. Since the start of the outbreak, labs across the country have processed almost 1.1. million tests.

There were 17,396 first doses of vaccine administered yesterday and 55,287 second doses.

Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins said six million doses of the vaccine have now been delivered across New Zealand.

“Of the eligible population, 75 percent have either been fully vaccinated or are booked in for the second dose to get fully vaccinated.”

Dr Bloomfield said My Covid Record is now accessible to the public via mycovidrecord.nz.

People over 16 years will be able to view their vaccination record on this website by creating a my health account.

“From later November people will be able to access two different types of vaccination certificates: one for use in New Zealand and one for travel overseas.”

Dr Bloomfield said people can also request the Ministry of Health for their vaccination status.

Alleged drug dealer granted bail over meth in Auckland container

NUKU’ALOFA: A suspected drug dealer was freed on bail after a 30kg package of illicit drug was found in a shipping container in New Zealand.

Kama Norman Manulevu. Photo/Facebook

The food container was transported from Tonga before it arrived in New Zealand in July.

Norman Kama Manulevu is expected to reappear in court in December 13 after he has been charged with exporting illicit drugs after a joint operation between New Zealand and Tonga police intercepted the suspicious parcel in Auckland.

Meanwhile, New Zealand authorities have arrested five suspects and charged them with importation of methamphetamines from Tonga as part of the investigations.

Last week, the king opened a two-day National Symposium aimed to develop a way forward in Tonga’s fight against illicit drugs.

The king previously criticised the parliament for what he says is a failure by the government to combat the country’s problems with drug addiction, in a move that has been welcomed by politicians and civil society groups.

In August an estimated 14kgs of cocaine washed up on beaches in Vava’u.

Tongan police seized the haul and an ongoing investigation has seen 21 people charged so far including three foreigners.ga

The recent arrests included a 49-year-old man and his 23-year-old wife from Ta’anea, Vava’u on August 23.

The couple are in police custody charged with engaging with others in the supply of illicit drugs.

Jamil Hopoate avoids jail sentence after shock Covid diagnosis

By Foxsports.com.au

Former NRL bad boy Jamil Hopoate has narrowly avoided being sent to jail for domestic violence offences after the court heard he had been forced to give up on his footy dreams to follow in the footsteps of his famous family.

There was a fresh twist when Hopoate was due to appear at Sydney’s Downing Centre Local Court on Friday, with his barrister revealing the 26-year-old had contracted Covid-19.

Hopoate was due in court to be sentenced for the assault of his partner, which occurred in front of a child, at the Panthers Port Macquarie club in December last year.

The former Brisbane Bronco spent three months in custody for unrelated charges earlier this year and was only recently released on bail, the court heard.

He was facing being sent back to jail but Magistrate Jennifer Atkinson instead sentenced him to a 12-month sentence to be served in the community by way of an intensive corrections order.

Hopoate appeared via videolink from his parents’ northern beaches home in Sydney, where he sat in front of a wall of boxing posters, including one of his infamous father John holding a title belt.

Jamil had hoped to follow in the path of his dad, and his brother Will, who both played rugby league for their state and country.

He played 12 games for the Broncos, however was not offered a new deal by the Queensland club when his contract expired in November 2020.

A month later, he assaulted his partner outside the club during a drunken incident.

“His family are a particularly well known rugby league family who played at the highest level,” his barrister Evan James said.

“It’s a hard thing to be told he will not play and not achieve the same level as his father and his brother. This caused issues and he responded inappropriately.”

The court heard Hopoate had accepted responsibility for his actions, with Mr James describing them as “disgraceful” while emphasising Jamil was not seeking to shift the blame.

Mr James said Hopoate’s offending was a result of his depression and alcohol issues.

He pleaded guilty to seven offences, including two counts of common assault – domestic violence related, one count of common assault, two counts of stalking/intimidation, driving without a license and mid-range drinking driving.

Hopoate was arrested after he was thrown out of Panthers Port Macquarie on December 28.

He admitting to assaulting his partner Shae Beathe in the club parking lot, in front of a young child, before he sped off.

According to a statement of agreed facts, the pair was having dinner at the club before Hopoate went to the pokies room where he continued drinking.

When Ms Beathe came to ask him to take their family home, he became argumentative, snatching her bank card, bending it and throwing it on the ground, prompting security to step in.

