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Suspected gang shooting targets wrong house in Auckland

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

Police say a family are lucky to have escaped serious injuries after a suspected gang shooting in Auckland last night.

Police investigating serious firearms incident in Mangere
Police at the scene of the shooting in Yates Road, Māngere Photo: RNZ/ Marika Khabazi

Police were called to Yates Road, in Māngere, just after 11.30pm, after reports of gunshots being fired at a home.

A vehicle was also heard leaving the area at speed.

Police believe the incident was gang related but the offenders targeted the wrong address.

The home had a number of children inside and had no gang connections.

“We are taking this incident extremely seriously and will be undertaking a number of enquiries today to identify and locate those responsible,” police said in a statement.

Anyone with information is asked to contact police by phone on 105 and quote file number 211104/5280.

Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

Covid-19: Health officials investigate death of person while isolating at home

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

Health officials are investigating the death of a person who had Covid-19 and was isolating at home in Auckland.

Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield during the Covid-19 and vaccine update at Parliament on 29 September 2021.
Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield. Photo: Pool / NZME / Mark Mitchell

The person tested positive for Covid-19 on 24 October and had been self-isolating in Manukau.

They were found by a family member who visited on Wednesday.

The Ministry of Health has said the cause of death was unknown and the coroner would determine whether it was due to the virus or something else.

Director General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield said there was no indication at this stage they required any extra support, but a formal investigation was under way.

“We got notified late yesterday afternoon by the police, who had been called by a family member who found this person deceased, and that’s a tragic situation.

“At this stage we don’t have any more information but we do have a very formal investigation protocol that we initiated to look and see what might have happened from a health perspective and will work with police.”

He understood the person was isolating alone at home.

Because it was an unexplained death it would be referred to the coroner, Bloomfield said.

Bloomfield said a daily check-in is standard procedure for those isolating at home.

“For most people that will be simply through electronic feedback – an email that they will send in with information about their symptoms. If an email isn’t received then that’s followed up with a phone call.”

On whether the person was getting all the help they needed or had asked for further assistance, Bloomfield said they had no further information on that, and there was no indication at this stage on whether person was high risk.

The first assessment of a person with Covid-19 is a “thorough process” to find out what support they need, and their potential risk to themselves or others, he said.

That was the point health officials found out whether the person has access to emails or needs phone calls instead.

“There is a range of options available for anyone isolating at home.”

He hoped to give more information about today, including whether the person was a high-risk individual.

“There’s no sense yet if the death is related to Covid or another cause,” he said.

Manurewa/Papakura ward councillor Daniel Newman said it would be a very distressing time for the person’s family.

“We’re wanting to ensure that those people who are Covid-positive, and whānau who are affected by that diagnosis, are receiving all the support they need in a community, obviously, which is complex in terms of the wider economic and social challenges we face.

“Most people in New Zealand are going to face an outbreak of Covid in their community with about 80 or 90 percent full vaccination coverage.

“My community in Auckland faced it with about 20 percent vaccination coverage.”

Northland

Bloomfield said household and workplace contacts of the two unexplained Northland cases had so far returned negative test results.

They remained in isolation, and it was still possible they positive in the coming days.

Part of the Far North is in alert level 3 until at least Monday due to the cases in Taipā having no known epidemiological or person-to-person link with any other Covid-19 cases.

Bloomfield was still waiting for genome sequencing results on the initial case but hoped to have that today.

“It may or may not help us with identifying where the case came from”, he said, and interviews and other work was going on.

139 new community cases in New Zealand today

There are 139 new community cases of Covid-19 today, with 64 people now in hospital with the coronavirus, the Ministry of Health says.

In a statement, the ministry said two of the new cases were in Waikato and one was in Northland, with the remaining cases all in Auckland.

It said 72 of today’s cases are still to be linked.

Last night the ministry announced the death of a person who had Covid-19 and was isolating at home in Auckland.

The person tested positive for Covid-19 on 24 October and had been self-isolating in Manukau.

The ministry said the cause of death was unknown and the coroner would determine whether it was due to the virus or something else.

At the briefing yesterday there were 100 new cases – 97 in Auckland and three in Waikato.

