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Complainant claims rooms and toilet at MIQ dirty and expired milk was served amid COVID outbreak

A male returnee has described a hotel room in which the Tongan government had arranged for him to stay while being in a 10-day Covid quarantine period as appalling.

Kingdom of Tonga. Photo/Kalino Lātū

It has been reported the room and toilet at the Kupesi Hotel were dirty and food was bad. It has been claimed the sheets were unwashed or unchanged and part-used bars of soap were left in the hotel bathrooms for clients to use,  reported Radio TV Tonga International.

The complainant alleged the hotel had provided expired milk for their daily meals. There were reports of other repatriates in the hotel taking photos of the expired milk and sharing them on Facebook.

The man’s wife reportedly said the whole experience was disgusting.

The woman, who said she made contact with her husband while he was currently staying in the hotel,  said she had raised their concerns with the Minister of Health.

Kaniva News contacted the Prime Minister’s office for comment. We also contacted the Kupesi Hotel through an email provided on a Facebook account known as Kupesi Hotel.

We have asked the Chief Secretary in an email in which the Prime Minister and other government ministers and a CEO were copied to respond to the complaint.

We asked the Chief Secretary to let us know whether the government was aware of the situation and the hotel’s condition.

We also wanted to know whether the government still paid for the hotel’s services to serve and host overseas repatriates.

The report about the Kupesi hotel was shared on Facebook, and it has sparked outrage among members of the Tongan online community.

While supporters of the hotel wanted to hear from its management’s side of the story many wanted to know whether the government should take responsibility for choosing a hotel to provide what appeared to be substandard MIQ services to Tongan repatriates who had no choice in choosing which MIQ to stay.

Tonga Police name NZ couple found dead in Vava‘u

Deputy Police Commissioner Tēvita Vailea. Photo/Facebook

A New Zealand couple found dead in a home on Tonga’s Vava’u islands after an alleged electrical accident have been named by police.

They were Mr. Ben Rocky Neill. 48, and Mrs. Rochelle Neill, 49.

Police at Neiafu, Vava‘u responded to a report from the village of ‘Utungake on Saturday afternoon, March 2, 2022.

“At the village resort, Police discovered two corpses identified as New Zealand couple, Mr. Ben Rocky Neill (born 30/4/1974) and Mrs. Rochelle Neill (born 25/3/1973). The couple lived by themselves at the resort”, Deputy Police Commissioner Tēvita Vailea said.

“Formal inquest conducted during the weekend, ruled the cause of death as electrocution and was likely accidental. The bodies were buried immediately after the inquest on the advice of the medical doctor due to their partially decomposed state.

“Tonga Police had liaised with the New Zealand High Commission in Tonga identifying the deceased couple’s next of kin to establish point of contact with their families in New Zealand.

“Contact Police on phone 740-1660 or 922 and share any information you may have on this matter or any crime you wish to report”.

New Zealand couple found dead in Vava’u, Tonga, police say

By RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.

Tonga police are investigating the death of a New Zealand couple in Vava’u.No caption

File image. Photo: RNZ Pacific / Koro Vaka’uta

The New Zealand High Commission consular officer Mark Santos said local police told him about the deaths, according to Matangi Tonga Online.

“I can confirm they were kiwis,” he said today.

The bodies of the couple were found by locals at the village of ‘Utungake in Vava’u on Saturday 2 April, the Matangi reported.

Tonga Police said they were investigating the deaths but did not offer any further information, according to the report.

Shocking video shows man hitting and punching woman while dancing

A Tongan man has been caught on camera slapping a woman’s back before uppercutting her face with his left hand on a dance floor.

A man caught on camera punching a woman

A woman who was dancing with the accused immediately grabbed the man’s hand and led him out of the dancing floor, a video clip seen by Kaniva News showed.

Bystanders and dancers closed to the incident appeared shocked by the attack.

It has been reported the incident happened in Maui, Hawai’i last night during an alumni function.

It appeared the victim was joyfully dancing by herself around the dance floor before she passed the man who was dancing with his partner.

The reason behind the attack was unknown.

The video was shared on Facebook by a person who recorded it onFacebook live.

Many Facebook users were outraged by the man’s action.

“How on earth a man could do this to a woman who was just like his own mother,” a commenter wrote.

“That’s terrible and it was disrespectful to beat the woman like that,” another wrote.

However, some commenters defended the man’s action.

They alleged there was what appeared to be a long feud between the victim, the man, and the man’s wife. 

“The man was fed up with the victim for spreading gossip and making fun of the couple’s marital relationship. What her problems with the couple”, a commenter who supported the man wrote.

Ukraine forces retake areas north of Kyiv as Russians look eastward

Ukrainian forces have advanced into areas north of Kyiv as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accuses departing Russian soldiers of leaving behind mines.Ukrainian servicemen walk next to destroyed Russian tanks and armored personnel carriers in Dmytrivka village, west of Kyiv, on 2 April, 2022.

