Monthly Archives: September 2021

New Zealand records its warmest ever winter with average temperature of 9.8C – The Guardian

Posted: September 8, 2021 at 10:10 am

New Zealand has recorded its warmest ever winter, and scientists say that climate change is driving temperatures ever higher.

For the three months through to the end of August 2021, the average temperature was 9.8C, according to New Zealands National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research.

The figure was 1.3C above the long-term average and 0.2C higher than the previous record posted in 2020. Scientists have been keeping records since 1909, but most of the warmest winters have been recent.

Nava Fedaeff, a meteorologist at the institute, said that on top of a background of global warming, this year there were more warm winds than usual from the north and warmer sea temperatures.

She said the underlying warming trend could be tracked through carbon dioxide concentration, which had increased in New Zealand from 320 parts per million 50 years ago to about 412 parts per million today.

Fedaeff said snowfall at lower elevations was well below average this winter as it was often replaced with rain, which could make for lower river levels later in the year because there would be less snowmelt. That could impact irrigation for farms, she said.

There were also more extreme weather events, Fedaeff said, including severe flooding in some places and dry spells in others.

Prof James Renwick, a climate scientist at the Victoria University of Wellington, said that in the short term at least, some New Zealand farmers with cow or sheep herds might benefit from a longer grass-growing season.

But he said the changes were also putting pressure on natural ecosystems and that over time more species would face extinction. It was imperative for humans to slow the rate of greenhouse gas emissions, he said.

If we dont get on top of warming soon, there is going to be grief for large sections of the world.

Renwick said New Zealand had talked a lot about climate change but had so far done little to curb its emissions. But he said there were now good government policies in place, including a pledge to become carbon-neutral by 2050.

He said there were plenty of natural resources like wind, sun and water that could provide renewable power for the nations energy needs.

New Zealand could become world-leading in green energy and a green economy.

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Steve Hansen shoots down suggestion World 12s could hurt New Zealand Rugby – Stuff.co.nz

Posted: at 10:10 am

Michael Steele/Getty Images

Former All Blacks coach Sir Steve Hansen.

Sir Steve Hansen has shot down suggestions the proposed new World 12s competition could hurt New Zealand Rugby, claiming it could even stop key players departing on Japanese sabbaticals.

The former All Blacks coach is an ambassador for the freshly announced 12-a-side competition, which is being touted as the rugby equivalent of the IPL, and is set to launch with a mens tournament in England next year, followed by the inaugural womens tournament in 2023.

New Zealand Rugby plan to work alongside World Rugby in the coming days to get to terms with the proposed competition but, in a statement, general manager of professional rugby and high performance Chris Lendrum made it clear they would not support any competition that impacts domestic rugby, among other factors.

However, Hansen was quick to dismiss the suggestion the proposed competition could hurt the sport in New Zealand, from NPC level to the All Blacks.

READ MORE:* Why Steve Hansen believes World 12s will be irresistible* Steve Tew and Steve Hansen in World 12s rugby evolution * Mark Reason: It's to our eternal shame neglected Ngani Laumape has gone into exile * Ex-All Blacks coach Steve Hansen says NZ Rugby don't owe Aussies anything

No, I dont believe so. The people that are going to be going, the majority are going to be world-class players playing Super Rugby and international rugby, he told Stuff.

There is a lot of negotiating to go on...its not about trying to have a rebel competition, its about trying to have something that fits in for all.

Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images

Former All Blacks coach Steve Hansen, left, and former New Zealand Rugby boss Steve Tew are both involved in World 12s, Hansen as an ambassador, and Tew as a non-executive director.

Using All Blacks Damian McKenzie and Patrick Tuipulotu as examples, two players who are taking Japanese sabbaticals and will miss Super Rugby next year, Hansen said World 12s could result in players staying put.

If these two guys were to be selected in a 12s team, the money would be good enough for them not to have to go away, leave New Zealand, leave their family, leave their franchises. So, I think there are benefits for the domestic game, as well.

World 12s is targetting 192 players for eight franchises. They will play an abbreviated format of the game in teams involving six forwards and six backs, contesting 30-minute matches, with new rules aimed at improving problem areas such as the breakdown and scrum.

