Sunday, April 5, 2026
Home Blog Page 196

Immigration laws need stability, says adviser group

By Rayssa Almeida of RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission

Immigration laws in New Zealand are loose and need to be more consistent, says an immigration adviser association.

National, ACT and Labour all launched immigration policies targeting migrant parents and grandparents yesterday, with Labour also promising amnesty for overstayers who have been in the country for 10 years or more.

The New Zealand Association for Migration and Investment (NZAMI) Chair Arunima Dhingra argued that frequent changes to immigration policies were undermining their objectives.

“What we as a country need is stability. Our policies have chopped and changed so many times over the years that it has almost become a mishmash of so many policies.”

She said without consistency, new immigration laws would not be fit for purpose.

“There’s a lot of things that we hear close to [the] elections and there’s a lot of promises. But what’s going to stick? What’s going to come out? What’s going to be implemented?

“Or is it going to turn out to be another Accredited Employer Work visa scheme where the implementation didn’t deliver the objective. Time will tell.”

All the parties announced immigration policies targeting migrant parents and grandparents, with National allowing relatives to visit family members in New Zealand for five years, with the possibility of renewal for another five years.

Dhingra said NZAMI had been advocating for the changes for a while.

“That’s been something that’s been in the making for many years, but it’s only just coming out now, just a few weeks from the election.

“It’s taken multiple governments a long time to come to that long term visa. It’s here now, so whoever comes to power, we know that there will be a visitor visa for parents who have been waiting for a long time.”

She said changes to Parent Visa legislation were long overdue.

“We are quite late on a lot of policies, and I have no qualms about saying that we have been telling the government officials for a long time that New Zealand does need to allow parents to have a smoother transition when they want to come here.”

High volumes of policy changes were weakening the credibility of New Zealand policies, Dhingra said.

“It does have a huge detriment on the New Zealand brand to the rest of the world, who want to believe in the credibility of our policies.

“You don’t want too many changes, you want that ‘business as usual’ state for New Zealand.

Dhingra said immigration laws shouldn’t be used as political footballs.

“I say these campaigns and announcements are on steroids, because we are two and a half weeks away from the elections, and the campaigns are obviously full formed.

“What we’re finding is that a lot of these policies have been brewing in the background for a while. The big question is [if] a lot of these [policies] have been escalated because of the election or not.”

Labour leader Chris Hipkins speaking at the party's immigration announcement on 23 September, 2023.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins speaking at the party’s immigration announcement yesterday. Photo: RNZ / Giles Dexter

‘Wrong message’ – Amnesty Visa Policy

If re-elected, the Labour Party promised amnesty for overstayers who have been in the country for 10 years or more.

Up to 20,000 people could be eligible for regularisation.

Dhingra said giving overstayers amnesty could send the wrong message for those planning to come to New Zealand.

“We don’t want to be looked at as a country where [if] you’ve become unlawful, you can stay here for 10 years, find your way through the system, and have a residency pathway because you’ve got this amnesty.

“But at the same time, we do want to be seen as a humanitarian fair country. Those people that really can’t get out of that system and it’s no fault of theirs. [People who] have tried everything or the issue it’s generations down the line, you do want to give them a second chance.”

Dhingra said the details and requirements of the amnesty policy should be specific.

“Who will qualify, what are the requirements, what’s the threshold, what have you done all of these years to rectify your status?

“Those things will then tell how good or bad these policies are.”

Dhingra said the government should not drop the threshold of those eligible for amnesty.

“If you drop the bar really low with that amnesty, it does send out the wrong message.

“We want people to do the right thing, work towards rectifying their status, work towards getting residency.”

The first fights from across the Tasman landed in New Zealand after the border reopened on 13 April 2022.

File photo. Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi

‘Window dressing for votes’ – Migrant Workers Association

The Migrant Workers Association President Anu Kaloti said the amnesty overlooked thousands of people let down by overly restrictive immigration policies.

“All of the people who are here without visas currently, they arrived in New Zealand on valid visas going back five years, 10 years.

“At that time, we had too many colleges and shop fronts for bringing people in, and those colleges got closed down and ended the process. The students ended up with nothing.”

She said Labour’s promise was a window dressing for votes.

“There will be very little uptake and benefit if they are going to limit it to people who’ve been here 10 years or more.

“There are people who’ve been here less time than that and those people also have children born here so that this will again leave a lot of people in need behind.”

Labour pledged that the amnesty policy would make good on the Dawn Raids apology, but Kaloti said the party had nearly two years since apologising for the Dawn Raids to do the right thing.