Ukrainian servicemen walk next to destroyed Russian tanks and armored personnel carriers in Dmytrivka village, west of Kyiv, on 2 April, 2022. Photo: AFP

Ukrainian presidential adviser Okeksiy Arestovych said Ukrainian troops had retaken more than 30 towns and villages in the region since Russia announced this week it would scale down operations around the capital to focus on battles in the east.

British military intelligence said Russian troops had abandoned Hostomel airport in a northwestern suburb of the capital, where there had been fighting since the first day of the invasion.

In the east, a Red Cross convoy was again seeking to evacuate civilians from the besieged port of Mariupol after abandoning an attempt on Friday because of a lack of security guarantees. But that renewed mission was not expected to reach the port until at least Sunday.

Russia has depicted its drawdown of forces near Kyiv as a goodwill gesture in peace negotiations. Ukraine and its allies say Russian forces have been forced to regroup after suffering heavy losses.

“In the north of our country, the invaders are leaving. It is slow but noticeable. In some places they are being kicked out with fighting. Elsewhere they’re abandoning the positions themselves,” Zelensky said in a video address released on Saturday.

“They are mining all this territory. Houses are mined, equipment is mined, even the bodies of dead people,” he said, without citing evidence.

Russia’s defence ministry did not reply to a request for comment on the allegations.

Reuters could not independently verify the allegations.

In the village of Nova Basan, northeast of Kyiv, which was among those retaken by Ukrainian forces, the body of a man lay next to the carcass of a car. A woman wept as men brought a coffin to remove the body.

The village showed signs of heavy fighting, with collapsed buildings and the wreckage of tanks and armoured vehicles strewn around. Another dead body, apparently that of a Russian soldier, lay near a destroyed armoured personnel carrier.

Fleeing Mariupol

Maksim Levin, a Ukrainian photographer and videographer who was working for a Ukrainian news website and was a long-time contributor to Reuters, was killed while covering the war. read more

His body was found in a village north of the capital Kyiv on 1 April, the news website LB.ua where he worked said on Saturday.

Russia denies targeting civilians in what President Vladimir Putin calls a “special military operation” aimed at demilitarising and “denazifying” Ukraine.

Ukraine calls it an unprovoked war of aggression and Western countries have imposed sweeping sanctions in an effort to squeeze Russia’s economy.

In encircled Mariupol, Russia’s main target in Ukraine’s southeastern region of Donbas, tens of thousands of civilians remained trapped with scant access to food and water.

A convoy of about 54 Ukrainian buses and other private vehicles, accompanied by a team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), was renewing its attempt to organise a mass evacuation from the city after turning back on Friday.

ICRC spokesperson Ewan Watson said the team had not yet reached Mariupol, adding they left the city of Zaporizhzhia on Saturday morning and would spend the night en route.

Some civilians who have escaped Mariupol and reached Zaporizhzhia said Russian soldiers repeatedly stopped them to check for the presence of Ukrainian fighters as they fled.

“They stripped the men naked, looked for tattoos,” said Dmytro Kartavov, a 32-year-old builder, adding that the troops paid particular attention to the men’s knees.

“I work, I do repairs, naturally my knees – these are working knees. They say – (you) climbed trenches, dug, and the like.”People walk through a street strewn with several dead bodies in Bucha, northwest of Kyiv.

People walk through a street strewn with several dead bodies in Bucha, northwest of Kyiv. Photo: AFP

Missile strikes

Pope Francis came the closest he has yet to criticising Vladimir Putin over the invasion. He did not name the Russian president but said a “potentate” was fomenting conflicts for nationalist interests.

“Once again, some potentate, sadly caught up in anachronistic claims of nationalist interests, is provoking and fomenting conflicts, while ordinary people sense the need to build a future that will either be shared or not be at all,” he said during a visit to Malta.

Even as Russian forces pulled back from some northern areas, Ukrainian officials reported missile strikes on targets in various parts of the country.

The governor of south-central Dnipro region, Valentyn Reznichenko, said a Russian rocket hit a rail line, badly damaging the tracks and suspending train traffic in the area. He did not say if there were any casualties.

In the early hours, Russian missiles hit the cities of Poltava and Kremenchuk in central Ukraine, Dmitry Lunin, head of the Poltava region, wrote in an online post.

Before dawn, as sirens sounded across Ukraine, the Ukrainian military reported Russian air strikes on the cities of Severodonetsk and Rubizhne in the Luhansk region.

Russia’s defence ministry said high-precision air-launched missiles had disabled military airfields in Poltava and Dnipro. It added later that its forces had hit 28 Ukrainian military facilities across the country, including two depots of rockets and artillery weapons and ammunition.

Alcohol sales in Kyiv

In Kyiv, people started buying alcohol again after Mayor Vitali Klitschko relaxed a month-long ban.

Olena, a psychologist who was buying beer in a supermarket, said it did not mean people had forgotten the war.

“We are just supporting our country in this way. No one will be better off if we are depressed, doing nothing,” she said.

“I’m happy because for two weeks I’ve been walking around thinking ‘I want a beer’,” she said, smiling.