It has a goal of generating around $500 million over its first five years, handsomely rewarding all those involved.

ALL BLACKS

'It protects us all'. All Blacks show the vaccination process.

Its that money, and the prospect of rubbing shoulders with the best players in the world, which Hansen believes will make the best players in the world come running.

I think anyone who gets asked will be pretty keen to go, Hansen said, maintaining the new concept would not be gimmicky, and 15s rugby would always be king.

Hannah Peters/Getty Images

Sir Steve Hansen believes World 12s could stop players like All Black Damian McKenzie taking up sabbaticals in Japan.

Administrators will have to listen. It's a really good catalyst to try and get a global season, so we can fit things in properly, and give the players a good rest. Player well-being has been something we've talked a lot about within this group, and leading up to this so far, that's certainly going to be one of the high priorities.

The prospect of finally getting a global season across the line was one factor behind Hansen jumping on board with the concept, as was freshening up the game he believes has lost its way.

Much of that comes down to the way its being officiated, with overcomplicated rules making life difficult for referees, he said.

We need to change what were doing. The officiating of the game is so complex that were not getting any consistency.

We still cant give a coach, a fan, a player one sheet of paper that says this is what the three officials are going to do today. We cant do that. To me, thats diabolical. We keep adding to the rule book, and we should be taking away and making it a simpler game.

World 12s will largely follow the laws of 15s, but with these adaptations:

12 players in a team six forwards and six backs

15-minute halves

Conversions will be drop goals only

Only one scrum reset, followed by a free kick

Scrum infringements are penalised by a differential penalty (a penalty that cannot be kicked at goal)

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Social inclusion is important in Aotearoa New Zealand but so is speaking honestly about terrorism – The Conversation AU

Posted: at 10:10 am

Jacinda Ardern used very specific language in her description of the terrorist attack in Auckland last week:

It was carried out by an individual not a faith, not a culture, not an ethnicity but an individual person who was gripped by ideology that is not supported here, by anyone, by any community.

The New Zealand prime ministers message was clear our security will not benefit from vilifying a religion or a religious community.

At the same time, Ardern showed that the way Aotearoa New Zealand now talks about terrorism and counter-terrorism aligns with its objectives of enhancing social cohesion and inclusion.

However, there is a risk that such neutral or generalised language might obscure important truths and even make the job of combating terrorism harder.

Before the 2019 Christchurch attacks, counter-terrorism was not a major public concern. But the events of March 15 shifted the focus to national security and raised our collective consciousness about Muslims and Islam.

This was reflected in the 44 recommendations of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Christchurch attack, in various new government policies and institutions, and in a growing concern with social cohesion.

Read more: New Zealand's latest terror attack shows why ISIS is harder to defeat online than on the battlefield

Similarly, the Ministry for Social Development commissioned a rapid evidence review of social inclusion after the Christchurch terrorist attack. Currently available for public review, it proposes six ways to help make New Zealand more socially cohesive.

By describing the Auckland terrorist attack the way she did, Ardern sought to reinforce a vision of Aotearoa New Zealand as a place where all people can feel safe, have equal access to opportunities and do not experience discrimination.

In the wake of March 15, then, we can see how the official discourse on counter-terrorism has become more closely linked with concepts of social cohesion and inclusion.

Appearing before parliaments Intelligence and Security Committee recently, Security Intelligence Service (SIS) director-general Rebecca Kitteridge noted a deliberate change in her organisations counter-terrorism language.

A new terrorism framework has done away with the term Islamist extremist terrorism in favour of categorising terrorist acts as being violent extremism motivated by political beliefs, identity, faith or a single issue.

Adapted from a framework developed by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, the new terminology focuses on ideology and should make specific communities feel less securitised, according to Kitteridge.

Read more: New Zealand needs to go beyond fast-tracking counter-terrorism laws to reduce the risk of future attacks

But while these changes appear to support social inclusion in Aotearoa New Zealand, we should also ask how counter-terrorism is served by describing the Auckland attack as faith-motivated violent extremism rather than radical Islamist terrorism.