There were 26,999 vaccine doses administered yesterday, including 6659 first doses and 20,340 second doses. The Ministry said 89 percent of New Zealanders have now had their first dose and 77 percent are fully vaccinated.

– more to come

Tonga patient tests negative in second round of Covid-19 testing

A person who tested positive for Covid 19 in Tonga has now tested negative, says the Ministry of Health CEO today.

Chief executive of Tonga’s Ministry of health Dr Siale Akauola. Photo: RNZ Pacific/Christine Rovoi

Dr Siale ‘Akau’ola said another test is expected on Friday for the patient.

He said the Covid-positive person who arrived in Tonga from Christchurch would continue to stay in the MIQ until his 21-day quarantine was over.

Dr ‘Akau’ola, who joined the Prime Minister and a team of government officials in a press conference this afternoon, said he was advised on Monday  that the person had provided a second negative test.

Dr ‘Akau’ola reiterated during the conference that the sample from the patient was tested on Thursday, October 28 and Friday, October 29. He referred to the positive result as “weak positive”.

New Zealand weak positive case

The Tonga case came after a weak positive case was tested negative on its second test in New Zealand.

Last month, a Covid-positive person who travelled to Katikati from Auckland tested negative on their second test.

“The person had a high CT value, indicating a weak positive result, and was tested again following their initial positive result last week”, Stuff reported.

Tested on all machines

‘Akau’ola said the person’s sample was tested on all three of the Health’s COVID-19 testing machines on October 28.

He also repeated what he had said in the previous conference on Friday that the weak virus can be a historical virus or a baby virus which tried to grow, but was stopped by the antibiotic because the patient was fully vaccinated.

“The nature of the virus is shedding and it can be negative or positive at various times and this is why we have the 21-day quarantine rule.”

All the people on the flight from Christchurch were required to have negative Covid tests prior to departure.

New Zealand’s Ministry of Health said the positive case was fully vaccinated with the Pfizer vaccine,and had their second dose on October 15.

Tonga’s main island Tongatapu is currently on lockdown for one week until next week Monday 8.

 

Reefton gym shuts down rather than police vaccine certificates

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

A West Coast couple have chosen to close their gym, instead of turning away customers who are not vaccinated.

Powerhouse Fitness Centre manager Rachel Fifield owns the Reefton gym with her husband Murray Fifield.

The new Covid-19 Protection Framework, or traffic-light system was announced as the couple were moving the fitness centre to new premises and it made them consider if they wanted to continue the business.

Rachel Fifield said the couple did not want to discriminate against its members or employees based on their personal choice whether or not to get vaccinated.

“We both agreed that we weren’t prepared to do the government’s dirty work for them and discriminate against our community and that is exactly why we closed our gym, it is a political stand against tyranny, we won’t enforce discrimination of any kind.

“I think New Zealand needs to look at this really seriously, the division that it’s making in our communities, families and workplaces.”

The couple had recently spent thousands buying new gym equipment and painting their new building ahead of what would have been the gym’s third birthday.

She said the decision was not made lightly and the couple had since received support from around the country for their stance.

Testing systems don’t lie says Health CEO as he hits back against online claims and rumours

CEO of the Ministry of Health Dr Siale ‘Akau’ola said today the Ministry’s testing systems didn’t lie.

Dr Siale ‘Akau’ola, Ministry of Health CEO

Dr ‘Akau’ola was rejecting rumours on social media that the Ministry was lying about the existence of a positive case from last Thursday’s repatriation flight from Christchurch.

His response came after Kaniva sent him an audio file which has been widely shared on Facebook. The file purports to be the voice of the Tongan patient being quarantined saying his test was negative. The man in the audio file says that he was one of a group of Mormon church missionaries who tested positive.

There is no evidence the audio is genuine and people have argued it was  important to trust the Ministry and the health professionals who were educated and trained to do the job. However, the audio file has also sparked outrage online with critics taking it seriously. They accused the government of lying.

Dr ‘Akau’ola told Kaniva News this morning the sample from the patient was tested on Thursday, October 28 and Friday, October 29. He referred to the positive result as “weak positive”.