– Reuters

Police launch homicide investigation after South Auckland death

A homicide investigation has been launched following the death of a man in the South Auckland suburb of Favona overnight.No caption

Photo: 123rf.com

Emergency services were called to the Abiru Crescent scene just before 4am.

The man had critical injuries when staff arrived but died at the scene.

In a statement, Police said they were speaking with someone in relation to the incident and a scene examination would start this morning.

One dead following serious crash in Otara

By RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.

Emergency services are at the scene of a serious two-vehicle crash on Hills Road in the Auckland suburb of Otara.Unexplained death in Taita, Lower Hutt early on Sunday 26th January 2020.  A Police cordon and crime scene invetsigation tent were in place Monday 27th January 2020.

Police say they were called to the scene about 8.40pm. Photo: RNZ / Patrice Allen

Police said in a statement that they were alerted about 8.40pm and one person had died at the scene.

The road is closed and diversions are in place while the Serious Crash Unit completes its examination.

Motorists are asked to avoid the area if possible.

Power outage hits Auckland City Hospital

By RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.

Auckland City Hospital lost power this evening, and back-up generators appeared not to kick in for several minutes.Auckland City Hospital

Auckland City Hospital experienced a power outage of several minutes’ duration this evening. Photo: RNZ / Dan Cook

RNZ understands intensive care and some operating theatres had power restored almost immediately but much of the rest of the hospital’s power was out for longer.

A patient told RNZ he was in the emergency department when the lights went out, leaving it in almost total darkness for 15 to 20 minutes.

“It was like you’d turned off all the lights ready for sleep.”

He said staff remained calm and told patients they were waiting for the back-up generators to kick in.

Staff were still able to treat and discharge him, he said.

Another person in the hospital at the time said the lifts were not working and at least one person had been stuck in one.

She said wifi and some computers were still going.

The cause of the outage is not known.

Supreme Court rejects former Comanchero boss’s application to appeal earlier decision

The New Zealand Supreme Court has rejected an application by former president of the Comanchero Motorcycle Club to appeal a decision of the Court of Appeal dismissing his conviction appeal.

Pasilika Naufahu is on trial for drug, money laundering and organised crime charges. Photo: RNZ / Dan Cook

Pasilika Naufahu, who is of Tongan descent, was jailed in February 2021 by Justice Graham Lang over his role in a money laundering and drugs scheme.

He was arrested following a series of raids across Auckland in April 2019, in which more than $3.7 million in assets was seized along with luxury cars, motorbikes, high-end luggage and jewellery.

Naufahu moved to Sydney with his family when he was one year old. In 2016 he was deported to New Zealand after short prison stints in Australia.

The court was told that police intercepts between Samuel Vaisevuraki and  Mr Sha demonstrated they planned to supply pseudoephedrine valued at $1 million to an unnamed third party, alleged to be Naufahu.

Naufahu was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment, later reduced to nine years.

He appealed his sentence in the Court of Appeal, which rejected his application.

He then lodged an application to overturn the Court of Appeal’s decision.

That application was based on questions of whether certain hearsay evidence given at the original trial was admissible.

The Evidence Act said that in criminal proceedings, a hearsay statement was admissible against a defendant if there was reasonable evidence of a conspiracy or joint enterprise; reasonable evidence that the defendant was a member of the conspiracy or joint enterprise and the hearsay statement was made in furtherance of the conspiracy or joint enterprise.

The Court of Appeal upheld the High Court’s finding that these statements were admissible.

The Supreme Court rejected Naufahu’s appeal.

The Supreme Court ruled that there was enough evidence to suggest that Mr Naufahu was “probably” involved in the pseudoephedrine deal.

There was also insufficient merit in this argument to warrant the granting of leave to appeal.

MPs and Cabinet Ministers alleged campaign finance violations trial delayed by lawyer’s illness

Seven MPs and Cabinet Ministers alleged overspending and bribery trial is adjourned until April 14 after one of the lawyers took ill.

Tonga Parliament. Photo/Fale Alea ‘o Tonga (Facebook)

The delay on Thursday came after unsuccessful candidate Paula Piveni Piukala, who was representing himself in the lawsuit he brought against the Minister of Internal Affairs Sangstar Saulala informed the judge that he needed to seek medical attention.

It was unclear whether the illness was related to COVID-19.

It is understood the court was told the following day Piukala was still sick.

Hon Saulala posted a get-well-soon status for Piukala and asked his followers to pray for him.

“We have different political views but we all Tongans,” he said.

As Kaniva News reported this week, the former Prime Minister and six other MPs had been charged after Tonga 2021 general election.

They appeared in court this week March 31.

The lawsuits had been brought against them by the PTOA Party.

The accused MPs are Tēvita Puloka of Tongatapu 1, MP Dr Pingi Fasi of Tongatapu 2, Minister of Finance and MP for Tongatapu 4 Tatafu Moeaki, MP ‘Aisake Eke of Tongatapu 5, Minister of Internal Affairs and MP for Tongatapu 7  Sangstar Saulala and former Prime Minister and MP for Tongatapu 10 Pōhiva Tu’i’onetoa.