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Tongan men to face court in relation to alleged sexual assault of teenage girls in Wingham

By Evin Priest, The Australian.

Three Tongan nationals in Australia on working visas will face court on Wednesday on the NSW mid-north coast, accused of sexually assaulting two teenage girls at a park over the weekend.

Wingham Central Park, off Bent St.

About 10pm on Saturday, emergency services were called to Bent St in Wingham following reports two teenage girls had been sexually assaulted by three men at a nearby park.

Police will allege one of the men committed aggravated sexual intercourse with a child aged between 10 and 14.

A crime scene was established at the park, where specialist forensic officers started an investigation.

Officers attached to Manning/Great Lakes Police District began inquiries before the matter was referred to detectives from the NSW Police State Crime Command’s child abuse and sex crimes squad.

Detectives arrested three men – aged 21, 24 and 31 – at a Wingham business at 11.45am on Tuesday, while another 21-year-old man was arrested at 2.30pm in Wingham.

Wingham Central Park, off Bent St.
Wingham Central Park, off Bent St.

Two warrants were used to search hotel rooms at Bent St, Wingham, where police seized several items.

All four men, who are Tongan nationals, were taken to Taree police station; however, the 31-year-old man was released.

The 21-year-old man was charged with aggravated sexual intercourse with a child (aged between 10 and 14 years), while the other 21-year-old was charged with two counts of intentionally sexually touching a child (aged between 10 and 16 years).

The 24-year-old man was charged with two counts of intentionally sexually touching a child (aged between 10 and 16 years).

The three men were refused bail to appear at Taree Local Court on Wednesday.

It is understood the men are in Australia on unskilled visas and had only recently completed hotel quarantine to start work in the Wingham area.

Investigators are working with the Department of Home Affairs regarding the visa status of the group.

Anyone with concerns about suspected child abuse or exploitation should call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or use the Crime Stoppers online reporting page

Three months before Christmas, companies plan early for freight delays, higher costs

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

Businesses already have Christmas front of mind, hoping Covid-19 won’t be a grinch again.

Ports of Auckland

File photo of Containers at Ports of Auckland. Photo: RNZ / Kymberlee Fernandes

Getting stock into the country last holiday season was a stressful time for many, largely because of how Covid-19 impacted global shipping.

There were also problems at New Zealand’s largest port, the Ports of Auckland.

Businesses like champagne importer Three French Vines, which ran out of some stock last summer, want to make sure they can combat ongoing global shipping delays.

Director Andrew Lyndsay said they had tried hard to plan ahead for the holiday season, but he ultimately believed he would experience shortages again.

Lyndsay said they ordered stock early, making estimates based on sales over the last few Christmas and New Year periods, but whether it matched this year’s demand was a complete guessing game.

He did not see any risk if they ordered too much champagne because they can sell an aged wine.

“We sell champagne that was bottled, for example, in 1975 and it’s as beautiful today as it was then.”

On the other hand, New Zealand Toy Distributors Association president Geoff Lyons felt like shipping at the moment was a nightmare.

He said there was massive demand for toys but the price of shipping had skyrocketed.

The cost of freight from China had gone up “as much as four-fold from last year”, he said.

“So a container that was costing me $4000 last year, the latest one I’ve had is just over $17,000.”

Lyons said his toy distribution company Haka New Zealand tried to absorb some costs but some would be relayed to the customer.

He said the toy sector started preparing for Christmas in about April, which was normal.

Despite shipping delays being weeks-long, he was confident all his Christmas stock will be in the country by 25 December.

“Whether we can physically get all of that stock in the stores pre-Christmas is going to be the tester,” he said.

To try combat delays, Unity Books had expanded storage space and was getting stock for months ahead – through into February – instead of weeks.

Adrian Hardingham, who manages the Wellington store, said was already contacting customers as well.

“We’re starting to send messages to our customers about thinking about their Christmas presents now, in October, rather than in late November.”

He had even brought on extra summer staff early to help process the stock already coming in.