The 2020 SIS annual report included a fifth category in the framework white identity extremism (WIE).

Given the ideological profile of the Christchurch terrorist, its not surprising the SIS received numerous leads about possible WIE threats after March 15. But WIE is not a separate category in the latest framework. It is now included in the identity-motivated category of violent extremism.

How do we begin to understand the racism and radicalisation of the Christchurch terrorist without acknowledging his identity as a white supremacist?

Europe has also trialled different terms to describe terrorist threats. The European Union (EU) law enforcement agency Europol used Islamist terrorism between 2006 and 2010, then moved to religiously inspired terrorism between 2011 and 2014.

Since 2015 it has employed jihadist terrorism, ethno-nationalist and separatist terrorism, left-wing and anarchist terrorism, right-wing terrorism and single-issue terrorism.

Read more: The Christchurch commissions call to improve social cohesion is its hardest and most important recommendation

The 2020 EU report on terrorism carefully defines jihadist terrorism as a violent sub-current of Salafism (a revivalist movement within Sunni Islam) that legitimises violence against non-Muslims by drawing on classical Islamic doctrines of jihad, and against Muslims by using takfir (an act of declaring Muslims apostates or infidels).

The term was widely used in the wake of Islamic States territorial successes in Iraq and Syria in 2014, and in relation to Islamic State-inspired terrorism in Paris (November 2015), Nice (July 2016), Brussels (March 2016) and the Manchester Arena (May 2017).

On the face of it, the Christchurch and Auckland terrorist attacks share similarities, such as the role of online radicalisation and that both terrorists were lone actors.

But does it serve our understanding of the terrorist threat to conflate the actions of a white supremacy extremist and a radical Islamist extremist?

Its true that terminology needs to adapt to changes in the political environment. What was fit for purpose before the Christchurch attack is not necessarily relevant today.

New terminology, however, does not replace the need for public education and knowledge. Nor should we assume well-informed New Zealanders cannot distinguish between a religion and an ideological construct simply because some populist politicians conflate Islam and radical Islamism.

Read more: Treating NZs far right groups as terrorist organisations could make monitoring extremists even harder

The prime ministers description of the Auckland attacker as an aberrant individual influenced by a foreign and unacceptable ideology supports ideas of social inclusion.

This is particularly important at a time when populist political movements present Islam as a civilisational threat. Social inclusion and counter-terrorism both foster a more resilient and safe Aotearoa New Zealand.

But there are dangers in conflating the two concepts, and we should not shy away from specifically and accurately naming terrorists for who they are and what they stand for.

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Social inclusion is important in Aotearoa New Zealand but so is speaking honestly about terrorism - The Conversation AU

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9/11 anniversary: How the attacks changed New Zealand’s foreign policy – Newshub

Posted: at 10:10 am

Instead, the US rewarded supporters of the Iraq War with free trade agreements with Australia and Singapore at the top of the list.

At the time, the differences over Iraq made it seem that any improvement New Zealand-US relations had again stalled.

The nuclear ship issue was once again seen as the main roadblock to the full restoration of ties.

The issue gained particular prominence in 2004 when Don Brash, then the National Party leader, was noted by officials as saying the ban would be "gone by lunchtime" under a future National-led government.

But there were advantages to the diametrically opposed positions over Iraq.

With the US position seemingly crystal clear, New Zealand's wider foreign policy agenda was largely freed up for other matters.

The focus moved to negotiating free trade agreements with other countries following a 2001 model agreement with Singapore and amidst World Trade Organization's ill-fated Doha round of negotiations.

New Zealand's free-trade efforts first bore fruit in 2005 when an agreement was signed with Thailand.

Even more interesting was an agreement signed later that year as a grouping of Pacific Rim countries called the "P4".

The agreement with Brunei, Chile and Singapore was the genesis for what ultimately became the 11-country Comprehensive and Progressive Trans Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

But New Zealand's biggest prize came in 2008, when it became the first Western country to sign a free trade agreement with China which rapidly became New Zealand's biggest trading partner.

