Category: Public health

  • RNZ News

    Opposition National MP Simon Bridges, a former party leader, and backbench Labour MP Anahila Kanongataá-Suisuiki have tested positive for covid-19 with a record 696 cases in hospital.

    Bridges is National’s spokesperson for finance and infrastructure.

    Kanongataá-Suisuiki said in a Facebook post that she had tested positive on a day 3 test of home isolation, after her daughter had contracted the coronavirus.

    In a social media post she said she had lost her sense of smell and taste, but was “feeling ok”.

    Last week, Environment Minister David Parker Clark reported testing positive, and said he had minor symptoms and was “not feeling too bad”.

    He had not been in the Beehive since the previous week, so was not with other MPs or staff while infectious, he said.

    17,522 new cases
    The Ministry of Health reported 17,522 new cases of covid-19 in the community today and 696 people in hospital.

    The seven-day rolling average of community cases is 17,921, up from 17,272 yesterday.

    “Care needs to be taken when interpreting daily reported cases, which are expected to continue to fluctuate,” the ministry said.

    “This means that the seven-day rolling average of cases gives a more reliable indicator of testing trends.”

    More than 47,000 rapid antigen test (RAT) results were reported yesterday, including 16,625 positive results.

    In comparison, 897 cases were confirmed via PCR testing.

    “We would again urge people to self-report RATs results, even if it is negative. If you are a household contact please still report your RATs results separately, even if other household members have already reported theirs,” the ministry said.

    “The self-reporting of RATs helps provide a clearer picture of how the pandemic is progressing. It is essential we have as much information as possible to inform public health decision-making.”

    Unvaccinated four times over-represented
    There were 192,492 active cases confirmed in the last 10 days and not yet classified as recovered.

    Of the 696 in hospital, 13 are in ICU. The average age of those in hospital is 57.

    The ministry said: “While still early in the omicron outbreak, the figures show that, based on the data available, unvaccinated people are four times over-represented in the current hospitalisation data.

    “Just 3 percent of eligible people aged 12 and over in New Zealand have had no doses of the vaccine. However, of the eligible people in Northland and Auckland hospitals with covid-19, 13 percent have had no doses of the vaccine.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • By Russell Palmer, RNZ News digital political journalist

    All political parties have supported a motion in Parliament to recognise the “safe restoration of Parliament’s grounds” and the selfless service of emergency services.

    Yesterday, riot police moved in and dispersed the protest against covid-19 restrictions, which had occupied the Parliament grounds for 23 days.

    In response, protesters set fire to tents, scrub and other structures including a children’s playground. Police in turn used pepper spray and sponge bullets as protesters lobbed cobblestones, metal poles and other debris.

    The police operation resulted in 89 arrests yesterday — 40 of the 600 officers involved were injured, with eight admitted to hospital.

    Parliament’s regular question time was cancelled today with party leaders instead delivering speeches on yesterday’s chaos, before adjourning early. This is standard procedure after major events, such as the Christchurch terror attacks in 2019.

    ‘Acts of violence cannot stand’ – Ardern
    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern began proceedings with the motion that the House recognise the safe restoration of Parliament’s grounds and the selfless service of our Police, Fire and Emergency Services, Wellington Free Ambulance, Parliament Security, and many others, in returning Parliament to the people.

    The support of Māori wardens was also recognised in an amendment, at the suggestion of Te Pāti Māori.

    “You were there throughout these events at a great risk to yourselves. Many of you were abused, some were injured, but you put your personal safety aside in order to look after others and for that we are very grateful,” Ardern said.

    She expressed sorrow at what Wellingtonians endured, and the trampling of the mana of Taranaki Whānui. She said it was clear to her this protest was different from others as soon as it arrived.

    Prime Minister Jacinda Arderns’s speech.

    “There was an immediate focus on occupying the space. The rhetoric that came from the speakers they installed swung between benign to sometimes threatening. Many media who walked the grounds were either abused or in some cases chased away. It was a form of protest I did not recognise and I found it hard to reconcile it with the reality of what all New Zealanders had faced in this pandemic, and yet quietly got on with it.”

    She said the demands of the protesters were hard to square with what others had suffered during the pandemic, including Labour MP Barbara Edmonds’ six-week-old niece who was recovering after a trip to hospital, having struggled to breathe after being infected with covid-19.

    “And so my message today is simple, Mr Speaker, it is to condemn what happened here. Acts of violence cannot stand. It is to reinforce that this will always be a place where difference can be expressed and where that will be welcomed, but that should always be done with dignity and respect for the place upon which we stand.”

    She said the pandemic felt hard right now, but it would pass; and vaccine passes, mandates and restrictions would also change.

    “There is reason to feel hopeful, but for now, the smell of smoke has faded, the playground will be restored, and the people, our people, will return to their place.”

    Protesters’ behaviour ‘was thuggery’ – Luxon
    Opposition National Party leader Christopher Luxon also thanked emergency services and others who responded, particularly the “immense bravery and selflessness of our frontline police officers”.

    He said National condemned the protesters’ behaviour, saying it was “not peaceful protest or activism, it was thuggery“.

    “Those scenes were the culmination of weeks of intimidation and aggression toward Wellingtonians. We will always respect people’s right to protest, it is quite rightly a basic tenet of our democracy … but something was off in this protest from the get-go. There was real animus in the atmosphere.”

    Opposition National Party leader Christopher Luxon’s speech.

    He said he visited officers last night to thank them, and heard how they had all manner of things thrown at them, resulting in broken bones for some. About 80 had only recently graduated, he said, and for one he spoke to it was only her second day on the job.

    “Their tenacity in withstanding the protesters provocations and remaining calm, patient and restrained is a testament to their incredible skill and professionalism and we all owe them our sincere and heartfelt thanks.”

    He called for a review of the relationships between police and Parliamentary authorities, including the Speaker, as well looking for practical measures to ensure the security of Parliament while not cloistering politicians away from electors.

    And while it was not appropriate for lawmakers to have a conversation with lawbreakers on the forecourt of Parliament, they could not risk writing off the concerns of other New Zealanders, he said.

    “It is reasonable to expect that Aucklanders who spent 15 weeks in lockdown last year, or business owners who have lost the ability to pay their staff or put food on their family’s table will want to hold the government accountable for its decisions and promises.”

    Greens: ‘There is another virus’
    Green Party co-leaders Marama Davidson and James Shaw each spoke. Davidson drew particular attention to health workers who had supported the pandemic response, including social workers and community leaders who would play a role in supporting social cohesion into the future.

    She said it took courage for police to maintain as much of a de-escalation approach as possible while also being urged to do something to restore a peaceful environment for Wellington.

    “That approach over the history of police here in Aotearoa, has unfortunately not been applied consistently and unfortunately there has been discrimination in the way that it hasn’t and has been applied. So I acknowledge yesterday as being a really positive step in the way we police in Aotearoa.”

    Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson’s speech.

    Seeing people come to harm yesterday had rocked her, she said, and the violence was completely unacceptable, but it had begun long before.

    She urged police to investigate those who were responsible for spinning out disinformation and hold them accountable, and urged protesters to think on yesterday’s events and hold themselves accountable.

    “The biggest prevention of harm would have been for the protesters to go home, that much is very clear.”

    Shaw commented on disinformation and conspiracy theories by reflecting on how he was attacked in the street in 2019, “by a man who yelled at me that I had to stop what I was doing at the UN before fracturing my eye socket with his fist”.

    The reasoning for that could be one of two conspiracy theories, he suggested, both with “the same root cause”.

    “Twenty-nine hours later 51 people were killed and another 40 injured at the hands of a white supremacist terrorist in Christchurch. It’s apparent that the terrorist spent a great deal of his time … in the dark recesses of the internet.”

    Green Party co-leader James Shaw’s speech.

    He also spoke of the attack on the US Capitol last year, which he said was aimed at destabilising society and creating conditions for authoritarians like Donald Trump and Vladmir Putin. He said doubts about vaccines and mandates were “seeded by the same actors” and led to hundreds of thousands more deaths when instituted as public policy overseas.

    He said New Zealand, with its “breezy, she’ll be right attitude” had almost no immunity to this other virus, misinformation, and questions like “should Parliament have a wall around it, is it ever okay to play Barry Manilow” were just addressing the symptoms.

    “Yesterday the grifters and the charlatans, the political opportunists and the white supremacists who were behind the protest melted away like cowards and abandoned the field to the desperate people who they had led astray.

    “I can only hope that they will be held accountable for their part in all this and that we can find a way as a country to immunise ourselves against their malign impact.”

    ‘Can’t talk about civil liberties when you’re threatening others’ – David Seymour
    ACT leader David Seymour agreed with the motion, and used the time to criticise the protest, support the police, and to criticise the response and attitude of the government.

    “There is a right to protest, but that right of protest does not extend to taking over the rights of other people around you. You can’t talk about civil liberties when you’re threatening others. You can’t talk about restrictions when you’re preventing small businesses in the area … from getting on and doing their business.”

    ACT leader David Seymour’s speech.

    Most protests understood that a society that observes democracy and the rule of law is worth preserving, he said, and the protest seen yesterday was different from those that had come before.

    However, Ardern’s speech in response yesterday was disappointing, he said.

    “So far as she’s concerned, everything is fine, the covid response is fine, it’s all because of foreign conspiracy theories driven by foreign websites. Well you know what? That sounds like a conspiracy theory in itself.

    “Just to be clear, the world does have a big problem with misinformation … that doesn’t mean that everybody who has a concern is misinformed, and the problem with being unable to ‘internalise complex problems in our head’ to quote an old ad, is that we are failing to do that as politicians too.”

    He also criticised the Speaker for calling the protesters ‘ferals’ and turning loud music on them.

    “Where were you as the leader and custodian of this fine institution seeking a mature de-escalation. That’s what we should have seen.”

    He said there were unacceptable behaviours in the protest, but also behaviours from people who felt they had been ostracised by society. A more “human response” to the pandemic from the government may not have created the seeds of “this unexpectable and despicable meltdown”, he said.

    ‘Colonisation … continues to divide us’ – Rawiri Waititi
    Māori Party co-leader Rawiri Waititi expressed deep sadness and loss, saying the violence seen on the grounds yesterday was a manifestation of the colonial vision of those who had continuously oppressed the people through reckless laws.

    “One of the key objectives of the formation of this Parliament was to kill the “beastly communism” of Māori — a quote made by a past Minister of this House: Christopher William Richmond,” he said.

    Māori Party co-leader Rawiri Waititi’s kōrero.

    The whakapapa of this generational trauma could only be traced back to colonisation, he said.

    “Colonisation has turned our worlds upside down and has rendered parts of the culture unrecognisable. It continues to divide us today because it feasts on our trauma, thus forcing us to disregard the very essence of who we are and who we once were.”

    He said when mandates did lift, we “will still be left here fighting against the racist system that is still designed to kill our ‘beastly communism’. We will still be faced with Māori health inequities, Māori education disparities, Māori being the highest incarcerated peoples in the world. Māori will still make up 50 percent of the social housing waiting list and 67 percent of the tamariki in State care.

    “We will still be over half of the people in emergency and transitional housing. And the Māori unemployment rate will still double that of non-Māori. That is the true plight that we as tangata whenua have been fighting for near on 200 years, and we will continue to fight once the mandates have been lifted”.

    Threats, abuse and hate towards politicians was unacceptable, he said, and it was time to heal.

    “It is time for us to dig deep into our ngākau to show the world who we truly are. We are an honourable people. We are tangata whenua. We are the people of this land and it is our responsibility to ensure everyone is safe.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Police are out in force in New Zealand’s capital Wellington after yesterday’s massive operation to clear the illegal anti-covid public health measures occupation of Parliament grounds.

    There were chaotic scenes as protesters scrambled to save what gear they could and some were pepper-sprayed.

    People set fire to trees and tents and loud bangs could be heard — possibly gas canisters exploding — as the flames spread, damaging the children’s playground and surrounding trees.

    The fires were put out, allowing police to push protesters onto the streets but tensions simmered for hours.

    At the height of the confrontation officers fired sponge bullets and protesters hurled bricks, pieces of of wood, rubbish and traffic cones in running battles on central city streets.

    As of late last night, 87 people had been arrested for offences including trespass, wilful damage and possession of restricted weapons.

    Question time cancelled
    Parliament’s regular question time has been cancelled today and MPs are instead delivering speeches on yesterday’s chaos.

    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern makes an initial statement, followed by other party leaders.

    The House will then adjourn early and return on Tuesday.

    As damage to Parliament’s grounds and surrounding streets is assessed, the future of protest in New Zealand — both online and in person — will have to be reconsidered, said Deputy Prime Minister Grant Robertson.

    This morning parliamentary services workers were out in gloves beginning the work of dismantling and disposing of piles of debris left strewn across the site when protesters were forced out by police yesterday.