CCTV caught the moment Hopoate spat at Ms Beathe, which hit both his partner and the security guard.

He was thrown out, but the altercation continued in the parking lot, where he unleashed a verbal tirade and slapped Ms Beathe.

Ms Beathe was escorted to her car by security and when Hopoate saw her approaching, he let loose with a verbal threat at the guards.

“What are they going to do? I will bash them,” Hopoate said, according to a statement of agreed facts.

Hopoate struck Ms Beathe on the face with an open palm, knocking her to the ground.

Ms Beathe told police she did not want to make a statement, however the incident was captured on CCTV.

She was taken to hospital as a precaution and Hopoate’s car was seen driving slowly past the entrance.

He was eventually pulled over on the Oxley Highway at Port Macquarie and recorded a blood alcohol reading of 0.095, nearly two times the legal limit.

The court heard he had apologised to his victims in a letter which was tendered to the court.

Mr James argued Hopoate should not be sentenced to a full-time custodial sentence.

He proposed a lengthy community corrections order, including strict conditions that he abstain from alcohol, undergo psychological treatment, relationship counselling and anger management therapy.

“He’s very much under his father’s thumb, if he steps out of line, his father’s wrath will be far greater than anything the court could impose,” Mr James said.

“I doubt that,” Ms Atkinson quipped back.

The prosecution argued that his crimes were deserving of a full-time jail sentence, noting that Hopoate was in 2014 jailed for an unprovoked attack outside a Manly hotel.

Ms Atkinson described his spitting offence as “disgusting” and said domestic violence must be denounced.

“We must always say it’s wrong,” she said.

But she took into account his early guilty plea and expressions of remorse.

Hopoate was sentenced to a 12-month intensive corrections order, including performing 250 hours of community service and abstaining from alcohol.

He was also fined $2100, suspended from driving and ordered to have an interlock device fitted on his car.

Polikalepo Kefu’s killer avoids death penalty

‘Inoke Silongo F. Tonga, 27, escaped death penalty Monday when Lord Chief Justice Whitten QC, convicted and sentenced him after a murder at a beach in Tatakamotonga.

‘Inoke Silongo F. Tonga (L), Polikalepo Kefu

The court was told Tonga admitted to police he had killed Polikalepo Kefu, 47, after they went to buy a bottle of spirits, Matangi Tonga reported.

Kefu instead drove to the beach where he allegedly made sexual advances towards Tonga, a claim the judge said were “impossible to accept” after he considered the scale of the attack and Kefu’s injuries.

“The defendant became angry and in a prolonged attack he twice attempted to strangle Poli, for about 12 minutes, before slamming him on the road, then strangled him for about 5 more minutes, before bashing him with a rock more than 30 times,” the paper said.

“The defendant then rested for a couple of minutes before dragging Poli’s body to the water line, hoping it would be washed out to sea. He admitted that he intended to beat Poli to death”.

Tonga was a meth addict, brought up in a broken family and had been sniffing benzene, the court heard.

None of the evidence brought up in court was enough for Tonga to get the toughest punishment allowed under Tonga law: the death penalty which is hanging by the neck.

The defendant’s early guilty plea and had no previous convictions and his family making an apology with customary reparations to Kefu’s family were considered by Mr Whitten before sentencing him to life imprisonment.

Man charged over search for missing Marokopa family

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

A 34-year-old man has been charged following the search for a man and his children in Marokopa last month.

No caption
Photo: RNZ / Richard Tindiller

The man and his three young children were not seen from Saturday 11 September until 30 September when they reappeared after camping in dense bush, living in a tent inland from Kiritehere Beach.

During that time a large team led by police searched land, sea and air for 12 days.

The 34-year-old man will appear in the Te Kuiti District Court on 5 November on a charge of causing wasteful deployment of police personnel and resources.

Covid-19: 43 new cases in the community today

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission

There are 43 new cases of Covid-19 in the community today – 40 in Auckland, three in Waikato.

Figures supplied by the Ministry of Health show 58 percent of people infected with Covid-19 in the latest outbreak had not been vaccinated.

Only 4 percent had received the full dose more than 14 days before being reported as a case.

Of those who ended up in hospital, 21 percent were children under 12 who are not eligible to be vaccinated; 124 people over 12 out of a total of 158 individuals had not had any vaccination.

More to come…