Last year in New Zealand, the impacts on global shipping by Covid-19 were sitting on top of challenges relating to staffing and operations at Ports of Auckland.

But the Ports said it was in a much better position now. Delays were global and not in getting freight through Auckland’s port.

However, Ports of Auckland said it was expecting a busy holiday season and was not being complacent because it was wary of surprises Covid-19 could spring.

Covid-19 vaccine certificates: How they might work and what questions remain

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

The government will need to give more detail on how vaccine certificates will work for those who can’t be vaccinated for medical reasons, a computer systems engineer says.

Qr code payment , online shopping , cashless technology concept

The QR code showing vaccination status will be able to be carried in paper form or on an app. Photo: 123RF

Yesterday, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced Cabinet had agreed to the use of vaccine certificates in Aotearoa, and they were likely to be a digital Covid-19 vaccination certificate containing a QR code.

The codes can be printed out on paper, and there will be an app available for venues to use to verify the QR code is genuine.

The government aims to have the vaccine certificates in use by next month.

Technologist Andrew Chen, a computer systems engineer and research fellow at the University of Auckland, was waiting for further detail on the policy for people who cannot be vaccinated due to a medical condition, and on ensuring QR codes were not misused.

“From a technology perspective, the main benefit that we have had is that we’ve been able to see how this technology has been rolled out overseas,” Chen said.

“We’ll be able to learn from their experiences, and I would say at this point the European Union [standard] has been pretty robustly tested.”

He said New Zealand’s planned system is similar to the European Union standard, the EUDCC, with a QR code that a verifier app will be able to scan.

“In that QR code is encrypted information about the individual and their vaccination and/or test status.

“The way that this has been done is that they’ll make sure that only legitimate people can generate the QR codes, and then only legitimate people will be able to decrypt the QR codes which will help keep that private information a bit safer.

Non-vaccinated people

Chen said staff checking QR codes at venues should not have to deal with any information about health conditions underlying a vaccination exemption.

“What we heard yesterday was that if you have a verifier app for a venue operator, then they’ll only see a vaccination status and a name, and that status might just be a green check or a red cross.

“One of the open questions at the moment is whether somebody who is unvaccinated for legitimate health reasons … if you scan their vaccination certificate maybe it’ll just come up with a green tick to say that this person is allowed in.

“I think that’s a question that the government’s going to have to grapple with from a policy perspective and from a public health risk perspective.

“I don’t want your average retail worker to have to figure out whether or not this particular disease is a legitimate exemption for not being vaccinated.

“The more that we can abstract that away by just showing a green tick or a red cross the better that will also protect the privacy of those individuals.”

There could be different level of access in the a verifier app for staff checking people into a festival compared to those checking people at the border, Chen said.

“That’s a little bit of the tricky stuff that might throw a spanner in the works, but we’ll have to see what the policy looks like in the coming weeks.”

Hacking risk ‘low’

While no technology system was 100 percent immune from cyber attack, Chen said the systems were designed “as well as they can be”.

The information contained in the certificates was backed by the Covid Immunisation Register, “which is the central source of truth around people’s vaccination statuses”.

If New Zealand’s vaccine certificate was in a similar format to that used in Europe, Chen said he would be “reasonably comfortable” the risk of our information getting hacked was relatively low.

“Most of the attacks that we can see probably require in-person interventions rather than relying on cyber hacking.”

Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins said [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/452993/national-party-leader-judith-collins-criticises-vaccine-certificates-and-mandates the government was working to make sure a verification system meant certificates could not be forged.

“There will be a system where those who are scanning people in will be able to verify that the name on the QR code matches the name that’s registered against the vaccine. “The certificate was “aimed at places of particular risk”, Hipkins said.

Misuse of QR codes

Other countries have experienced the problem of people using a QR code that was not their own, Chen said.

“The QR code will reveal your status and your name. In theory what was supposed to happen overseas is that you’re supposed to then also get another form of ID.