She said National and Act’s immigration policies were treating people without visas as illegal immigrants who arrived the country by boat.

Tongan men convicted for illegal taking of around 10,000 cockles, two cars seized from Auckland beach

This Content Is Only For Subscribers

Please subscribe to unlock this content. Enter your email to get access.
Your email address is 100% safe from spam!

Former Wallaby Adam Coleman named in Tonga’s match-day 23 against Scotland

By Iliesa Tora of  rnz.co.nz and is republished with permission

Former Wallaby Adam Coleman will debut off the bench for the ‘Ikale Tahi when they battle Scotland in Nice on Monday morning (New Zealand time).

Coleman became eligible for Tonga with World Rugby approving its eligibility rule allowing players to play for their home nations after three years of stand-down from their last international game with their adopted home teams.

Coleman and fly-half Patrick Pellegrini are the only changes to the bench as head coach Toutai Kefu has gone with retaining the team that was thrashed by Ireland in Nantes last weekend.

“They are our best players and I think after last week’s performance, it probably wasn’t our best version of us. They deserved another chance,” he told the media in Nice on Friday evening.

“The only difference is Adam Coleman comes onto the bench and he might be able to give us a bit of an impact off the bench.

“Depending on how it goes he will be pushing for a starting place in the next couple of weeks. It’s been a while since he played and he’s still getting over a calf injury.

“That’s what he’s had for the last month. Before that it was a shoulder and an Achilles at the same time. He’s been through the wars a bit so we are just taking it daily with him.”

Kefu said they must win against Scotland to have any hopes of getting a quarterfinal spot, a tough ask for the side, following their big loss to the Irish last weekend.

“It is. We are desperate to win. Last week wasn’t us so we want to fix that.”

He said they had focused on Ireland last week and worked on improving areas they identified as weak links from last week.

“The dream is to win three games in a row. That would be a dream. We can’t look too far ahead of ourselves. We are fully focused on performance. Our preparation has been okay this week,” he said.

“The boys are probably a little bit hungover from last week’s performance. They were devastated. We didn’t fire any shots at all. To Ireland’s credit, they kept us under sustained pressure.

“We definitely want to put the best version of ourselves this week.”

Tonga last played Scotland in 2021 and suffered a 60-14 defeat at Murrayfield.

Kefu said this was a totally different team with a lot of experience.

“I wasn’t on that tour, I think that was the Covid tour. This is a totally different squad. I think there’s only one of two players left over from that squad,” he said.

“They did beat us quite convincingly so I’d like to think we will be a lot more competitive, a lot more organised.

“Last week was a massive disappointment. We will put our best foot forward this weekend and show what we’ve been building over the past couple of months.”

Prop Ben Tameifuna will lead the team again.

He said they have prepared to give it their all against Scotland.

“We looked at the whole footage. We put ourselves in tough positions but we got the tools and we fixed that straight away in our first team training back.

“We are still looking to take it week by week and it starts this weekend with Scotland.”

On what he thinks of Scotland: “I played with [fly-half] Finn Russell at Racing. I know his tricks and his little inside balls and dummies and stuff. It will be good to see Finn again on the field. We’re excited and looking forward to this weekend. We’ve just been focusing on ourselves and putting our best foot forward after last week.”

Augustine Pulu, one of the former All Blacks in the side, said they know the importance of winning against Scotland.

“It’s knock-out footie this week. We understand what’s in front of us and put our best foot forward this week,” he said.

“We understand they are quality players but we can only focus on ourselves. Last week we didn’t fire our shots so this week we are going to redeem ourselves by going out there and doing our best.”

Tonga’s match-day 23 against Scotland:

1 Siegfried Fisi’ihoi, 2. 2 Paula Ngauamo, 3. Ben Tameifuna (c), 4 Halaleva Fifita, 5 Sam Lousi, 6 Tanginoa Halaifonua, 7 Sione Talitui, 8 Vaea Fifita, 9 Augustine Pulu, 10 William Havili, 11 Afusipa Taumoepeau, 12 Pita Ahki,13 Malakai Fekitoa, 14 Solomone Kata, 15 Salesi Piutau; Replacements: 16 Sam Moli, 17 Tau Koloamatangi, 18 Sosefo Apikotoa, 19 Adam Coleman, 20 Semisi Paea, 21 Sione Vailanu, 22 Sonatane Takulua, 23 Patrick Pellegrini

Father and sons convicted in machete attack case; judge cites police failure to lay ‘attempted murder’ charges

A father and his two sons were convicted of common assault after a 24-year-old man was assaulted and struck with a machete.