    The violent scenes ended a three-week occupation, and left behind couches, clothing, tents and gazebos, barbecues, gas bottles and camping gear, as well as the gaps left when paving stones were torn out and hurled at police and charred damage from fires lit in a final desperate stand.

    Meanwhile, the Ministry of Health reported 23,183 new community cases of covid-19 today, with 503 people in hospital, including seven in intensive care.

    In a statement, the ministry said a new death of a New Zealander with covid-19 had been recorded with a person dying in a Bay of Plenty rest home. The person died of an unrelated medical condition while receiving palliative care and had tested positive for the coronavirus.

    There are 146,527 known active community cases in New Zealand.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    The area around New Zealand’s Parliament has today been the scene of a full-day ordeal of violence as police removed protesters whose behaviour prompted the Prime Minister to say there were “words I cannot use in this environment for what I saw”.

    Early this morning, police launched an operation at Parliament and the surrounding areas in the capital Wellington “to restore order and access to the area”.

    Before the sun rose, police could be seen getting information, holding shields.

    As the sun set at the end of the day, about 150 protesters were peacefully facing police with riot shields on Featherston Street near the Railway Station — although other officers were clearing away signs of the earlier violence – bricks and bottles that had been thrown at them.

    The afternoon saw fires lit, explosions, weapons used against police, injuries to officers and arrests at the 23-day anti-covid public health measures protest.

    About 5pm, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern addressed media and laid out just how she felt about the actions of the protesters.

    Ardern said she was angry and deeply saddened to see Parliament desecrated in the way seen today, including the children’s playground being set alight.

    An ‘illegal, hostile’ occupation
    It demonstrated why the government refused to engage with the group, she said.

    “It was an illegal occupation, they engaged in hostile, violent and aggressive behaviour throughout the occupation, and today that has culminated in the desecration of this Parliament’s grounds.

    “I am absolutely committed we will restore those grounds and we will not be defined by one act by a small group of people.”

    Ardern said there was a place for peaceful protest in this country, but “this is not the way that we engage and protest”. She said peaceful protest was the way to send a message, this by comparison was “a way to end up before the courts”.

    Police remove protesters from Parliament.      Video: RNZ News

    How it played out
    As the day began, some protesters had spent the night preparing for action, with cars and campervans moved to block streets.

    As police moved into the area, a loud speaker blared instructions for protesters to leave or be arrested, while officers searched tents and checked no-one was in them before ripping them down.

    As daylight set in, a clash between protesters and police followed.

    Police undertake an early morning operation around Parliament.
    Police undertake an early morning operation to restore order and access to the area around Parliament. Image: Angus Dreaver/RNZ

    But police gained significant ground, removing a number of vehicles and structures belonging to the protesters.

    Leading up to midday, police in riot gear could be seen in among the operation. Pepper spray was used in response to protesters using fire extinguishers at officers.

    About noon, Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said a point had been reached “where protest leaders were either unable or unwilling to effect substantial change”.

    “We have been concerned that those with good intentions have been outnumbered by those willing to use violence,” he said.

    “The harm being done far outweighs any legitimate protest.”

    Balance had tipped
    Until today, police had been trying to de-escalate the situation, he said. But the balance had tipped.

    “We will continue this operation until this is completed.”

    Commissioner Coster would not give a timeline, saying it would be when the job was done.

    As the afternoon progressed, the situation heated up.

    Police continued to gain ground, ripping out tents, barriers and signs, protesters physically pushed back, threw bricks, wood and other items, and used tent poles like javelins.

    Gas bottles exploded and fires were lit – including Parliament’s slide and tents set ablaze.

    Just before 4pm, police said they had arrested 38 people and towed 30 vehicles.

    Shortly after, police gained more ground including the Beehive forecourt and then began using fire hoses to spray protesters.

    A fire at Parliament grounds
    A fire at Parliament grounds. Image: RNZ

    No caption

    ‘Grounds reclaimed’
    By 6pm, police had cleared Molesworth Street of all protester vehicles. They had arrested 65 people — that number would reach 87 by late Wednesday – and towed 50 vehicles.

    Not long after, Assistant Police Commissioner Richard Chambers told Checkpoint that Parliament Grounds had been reclaimed after 23 days of occupation.

    “We’ve made magnificent progress today our staff have done an incredible job, in very challenging circumstances.

    “You will have seen that has been met with significant resistance and violence from some, and we are very pleased with the way that our staff dealt with it today.”

    Seven police staff required hospital treatment.

    “They have a range of minor and serious but non-life threatening injuries. They are all receiving support and their families have been advised,” police said in a statement.

    “Some injuries were lacerations caused by objects thrown at them. These included bricks and paving stones taken from the nearby streets, rocks, traffic cones, poles and wood from pallets. Staff were also showered with paint, petrol and water from a high-powered fire hose.”

    Review of protest occupation
    Ardern signalled there would be a review of the protest occupation at Parliament to determine if more could have been done to prevent it from happening.

    Coming into the evening, police said they would continue efforts to clear Parliament grounds overnight.

    There will be a substantial police presence in Wellington and at Parliament, and residents should be assured that police will continue to make their presence felt and keep them safe.

    A small number of protesters remained near the Victoria University Pipitea campus.

    Rubbish left behind at the Parliament protest site
    Rubbish left behind at the Parliament protest site. Image: RNZ

    Late on Wednesday evening, Speaker of Parliament Trevor Mallard said in a statement that Parliament’s grounds would be closed until further notice.

    ‘Recovery plan’
    “A recovery plan for the grounds has been developed which includes working with mana whenua and coordinating offers of assistance from volunteer groups,” he said.

    “Due to assessments of the grounds’ condition that must take place before that work can begin, and for health, safety, and sanitary reasons, I ask that all members of the public please stay away till advised otherwise.

    “I’d like to take this opportunity to thank the police, Parliamentary Security, Buildings and Facilities, Health and Safety teams and all other staff for their continued efforts to keep everyone at Parliament and the surrounding areas safe.

    “Their resilience and understanding, along with all of you who have been affected by this protest must be acknowledged and thanks given for everyone’s hard work and messages of support.”

    More information about the recovery plan for Parliament’s grounds would be released when it was available, Mallard said.

    “We will restore our beautiful grounds and I will keep you informed of developments.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Police have made 60 arrests today as part of a pre-planned operation to remove anti-covid public health protesters from New Zealand’s Parliament grounds.

    Police have been descending on Parliament from early this morning on day 23 of the occupation and have also begun towing larger vehicles, including campervans and trucks.

    They say they have gained significant ground this morning across the occupation.

    Police have asked the public and commuters to avoid the area near Parliament and say they will continue to help those who want to leave the grounds to do so safely.

    Hill Street is closed, and many surrounding streets to the protest have been blocked.

    Protesters have reacted by throwing cones at police.

    Police staff in and around the protest area have sighted protesters in possession of various weapons. These include homemade plywood shields and pitchforks.

    One man told RNZ he wanted to move his car because it was all he owned.

    There were reports of forklifts on the move, and police were also taking down more tents.

    One of the RNZ reporters on the scene said they were being abused by protesters and told to leave.

    A police statement said weapons deployed among protesters included the use of fire extinguishers, a cord set up as a trip wire, paint-filled projectiles, homemade plywood shields and pitchforks.

    At least three police staff have been injured in the clashes.

    Protesters have repeatedly been reminded that Parliament grounds are closed, and that remaining there means they are trespassing.

    The Kīngitanga is calling for a peaceful resolution to the occupation at Parliament and other sites across the country.

    In a statement, a spokesperson said the Kīngitanga had not given its support to any occupation and claims to the contrary were untrue.

    They said Kiingi Tuheitia had been a strong advocate for the covid public health response, while acknowledging the impact on people and their families.

    The Kīngitanga said its priority was to get through omicron and start preparing for a life after covid.

    The Kīngitanga said it was calling for a peaceful resolution to the occupation at Parliament and other protest sites across the country.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

  • RNZ News

    Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield says the national health system relies on New Zealanders’ continued cooperation as almost 20,000 cases are announced today.

    Dr Bloomfield is resuming his appearance at daily 1pm media briefings amid the omicron outbreak, with peak cases and hospitalisations expected in the next few weeks.

    He said today nearly 20,000 new cases of covid-19 had been reported, with 373 people in hospital, nine of whom are in ICU.

    He said it was hard to estimate how many people in hospital with covid-19 were there because of the virus, as opposed to simply having the virus and being there for a different reason.

    However, he said Middlemore Hospital’s estimate of about 70 percent to 80 percent presenting because of covid-19 symptoms gives a good gauge.

    There are just under 100,000 active cases across the motu, he said.

    “I know that such a high daily case number can be concerning for people to hear, and many of us will now have whānau members who now have covid-19, but it’s important to remember that covid-19 now is a very different foe to what it was at the beginning of the pandemic.”

    He said what had helped New Zealand so far had been doing the basics well and people should keep doing this — wearing masks, practising good hand hygiene, and avoiding going out if unwell.

    “There’s no doubt the next few weeks are going to be tough, the health system can’t do it alone, so thanks in advance to all New Zealanders for continuing to support our efforts to live with the virus on our terms.”

    Watch a replay of the briefing here:

    The media conference today. Video: RNZ News

    He said the high vaccination rate meant for most people omicron would be a milder illness and could be managed safely at home.

    Dr Bloomfield says PCR testing had served New Zealand “incredibly well”, but with thousands of cases each day the country reached the point last week where rapid antigen testing became both useful and appropriate.

    He said samples were typically pooled earlier on in the outbreak, but a positive test in a batch means each will need to be retested. Higher test positivity rates now, however, mean it becomes less feasible.

    He said prior to February 7, none of the labs had ever exceeded 5 percent test positivity, but the swift increase in positive cases has affected that. Labs have also had other difficulties, including vacancies in roles and sickness because some lab workers had contracted the virus.

    Apology over test result backlog
    Dr Bloomfield said he wanted to apologise to people whose tests had been delayed, but said they had committed to completing the test processing.

    People are still advised to seek a test, though some people facing a longer delay should also seek a rapid antigen test, he said.

    The samples affected by the backlog might be slightly less accurate — they were more likely to show a negative result — but all positive results would be accurate.

    Dr Bloomfield said some 9000 tests were sent to Queensland for testing, to help clear the backlog. He said the backlog was clearing, but anyone who had had a test on February 23 or earlier, or who had developed symptoms, should collect a rapid antigen test from their local testing centre or seek advice from Healthline.

    He said the problem with delays in PCR testing was less to do with delays in rolling out rapid antigen tests, and more to do with the ministry being “a day or two late” to recognise how quickly the virus was spreading.

    “Once the samples were in the lab it’s hard to take them out and redistribute them, so we still had capacity across the network but we didn’t have the opportunity to redistribute them and probably if we’d started to do that a day or two earlier, then we may still have had a backlog but perhaps not such a big one.”

    Dr Bloomfield said test processing had got to a much more manageable level in the past 24 to 48 hours.

    He said there was strong uptake of RATs for people who had symptoms, or who were household or close contacts, as well as surveillance testing at hospitals and aged care facilities.

    If people needed to pick up a rapid antigen test, the Healthpoint website had an increasing list of places where they were available.

    Dr Bloomfield said there were good numbers of the tests available now — more than five million had been distributed in the last seven days, there were over 12 million in storage, and more than 16 million were expected to arrive this week.

    Self-reporting of test results
    Bloomfield thanks the more than 40,000 people who have self-reported a rapid antigen test result. He says it is an important measure to give officials a good idea of how far the virus is spreading.

    He says people who are unwell will be given enough tests for three tests per eligible person in their household. People who are critical workers can also preorder the tests online from testing centres.

    During question time Dr Bloomfield said there was a bit of a lag on whole genome sequencing for those who have been in hospital, and with the short hospital stay times, there is not an accurate picture of how many cases in hospital are omicron versus delta.

    The most common symptoms are cough, sore and scratchy throat, a runny nose, and generally feeling unwell, “that sort of flu-ey feeling, the whole body aches”, but people who are not boosted are far more likely to have more severe symptoms.

    Dr Bloomfield said the loss of sense of smell and taste does not appear to be as much of a notable symptom for omicron, but some young people had also been experiencing an upset stomach.

    The past two days have seen daily cases above the 14,000 mark, and hospitalisations have also continued to increase, reaching 344 yesterday.

    It comes as the government yesterday confirmed New Zealanders would be able to return to New Zealand without isolating, with the date for returnees from countries other than Australia brought forward to Friday.

    New Zealanders in Australia and critical workers were yesterday able to return without entering managed isolation.

    People who are eligible but have not yet got their booster shot are urged to, as it protects against both transmission and severe illness from the omicron variant.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Epidemiologist Sir David Skegg, who along with his team has been providing advice to the New Zealand government on the covid-19 response, says more border restrictions may ease soon, as the opposition National Party calls for all visitors to be allowed into the country.

    Yesterday, the government announced that from 11.59pm on Wednesday, vaccinated New Zealanders returning to the country and who test negative on pre-departure will no longer have to self-isolate on arrival.