In hindsight, the fallout from the 9/11 attacks and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq did New Zealand foreign policymakers a favour.

Afghanistan gave New Zealand an opening to show the US what it had to offer, while Iraq clearly showed New Zealand the limits of that engagement.

Without Iraq, New Zealand might have continued to put even more effort into repairing its US relationship which could have prevented it from moving on to a more diversified trade focus.

But what is even more remarkable is that New Zealand ultimately ended up almost having its cake and eating it too.

Against the backdrop of New Zealand's commitment in Afghanistan, but also with the simple passage of time, the nuclear ship issue that had once seemed so central essentially faded into the background.

Significantly, then Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called New Zealand an ally in 2008, and diplomatic cables from Wikileaks revealed that US quietly resumed full intelligence sharing with New Zealand in 2009.

New Zealand's defence ties with the US have also largely been restored. Since 2014, New Zealand ships have again fully participated in US-led 'Rim of the Pacific' military exercises.

And in 2016, New Zealand even came within a whisker of securing a free trade deal with the US as part of the CPTPP until Donald Trump withdrew from the arrangement shortly after taking office.

Despite this setback, it is probably only a matter of time until New Zealand concludes a free trade deal of some kind that involves the US.

After all, the US is now taking a much greater interest in New Zealand and its neighbourhood as part of its Indo-Pacific vision that seeks to challenge China's perceived dominance.

Ultimately, the September 11 attacks triggered a chain of unforeseen actions and decisions.

The impact of the tragedy changed the course of US foreign policy.

It changed the trajectory of New Zealand's foreign policy too.

Democracy Project

Geoffrey Miller is the Democracy Projects international analyst and writes on current New Zealand foreign policy and related geopolitical issues. He has lived in Germany and the Middle East and is a fluent speaker of German and Arabic.

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The world is desperate for new antibiotics, and New Zealand’s unique fungi are a source of promising compounds – The Conversation AU

Posted: at 10:10 am

While were all rightly focused on the COVID-19 pandemic at the moment, the SARS-CoV-2 virus isnt the only microbial threat we face.

Back in 2014, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned that within a decade, antibiotic-resistant bacteria could make routine surgery, organ transplantation and cancer treatment life-threateningly risky and spell the end of modern medicine as we know it.

Antibiotics are a cornerstone of modern medicine, used to treat infections and to protect vulnerable patients undergoing surgery or chemotherapy. The world desperately needs new antibiotics and COVID-19 has only exacerbated the problem.

In our search for new antibiotics, we have focused on fungi, especially those found only in Aotearoa New Zealand. Our latest research describes the discovery of fungal compounds able to kill Mycobacteria, a family of slow-growing bacteria that includes another important global airborne killer Mycobacterium tuberculosis which causes the lung disease tuberculosis and kills thousands of people around the world each day.

While most people in Aotearoa know me as the pink-haired COVID lady, for the past six years my lab has been hunting for compounds that could make good antibiotics. Weve focused on fungi from the International Collection of Microorganisms from Plants (ICMP), cared for by the Crown Research Institute Manaaki Whenua and our collaborator Bevan Weir.

Our latest findings follow earlier research which revealed a fungal compound with some activity against the hospital superbug methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, better known as MRSA.

One of the earliest antibiotics ever discovered, penicillin, originally came from a fungus called Penicillium rubens. With more than 10,000 fungi in the ICMP database, we think this may be a treasure trove of potential new antibiotics.

For our latest study, we tested 36 fungi collected between 1961 and 2016 from locations right across Aotearoa, including the Chatham Islands. Our first exciting finding is that nine of the fungi are not known species, suggesting they may well be unique to Aotearoa.

Aotearoa is well known for its iconic animal and plant species that arent found anywhere else in the world. Our fungi will be no different. And if they are unique, they may have come up with unique compounds able to kill bacteria.

Our second major finding is that 35 of the 36 fungi we tested had some form of antibacterial activity against Mycobacteria. In fact, when we first started doing this work, we thought we must have made a mistake. Wed never had anything like that kind of success rate when screening fungi against other superbugs.