The father was also found guilty of causing grievous bodily harm while his sons were acquitted of that same charge.

And in handing down his decision, Justice Cooper made searing comment about the situation.

“Firstly, from the foregoing it will be entirely obvious to anyone that all defendants should have been charged with attempted murder”, Mr Cooper said.

“No explanation has been offered as to why this was not so.

“Secondly, the medical evidence plainly needed expanding upon, rather than simply a one-page note and a photo. Ultimately it did not stop and clear finding by the Court, but it was crying out for expert evidence as to how this was caused, from what height and angle; when spelt out may have concentrated the defendant’s minds on arraignment.

Both these points should have been picked up in any proper case review”.

Kali Malupo, 57, was  guilty of count of grievous bodily harm after he struck Filihia Lī on his head using a machete at Tonga’s Manuka village.

His two sons, Sione and Siaosi Malupō were convicted of common assault for punching Lī.

The court was told the incident occurred outside Lii’s father’s house on October 31, 2022, in Manuka.

Li was drunk before he had a confrontation with  Kali.

At one stage Li was standing in the road while Kali was in his vehicle.

Kali had moved his vehicle towards Li before Li had punched and smashed a front head light.

Kali then produced a machete and struck  Li with it causing the injury. Li was unarmed and there was no suggestion he ever had a weapon or any person thought he may have had one.

At another stage, according to court document,  Kali approached  Li before he ordered Sione and Siaosi  to step aside so he could strike him.

As they stepped aside they also shouted words of encouragement to their father to attack Li.

 “Beat him until he shits himself’.  

Li was injured by the third strike of the machete despite his father tackling Kali. Sione and Siaosi then continued to punch Li, as he kept retreating all the way back to his fale even as he was trying to get in the door to be cared for.

“I am also quite sure they continued to attack Filihai Li after he was grievously injured. This is strong evidence of their state of mind from the start; that they were determined upon violently dealing with Filihai Li for violence’s sake and did so”, Mr Cooper said.

The defence argued that Siaosi was not at the scene at this time and arrived only as Li was being led into his father’s fale to be cared for.

It said Siaosi never had any physical interaction with Li nor threatened him.

Upper Hutt homicide: Woman arrested, charged with murder

By RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission

A woman has been arrested and charged with murder after a man’s death in Upper Hutt on Friday.

Armed police at the scene of a reported Homicide in Akatarawa Road in Upper Hutt. Photo: RNZ / Bill Hickman

A homicide investigation was launched after a person died of their injuries when they were found on Akatarawa Road on Friday afternoon.

The 39-year-old woman who was arrested is due to appear in Hutt Valley District Court on Saturday.

Police said nobody else was being sought in relation to the incident.

Heavy rain watches in place for North Island as front moves from South Island

By rnz.co.nz and is republished with permission

Heavy rain warnings are in place for parts of the North Island as an active front moves up north after battering the South Island earlier this week.

Surface flooding in Gore following heavy rain that is moving up the country. Photo: RNZ / Tess Brunton

The school holidays have started and with travel picking up, motorists are being warned to be wary of the road conditions.

MetService said the front which hammered the South Island this week was slowly moving onto the North Island and would continue moving slowly eastwards across the island during the weekend.

Heavy rain warnings are in place for Bay of Plenty east of Opotiki and Waitomo and the Central North Island High Country south and west of Lake Taupō until Sunday.

A heavy rain watch is in place until Sunday for Northland, Waitomo, Taumarunui, Taihape, Whanganui, and Taupo west and south of the Lake, and Taranaki.

MetService meteorologist Alec Holden said heavy rain was lashing Nelson and Marlborough on Saturday morning, but that would ease by the afternoon.

“By this evening, it should be lined up stretching from the top of Northland down through inland Taranaki and then into the lower North Island.”

Authorities in Southland remained on watch overnight as the Mataura River peaked at various points after a 24-hour deluge, which began on Thursday and led to states of emergency in Southland and Queenstown.

However, Emergency Management Southland (EMS) said those peaks were expected to be lower than the 2020 floods and staying within the capacity of the river system.

EMS Group Controller Simon Mapp said some people were evacuated as rivers overflowed onto their land.

But he said the worst was over and MetService’s forecast showed the weather in the region would improve on Saturday.

Mapp urged people not to enter or drive through flood waters, which might be contaminated.

Gore District Council stood down its emergency response on Friday night, but Southland’s state of emergency remains in place.

A Civil Defence Southland spokesperson said a number of streets and roads around the Gore District remain affected by flooding, but State Highway 1 between Gore and Mataura reopened on Saturday morning.