“So in New Zealand that might be your drivers licence or passport that has your photo on it and then you would check that the person’s face matches the name on the ID which measures the name on the vaccination certificate.

“What we’ve seen overseas is that a lot of places have just not bothered because it’s a bit too much of a hassle, and so that hasn’t been enforced as much.

“But they’re living in a different context where having a small number of unvaccinated people attend a baseball game, is perhaps okay given that they’ve got more cases in the community, whereas here you know even one unvaccinated person attending a large summer festival might present a significant risk.

“So I think we might be a bit more strict about that.”

Chen said clarity was also need on when the use of certificates might be phased out, such as a sufficiently high vaccination rate or a specific alert level.

“It is only under extraordinary circumstances, with the current public health crisis, that we can justify the use of certificates in this way.”

Live Covid-19 updates on Auckland’s first day of loosened level 3 restrictions

Dr Caroline McElnay has reported the death of a Covid-19 patient at Middlemore Hospital.

At today’s briefing, where 39 community cases were reported, Dr McElnay said there are 32 people in hospital with Covid-19, including seven in intensive care.

Dr McElnay said she did not have details regarding the death of the person.

“There are conversations happening with the family and we have to respect the family’s wishes, they are obviously grieving. When we are able to release information we will.”

Meanwhile, Kāwhia Community Board chair Dave Walsh has confirmed a Covid-19 positive case in the coastal King Country settlement.

Kāwhia, south of Raglan, is not part of the alert level 3 lockdown which covers Raglan and Hamilton.

Tonga committed to Northern rugby tour

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

The Tonga Rugby Union remains committed to sending an ‘Ikale Tahi squad to the Northern Hemisphere despite the ongoing uncertainty around Covid-19.

Tonga will face the Cook Islands after losing back to back tests against Samoa.

Tonga played the All Blacks, Manu Samoa and the Cook Islands in July. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

Manu Samoa’s end of season tour was cancelled this week in line with the current health and travel advice from the Samoa Government.

Tonga is scheduled to kick off their Northern tour against Scotland at the end of the month before facing England, the French Barbarians and Romania in November.

Tonga Rugby Union CEO Peter Harding hopes to confirm a playing squad by the end of the week and are in the process of finalising their tour details.

“Samoa’s made a very difficult decision,” he said.

“We’re not in their building so we can’t really comment on why they made the decision but we do understand, intimately understand, the difficulties of putting this tour together.

“Honestly it is such an energy sapper but we’re going to go ahead with ours and that’s the decision we’ve made.”

Peter Harding, new CEO of Tonga Rugby Union

Peter Harding. Photo: World Rugby

The bulk of the ‘Ikale Tahi squad will be drawn from players already plying their trade in the Northern Hemisphere, with Covid-19 travel restrictions making it difficult to include players from Australia and New Zealand.

Tonga managed to secure an MIQ spot for one New Zealand based player, so they can return home after the Northern tour, and are hopeful of securing another quarantine spot when the next bunch of rooms is released next week.

Peter Harding said it has been difficult trying to put a team together in a world of travel restrictions.

“This isn’t just a normal tour where you take 31 players away. This is a tour where people will be coming in and out as we go…so we’ll be naming an extended squad.”

Ikale Tahi head coach Toutai Kefu will not travel with the squad as he and his family continue their recovery from a violent home invasion in August.

Tonga halfback Sonatane Takulua passes the ball during the 2019 Rugby World Cup match against England.

Tonga will face England in November. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

Peter Harding said a make-shift management team will look after the team during the month-long tour.

“I’ve been putting together a squad of staff since July, because I sort of anticipated this,” he said.

“We’ve got all these amazing professional people but it’s a hit and run mercenary style staff – very good at their job but it’s just the way it is and for continuity I’m going and the old doctor is going, just to make sure things stay on the right track.”

The ‘Ikale Tahi squad will assemble in Edinburgh on 24 October.

Meanwhile the Flying Fijians are scheduled to face Spain in Madrid, Wales in Cardiff and Georgia during the November window.