    The move brings forward step two of the phased reopening of the border, but the National Party says that does not go far enough and is calling for the border to be open to all visitors, to jump-start the tourism industry.

    The government relied on urgent advice from the Strategic Covid-19 Public Health Advisory Group — chaired by Sir David — before making the changes.

    Sir David told Morning Report the next few weeks were expected to be very challenging on the health system as the peak of the omicron outbreak evolves, so it was best to wait until then before making decisions about opening to tourists.

    “We still don’t know where it’s going to end. The number of people going into hospital every day is increasing, so I’m not surprised that they’re [the government] just going to take a bit of time to decide about that, but I expect that tourists will be welcome to New Zealand earlier than we expected,” he said.

    “And it’s funny everyone calls for certainty, but actually this is a case where the uncertainty has been beneficial to those interests because the dates are coming forward.”

    Tourism industry planning
    However, National Party Covid-19 response spokesperson Chris Bishop told Morning Report that the tourism industry needed that certainty from now to plan ahead.

    “If you talk to people involved in the tourism industry, they are literally borrowing money on their credit cards, mortgaging their houses to try and get through. And so what we can do for them is reconnect New Zealand to the world, open those borders, and allow tourists to come here,” he said.

    “You’re probably not going to see a massive influx of tourists straight away in the next two to three, four weeks, you know, airlines have got to put flights on.

    “But it is really important that we send signal to the airlines and to the airport that tourists are going to come and they’re going to come soon because airlines are making those bookings for the next few months and the next year right now so they do need some certainty, they do need that time frame.”

    Bishop said while there would be some risk in such a decision, it was about considering the “relative risk”.

    “The relative risk of allowing people who are vaccinated, who have passed the pre-departure test, to arrive into New Zealand, going into a country with one of the highest reproduction rates in the world right now and with 15,000 covid cases per day, the relative risk is much lower.

    “But you’ve also got to weigh that up against the incredibly tough circumstances that our tourist parts of the economy have been in over the last two years.”

    ‘Minimal effect’ on NZ
    On the other hand, Bishop said yesterday’s announcement was undoubtedly good news for the grounded New Zealanders who would be excited to once again be able to see their friends and whānau here.

    Sir David said the changes announced yesterday would only have a “minimal effect” on New Zealand’s situation.

    “The impact of this on the progress of our epidemic in New Zealand will be very small, really quite slight. The fact is that we’ve got thousands of new cases occurring every day … the number of people turning up at the airport who are infected at the moment it’s an average of about 10 a day.

    “That number will go up, of course, with more people coming into New Zealand, but it will have a minimal effect on our epidemic.”

    The government has asked the advisory group to now review the role of vaccine passes and mandates for the future.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    A public health expert says New Zealand’s covid-19 response is still one of the best in the world, two years after the first case was discovered here.

    Two years ago today, the first case of the coronavirus was confirmed in New Zealand, in a recent returnee.

    The entire country would go into lockdown for the first time less than a month later.

    As New Zealand marks two years of living with covid-19, 14,633 new community cases of the virus were announced yesterday alone and a total of 56 people have died from it.

    In a statement, the Ministry of Health said there were also 344 community cases of the cases in hospital and five in ICU.

    This was less than a record 14,941 community cases reported yesterday.

    Lowest death rate in OECD
    Epidemiologist Professor Michael Baker of Otago University said this country still had the lowest death rate from covid-19 in the OECD by a large margin.

    “The pandemic is now thought to have killed about 20 million people across the globe,” he said.

    “And they’re mainly in countries where, obviously, they’ve had limited resources, or they’ve had very poor leadership from the governments.

    “It’s interesting to see, in somewhere like Russia, the pandemic has now killed almost 0.8 percent of the entire population.”

    The Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Centre reported 86,140 cases of covid-19 and 56 deaths today.

    The centre reported more than 435 million cases of the virus and 5.9 million deaths globally.

    Professor Baker said he was still optimistic about the future, highlighting that life expectancy in New Zealand had risen by about eight months over the course of the pandemic — one of the only countries in which this has happened.

    Russian life expectancy dropped
    By comparison, the life expectancy of Russian residents had dropped by about two years, he said.

    “We haven’t seen those kinds of impacts since the Second World War.”

    Professor Baker said the outbreak would peak over the next month before declining. He warned that New Zealand would see tens of thousands of new infections every day, and the total number of people with covid-19 was likely to be much higher than the number of people that get tested.

    However, he said New Zealand had fared well compared to other countries.

    “By delaying the arrival of the omicron variant, it’s given us a good opportunity to get highly vaccinated and boosted. And also, we have what is called peak immunity, because we’ve had our vaccine doses and boosters very recently and that means we’re ready to meet this virus with a lot of antibodies.”

    The Ministry of Health said more than two thirds of eligible New Zealanders had now had their booster dose, with 28,836 people receiving their boosters on Saturday.

    Four people were arrested at the Parliament grounds anti-covid public health protest overnight — two for breaking bail conditions, one for possessing an offensive weapon and one for trespass.

    Police said the number of protesters had shrunk to about 200 people.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Auckland Mayor Phil Goff says council has trespass orders “ready to go” as Auckland Domain remains closed to vehicles due to a small number of anti-covid public health measures protesters refusing to leave.

    The small group of protesters set up camp at Auckland Domain after walking over the Harbour Bridge for another protest organised by Freedoms and Rights Coalition at the weekend.

    They had promised to move that night, but did not.

    Goff told Morning Report everyone had a right to protest, but he hoped this was not a repeat of Wellington’s protest.

    “What I absolutely oppose is a sense of entitlement and self-given right to disrupt others’ lives when people want to make their point. We’ve seen that at Parliament, we don’t want to see it in Auckland,” he said.

    “People say, ‘Why don’t you talk to the protesters? Why don’t you negotiate with them?’ How do you negotiate with people in bad faith, who agree one thing and then immediately dishonour their promise?

    ‘They’re not entitled to disrupt lives’
    “These are people that we know from a range of other protests around the city … they are not entitled to camp on the domain, they are not entitled to disrupt the lives of others as they are doing.”

    Goff said he was in regular discussion with police, right up to the commissioner’s level, and had made his views clear.

    “I’ve indicated that the council has trespass orders and its compliance team ready to go, as soon as police indicate they’re ready to enforce those trespass orders and remove the people, and I hope that that will happen,” he said.

    “Nobody is above the law, nobody is entitled to believe they can break the law and there are no consequences and that’s what we’re seeing at the moment and I think that’s got to stop.”

    Goff said he respected the independence of police on operational issues, but he did not “want to see the same sort of disruption of people’s lives and the tolerance of appalling behaviour that we’ve seen in Wellington”.

    Convoy protesters install their own toilets in Wellington
    Meanwhile, Wellington City Council engineers have confirmed that the protesters at Parliament have plumbed toilets into the Capital’s sewer system.

    A plywood structure next to the portaloos at the intersection of Molesworth and Hill streets has pipes that connect to the sewer.

    Wellington Mayor Andy Foster, who has been at the site to take a look, told Morning Report he would be discussing with police as to how the protesters managed to get all the required material onto the site.

    He said he had been advised by Wellington Water and people at the site that it was connected to the wastewater system.

    “If they were going into the stormwater, that would be completely unacceptable. As I said, it’s unlawful to have put them into the wastewater. [If it was going into] the stormwater, [that] will be a real environmental problem, whereas the wastewater is simply an unlawful connection.”

    Discussions with protesters were still ongoing to end the occupation which started earlier this month, he said.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    The Auckland Domain remained closed today to vehicles until further notice, because a small number of anti-covid protesters have set up tents there and stayed overnight.

    They moved there after thousands of people crossed the harbour bridge on foot yesterday, in a march organised protest against New Zealand’s covid-19 public health measures.

    The Ministry of Health reported a record 14,941 new community cases of covid-19 in New Zealand today, with 305 people now in hospital — five of them in intensive care.

    Camping is not permitted in the Domain, which lies between the suburbs of Parnell and Grafton.

    Auckland Council director of customer and community services Claudia Wyss said it was working with event organisers on a safety-first approach.

    She said there was no timeline for reopening at this stage and the council apologised for any inconvenience.

    The campers include people who took part in the march over the Harbour Bridge, shutting down southbound traffic for an hour and a half.

    The march was organised by Destiny Church’s Freedoms and Rights Coalition. Leaders had been in talks with the Auckland Council and police about their presence late on Saturday, and promised to leave the site by 9pm that night.

    A protester in a video has claimed to have mana whenua status, and said they were occupying a pa site at the domain.

    Auckland Council said it was continuing to work with police and to engage constructively with the group.

    However, it has raised concerns the marchers and protesters risked spreading covid-19 by gathering.

    In New Plymouth, about seven tents and about 30 people were at an anti-covid protest beside the Coastal Walkway on Sunday morning.

    Fewer people at Wellington anti-covid protest
    About 300 vehicles remain in the protest area inside cordons at Parliament grounds, however an RNZ reporter said some protesters appeared to be packing up this morning ready to leave.

    Police are maintaining a perimeter at access routes to the area amid the sounds of reggae music and the occasional car horn. The protesters are waving flags and shouting the word “freedom”, to passing cars.

    Protesters have been camping in tents and in vehicles parked in and around the protest area, which covers grounds belonging to Victoria University as well as parts of Molesworth and Hill streets.

    Businesses, schools, the university and residents in the area have reported major disruption since it began on February 7.

    About 200 new protesters turned up at the campsite on Saturday, but police said that was far fewer than on previous weekends.

    RNZ estimates that by Sunday the number of protesters had halved from last weekend, when more than 1000 people took part.

    A group called Farmers for Freedom told followers this morning via social media that a convoy it had organised would reach the protest today with a trailer of food.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Hospitals across New Zealand are receiving anti-covid-19 mandate protesters returning from Parliament, and are pleading with those experiencing cold and flu symptoms to get tested and isolate.

    There were mounting tensions at the Parliament protest today, where police have formed a line to keep protesters back.

    More people have turned up in Wellington to join the event.

    Officers are trying to block access for cars into the bus interchange area and are using a forklift to reposition concrete bollards.

    Some protesters are driving past the area, shouting at police to leave.

    Meanwhile, hospitals are now reporting visits from protesters returning from the anti-covid-19 mandate protest at Parliament, and are pleading with those experiencing cold and flu symptoms to get tested and isolate.

    The Ministry of Health said hospitals throughout the country had reported visits from people who have been at the anti-mandate protest at Parliament before returning home.

    Widespread disruptions
    Thousands of protesters have occupied the grounds of Parliament and nearby Wellington central streets since their convoy arrived on February 7 creating widespread disruptions, with many ignoring social distancing rules and not wearing masks.

    The occupation is now a location of interest after people infectious with covid-19 were confirmed to be among the crowd, and anyone who is there on the listed times and dates is asked to carefully monitor for symptoms, and follow instructions about what to do next if they have any.

    In a statement today, the ministry said the protest was a potential super spreader event as the spread of omicron hit a new record of 13,606 community cases today.

    Five of the 263 people in hospital with the coronavirus were in intensive care.

    Early in the protest leading epidemiologist Professor Michael Baker of Otago University warned this could happen, saying people mixing with groups from outside their household, singing, eating together and sharing transport and accommodation was a recipe for the spread of omicron from those at the protest out to other communities.

    Yesterday police called on protesters to take children home, saying the event was not safe for families.

    More than 130 people have been arrested at the event, and media have reported Corrections has confirmed they have been monitoring a “small number” of criminals subject to GPS monitoring conditions who were at the event.

    ‘Reassurance patrols’
    Sewage leaks and assaults have also been connected to the event.

    Police are carrying out “reassurance patrols” for residents that live near the protest at parliament today, and said officers would continue to be visible at the protest site.

    “The focus for police is to contain the current perimeters of the protest and continue to maintain a safe community for our Wellington residents,” they said.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Kaniva News

    Kaniva News correspondent Patimiosi Ngūngūtau took this photo of an emotional farewell for a grieving Tongan family at the Tanoa hotel in Nukua’alofa this week.

    The family requested that they stop outside the quarantine facility so that her daughter, who was in managed isolation after recently arriving from New Zealand could pay her respects to her mother, Ngūngūtau said.

    The daughter can be seen grieving in a quarantine room as family console her from a distance on Tuesday.

    A burial service was held after the MIQ farewell at the Pikipeavela cemetery in Haveluloto for the deceased.

    The photograph shone a light on the struggles some people in managed isolation face when returning home for a family bereavement.

    Tonga has a strict rule of 15-day quarantine at MIQs for repatriates who arrived at Fua’amotu International Airport.

    Prime Minister Hu’akavameiliku said Tonga had had 287 positive cases since the outbreak.

    There were only 133 active cases at present, 57 had recovered and 78 cases had been discharged from MIQs.