The Queenstown Lakes District Council said its next steps in the flood clean-up included clearing debris on Brecon Street, where about 70 people were still out of their homes.

Thick snow has settled on farms in Central Otago after Friday’s heavy snowfall.

But in Alexandra, the annual Blossom Festival parade and market was set to go ahead.

Community emergency hubs at Gore and Mataura have been closed.

As for Sunday, MetService said rain was again expected for most of the North Island, while scattered showers were expected in the north and east of the South Island.

Tongatapu man acquitted after girl left blind in one eye after a stone was thrown at her

This Content Is Only For Subscribers

Please subscribe to unlock this content. Enter your email to get access.
Your email address is 100% safe from spam!

Tonga-born Australian soldier hoping to represent Kingdom in judo at 2024 Paris Olympics

When the phone rings and a chance to be in the Olympics is on the other end – you don’t hang up.

Identified to represent his country of birth, Private Fe’ao Faka’osi said he was overwhelmed and called the Tonga Judo Association to make sure he wasn’t dreaming.

Now, the preparation begins to take his signature move of the ‘drop seoi nage’ from his Sydney dojo to the Olympic stage in Paris, 2024.

“I had to ring the guys from Tonga and they told me that I had qualified if I was willing to take the opportunity,” Private Faka’osi said.

“In 2012, I qualified but I dislocated my shoulder so I missed out. It means everything to me, I didn’t know this second chance would come around.”

Enlisting in 2020, the Tongan-born soldier had already been competing in judo for 25 years and recently became recognised by Army as an elite sports participant.

Private Faka’osi has lived in Australia since 2010, however being the only world ranked Tongan judo competitor he qualifies to represent the country.

“As much as I want to represent Australia, I don’t have a chance of doing that as they already have their players set,” Private Faka’osi said.

Each morning the judoka completes a custom, online training program.

Five days a week, he will battle Sydney traffic from Holsworthy to Silverwater for back-to-back 2-hour training sessions of an evening and still find time to sleep when he gets home.

Private Fe’ao Faka’osi is aiming for Paris Olympics 2024.

Private Fe’ao Faka’osi is aiming for Paris Olympics 2024. Photo: ADF

‘Quietly confident’ – coach

Judo has taken him nationally and overseas to compete and train.

Private Faka’osi attended a training camp in Zagreb, Croatia last month.

He will be competing in Brisbane later this month with the ADF Judo Team, and then heads to Tahiti in October for another competition to represent Tonga.

Private Faka’osi said he has to keep his head in the game and will give it a “red-hot crack” in the City of Light.

Private Faka’osi’s coach, Major Derek Morris, has formed a strong relationship with the Judo coaching staff of the Combat Institute of Australia, after being invited to train at the National Performance Centre.

“Since commencing training with the Australian team, the coaching staff have been more accommodating than I could have imagined,” Major Morris said.

“It’s allowed Fe’ao to develop beyond state and national level competition and really get immersed in the culture and mindset of high-level international judo.”

Major Morris said this journey is not just about striving for a gold medal at the Olympics, but about making Tonga a credible contender in international judo in the years to come.

“At 40 years old, Fe’ao will probably be the second or third oldest guy on the mat at the Olympics next year,” Major Morris said.

“I’m quietly confident that if we get a favourable draw, he should still be able to walk away with a win or two.”

Private Faka’osi’s son is also competing well on the national circuit and Major Morris said, looking into the future, he could be an upcoming Olympian himself.

“I’m also developing [Private Faka’osi] to be a coach. His young fellow will be 24-years-old by Brisbane Olympics in 2032 and I believe that he has a real chance at winning a medal,” Major Morris said.

“This journey is not just about next year, there’s a longer-term strategy at play here. We’re looking at creating longevity for Tongan judo at the Olympics.”

Major Morris said his students’ unit has been supportive and he’s grateful for the opportunities they’ve allowed Pte Faka’osi to pursue.

The Paris selections will be confirmed on June 24, 2024.

– ADF

Reported drowning at Piha beach

Piha beach
By rnz.co.nz and is republished with permission

A person has drowned at Piha beach in West Auckland this morning.

St John said it was alerted to the situation just before noon.

Emergency crews attempted to resuscitate the person, however they were unable to be revived.

A helicopter, ambulance, and two response vehicles are at the scene.

No further details were yet available.

Customs officer arrested as dozen of illegal guns, thousands of ammunitions intercepted at Tonga border

This Content Is Only For Subscribers

Please subscribe to unlock this content. Enter your email to get access.
Your email address is 100% safe from spam!