Covid-19 update: 39 new cases in the community, including nine in Waikato

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

There have been 39 new cases of Covid-19 reported in New Zealand today, including nine in Waikato, although just one is unlinked to other cases.

Coronavirus disease cells, 3D rendering. new 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) infection outbreak occurs from Wuhan, China

File image. Photo: 123rf.com

There has also been one death reported at Middlemore Hospital.

There were 24 new Covid-19 cases in the community yesterday, 18 of which were in Auckland and six in Waikato. Four of these remain unlinked.

There have now been 1420 cases in the current community outbreak.

All of the 18 cases in Waikato are linked to known cases.

Speaking at today’s media briefing, Director of Public Health Dr Caroline McElnay said there are two cases in recent returnees in MIQ

There was also one new case in a border worker and authorities are investigating to determine whether it is linked to the border or to a community cluster.

There are 12 active clusters and Dr McElnay said it was estimated there could be an additional 36 cases in coming days in household contacts.

There are 32 people in hospital with Covid-19, seven of whom are in ICU.

There were almost 25,000 swabs processed nationwide yesterday. There are 22 community testing centres open in Auckland today.

Waikato DHB said a patient visited its ED last Friday night and has now tested positive for Covid-19. They were asymptomatic at the time and correctly screened, but some ED staff have been stood down. Public health staff are investigating.

There continued to be exposure events, but that was expected, Dr McElnay said.

Strict infection control measures are in place, she said.

In light of the increased risk from Delta, the Ministry of Health is advising people consider a shorter gap between vaccine doses than the currently recommended six weeks.

The gap between doses was extended from three to six weeks in August.

Rugby league star Manu Vatuvei pleads guilty in meth importation case

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

Former rugby league star Manu Vatuvei has pleaded guilty to importing methamphetamine.

Manu Vatuvei arrives at Manukau District Court.

Manu Vatuvei arriving at Manukau District Court this morning. Photo: RNZ / Katie Todd

The 35-year-old appeared in the Manukau District Court this morning.

He was due to stand trial this week on charges of importing methamphetamine and possessing methamphetamine for supply.

But he has now entered a guilty plea through his lawyer Vivienne Feyen to a representative importation charge.

Feyen told the court Vatuvei accepted responsibility for his offending.

Vatuvei has been remanded on bail ahead of his sentencing in December.

The Crown has indicated it will withdraw the remaining charges at sentencing.

Vatuvei was arrested in November 2019.

Manu Vatuvei pictured in March 2021.

Vatuvei during an earlier appearance in the High Court Photo: RNZ / Simon Rogers

He fought to keep his name secret, but name suppression was declined by both the District Court and High Court.

Days before suppression was due to lapse, Vatuvei outed himself on Instagram.

At the time, he told his followers he wanted them to hear directly from him that he was accused of possessing and importing the drug in 2019.

“I’ll be fighting my innocence for these charges,” he said.

“I know there’ll be a lot of questions that will be wanting answers but I’ve been advised by my legal team that’s all I can talk about. So hopefully you can all respect that, and also can you please respect the privacy of my family while I go through this battle.”

Manu Vatuvei outside court in March 2021.

Vatuvei outside court in March 2021 Photo: RNZ / Simon Rogers

Between 2004 and 2017, Vatuvei played 14 seasons for the Warriors and scored 152 tries over 226 games.

He was nicknamed “the Beast” and became the first player in NRL history to complete the feat of scoring 10 tries or more in 10 consecutive seasons in 2015.

In 2019 he had success in Dancing with the Stars, winning the series with dance partner Loryn Reynolds.

NZ govt urged to ban seabed mining for Pacific’s sake

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

A New Zealand Supreme Court ruling against seabed mining has been described as important for the Pacific region.

After a long legal process the Supreme Court has ruled against a bid by Trans Tasman Resources to mine the South Taranaki seabed.

The ruling was welcomed by Te Paati Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer of Ngāti Ruanui iwi in South Taranaki, who led legal challenges against the bid.