    One person who had covid died this week but the Minister of Health attributed his cause of death to the person’s underlying medical conditions.

    Republished with permission from Kaniva Tonga News.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • By John Gerritsen, RNZ News education correspondent

    Education Minister Chris Hipkins has warned that nearly every New Zealand school and early childhood centre will have contact with covid-19 in the next few weeks.

    He told students at Mana College in Porirua today that one in five schools were already managing cases among students or staff but they were well prepared.

    “We’re now up to one in five schools [which] have covid-19 cases in them and that’s going to just continue to increase from here,” he said.

    “We expect in the next few weeks that just about every school, every early childhood service potentially is going to end up coming into contact with covid-19 as it spreads more rapidly throughout the community. That is now going to happen,” he said.

    His comments came as the Ministry of Health reported an almost doubling of new community cases to 12,011, with five further deaths — the highest number in a single day taking the total to 61.

    Yesterday’s number was 6137 cases.

    In a statement, the Ministry of Health said 8223 of the positive results came from Rapid Antigen Tests (RATs), while 3807 were PCR tests.

    There are currently 237 people in hospital with the coronavirus, including three in intensive care.

    92% of students vaccinated
    Hipkins said 92 percent of secondary students were fully vaccinated, the government had 42 million facemasks on order or in the country for schools, and it was expecting 5000 air purifiers for rooms with poor ventilation.

    He also said schools might get easier access to rapid antigen tests after two large orders arrived in the next two weeks.

    Currently the tests were a last resort for teachers who were isolating and whose schools could not find enough teachers to safely supervise children who could not be at home, such as the children of essential workers.

    “In another week or two we will have a greater supply of rapid antigen tests in the country and at that point we may be able to say actually we can be a bit more generous than that and we can provide tests in a few more circumstances than that including for what we call surveillance which is just to give you reassurance that it’s not out there,” Hipkins said.

    Education Minister Chris Hipkins
    Education Minister Chris Hipkins … Image: Angus Dreaver/RNZ

    Auckland Secondary Principals Association president Steve Hargreaves said that could make a big difference as the pandemic bites.

    “That’ll help keep schools open.

    “Schools are having to roster year levels home and children are having to learn remotely because so many staff are tied up as close contacts, family members have test positive but they’re still well, they’ve been able to isolate successfully at home and if we can keep those teachers in schools through the use of rapid antigen tests, that’ll be good for our children.”

    After-school sport
    Hipkins also promised to clarify the rules around unvaccinated children’s participation in after-school sport and cultural activities.

    The Education Ministry’s website said there were no limits on curriculum-related activities like PE classes, but extra-curricular events like team training at schools must be limited to 25 people if any were unvaccinated and 100 if all were vaccinated.

    Hipkins said that was not the government’s intention.

    “Some schools are interpreting something like a kapa haka rehearsal after school hours or sports after school hours as being included in the guidance.

    “We’d never intended for that to be the case so we’re clarifying that so to make it clear that if you’re participating in a school-organised activity, that includes sports, kapa haka, those other cultural events, the vaccine requirement will not apply,” he said.

    The minister’s office and the ministry were unable to confirm details and Hargreaves said that was a shame, because he had unvaccinated students ready to play sport tomorrow.

    “It’s really sad because we don’t want to exclude any children from these great extra-curricular opportunities but we’ve been following the guidelines around events, gatherings and those size limits and of course College Sport Auckland has its rule around needing to be vaccinated to comply with those rules and that’s blocked a few kids from playing and the sooner we can get this tidied up the better,” he said.

    More detail needed
    School Sport New Zealand chief executive Mike Summerell said he wanted to see more detail but allowing more unvaccinated children to play sport would be good.

    “We welcome the news. It’s been a divisive and difficult time for sport and for schools in terms of inter-school activity but the announcement this morning means more kids are going to have access to sport where over the last few months they haven’t so that’s a real positive,” he said.

    He said the change would not be enough to return big regional sports tournaments to the calendar because they involved more than 100 people.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    New Zealand will move to phase 3 of the omicron response at 11.59pm tonight, Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins has confirmed.

    Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield and Hipkins laid out what phase 3 includes.

    While the ministry’s daily update of case numbers will come out later this afternoon, Hipkins confirmed today’s cases were “about 5000”. The actual figure was later confirmed as 6137 new cases and one death.

    “This continued rise and also the number of hospitalisations we have which today sit at 205 means that we are now confirming our shift to phase 3 of our planned Omicron response. That’ll happen at 11.59pm tonight.”

    He says most had been gearing up for this and it would not come as a surprise.

    However, the move to phase three would not mean a “sudden lurch” in terms of additional restrictions or movements, because the traffic light system had been designed to smooth things out already.

    “Our priorities now shift to isolating those with covid-19 and their household contacts to reduce the spread, while at the same time supporting supply chains and essential services to continue to operate.”

    Only confirmed cases
    Only confirmed cases and their household contacts – the people they lived with – would be required to isolate. All other contacts would be asked to monitor for symptoms but they would not have to isolate.

    Hipkins said it was important to note that the legal requirement to isolate for cases and household contacts did not mean people who did not fit in those groups should not isolate.

    “If you have a friend who has covid-19, you can make a judgment about whether you think you might be at risk … we are asking New Zealanders to accept a much greater degree of personal responsibility.”

    Watch the announcement:

    Today’s media briefing. Video: RNZ News

    Dr Bloomfield said healthcare workforces who were essential and were household contacts were not allowed to go back to work for the first seven days but may return to work after that — three days early — if they returned a negative RAT on days five and six and were asymptomatic.

    Hipkins said detailed information would be sent to schools but the principle remained the same — if you are not a household contact you are not required to isolate.

    He said he acknowledged some parents were in a better situation than others.

    Dr Bloomfield said people who did not respond to the text message would be followed up to confirm whether or not they needed clinical or social support to isolate.

    RATs primary testing
    Rapid antigen tests (RATs) will become the primary means of testing for covid-19, and will be available from thousands of sites. Millions more are expected to arrive over the coming days.

    It is expected that businesses would be able to make the tests available to the public through retail outlets from March, he said.

    Hipkins said RAT tests had been distributed throughout the health network.

    “They’re available to people who need them … through the testing network,” he said.

    “The last thing we want is people sitting on big stockpiles of them when there’s more demand elsewhere.”

    Businesses have been able to import RATs since the beginning of December, but many “like ourselves, have had challenges in securing supplies because of global constraints”, Dr Bloomfield said.

    He said clinics in Tāmaki Makaurau would begin rolling out supervised rapid antigen testing from today.

    Testing locations
    Locations where people can get a rapid antigen tests would be listed on the Healthpoint website.

    He said there were 6.3 million unused tests in the country yesterday, another million arrived last night and another 10 million were expected to arrive in the coming week.

    Hipkins said that because only household contacts were required to isolate, a self-assessment tool would help the government keep track of very high risk locations and the overall spread of the virus.

    This included things like hospitals and aged care facilities.

    Hospitalisations had become a major focus and daily case numbers would be a less important metric from now, Hipkins said.

    “There’s no doubt the next few weeks are going to be pretty challenging… We just need to stick to the plan that we’ve set out as we manage a higher number of cases in our coming weeks before we reach a peak as other countries have,” he said.

    Dr Bloomfield said hospitalisation rates were about 85 percent at the moment, which was “about what they usually are”, but an increase in cases would drive an increase.

    Isolation plans needed
    That said, “if you are unwell for any reason, you can and should seek care in our health system and that includes in our hospitals”.

    Hipkins said omicron’s lower likelihood of severe illness, and high vaccination rates, were what allowed the self-management approach.

    He suggested people should have an isolation plan, and talk to friends and whānau about how they would manage if they needed to isolate.

    He also urged people to take up booster shots.

    “You are far less likely to end up in hospital if you get covid-19 [and] if you’ve had a booster.”

    He said modelling of the low-transmission scenario assumes high booster uptake.

    Dr Bloomfield said two new studies confirmed the vaccine protected against getting infected in the first place and protected against severe illness.

    “One of the studies, which was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, showed that compared with being unvaccinated the odds of contracting omicron after receiving three doses dropped by 67 percent — two thirds — and for delta the risk declined by a stunning 93 percent.”

    “So a highly-boosted population here will serve us all well.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    The two-week old protest at New Zealand’s Parliament has been added to the Ministry of Health’s covid-19 locations of interest website as new omicron cases soar in the country.

    At least two positive covid-19 test results have been reported among the anti-mandate protesters in Wellington.

    The protest site is listed as a close contact event on Saturday, February 20, from 11.55am to 11pm and Sunday, February 21, from 11am to 11.59pm.

    People are advised to self-isolate for seven days and test on day five after being exposed at the location of interest.

    They should also monitor symptoms for 10 days and test again if they feel unwell.

    People are being urged to log their visit to the protest online so contact tracers can reach them.

    There was a stand-off late last night between police and at least 100 protesters on Hill Street, alongside Parliament.

    Infected people
    Earlier, the Ministry of Health said the infected people from the protest had been told to self-isolate.

    However, it would not say if the cases were among those who had been arrested in the past few days.

    Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said earlier a team of staff working at the protest had caught covid-19 and while it had not been linked to protesters, it “stands to reason” the coronavirus is there.

    He told Morning Report even if the virus had not been at the protest “it will be soon”.

    Protest area ‘unsafe for families’
    Assistant Commissioner Richard Chambers said today: “Movements to shrink the protest footprint will continue in the coming days as our focus remains on returning the city back to normal as quickly as possible.”

    He added: “The protest area is not safe for families, and it is still far from being operated lawfully.

    “We will not hesitate to take enforcement action against any unlawful activity that is reported to us.

    “This has been a difficult and disruptive time for many local residents and businesses.”

    He said there would be a high police presence throughout the city this weekend.

    “Police encourage everyone to enjoy Wellington for the right reasons this weekend.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Pacific Media Watch newsdesk

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has condemned the threats and violence against news media by protesters during the 16-day anti-covid-19 vaccine mandates occupation of Parliament grounds, and called for prosecutions of those responsible.

    The media are among favourite targets of some of the 500 or so protesters still camped in front of the Parliament building, known as the Beehive, after arriving from various parts of the country in “freedom convoys” akin to those causing chaos in parts of Canada for the past month, reports the Paris-based media freedom watchdog in a statement tonight.

    The violence against journalists trying to cover the protest had included being regularly pelted with tennis balls with such not-very-subtle insults as “terrorists” and “paedophiles” written on them, said RSF.

    “Media = Fake News” and “Media is the virus” are typical of the slogans on the countless signs outside protesters’ tents.

    Journalists who approach have also been greeted with drawings of gallows and nooses, as well as insults and threats of violence ­– to the point that most of them now have bodyguards, says Mark Stevens, head of news at Stuff, New Zealand’s leading news website.

    ‘Your days are numbered
    Stevens sounded the alarm about the attacks on journalists in an editorial published on February 11.

    “They’ve had gear smashed, been punched and belted with umbrellas,” he wrote. “Many reporters have been harassed […], including one threatened with their home being burned down.”

    The violence has not been limited to Wellington.

    In New Plymouth, an angry crowd tried to storm the offices of the local newspaper, Stuff’s Taranaki Daily News, two weeks ago, as reported by Mediawatch. Some of the protesters even managed to breach the newspaper’s secured doors and attack members of the staff.

    “After the police intervened, [conspiracy theorist] Brett Power urged the protesters to return in order to hold the editor ‘accountable for crimes’ — meaning the newspaper’s failure to report their protests in the way they wanted,” the RSF statement said.

    “The verbal and physical violence against journalists is accompanied by extremely shocking online hate messages.”

    Stuff’s chief political reporter Henry Cooke tweeted an example of the threats he had received on social media:

    Daniel Bastard, the head of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk, said: “The virulence of the threats against journalists by demonstrators, and the constant violence to which they have been subjected since the start of these protests are not acceptable in a democracy.”

    He called on authorities to “not allow these disgraceful acts to go unpunished. There is a danger that journalists will no longer be able to calmly cover these protests, opening the way to a flood of misinformation.”

    In a recent article, Kristin Hall, a reporter for 1News, described her dismay at discovering the level of “distaste for the press” among protesters who regarded the mainstream media as nothing more than “a bunch of liars”.

    “People have asked me why I’m not covering the protests while I’m in the middle of interviewing them,” she wrote.

    A Wellington Facebook page publisher attacked
    A Wellington Facebook page publisher attacked at the protest, as reported by 1News. Image: 1News screenshot APR

    ‘Headlocks, punches’
    Protester mistrust is no longer limited to mainstream media regarded as accomplices of a system imposing pandemic-related restrictions, as Graham Bloxham — a Wellington resident who runs the Wellington Live Community local news page on Facebook – found to his cost when he went to interview one of the protest organisers on February 18.

    “We just wanted to show people that it is peaceful … then bang. They just yelled and whacked. They were just all on me and they basically beat me and my cameraman to a pulp,” he told 1News.