Read more: How we discovered a hidden world of fungi inside the worlds biggest seed bank

Taking a deeper dive into the chemistry of those fungal compounds, we found the majority are fatty acids which wont make good antibiotics. But we did find several fungi, including two of our unknown species, whose antibacterial activity wasnt due to fatty acids.

Were currently working to identify these compounds, with our collaborators Melissa Cadelis and Brent Copp.

Physicist Jim Al-Khalili once said that most scientific progress is a messy, complex and slow process. Take the COVID-19 vaccines as a good example. While weve watched numerous vaccines come through clinical trials successfully and quickly, they are based on decades of scientific study of mRNA and lipid nanoparticles.

My labs search for antibiotics has its roots in work we did over a decade ago, making tools to make Mycobacteria glow in the dark. Because these bacteria grow so slowly, it can take weeks to months for them to form colonies on a petri dish.

But they glow only when they are alive, and this technique allows us to measure the amount of light they produce instead of waiting for them to grow. This massively speeds up the antibiotic discovery process.

Read more: New technology can create treatment against drug-resistant bacteria in under a week and adapt to antibiotic resistance

I started thinking about fungi as a potential source of new antibacterial compounds when Manaaki Whenuas fungi expert Peter Buchanan told me about the collection. After a few years of rejected funding applications, we finally got a small grant-in-aid from Cure Kids to get the project started in 2015.

One of their ambassadors, Eva, has battled superbug infections her whole life. Meeting Eva changed my relationship with my work and inspired me to do all I can to find new antibiotics.

Weve still got a way to go before we have any compounds that might be suitable for further development as antibiotics. We also know that many compounds fail as they move through the pipeline that takes them from the lab to clinical trials in humans.

Thats why my lab will keep working its way through the fungal collection for as long as we can afford to. There are thousands more fungi to screen and hopefully many more unique compounds with antibiotic potential to discover.

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The world is desperate for new antibiotics, and New Zealand's unique fungi are a source of promising compounds - The Conversation AU

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New Zealand cases drop to 49 in reassuring indication lockdown is working – The Guardian

Posted: at 10:10 am

New cases of Covid-19 have continued to drop in New Zealand, in a promising early indication that the countrys strict lockdown is working and its latest outbreak may be coming under control.

The country announced 49 new cases on Tuesday dropping for the second day in a row, down from 53 cases on Monday and 83 on Sunday. It is the lowest number of new cases reported in the country in six days.

Director-general of health Dr Ashley Bloomfield said the drop does provide a further reassuring indication that our public health measures are rapidly slowing the spread of the virus.

According to the latest modelling, Bloomfield said the reproduction rate of the virus in this outbreak is now looking like it is remaining under one, which means cases will continue to decline.

Asked whether New Zealanders should be celebrating the latest results, prime minister Jacinda Ardern said she would ask New Zealanders to hold that thought.

Every day for me is, another step, a bit of progress, but [its] too early. For me I want to see sustained reductions over a period of time and I think actually most people want to see that. It is good not to see some of those high numbers we were only a few days ago.

Its another step. Weve still got a journey to go through.

New Zealand has been in a strict level 4 lockdown since 17 August, when a single case of Covid-19 was detected in the general population. Since then, the total number of cases in the outbreak has grown to 612.

The seriousness of Covid-19 infection is also very visible to us, Bloomfield said, with 33 people in hospital, including eight in intensive care of whom two were on ventilators. These hospitalisations obviously have an outward ripple effect on our communities and whnau [families], and my thoughts are with those individuals and their whnau. Its also sobering that of the current Auckland outbreak six cases are under the age of one.

Ardern said We have an 18-year-old in hospital right now. I dont think anyone can assume that they are safe from this virus, so we all have a job to do so. My request would be that we need everyone from all walks of life to do their best and to be the best role models that they can be.

Officials are still hunting for how the virus got into the community. While the first cases have been traced, via genomic testing, to a single quarantine facility in Auckland, they have not yet been able to identify exactly how someone outside the facility was infected.

Ardern said that all of the obvious sources of transmission people to people contact it would be fair to say that weve ruled most, if not all, of them out.