He previously said the person’s sample was tested on all three of the Health’s COVID-19 testing machines on October 28.

In confirming the Vaiola hospital lap test positive results he said: “It was not lying”.

“It can be a historical virus or a baby virus which tried to grow, but was stopped by the antibiotic because the patient was fully vaccinated. The testing equipment cannot tell the difference between these two aspects of the virus,” Dr ‘Akau’ola said.

“The next test for the patient will tell whether it was a weak virus and it became negative and that test will be conducted on Wednesday or Thursday. If it is negative let’s be grateful because it shows the antibody managed to stop the virus from growing. Thanks New Zealand for vaccinating the person.

“The nature of the virus is shedding and it can be negative or positive at various times and this is why we have the 21-day quarantine rule.”

All the people on the flight from Christchurch were required to have negative Covid tests prior to departure.

New Zealand’s Ministry of Health said the positive case was fully vaccinated with the Pfizer vaccine,and had their second dose on October 15.

Tonga’s main island Tongatapu is currently on lockdown for one week until next week Monday 8.

 

COVID-19: Tongatapu placed into one-week lockdown after first case detected

Tonga has announced a snap lockdown for main island Tongatapu after a person tested positive for Covid, the first case since the worldwide pandemic.

Prime Minister Pōhiva Tu’i’onetoa. Photo/Kalino Lātū (Kaniva Tonga)

The Prime Minister said the main island will go on lockdown for one week starting tomorrow Tuesday 2 at 12.01 am until Monday 8 at 11.59pm.

The case was detected in Nuku’alofa, after three tests conducted at the Vaiola hospital lap on samples from 215 passengers who flew from Christchurch to Tonga on Wednesday.

Authorities say they are working on the assumption that the new case was the Delta variant.

Around 62 per cent of Tonga’s population has been fully vaccinated.

The lockdown announcement was made according to the lockdown alert levels used in New Zealand and Australia.

The Prime Minister said essential services including businesses like banks and the market will stay open.

All schools are closed before the high school national exams starting on Tuesday 9, after the one-week lockdown ends on Monday 8.

Funeral services were allowed with 10 people inside and 20 outside

Covid 19 Delta outbreak: In-principle decision to move Auckland to step 2 next week, Waikato to move to step 2

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

Cabinet met today to review alert levels in Auckland and parts of Waikato, which are currently at alert level 3, step 1.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says Cabinet has decided in principle to move Auckland to alert level 3 step 2 next Tuesday at 11.59pm.

Parts of Waikato will move down to step 2 of alert level 3 from tomorrow 11.59pm.

Watch the announcement here:

Ardern says the Director-General of Health recommended Waikato can move to the second step down in level 3.

This means retail can open their doors with face masks and physical distancing; the number of people meeting outside can increase to 25; while the two-household restriction is also removed.

In Auckland, fewer than 5000 first doses remain before reaching 90 percent single-dose vaccination, and for Auckland as a whole 80 percent has had two doses.

“And that’s incredible,” Ardern says. “Case numbers, while growing, remain within some of our expectations as modelled and the public health assessment of the impact of changes like opening up retail include that this activity is generally not responsible for marked increases of new cases.”

Cabinet has decided in principle to move Auckland to the second step down of level 3 from next Tuesday, 9 November, at 11.59pm.

Ardern says the approach is to take a “steady and conscious change” in restrictions.

“For those who have concerns about any easing, I would say that because of high vaccination rates in Auckland we can move forward with greater confidence and we will continue to have very strong and clear public health guidance on how businesses that are eligible to reopen, do so.”

Vaccination rates

Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield says as of yesterday 75 percent of eligible New Zealanders are now fully vaccinated, and 80 percent can be expected to reach that milestone next week. Auckland is already at 80 percent.

He says 70 percent was a figure that was being bandied about internationally, so to reach that is fantastic.

Pointing to several slides showing the outbreak in Auckland, Bloomfield says whilst case numbers are increasing, “we can see the hospitalisation numbers are not increasing at the same rate, and in fact a number of those people in hospital are in hospital for reasons other than Covid-19”.

He says of concern in the current cases is a large proportion of Māori. “It was less than 10 percent of cases initially in August but is … between 40 and 50 percent of cases each day now.”