    “Headlocks, punches… they were really violent.”

    A photo of a dozen Nazi war criminals being hanged at the end of the Second World War has been circulating on social media popular with the protesters for the past few days, accompanied by the comment: “Photograph of hangings at Nuremberg, Germany. Members of the media, who lied and misled the German people, were executed.” Definitely not subtle.

    Attacks against journalists have rarely or never been as virulent as this in New Zealand, which is ranked 8th out of 180 countries in RSF’s 2021 World Press Freedom Index.

    • Henry Cooke reported an apology from some of the protesters over the “treatment” of some journalists, but incidents have continued to be reported.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Epidemiologist Professor Rod Jackson is urging New Zealanders to take omicron seriously, and certainly not to think of it as similar to the flu.

    The warning comes as new modelling shows omicron could peak by mid next month with about 4000 daily cases.

    Professor Jackson, professor of epidemiology at Auckland University, told RNZ Morning Report there was “no doubt” New Zealanders were not taking omicron seriously.

    “The standard thing I hear these days is, ‘Oh, this is just a mild condition, it’s like a mild flu’ — and it’s just not true,” he said.

    “In the [United] States, for example, more people have died from omicron, than died from delta. It’s also worth noting that I mean if you ever had a bad flu, you feel like you want to die.

    “It’s not a particularly good comparison. The flu kills 500 people a year. Normally that’s almost double the road crash death rate. It’s about the same as suicide, just a bit less.

    “This is a serious disease that people need to take seriously.”

    High omicron death rate
    The high omicron death rate in the US was because the variant was so contagious, Dr Jackson said.

    “It spreads like wildfire, and I guess that’s the other important issue when we’re thinking about the comparison between the flu and and Omicron is that the R value, the number of people that one infected person with the flu is going to infect, is less than two.

    “With omicron, we don’t even know how big it is. It’s certainly much bigger than delta, which was about six (people infected per person), so this is a very different disease from the flu and we need to take it seriously.

    “We need to go out and get maximally vaccinated.”

    On that point, Dr Jackson said there were a likely a lot of reasons more people had not got a booster shot.

    “One is, we’re all a little over it, aren’t we? Everyone is tired. Everyone wants to go back to normal.

    “Secondly there is this general view is that I hear — ‘Oh, but isn’t omicron, you know, just like a cold?’

    ‘People die of this’
    “For some people, it’s very mild. For some people it’s asymptomatic, but people die of this.

    “Look at the hospital rates. Every New Zealander should have a look at the graph of the number of hospitalisations, and if you look at it in the last week or two, it’s going almost vertically.

    New Zealand and covid-19 progress at 22 Feb 2022
    New Zealand and covid-19 progress as at today. Graph: WHO

    “There’s a couple of things we really need to do – get maximally vaccinated and wear a good mask.”

    Yesterday, the Ministry of Health reported 2846 Covid-19 cases in the community and 143 people in hospital with the virus, including one in intensive care.

    Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said that police staff working at the anti-mandate protest outside Parliament have contracted covid-19.

    He said while they could not link transmission to the protest, with people coming far and wide for the demonstration, he would be surprised if there was no covid among protesters.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • ANALYSIS: By Dominic O’Sullivan, Charles Sturt University

    The early morning action on Monday to cordon off the occupation of Parliament grounds and prevent it growing might go some way to restoring public confidence in the police, which has appeared to be eroding since the protests began a fortnight ago.

    So far, police have pursued a de-escalation strategy, but there have been calls for firmer action.

    The whole event has raised important questions about the relationship between the police and government, and about police independence and accountability.

    With local businesses unable to trade, and the neighbouring university closing its campus for eight weeks, the political consequences are potentially serious.

    From the government’s perspective, there is a direct relationship between its own public support and public confidence in the police. The political and legal impasse between the rightful independence of the police and public accountability is not a simple issue to resolve.

    Constabulary independence
    The relationship between the government and the police has come a long way since government minister John Bryce — armed and on horseback — led the police invasion of Parihaka in 1881. Bryce decided who would be arrested and personally ordered the destruction of property.

    Supporting the political objectives of the government of the day was a function of the police. But New Zealand was not a developed liberal democracy 140 years ago.

    The Wellington protest is testing police independence and public tolerance – are there lessons from Canada’s crackdown?

    By 2018, that relationship had evolved enough for the solicitor-general to advise the prime minister that “constabulary independence [had become] a core constitutional principle in New Zealand”.

    The solicitor-general explained the constitutional subtleties of the Policing Act thus:

    The Police are an instrument of the Crown […] but in the two principal roles of detecting and preventing crime and keeping the Queen’s peace they act independently of the Crown and serve only the law.

    This is reinforced in the oath police officers swear to perform their duties “without favour or affection, malice or ill-will”.

    Who is accountable?
    Constabulary independence means governments can’t control the police for political advantage. At the same time, police accountability to the public is as important as for any department of state.

    Independence should not mean the police can do whatever they like.

    However, the lines of accountability are complex. Constabulary independence means the ordinary process of accountability to Parliament through the relevant minister, and through Parliament to the people, does not fully apply to the police.

    The police commissioner is accountable to the minister for “carrying out the functions and duties of the Police”, but explicitly not for “the enforcement of the law” and “the investigation and prosecution of offences”.

    As well as “keeping the peace”, “maintaining public safety”, “law enforcement”, “crime prevention” and “national security”, the Policing Act requires “community support and reassurance”.

    This might help explain why, for security and tactical reasons, the police won’t fully explain their tolerance of the occupation, beyond the police commissioner saying the public would not accept the inevitable violence and injury a harder line would entail.

    Despite clear public concern, the police are not required to give further explanation of why they haven’t prosecuted people for intimidation and harassment, for threatening MPs, public servants and journalists, or for failing to remove illegally parked vehicles.

    Canadian comparisons
    The situation in Canada may be instructive. There, the police have seemingly abandoned a de-escalation strategy that had lasted three weeks, with the protest in Ottawa cleared in the last few days.

    As in New Zealand, public tolerance was low. Rejecting a claim that the repeated sounding of 105-decibel truck horns was “part of the democratic process”, a Canadian judge said: “Tooting a horn is not an expression of any great thought.”

    In both countries, the protests are being viewed less as expressions of political thought than as simple acts of public nuisance. The difference lies in the Canadian federal government invoking special powers under its Emergencies Act.

    The first time it has been invoked since it was passed in 1988, the law allows the government to use “special temporary measures that may not be appropriate in normal times” to respond to “threats to the security of Canada”.

    Banks can freeze accounts being used to support the protest. Private citizens and businesses may be compelled to provide essential services to assist the state — tow trucks, for example.

    Political calculation
    Such significant constraints on freedom can be justified only if they are proportionate to the emergency. But on Friday, the Canadian Parliament was prevented from scrutinising the decision to declare an emergency because protesters had prevented access to the debating chambers.

    Ironically, the debate began on Saturday when police cleared the obstruction (without needing emergency powers) — suggesting “freedom” is a wider concept than the one protesters claimed they were defending.

    The ability of people to go to work, to study, shop, drive on a public road — and (as in Ottawa) the ability of Parliament to function — are democratic freedoms the protesters are curtailing.

    Whether Wellington goes the way of Ottawa remains to be seen, but the New Zealand police commissioner says a state of emergency is among the “reasonable options” being considered to stop more protesters entering Parliament grounds.

    For now, the political question is what happens if the evolution from protest to public nuisance to crisis of confidence in the police continues.

    Given the constraints of constabulary independence, and the democratic need for accountability, what political responses are available to the government to ensure any crisis of confidence in the police does not become a crisis of confidence in the government itself?

    For both police and government, there is much at stake in the de-escalation strategy.The Conversation

    Dr Dominic O’Sullivan, adjunct professor of the Faculty of Health and Environmental Sciences, Auckland University of Technology and professor of political science at Charles Sturt University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Paul Farmer Leaves Behind the Legacy of a Global Public Health Movement

    We remember the life and legacy of Dr. Paul Farmer, a public health icon who spent decades building community health networks helping millions of poor people in Haiti, Rwanda, Sierra Leone and beyond. He died unexpectedly Monday at the age of 62. We feature Farmer’s past interviews with Democracy Now! and speak with his longtime colleague, Dr. Joia Mukherjee. Farmer leaves behind a remarkable legacy and an “enormous community of people that he brought to this large table that is now global health,” says Mukherjee, chief medical officer for Partners In Health, where she worked with Farmer for 23 years.

    Please check back later for full transcript.

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • By Nick Truebridge, RNZ Checkpoint reporter

    Police leaders condemned the behaviour by protesters outside New Zealand’s Parliament in the capital Wellington today as “absolutely disgraceful”.

    The confrontation between police and protesters began early on Tuesday morning and escalated when a car hurtled towards officers.

    Three police officers were hospitalised after being hit with what they described as a “stinging substance”.

    But protesters in the camp insist their stand remains peaceful, reiterating they will be going nowhere until covid-19 vaccine mandates are dropped.

    Despite the claim the protest is “peaceful”, Wellington Free Ambulance announced it has made the “difficult decision” to no longer enter the protest area at Parliament.

    It said the decision was made to prioritise the safety of paramedics, after the white Honda drove at police.

    “The behaviour of a certain group within the protests community is absolutely disgraceful,” said Police Assistant Commissioner Richard Chambers.

    Faeces thrown at police
    In a repeat of Monday’s conflict, officers had faeces thrown at them. The stinging substance that was thrown at police has not been identified.

    “We are working very, very hard to reduce the impact of the protest on the community here in Wellington, and to be met with the resistance we saw this morning is very disappointing for everybody,” Chambers said.

    However, many still camped at Parliament on the 15th day of the protest are insisting they come in peace.

    “This is a lovely community,” one woman told Checkpoint. “I’ve heard children say ‘I want to live here’.”

    Flax hats at a gazebo
    Leslie was weaving flax hats at a gazebo on the outskirts of the occupation. She said she felt the pull to go to Wellington after watching the protest on TV and after losing her job of seven years as a cook.

    “I didn’t only lose my job, I lost my house… the house was part of my job.”

    Another protester, Jacob, said the mandates meant he could not keep his job, and he was facing losing his house.

    “I’ve been a caregiver working with men living with disabilities. And now since mandates, I haven’t been able to work with these clients, even though it’s one on one and they would actually want to have that continuity.”

    Aucklander Bryan told Checkpoint he had been at the protest since day one and had been at the front of the line with his son in clashes with police, which he described as “amazing”.

    Year 10 student Libby was also at the protest, off school and with her family.

    “My brother can’t play sports. I can’t play sports. All my friends — one of my friends, she’s a really good football player and she’s been denied, she can’t play in her club teams and she’s like, really good, like she could go nationals, worldwide if she wanted to.”

    The fact is that the government has not mandated that children must be vaccinated to participate in school or extracurricular activities. They are decisions made independently by schools and clubs.

    Underbelly of undesirable, illegal, activity
    While the atmosphere appears friendly on the ground at the protest, police say they are seeing something quite different.

    Assistant Commissioner Chambers said there was an underbelly of undesirable, illegal, activity.

    “There has been a suggestion that within the protest area down there, there may be sexual assaults.

    “We are the only agency who can investigate sexual assaults and if anyone would like to come forward to us to talk about what might have occurred to them then please do come forward and we will work with you as best we can.”

    Some protesters agree there are small, negative elements that need cleaning up, while others say the protest message must be refined.

    “We need to be able to put our egos aside and be able to put our agendas aside and come together,” one protester told Checkpoint.

    Mayor in high level talks
    Wellington Mayor Andy Foster told Checkpoint he was in high level talks regarding the Parliament protest but would not detail who he was talking to.

    Foster said he was also talking with government and police regularly.

    “We are looking to achieve the same thing which is trying to get as quick as possible, as safe as possible, resolution of this protest so that we can get our streets back and people can go about doing their normal daily business.”

    He said police had made “good progress” today with containing the spread of the protest, but things at the protest were not in an “acceptable position” yet.

    On people losing their jobs because of the mandate, Foster said “there had to be a way through this”.

    “I think the government has been fairly clear that it won’t remove mandates at this stage, but I think at least if there can be a clear pathway that might be enough for some people.

    “And maybe the kind of thing you might want to think about is if … people are on sick leave, that kind of thing, just allow that to be extended so that the job is not actually lost.”

    Foster said Wellington City Council was putting together a pandemic response package for local businesses, including rates deferral, reduced parking costs, and reducing council fees and charges for businesses particularly in hospitality.

    Mixed messages aside, one thing that appeared consistent among the masses — with a pre-school, a vegetable garden and even a tattoo parlour — they are in it for the long haul.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ Pacific

    The Fiji government has warned that unvaccinated people in the vaccine-eligible population are 17 times more likely to die if they contract covid-19 than those that are vaccinated.

    Health Secretary Dr James Fong said this strongly indicated that many of the unvaccinated deaths were preventable.