She said officials were now investigating theories of how the virus could transmit through the air, without person to person transmission.

A number of people have been evacuated from west Auckland due to flooding this morning. Ardern said that those emergency evacuations overrode pandemic alert levels.

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New Zealand reports first COVID death in over 6 months – CBS News

Posted: at 10:10 am

New Zealand reported its first coronavirus death in more than six months on Saturday, while the number of new cases continued to trend downward. Health authorities said the woman who died was in her 90s and had underlying health problems.

Authorities reported 20 new community cases, all in the largest city of Auckland.

New Zealand remains in lockdown as it tries to eliminate an outbreak of the delta variant that began last month. The snap lockdown was announced in August after a man tested positive for the virus, marking the the first case there in six months, the BBC reported.

"Going hard and early has worked for us before," Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said at the time.

New cases in the outbreak have steadily fallen from a peak of more than 80 each day.

New Zealand has so far escaped the worst of the pandemic and has reported just 27 coronavirus deaths since it began.

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New Zealand and the West’s dangerous dance with civil liberties – The National

Posted: at 10:10 am

The stabbing attack in a West Auckland supermarket last Friday jolted New Zealanders, and understandably so it was the first ISIS-inspired terror incident to take place in their country. But more shocking still is the fact that the perpetrator, Ahamed Samsudeen, was well known to the highest authorities. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern had been briefed about him, and her government had been trying to deport the Sri Lankan national for years.

They knew that he wanted to commit an act of terrorism. He had been under 24-hour surveillance for nearly two months by 30 police officers. And yet, legally Samsudeen was free to wander and plot as he pleased, until the moment he struck, wounding six, of whom three are in a critical condition. Agencies used every tool available to protect innocent people from this individual, Ms Ardern said. Every legal avenue was tried.

To be fair to Ms Arden, she is moving swiftly to close this hole in the law by criminalising planning such an attack, but there have been too many cases in western countries of people who are on the security services radar being left at liberty, until they try to end the lives and liberties of others. In Britain, they knew all about Sudesh Amman, who stabbed two people in south London in February 2020; he had previously been jailed for possessing and disseminating terrorist material and pledged allegiance to ISIS while in prison. Two days before his attack, arresting him was considered, but rejected because no offences were identified. Three men linked to the 2015 Paris attack on the Bataclan theatre, in which 90 people died, were on a Belgian terror list.

The aftermath of the shooting outside the Bataclan theatre in Paris in 2015. AP Photo

This situation is so widespread that in 2018, Dr Lorenzo Vidino, director of the Programme on Extremism at George Washington University, wrote that he and his colleagues had looked at 76 [extremist] attacks in Western Europe and North America in recent years. We found that more than half [of them] involved perpetrators who had been on a security service watch list". Dr Vidino pointed to the near-impossibility of monitoring the thousands of people who are known extremists, even with clear murderous intent, but seemed to wring his hands, concluding: There are limits to how much a democracy can do to fight terrorism.

With all due respect to Dr Vidino, oh no there arent. It is all a matter of political will and what a society wishes to prioritise. From the perspective of a country such as Malaysia, where I live, the willingness of western countries to respect the freedoms of those who would violently deny others theirs seems like a form of madness. Here we have the Prevention of Terrorism Act, which became law in 2015 under the then prime minister, Najib Razak.

Some criticised its provisions, which allow for detention of suspects for up to 60 days while investigations are carried out. But Najib was resolute, telling a conference that year: It is right to talk about striking a balance between civil liberties and national security. But let me tell you this: there are no civil liberties under [ISIS], and they are no shield against those who are set on committing acts of terrorism. The best way to uphold civil liberties is to ensure the safety of the nation. I make no apology for taking every step to preserve that safety. We will not wait for an outrage to take place before putting all measures necessary in place.

People walk outside a corner restaurant serving Lebanese and Turkish cuisine in the Arab Street district of Singapore in July. AFP

Preventative laws have proved crucial in many countries. In neighbouring Singapore, they enabled the arrest of a 16 year old who planned to kill Muslims in two mosques and livestream his attacks earlier this year. Preventative strikes by special units in Indonesia have gathered up hundreds of militants, and in all three countries all democracies, by the way such moves have stopped many deadly attacks.