A map provided by Trans-Tasman Resources showing the area covered by the proposed ironsands project.

A map showing the area covered by the South Taranaki Bight Project. Photo: Trans-Tasman Resources

Ngarewa-Packer is wary about seabed mining companies courting Pacific islands governments with promises of money and claims that seabed minerals will help the fight against climate change.

“This isn’t about the planet and this isn’t about people, and I think if there’s anything that a pandemic environment has warned us it’s that money is not the ‘be all and end all’ I think,” she said.

No caption

Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

“Seabed mining wasn’t able to guarantee any assurance off environmental protection at all, it’s purely desecration.”

Given the growing interest in the Pacific Ocean seabed by mining advocates, Ngarewa-Packer said it’s incumbent on New Zealand to lead the way.

“The pressure now has to be calling on the prime minister to follow through and ban seabed mining. And if we follow through then the other Pasifika nations will get the confidenceto follow throught. There’s better ways to grow an economy.”

Ngarewa-Packer said New Zealand must now ban seabed mining in its waters.

She said economic growth should not come at the cost of the environment and future generations.

Timaru tragedy: Trial date set for mother accused of murdering daughters

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

A trial date has been set for the South African mother of three charged with killing her daughters.

No caption

Photo: RNZ / Richard Tindiller

Lauren Dickason, 40, who is a medical practitioner, was excused from appearing in the High Court in Christchurch via video link for her second hearing.

She is accused of murdering twins Maya and Karla, 2, and their older sister Liane, 6.

The three were found dead at their home soon after the family arrived in Timaru from South Africa for a new life.

Today a trial date of March 2022 was set by Justice Dunningham, however, a plea has yet to be entered.

The accused was remanded back to Hillmorton Hospital for a further psychiatric assessment.

Her next hearing is set down for 15 October.

Last week Graham Dickason, the father of the three children thanked all of those donating money to the family on a Givealittle page.

The fundraising was started by other South Africans in Aoteaoa to help pay for funeral expenses, and accommodate relatives who have travelled to be with Graham Dickason.

It has so far raised $31,755.

He said the messages left along with the donations had been heartfelt and comforting.

Coverage of the ‘Atenisi Institute’s recent court case

Letter to the editor

Dear Sir,

It was gratifying to remark the headline of Kaniva’s recent coverage of the ‘Atenisi Institute’s recent court case (AC9/2021) because it balances the denial of funding with the finding of liability, thereby capturing the two-fold aspect of the judgment. However, there are some factual errors.

In Oct. 2019, the recruitment bans of 2018 and 2019 were declared ultra vires by Lord Chief Justice Whitten, not Lord Chief Justice Paulsen who had denied injunction against the initial ban in February 2019. The ‘Atenisi Institute did not challenge Lord Chief Justice Whitten’s vital judgment of ultra vires but rather on appeal obtained reassuring clarification regarding two obiter dicta, as well as further encouragement to litigate for damages.

Justice Hansen’s opinions regarding quantum are restricted to judgement at ¶56-59. He endorsed endorse the reasoning of the Lower Court in denying quantum, but it is unfair to conflate the Lower Court’s opinions with his. He never, for example, opined that prospective candidates could sufficiently assess the ‘Atenisi environment via a “smart phone”; he cited the Lower Court’s opinion in that regard. And he certainly never described ‘Atenisi’s appeal for funding as “opportunistic”, again citing the Lower Court’s opinion in that regard, as is common practice in appellate judgment;

Moreover, it’s odd that Kaniva is in such detail covering the appellate denial of additional funding without ever having informed its readers that in February the Lower Court awarded ‘Atenisi damages for lost tuition caused by the recruitment bans. Had it done so, its readers would have appreciated that since litigating damages in May 2020 ‘Atenisi has twice established discrete liability for the recruitment bans.

Dr Michael Horowitz

University Dean

‘Atenisi Institute

We regret that some errors of attribution occurred during the editing process – Kaniva News.