    He is urging Fijians to get vaccinated against covid-19, including the booster shot, amid a third wave which began last November.

    “I strongly urge anyone who hasn’t been vaccinated to get vaccinated now because covid-19 is here to stay, and omicron will not be the last variant,” Dr Fong said.

    “And if you are vaccinated, but know someone who isn’t, please also encourage them to protect themselves by getting vaccinated.”

    The vaccine rollout for children aged 12 to 17 is also underway, with 43,241 of them already having had both doses.

    Meanwhile, Fijians who are unvaccinated against covid-19 are still being refused entry to a number of public spaces.

    Health Minister Dr Ifereimi Waqainabete said this included houses of worship, sporting venues and high-risk businesses.

    “Those who are in charge of these venues, businesses and houses of worship must ensure that they check the vaccine status of all those who enter their premises,” Dr Waqainabete said.

    As of 18 February 2022, 93.1 percent of Fiji’s adult population of 844,000 were fully vaccinated against covid-19.

    More than 800 deaths attributable to covid-19 have been recorded in Fiji.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    One of the people funding New Zealand’s two-week-old Parliament grounds occupation says it makes no sense to maintain a quarantine system at the border now that covid-19 cases are rife in the community.

    Red Stag, which has business interests in forestry, timber, property development, and tourism, is helping to fund the protesters’ efforts.

    Chief executive Marty Verry said he hoped they could bring about changes in the government’s vaccine mandate and border policies.

    Early today one person was arrested at the Parliament grounds protest after attempting to drive a car into a group of police officers. Two others were also arrested for obstruction as police described the protesters antics as “disgraceful”.

    Police, some with shields, have been moving the concrete barriers to reduce the protesters’ ground around Parliament.

    At least three officers needed medical attention after being sprayed with an unknown substance by protesters as they resisted the police actions.

    The Ministry of Health reported today a record 2846 new community cases of covid-19 with 143 people in hospital with the virus

    ‘Not happy with antics’
    Verry told RNZ Morning Report he did not support the protesters sending death threats to politicians and government workers.

    “Of course I’m not happy with some of the antics – nobody is.”

    However, at the same time the government had “restricted the movement and the ability for thousands of businesses to do business for the last few years”.

    Verry would not say how much money he had donated to the protesters or how long he had been giving them money.

    “For me the protest is a way to get the government to listen and to make changes earlier than it otherwise would,” he said.

    “So for me the major axe to grind I’ve got is with regards to what I’m seeing as to whether there is any justification now to maintain a quarantine system at the border for international tourism.”

    He said it had previously been an $18 billion earner for the country.

    Supports protest to help economy
    He supported protest if it could help resurrect a vital part of the economy, especially when rapid antigen tests could be used so readily to detect the virus among international travellers.

    By his calculations one positive case would have got through the border using rapid antigen tests on Friday — the same day the country had 1929 community cases.

    “So what’s one extra person coming in across the border to constrain an $18 billion sector…

    “There is no justification for keeping the borders closed because we’ve got one extra person with a cold.”

    Verry was contributing a sum of money that he said was “not a significant” amount to a website that was collecting donations to pay for the infrastructure at the Parliament grounds.

    He expected his donation would pay for “food, toilets, shelter, whatever they want to put it to”.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • COMMENTARY: By Lynley Tulloch

    There is a dangerous anger on rapid boil at the protest in Wellington. It is a stew of dispossession and unrest alongside various delusional beliefs and violent threats.

    Two weeks into the protest and the police have had to endure human waste and acid thrown at them; a car driven into them; threats of violence; chants of “shame on you”; accusations of police brutality; physical attacks and injuries.

    Meanwhile, the illegal occupiers (who refused to move their cars to a free car park) claim peace and love as the Ministry of Health reported today a record 2846 new community cases of covid-19 with 143 people in hospital with the virus.

    This “protest” was from the beginning organised in part and spread by QAnon (a conspiracy group that want to hang the government literally) alongside religious groups. Also in the mix are white supremacists (Nationalist Front).

    It was joined by “everyday people” annoyed with mandates they don’t want to live with.

    Well, if these “everyday people” can lower their standards to stand shoulder to shoulder with violent extremists all I can say is, “shame on you”.

    Deputy Leader of the House, Labour’s Michael Wood recently spoke of these threats at Parliament: “There is a river of violence and menace. There is a river of anti-Semitism. There is a river of Islamophobia. There is a river of threats to people who work in this place and our staff.”

    A recent Stuff article reported that a “Labour MP says protesters have been waiting at the doors of her office at night, and are telling politicians they will be ‘lynched, hung or kidnapped’”.


    Deputy Speaker Michael Wood speaking in Parliament on February 17. Video: NZ Parliament

    These underlying threads of violence give the protest its bite, if not its bark. The protest in Wellington was inspired by the truckers’ convoy in Canada and the occupation of Ottawa.

    We know that this was not an organic uprising of truckles, but was rather inspired by QAnon conspiracy theorists.

    Conspiracy far right media platform Counterspin in New Zealand was central in the formation and viral spread of the Aotearoa convoy,

    It is also, astoundingly, a protest that is preaching aroha (love) and peace. This is at odds with the Trump-loving, QAnon inspired cesspit of violence. QAnon believes that the government is full of elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and media.

    They believe that politicians and journalists will be executed in a day of reckoning.

    That is why “hang ‘em high” was chalked on the steps to Parliament in the first days of the protest. Many people at this protest want to see politicians and media people executed.

    This protest also has the support of white supremacists with swastikas chalked on a statue in the early days.

    This disgusting far-right, anti-establishment hatred has no place in Aotearoa. Yet here it is at a protest supported by thousands on the Parliament lawn.

    I have protested at many events over the years in Aotearoa in the name of animal rights. Never would I stand alongside people who preach violence. And in all cases police behaviour toward myself and my fellow protestors has been exemplary and respectful.

    The protest was ill-thought out in direction, leaderless, and doomed to failure. Their demands cannot possibly be met in a time of global pandemic that has brought the world quite literally to its knees.

    And yet as the days tick by, yoga classes spring up alongside gardens. Food stalls and dancing, a concert, love and freedom grow like fairy tales.

    It’s all a fairy tale. Make no mistake. This protest may preach peace, but its bones are evil.

    — Lynley Tulloch

    It’s all a fairy tale. Make no mistake. This protest may preach peace, but its bones are evil.

    So where to go from here? There is no end in sight for this drama. The protesters are revelling.

    The government can’t move them. Police can’t move them. The army can’t move them.

    Ironically, as suggested by ex-Labour party president Mike Williams, it will be the covid virus itself that will bring them down. And that is one little virus that doesn’t care about threats of violence.

    The only thing it will take notice of is a vaccine and a mask, and those are in short supply on Parliament grounds right now.

    The virus doesn’t care if you are a child, or elderly, or immune-compromised or dangerously deluded. It doesn’t give a care in the world about your rights. It just goes and sticks its spikes right into you joyfully.

    And so, Mike Williams is probably right. And therein lies the biggest irony of this whole protest.

    Dr Lynley Tulloch is an educational academic and also writes on animal rights, veganism, early childhood, feminist issues, environmentalism, and sustainable development.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says the omicron outbreak is likely to peak in Aotearoa New Zealand in three to six weeks.

    At that point, she says, the country will move down the traffic light settings, easing off gathering limits.

    “We are predicting cases will continue to double every three to four days … it’s likely then that very soon we will all know people who have covid, or we will potentially get it ourselves,” Ardern says.

    She says there are three reasons that is no longer as scary a prospect as it used to be.

    “Firstly, we are highly vaccinated, and that happened before omicron set in.”

    Secondly she said that meant omicron would be a mild to moderate illness, and boosters made hospitalisation 10 times less likely.

    Third, public health measures like masks, gathering limits and vaccine passes were helping slow down the spread to ensure everyone who needed a hospital bed can get it.

    The plan is working
    “So far, that plan is working. We have 46 cases per 100,000 people, compared to 367 in New South Wales and 664 in Victoria at the same point in the outbreak. Our hospitalisations too are well below Australian states at a similar time.”

    Ardern said cases were likely to peak in mid- to late March, some three to six weeks away.

    At that point a rapid decline, followed by cases stabilising at a lower level was likely.

    Ardern said at that point the traffic light system could change, because it meant public health measures used to protect the health system could be eased off.

    She said vaccine passes had been necessary as the “least bad option” but they had always been temporary.

    After we come through a wave and a peak of omicron, many unvaccinated people would have been exposed to covid-19.

    She says coming through the peak would allow the government to ease mandates in places where they were less likely to impact on vulnerable people.

    “They will remain important in some areas though, for some time.”

    Beyond omicron … the easing of covid restrictions. Video: RNZ News

    Mandates to remain in some areas
    Mandates were likely to remain for some areas — particularly sections of the healthcare workforce — but there would be a narrowing of where they were required, she said.

    She said it was hard to set a date, but the government needed to ensure the country was  “well beyond the peak” and that the pressure on the health system was manageable.

    She said the reasons not to do away with the traffic light system entirely was so the country was prepared for new variants and potential future waves, and the coming of winter at the same time as flu returns.

    “To summarise then, the coming weeks. Covid will increase, and rapidly. There will be disruption and pressure from omicron. We must brace through the next six weeks, but we can do so knowing the future with fewer restrictions is near because that has always been the course we have chartered,” Ardern said.

    She said that as the country reached the peak and started to come down New Zealanders could all move towards a “new normal” they can all live with.

    Finance Minister Grant Robertson has outlined new financial supports to help businesses impacted by the red settings.

    High daily cases continue
    Daily covid-19 cases continued to increase dramatically over the weekend, reaching a new high of 2522 on Sunday — with two new deaths — and remaining above 2300 today.

    The high case load has also led to an increase in related hospitalisations, putting strain on the health system which is already seeing some patients spending up to 36 hours in emergency departments, often waiting for hours in corridors.

    In a statement, the Ministry of Health said there had also been two covid-19 related deaths as well as 2365 new community cases.

    “Sadly, we are today reporting the death of a patient at Middlemore Hospital.”

    A patient in their 70s at Auckland City Hospital also died following a diagnosis of Covid-19, the ministry said.

    “Our thoughts and condolences are with both patients’ family and friends.”

    There are 116 people in hospital today – one in Northland, 20 in North Shore, 34 in Middlemore, 47 in Auckland, one in Tauranga, 12 in Waikato and one in Tairāwhiti.

    There is one case in ICU or HDU.

    The average age of the current hospitalisations is 58.

    Ardern’s message to protesters
    Ardern said she had a final message for those occupying the lawns of Parliament: “Everyone is over covid. No one wants to live with rules or restrictions, but had we not been willing to work together to protect one another then we would have all been worse off as individuals, including losing people we love.

    “That hasn’t happened here for the most part and that is a fact worth celebrating, rather than protesting.

    “We all want to go back to the way life was, and we will, I suspect sooner than you think. But when that happens it will be because easing restrictions won’t compromise the life of thousands of people — not because you demand it.

    “Now is not the time to dismantle our hard work and preparation, to remove our armour just as the battle begins.”

    Ardern said she still had confidence in the police commissioner and “the enormous job” he and all police did every day, including on the forecourt of Parliament right now.

    Asked when protesters would be gone, she said enforcement of the law was a decision that lay with police, she said.

    She said her speech today was “absolutely not” in response to the demands of the protesters.

    ‘Bullying’ and ‘harassment’
    She said the protesters had been engaging in illegal activity that bordered on and demonstrated “bullying” and “harassment” of Wellingtonians, and she found the opposition calls for more details on lowering restrictions “quite upsetting to see they now seem to be responding and sympathising with the protesters”.

    She said no one should have to put up with having human waste thrown at them, as police say happened this morning.

    This morning she again urged protesters at Parliament to go home.

    Police early today moved to contain the convoy protest — which has now been at Parliament for two weeks — by installing concrete barriers to prevent more vehicles from entering the area.

    A researcher today warned that the continued presence of far-right elements among the protesters risked greater radicalisation, and possible violence.

    Ardern has maintained there will be no engagement with the protesters, and although ACT leader David Seymour spoke to some of their representatives last week, all parties have since signed a letter from the Speaker saying there would be no dialogue from politicians until disruptive and threatening behaviour was brought to an end.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • By Hamish Cardwell, RNZ News senior journalist

    Two weeks in and New Zealand’s anti-mandates occupation of Parliament grounds remains a total stalemate with no sign protesters are going anywhere. So where to from here?

    About 800 vehicles continue to clog streets around the precinct and protester numbers swelled to more than 1000 this weekend.

    Music blasted from the performance stage — just some of the new infrastructure brought in during the second weekend of the occupation of Parliament.

    Early this morning, police installed concrete blocks in a bid to contain the protest and free up Wellington streets. They made a handful of arrests.

    But there is still no sign of a police crackdown, or of protesters leaving, and Otago University Law professor Andrew Geddis said it looked like they were trying to wait each other out.