It is true that such laws could potentially be misused; but ensuring oversight and that checks and balances are in place should keep their scope clearly demarcated. What this division in approach shows, though, is that the concept of the individuals liberty appears to have been fetishised to a ridiculous degree in many western countries.

You aspire to the liberty of living in a city that is not defined by its most disorderly elements

Tharman Shanmugaratnam

The Singaporean intellectual Kishore Mahbubani once noted that when visiting the central districts of New York, Washington and Los Angeles, if you ventured out at night and strayed a few hundred yards off course, you would be putting your life in jeopardy". He concluded: Danger from habitual crime is considered an acceptable price to pay for no reduction in liberty. In Singapore, by contrast, he said you could wander out at night in any direction since habitual offenders were locked up, often for long spells the interests of the majority in having safe city streets is put ahead.

It is a good point, elaborated on by the city-states then deputy prime minister, Tharman Shanmugaratnam, in 2015. Pointing out that there are many kinds of liberties, he said: You do aspire to a liberty of being able to walk the streets freely, particularly if youre a woman or a child, at any time of the night; you aspire to the liberty of living in a city that is not defined by its most disorderly elements.

He could have added that we all aspire to the liberty of being free from the future actions of extremists in our midst, even if they have not yet technically committed an offence. The rule of law is paramount, yes; but the law is an ass if it allows the likes of Samsudeen the same freedoms as those exercised by responsible members of the community.

Otherwise, the great cry of the American revolutionary Patrick Henry Give me liberty, or give me death! can translate into the liberty of misguided or evil individuals to inflict death on others. And that, for the victims of terror, would be a grotesque consequence of the idea that freedom must come above all else.

Updated: September 8th 2021, 9:00 AM

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

How to vote

Canadians living in the UAE can register to vote online and be added to the International Register of Electors.

They'll then be sent a special ballot voting kit by mail either to their address, the Consulate General of Canada to the UAE in Dubai or The Embassy of Canada in Abu Dhabi

Registered voters mark the ballot with their choice and must send it back by 6pm Eastern time on October 21 (2am next Friday)

See original here:

New Zealand and the West's dangerous dance with civil liberties - The National

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Weather: Rain, strong winds, hail and snow batter New Zealand – New Zealand Herald

Posted: at 10:10 am

Heavy rain showers hit Auckland as seen in Newmarket. Photo / Dean Purcell

While New Zealanders got a taste of spring last week, today's weather has been anything but spring-like.

MetService forecaster Sonja Farmer says New Zealand is covered by "fairly scattered cloud, certainly cold showery-looking cloud", calling today's weather a "mixed bag".

"There has been a sweeping through of frontal activity today which accounts for all those showers that have come through and that abrupt change," she said.

A strong wind watch remains in place for Auckland, Great Barrier Island, Coromandel Peninsula and Waikato north of Hamilton. That watch is expected to lift later this evening.

Strong southwesterlies were expected in Auckland, with some gusts reaching 90km/h in exposed places.

A transformer has blown in Beach Haven, leaving many residents on Auckland's North Shore without power.

Vector received reports of the outage at 8.38pm.

Although the country is in spring, Farmer said there was a "definitely chill" in the air across the country.

Auckland reached a high of 13C, 3C cooler than the regular spring temperature.

Earlier this afternoon Auckland dropped just below 11C.

8 Sep, 2021 04:46 AMQuick Read

8 Sep, 2021 05:53 AMQuick Read

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Aucklanders had some rain today, but Farmer said it wasn't heavy.

The Arataki visitor centre in West Auckland recorded 19mm since midnight. But the majority fell between 8am and 3pm. Similar numbers were recorded across Auckland.

"It's been a fairly steady rainfall out that way," she said.

With the majority of the country in alert level 2, Farmer is warning motorists to be careful on the roads.

A number of road snowfall warnings have been issued for Desert Road, Arthur's Pass, Lewis Pass and Milford Road.