He says the number of Pasifika cases has dropped from the high proportion seen at the beginning of the outbreak.

Bloomfield says testing for Māori is still high, however, with about 12 percent of Māori in Auckland having been tested in the past 14 days. “This is very important for us being able to identify cases there.”

He says there has also been a slight increase in the positivity rate, but it remains one of the lowest, if not the lowest, in the OECD.

Modelling of the R-value shows projections for where case numbers are expected to go. Bloomfield says vaccination rates can be expected to have an impact on the R-value.

He says hospitalisations last week were higher than what was expected, but ICU rates remained low.

Most cases are among the unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, he says, and the impact of vaccination on hospitalisations “is even more profound”, as can be seen from the data.

Ardern says daily case numbers do not say much about how the Covid-19 response is going.

She says she will travel to support Northland’s vaccination efforts tomorrow, and on Wednesday will be in Whanganui to support the vaccination teams there.

Parts of the Waikato will move to the next stage within alert level 3 would be which isstep 2 where retail can operate and public facilities like pools, libraries and museums reopen, subject to mask-wearing and social distancing.

There were 162 new community cases of Covid-19 reported today, 156 in Auckland and five in Waikato.

More than 3.1 million New Zealanders are now fully vaccinated.

Covid-19: 162 new community cases in New Zealand today

By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.

There are 162 new community cases of Covid-19 in New Zealand today.

Wellington Covid-19 testing station on 23/8/2021.
A sign outside a Covid-19 testing centre. File photo Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

In a statement, the Ministry of Health said of the new cases, 156 are in Auckland, five in Waikato and one in Northland.

There are also four new cases at the border.

The ministry said 53 people are in hospital, down from 56 yesterday – 15 in North Shore, 19 in Middlemore and 19 in Auckland.

Today more than 3.1 million New Zealanders now fully vaccinated, the ministry said.

It said it would highlight how many New Zealanders were vaccinated rather than the number of community cases to ” better reflect the shift in New Zealand’s current response to Covid-19 and the importance of vaccination”.

There were more than 20,000 vaccines administered yesterday taking NZ’s vaccination rate to 88 percent for first doses and 75 percent for second doses representing 3,159,301 fully vaccinated New Zealanders.

New Zealand had 303 cases over the weekend including Saturday’s 160 new infections which was a record for the pandemic.

There was no media conference at 1pm, with Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern due to hold a briefing at 4pm to announce Cabinet’s decision on whether alert levels for Auckland and parts of Waikato will be eased.

The next stage within alert level 3 would be ‘step 2’ where retail could operate and public facilities like pools, libraries and museums reopen, subject to mask-wearing and social distancing.

Ardern told Morning Report she would be sharing more details on Covid-19 modelling which suggests a rise in case numbers which would peak at 200 per day this month.

More to come…

Covid-19: Long queues at Nuku‘alofa testing centres after MIQ case

People waited in line for hours to get Covid-19 vaccines at a Nuku’alofa testing site after the announcement of Tonga’s first Covid case on Friday.

Long queues at Queen Sālote Memorial vaccination centre leave people waiting hours for their vaccination. Photo/Supplied

Long queues could be seen at the Queen Sālote Memorial building in Nuku’alofa this morning.

Reports said the high turnout will help boost the national coverage among the eligible population to hit 86 per cent with first dose and a second dose of about 62 percent.

There were also reports of worried residents flooding shops to buy groceries and there were queues at petrol stations and also at the hospital for vaccinations on Friday.

Prime minister  Pōhiva Tu’i’onetoa is expected to make an announcement today about any future lockdowns.

He said on Friday his cabinet will decide today what action to take following confirmation the Covid-19 case came in on a repatriation flight from Christchurch on Wednesday.

As Kaniva News reported earlier this morning, Tongan veteran journalist Kalafi Moala said the government appears to have failed in meeting the level of preparedness it promised the public if the Covid arrived in the kingdom.

“There is no sign of preparedness for this despite the number of previous statements assuring the public there was a plan already in place if the virus will arrive here,” Moala said.

Moala said the government needs to give people more certainty.