    He said it was now a battle for public approval — but there was nothing legally preventing police from breaking the occupation up.

    “If that was spraying them with pepper and hitting with batons, the law would allow for that,” he said.

    “The problem is, of course, that it would look terrible, and it also, it just would be terrible.

    “The idea of the police batoning people even if the law allows it … it is just something that in New Zealand we haven’t really seen for years and hopefully you never have to see again.”

    Police likely attempting to divide and conquer
    Security analyst Dr Paul Buchanan said the police should employ a divide and conquer strategy to separate and eject protesters at Parliament with violent ideologies.

    He said the intelligence services should be using camera and drone imagery and facial recognition technology to identify the far-right elements and racist extremists.

    “Those people have to be dealt [with] separately and I would say a little more harshly than the majority of the crowd, which are a bunch of hippies and circle dancers, wellness folk who are well intentioned — albeit in my mind misguided.”

    Dr Buchanan said there were more options than total appeasement or violent crackdown.

    Advocate Simon Oosterman advises non-violent social justice activists here and abroad on how to manage interactions with police.

    He said the police strategy seemed to be attempting to deescalate, avoid radicalising people by being heavy-handed, and keeping a lid on bad optics.

    For now, he expected towing and ticketing vehicles at the fringes while police worked to create a split between the minority of protesters who are harassing the public and police — and the rest.

    Public anger, and towing resources crucial
    The Parliament protest is a copycat of one in Canada which brought the downtown of the capital Ottawa to a standstill for three weeks, but which has largely been cleared out with little bloodshed.

    Freelance journalist Justin Ling, who has been on the ground in the city, said an increasingly furious public, massive resources from emergency powers and the bitter cold finally brought about the breakthrough.

    “Maybe the most crucial part was just the fact that the federal government was able to conscript a whole bunch of tow trucks into helping out police clear the street – just a game changer,” he said.

    “You’ve seen this the city clear in just 24 hours – incredibly quickly – there were fears that could have taken weeks.”

    Whānau need to ask protesters to come home – health research
    Tairāwhiti activist and health researcher Tina Ngata said whānau need to reach out to those who have gone to Parliament and ask them to come home.

    “Even if one or two does listen, and then that’s important.

    “But also I think Wellingtonians need to hear that we stand in solidarity with them. And the mana whenua of Ngāti Toa Rangatira – Taranaki Whānui in particular … they need to know we stand in solidarity with them.”

    Wellington iwi leaders have called for an end to the protest at Parliament.

    Ngata said those who did return home need to be tested so they do not bring covid back into vulnerable communities.

    Meanwhile, both Buchanan and Ngata said even if the Parliament occupation is broken up, they expect the protest to keep spreading around the country.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

  • COMMENTARY: Open letter by Nick Rockel to the Parliament protesters.

    So the Parliament protest goes on, the first protest I can recall having absolutely no sympathy for. I’ve been on marches protesting lack of education funding, nuclear testing, abuse of GCSB [Government Communications Security Bureau] powers, the TPP [Trans-Pacific Partnership] etc.

    All of which I cared about, but this protesting against health measures – yeah nah.

    People have been through a lot during this covid-19 pandemic; some have lost loved ones, and some have endured serious illness. We’ve all missed events or time with family and friends by following restrictions for the greater good.

    But these people? No they don’t want to comply with mandate restrictions to help others, no they don’t want to do their bit for herd immunity like the other 95 percent

    Sure a small number have suffered as a direct result of mandates although unless there is a genuine medical reason you can’t be vaccinated I have no sympathy, choices have consequences.

    You’re entitled to not get vaccinated, despite your placards this isn’t a fascist state. But if you want to be able to do certain jobs then get vaccinated, it isn’t hard, it is well tested, the science is out on this one.

    There is a false equivalence between “no jab no job” restrictions put in place to reduce the spread of a virus with the persecution of people based on race or sexual orientation. How ridiculous.

    Heavy machinery regulations comparison
    A better comparison is of someone being outraged at regulations where because you work with heavy machinery you have to pass a drug test to check you’re safe to do so for the benefit of others around you.

    Even that falls down, you’re not a danger to others if you turn up to work on Monday having smoked a joint on Friday evening, but if you refuse to get vaccinated to perform a role where you come in to contact with vulnerable people, for example in a retirement village or on a hospital ward, you present an additional risk to others.

    It may be a small risk but it is an additional risk that you are happy to impose on others for your “freedom”.

    There is also the additional, and unnecessary, cost to the health system of people not being vaccinated — the hospitalisation rate of the unvaccinated versus those with at least two doses is many many times higher. If our health system becomes overwelmed leading to the need to increase restrictions ironically it will be disproportionately down to people who want to remain unrestricted by regulations.

    Some suggest we could run parallel systems for the unvaccinated so the odd nurse or teacher who doesn’t want to get vaccinated can continue working. Our public services have limited resources, they are already under pressure, to think that we should run a parallel system for the 5 percent of people who choose not to be vaccinated is absurd.

    In addition to those opposed to health measures there are people at the protest for many different causes. According to their placards they oppose Jeffrey Epstein — which seems a reasonable thing to do if a little weird to include in this protest, fluoridation, 1080, Three Waters, and support Groundswell, Trump etc

    Some refer to “Jewcinda”, paint swastikas on statues and carry placards of the PM as “Dictator of the year” with a toothbrush mustache, or talking about Nuremburg trials. But those are just a few bad eggs, like the ones that threw, err eggs, at a child for wearing a mask.

    Not wanting others to wear masks
    Apparently their desire for freedom extends to not wanting others to be allowed to wear masks.

    Yes many people are there simply to oppose health measures rather than support these other causes, but the nutjob quotient, the thug element, even allowing for media sensationalism, seems incredibly high. I note the local Iwi have called for an end to the abuse and the threats at the protest.

    If Philip Arps or Kyle Chapman turned up at many protests they would be made very unwelcome to say the least. Seemingly this group is quite tolerant of them, tolerant of white supremacists. Nah — you’re supposed to be intolerant of fascists. Not protest alongside them and pretend you can’t see them.

    I don’t know if the other protesters are intimidated by the far right elements that are there with them, or happy that they have a common enemy in the government and content to co-exist.

    What is not plausible is any claim that says they are not aware of them, of the abuse and the death threats by those around them. I call BS.

    The Speaker of the house, Trevor Mallard, playing repetitive songs and covid health messages to the protesters, has outraged some people — many of us think it is rather funny.

    New Zealand has seen protests where people have really endured hardship for causes, be it Ihumātao, Bastion Point, the Springbok marches. Honestly the people outside Parliament have been there in the middle of summer, had some rain, probably don’t have enough toilets, and listened to some annoying music — its not much compared to getting battoned on Molesworth Street by the Red Squad.

    No return to Red Squad
    I would certainly not want to see a return to the approach of the Red Squad, but the police, as they have at other protests against covid health measures, have really lost credibility with the lack of action, at least against those intimidating people. The failure to tow, or at least clamp, illegally parked vehicles has become a joke.

    The mandates will eventually be gone of course; the government has already acknowledged this. When they go it will be based upon health information, one would hope, and not a relatively small group of people protesting.

    Not protesting, it should be noted, when these health measures were introduced a year ago when border workers became the first workers who had to be vaccinated in order to stop more spread into Aotearoa, but when the end is likely already in sight.

    Barring of course the unforeseen, the unknowable, that protesters demands would have ignored.

    I’ve been on protests of 10,000 people, and boy that feels like a big protest when you’re on it. These people though look to have maybe 400-500. Let’s give them the benefit of the doubt and say there are a thousand protesters. That is still a very small number to be getting this level of media coverage, making demands the majority are opposed to, or to be claiming to speak on behalf of others.

    Don’t claim to be standing up for my rights, put down the placard and stop holding the good folks of Wellington — who would like their city back — to ransom. As one old fellow interviewed on the news said: “Go home — and take a bath.”

    These people do of course have the right to protest, not erect tents or park illegally mind you, but certainly to protest. I also have the right to think and say they’re a bunch of selfish idiots, a view I suspect is shared by a very large number of people.

    Nick Rockel is a “Westie Leftie with five children, two dogs, and a wonderful wife”. He is the author of the Daily Read where this article was first published. It is republished here with the author’s permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    Some residents of the area around New Zealand’s Parliament in the capital Wellington are worried about leaving their houses with protesters outside, while police say they will clamp down on any abusive behaviour.

    Protesters have been occupying Parliament’s lawn and surrounding areas for close to two weeks.

    The growing frustration with the protesters comes as 95,000 people have signed a petition calling for an end to the anti-mandates occupation, the indigenous National Māori Authority has organised a counter-protest and new covid-19 cases have hit a record 2522 today as the omicron variant spreads.

    Today’s 100 people in hospital was also the largest total of the outbreak.

    According to RNZ data, hospitalisations hit highs of 93 cases twice in November.

    In 2020’s first covid-19 outbreak, the highest number of people in hospital at one time was 89.

    None of the 100 hospital cases announced today were in intensive care units. The hospital cases are mostly in Auckland, but there are also cases in Waikato, Tauranga, Rotorua and Tairāwhiti.

    Number in hospital grows
    The number of people in hospital has been growing steadily all week as new cases rose, and has tripled since 32 people were in hospital on February 13.

    According to the Ministry of Health’s website, as of February 19 a total of 836 people had been hospitalised during the pandemic, and 69 people were in ICU care.

    A Hill St resident who asked not to be named said the protest had spread further so he was now living in the middle of it.

    During the occupation, he said protesters had tried to remove his housemate’s mask, and other residents had been verbally abused for wearing one, including himself.

    The protest appeared to be “anti-everything covid”, not just anti-mandate, he said.

    “If it was a more nuanced protest around mandates, you’d see people wearing masks. The reality is there’s nobody wearing masks there.

    “It’s a complete denial of the risk of covid whatsoever, which is really concerning. I’d feel a lot more comfortable if people were wearing masks.”

    The resident has been going to his work every day to avoid being around the protest and said his neighbours had also gone away.

    A graffiti covered car parked at the protest camp at Parliament.
    A graffiti-covered car parked at the protest camp at Parliament. Image: Craig McCulloch/RNZ

    He didn’t feel entirely safe having to walk past and through hundreds of unmasked people to get home, he said.

    Policing being strengthened
    In a statement tonight, New Zealand police said that they were strengthening the policing of abusive behaviour around the protest, as well as traffic management and road traffic controls.

    “Regular reassurance patrols of local businesses have been increased,” police said.

    “Staff have also been instructed to take a zero-tolerance approach to any abuse, intimidation or violence against members of the public.”

    Police said there would be an increased presence around the start and end of each day.

    “Anyone abusing or intimidating members of the public can expect to be arrested, removed and face charges,” they said.

    The Wellington Hill St resident wanted protesters to wear a mask, for the streets to be cleared so people could walk freely without harassment, and for protesters to stick to the lawns of Parliament.

    “I am furious about the occupation of the bus exchange, I mean it’s a parking lot campsite now.

    Standstill of public infrastructure
    “That doesn’t affect the politicians. It’s not going to change anyone’s view on mandates, all it creates is a complete standstill of public infrastructure in Wellington. It’s nothing but disruptive.”

    While he wanted to see the streets cleared, he was concerned that he could end up in the middle of a riot if the police stepped in.

    “If we see the break out of a riot — which I think if police do eventually move in is a real possibility — it will be instigated by those more extreme people, but the reality of mob rule and people who feel pissed off is that they will join in.

    “And all of a sudden, we will be right in the middle of a riot.”

    Residents were contacted by the protesters about a week ago to see if they’d allow a medical tent to be set up in garages or a back garden who they told to contact the public health service, he said.

    “If we were having a party on the street, A – it would get shut down, and B – it wouldn’t be masking over that more like dangerous underbelly of the whole thing whereby people are still being abused.”

    Police said that parked vehicles around the protest area had swelled to approximately 2000 on Saturday, with about 800 of those illegally parked. A small number of vehicles were towed.

    ‘Positive’ engagement
    Police said engagement with protest leaders had been “positive” over the weekend.

    “Security and safety” were the focus of talks, police said in their statement.

    Meanwhile, a counter protest is being launched in response to the Parliament occupation.

    Matthew Tukaki from the National Māori Authority said an overwhelming number of people had been in touch with him saying they had had enough.

    He said the vast number of Wellingtonians were fed up with the disruption to their lives, the abuse and the desecration of the memories of servicemen and women.

    Tukaki said it would be an online protest without confrontation, intimidation, abuse or threatening behaviour.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ News

    New Zealand police have moved to start clearing up the roads near Parliament in the capital Wellington, where protesters have clogged the roads with vehicles for more than a week.

    But there has also been a significant increase in illegally parked vehicles in the area.

    Some streets around Parliament could not be used since people protesting against covid-19 vaccine mandates clogged the roads with their vehicles, with public transport in the capital also having to be re-routed.