"If you do want to get out and about to blow out the cobwebs you have to be careful," Farmer said.

MetService said a "few snow flurries" may affect Lewis Pass overnight, with the possibility of 1 cm or less near the summit.

Snow may affect higher parts of Arthur's Pass overnight, where 1 to 2 cm of snow may settle near the summit.

On Milford Road 2 to 4cm of snow may settle above about 800m, with rain also expected overnight.

While only 1 to 2 cm of snow may settle near the summit on Desert Road.

MetService has also issued a heavy snow watch for Fiordland; that watch is expected to lift this evening.

Napier reached a high of 19C, which was the warmest region, while Balclutha had the coolest temperature of 4.8C.

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Weather: Rain, strong winds, hail and snow batter New Zealand - New Zealand Herald

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BMW New Zealand confirms i4 pricing ahead of 2022 arrival – Stuff.co.nz

Posted: at 10:10 am

BMW New Zealand has confirmed local pricing for the two i4 models due here in Q1 2022, the i4 eDrive40 and i4 M50.

The lesser of the two, the eDrive40, will kick off from $109,900, right between the base ICE 420i Gran Coupe and the M440i Gran Coupe. It uses a single electric motor on the rear axle to generate 250kW/430Nm, hitting 100kmh in 5.7 seconds, along with a WLTP-rated range of 590km.

Stepping up to the M50, the M divisions first production electric vehicle, pushes price to $137,900. It also adds another motor to the front axle for all-wheel drive and a peak power output of 400kW/795Nm. Range takes a hit as a result, but its still a respectable 520km. Sprinting to 100kmh takes 3.9 seconds.

Supplied

The new BMW i4 is due here in early 2022 with a sharp price tag.

Compare those figures to the 375kW/650Nm M4 Competition, which costs $168,900 and has now been relegated to second-in-command of the 4 Series. Officially, both the M4 and i4 M50 take the same amount of time to get to the open road speed limit, largely due to the weight of the batteries offsetting the instant torque and AWD grip of the EV.

READ MORE:* BMW reveals 'Bahn-storming all-electric i4* BMW fires off one-two EV punch* 'Simple acceleration isn't enough' for BMW's electric i4

Purists will probably prefer the soundtrack of the M4, but its hard to ignore the price gulf of around $35k. Youre getting M4-or-better performance for less than the price of an M340i Sedan.

Supplied

This is the i4 M50, the M divisions first all-electric production car and the new king of the 4 Series.

Meanwhile, the eDrive40 is about three grand more than the 330i Sedan, and should offer substantially better performance than the 190kW/400Nm turbocharged four-cylinder.

However, comparisons will be drawn with the Tesla Model 3 range. The i4 currently doesnt have anything as cheap as the $66,990 Model 3 Standard Range Plus, which also qualifies for the Clean Car Discount rebate of $8625.

In fact, every Model 3 is cheaper than the i4 eDrive40, as the Model 3 Performance currently starts at $95,900. BMW has almost certainly left space for cheaper models in the future though.

Damien O'Carroll/Stuff

The biggest competition is this, the Tesla Model 3. And off the bat, Tesla wins in value.

Both i4 models get lift-related suspension dampers and rear air springs, while the M50 adds a performance chassis with adaptive dampers, anti-roll bars and variable sports steering.

BMW has given the two EVs the same 80.7kWh battery, which can charge at rates up to 210kW. Charging at full speed for ten minutes nets up to 164km of range. Improvements to regeneration under braking means the system can claw back up to 195kW in the M50 and 116kW in the eDrive40.

The exterior looks largely the same as other four-door 4 Series models, although the kidney grille isnt functional in a traditional sense, instead holding an array of radars and sensors.

Inside is a new, curved display running the latest iDrive 8 operating system, which spans half the length of the dashboard. It comprises a 12.3-inch driver's display on one side and a 14.9-inch touchscreen for various infotainment/air-conditioning controls on the other. Sports seats are standard, and there are plenty of blue accents to remind you this is an EV.

Originally posted here:

BMW New Zealand confirms i4 pricing ahead of 2022 arrival - Stuff.co.nz

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