    On Thursday, police estimated more than 400 cars, vans and campervans were ensconced in several streets alongside Parliament and today that estimate grew to 800.

    The protest, which began on February 8, drew a crowd of more than 1000 people today.

    Yesterday, Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said they were expecting more people to turn up to the protest over the weekend, and that they would implement a traffic management plan.

    Despite police previously warning protesters to move their vehicles or face towing, they did not end up acting on the ultimatum, fearing an escalation.

    Tow trucks relocating vehicles
    But on Saturday afternoon, tow trucks were seen relocating illegally parked cars near Wellington railway station.

    In a statement, police said there was an increase of people attending the protest today, as was anticipated.

    “Police cleared illegally parked vehicles on Thorndon Quay today — 15 were moved by protesters after police spoke with them and two were towed.

    “Police are also noting the registration of vehicles currently impeding traffic for follow up enforcement action, and structures such as tents and marquees are being removed from any site that does not form part of the main protest area.”

    The cars were parked in the median strip in the middle of the road, and appear to be relocated to the side of the road.

    Over a dozen police cleared traffic in the area and directed pedestrians to move away, when a small crowd began to gather.

    Further up the road, traffic cones with “no parking” signs have been laid down on the curb of Bowen Street, where many cars remain illegally parked.

    Sky Stadium at capacity
    Police said the parking facility at Sky Stadium was at capacity, after they had previously encouraged protesters to move their vehicles there.

    But they said they had “serious concerns” about health and safety as a concert at the protest site has been planned.

    “We continue to maintain a highly visible, reassurance presence on site, and staff are engaging with the public and protesters to provide advice and, where necessary, take enforcement action.”

    Police said they have attended at least six medical events within the protest and continued to urge anyone parked unlawfully to remove their vehicle to allow emergency services access.

    Business and community leaders have been calling for an end to the blockade, saying it was adding stress to nearby residents and users.

    Meanwhile, Marlborough Mayor John Leggett said protesters in Picton had made it clear they would not be moving until their counterparts in Wellington do.

    Leggett said the council had been in contact with leaders of the action in Nelson Square, who had made their position clear.

    He said the Picton occupiers were linked to the Wellington anti-mandate protest.

    “To put it the other way, if Wellington [protest] is resolved, we will get a resolution here, a peaceful resolution, and they’ve made it very clear that their occupation is linked entirely to what’s happening in Wellington so there needs to be some way of resolving the Wellington situation.”

    Police today said they were also maintaining a presence at that protest, as well as another one in Christchurch.

    1901 new community cases – down slightly
    Meanwhile, the Ministry of Health reported that the number of new daily community cases of covid-19 has fallen slightly from yesterday’s record, with 1901 new cases today.

    The ministry said 1240 of the new cases were in Auckland, with the rest in the Northland (33), Waikato (249), Bay of Plenty (66), Lakes (11), Hawke’s Bay (22), MidCentral (12), Whanganui (10), Taranaki (10), Tairāwhiti (12), Wairarapa (17), Capital and Coast (38), Hutt Valley (31), Nelson Marlborough (40), Canterbury (40), South Canterbury (2), West Coast (1) and Southern (65) DHBs.

    There were also 14 cases identified at the border, including five historical cases.

    There was a record 1929 community cases reported yesterday.

    There have now been 28,360 cases of Covid-19 in New Zealand since the pandemic began.

    The ministry said there are 76 people in hospital with the coronavirus. None are in ICU.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Due to one of the longest and strictest lockdowns in the world, limited in-person teaching in the Philippines only resumed in late 2021, 20 months since the start of pandemic restrictions in March 2020.  More than 27 million children have been out of school. The country’s Department of Education (DepEd) was only able to allow 100 public schools to take part in its pilot run of face-to-face classes in November 2021. Only five thousand students went back to the physical classroom. However, with the current wave of COVID-19 cases due to the Omicron variant still being managed, in-person classes have been disrupted again. The Philippine national government has no choice but to continue to rely on remote learning. This has set the Philippines back in attaining UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4: Quality Education which aims to achieve inclusive and equitable quality education and to promote lifelong educational opportunities for all.

    In her 24 January 2022 message for International Day of Education (IDE), UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay called for a new “social contract” for education. Her message asked for past injustices be repaired and for digital inclusion and equity in response to an educational crisis exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The Basic Educational-Learning Continuity Plan   (BE-LCP) has been the DepEd’s flagship response since the beginning of the pandemic. Aiming to deliver quality education in the “new normal” setting, the BE-LCP involves the distribution of self-learning modules integrated with alternative learning modalities such as online, blended, television-based, and radio-based instructions. This programme has safeguarded not just students, but also teachers and staff, from contracting COVID-19.

    Nonetheless, the national government’s earnest efforts to deliver inclusive quality education were met with challenges. We found evidence of these challenges in a series of 38 interviews with public servants, NGO workers, and community leaders in urban poor areas in Metro Manila and Bulacan. Our respondents reported on both the observable impacts of COVID-19, and the government and community responses to the pandemic. The key concerns our informants pointed out regarding basic education included: interrelated issues of accessing the internet, availability of gadgets, and proficiency in using technology; low quality instruction and supervision from guardians, most often stay-at-home mothers, due to their own limited educational attainment; and lack of physical and psychological space conducive to learning.  However, the pandemic did not trigger these issues for those living in urban poor communities; it just made them worse.

    To respond to these perennial challenges, DepEd Secretary Leonor Briones encouraged education experts and stakeholders to a collective effort in designing future learning spaces in her speech during the DepEd’s celebration of the IDE this year. DepEd took its cue from UNESCO’s Futures of Education project which aimed “to rethink education and shape the future”. The UNESCO initiative proposed to view education as “a new social contract” – a shared global effort to broaden the horizon of learning so that knowledge can genuinely shape humanity and the environment in an increasingly complex and fast-changing world.

    In line with this call to create new opportunities, one inspiring and innovative community response to the pandemic which an interviewee reported to us stood out: a tutoring programme in an urban poor mission station in the Diocese of Caloocan. A community organiser related how their chapel initiated a program to help young children by providing free one-on-one tutorial classes handled by the community’s own scholars. This project has been running for two years. Elementary students are paired with senior high school and college students. These student-tutors guide their respective tutees during two-hour sessions twice a week, with focus on English, Maths, and Science. They also cover other subjects if there is time. This school year, the programme is catering for around 70 pupils with more than 30 volunteers.

    Filipino students use “padungog-dungog” to resist educational inequality

    Many Filipino students don’t have computers or internet access for online learning during COVID-19. On “subaltern social media strategies” for demanding equitable access.

    As an incentive for the student-tutors, they can join another community project called “Laptop for Work”. As part of the programme, the tutors themselves have to render community service so that they can keep the laptop provided to them to guide their tutees. Thus far the mission station has provided 29 laptops for their scholars. Other tutors are still working towards ownership of their device. The tutors have the option to community service, such as helping with the liturgy or volunteering in the feeding program or community pantries. Most tutors, however, opted to conduct tutorial classes.

    This simple yet ingenious example addresses all three challenges to the remote learning plan of the national government: technology access, knowledge expertise, and a conducive learning environment. The model community-tutoring programme has provided the electronic devices and Internet access that pupils need to access their online modules. They also receive personalised academic guidance from a competent student tutor, and a space conducive to study within the chapel. More importantly, this mentorship programme involves the entire community: not just the pupil-tutor pair, but also their parents, other volunteers who prepare the study area and snacks, and the generous benefactors. Thus, this program has not only been an effective solution to persistent learning issues during the pandemic but also a concrete example of how education can in fact be a “social contract”.

    Schemes such as the one outlined above may go some way to addressing the inequalities in educational access that have been worsened by the pandemic.  However, there is also the danger that some students may lose educational aspiration or never return to education. Because of this, education departments need to future proof their policies by paying attention to SDG 4-related Targets 4.3 (Adult Education) and 4.4 (Skills for Work). To an extent, a “second chance” to learn has been addressed by DepEd’s adult-centred Alternative Learning System (ALS), though studies show that this program has also been impacted by the pandemic. Nevertheless, educational attainment is crucial, not just for the employment prospects of the individual but also for development prospects of the country as a whole.

    More practical attention also needs to be given to digital inclusion, that is, affordable and accessible internet access and the availability of devices. Many of our interviewees told us that even when school children were able to access online lessons they had to share devices with siblings. For many families, the only way to access online learning resources was by using mobile phones. Some commendable efforts have been made by local government agencies, charities, and schools to distribute devices but inevitably they were limited.

    These are some practical ways to respond to the crisis in education yet there is still a lot more reimagining and actual transformational work on learning that has to be done. In a globalised world, it takes not just a village but the whole world to raise every child. Only then can we celebrate an inclusive international day of quality education.

    The post COVID-19 and a new social contract for education in the Philippines appeared first on New Mandala.

    This post was originally published on New Mandala.

  • RNZ News

    Police have pulled back on their plans to begin towing vehicles illegally parked around the anti-vaccine, anti-mandate protest on Aotearoa New Zealand’s Parliament grounds.

    Yesterday, police estimated more than 400 cars, vans and campervans remained ensconsed in several streets alongside Parliament.

    Despite previous ultimatums, protesters showed little sign of voluntarily removing their vehicles today.

    In a statement, police said they now had access to significantly more tow trucks to remove illegally parked vehicles but they were concentrating on engaging with protest leaders.

    Police said they were exercising “careful judgement” about when to start the towing process.

    “Having observed the response from protesters and noting the ongoing dynamics of similar situations overseas, police is continuing to exercise careful judgement about when to commence a towing phase,” the statement said.

    “For the time being, police is continuing to focus on engagement with protest leaders with the aim of building on the initial positive responses we have seen so far.”

    Police secure tow companies
    Police had pulled back from an ultimatum to tow the vehicles but said they had secured commitments from companies outside the region to help if a decision was made to start the removal.

    Meanwhile, Speaker of the House Trevor Mallard said, on behalf of all parties, there would be no dialogue with protestors currently occupying the Parliamentary precinct and surrounding areas until the protest returned to “one within the law, including the clearing of all illegally parked vehicles blocking streets, the removal of unauthorised structures, and the cessation of the intimidation of Wellingtonians”.

    Parliament protest
    Police monitoring the Parliament protest in Wellington today. Image: Angus Dreaver/RNZ

    National Recovery Alliance — a group of seven Auckland towing companies — spokesperson Chris Ratcliffe told RNZ Morning Report that if police contacted towing companies across the country it was possible they could get up to 20 tow trucks.

    He said police would need every one of those tow trucks to clear the hundreds of vehicles in a timely manner.

    “Broadly speaking, a good operator in a good truck in a towaway environment might be able to tow one car every 30 minutes.

    “Assuming that they are able to operate unimpeded roughly 20 trucks could probably clear 400 vehicles within a day or so, and that doesn’t really take into account the heavy vehicles.

    “It depends how many people they are able to get involved.”

    No job on such large scale
    Ratcliffe had not experienced a job of that sort of scale before.

    The government has today also activated its top level national security group – made up of chief executives of government agencies which provide co-ordination on national security.

    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said it was not unusual for the group to meet, as they did today.

    “To give context it’s agencies coming together, so that’s happened at an agency level at the request of the New Zealand police because there are multiple agencies that are affected by the protest — the courts for instance sit opposite Parliament and have been affected.”

    ‘The law has failed,’ say Christchurch residents
    Meanwhile in Christchurch, residents are irate with the council’s lack of action in moving on protesters who have set up camp in Cranmer Square.

    Anti-Covid-19 vaccine mandate protesters have erected tents, gazebos, caravans and portaloos in the central park since Monday, but the square has been a regular meeting place of Destiny Church and the Freedom and Rights Coalition for months.

    Despite residents’ efforts to notify the council of their concerns, Christchurch City Council and police said they were only monitoring the situation as of yet.

    Due to safety concerns, the council said it would only send staff to the square if they were accompanied by a police presence.

    A resident said a neighbour had rung them crying, distraught over the lack of local authority action.

    Another resident believed the law had failed them.

    They said they had talked to the council about the protesters in the past, without any success.

    “The council said it has not been able to send staff to the park because they were concerned for their safety and said they would only attend with police protection.

    “But the police are only monitoring the situation, so nothing happens.”

    Picton protesters refuse to vacate park
    Today, a group of protesters entrenched in Picton’s Nelson Square Reserve — numbering in the hundreds — continued to camp out in the park, despite the Marlborough District Council’s request to vacate the area by 5pm yesterday.

    Marlborough’s Mayor John Leggett said Picton had been patient with protesters occupying the park, but it was now time for them to leave.

    “We have attempted a conciliatory approach, the occupiers have backtracked on that agreement. We have to move to a stage of serving trespass notices,” Leggett told Morning Report.

    “The enforcement part of the process will rest with the police. We’ve been working very closely with them, they are aware of our position.”

    Police said they would continue to monitor the situation.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.