Will New Zealand follow the ‘ugly shoe’ summer?

Source: Radio New Zealand

It’s been a great year for feet, particularly toes.

If you followed the fashion of the Northern Hemisphere summer, a predictor for what might be cool for New Zealand’s summer, you likely saw shoes that might typically be categorised as offensive to the eye.

I’m talking about styles such as the Vibram FiveFingers shoe (think of a glove but for your feet) or the split-toe shoe, where the big toe is singled out from the others with its own compartment. There were a lot of clunky, wilderness-style shoes that are a continuation of Gorpcore, where you mix sports or outdoor wear with something not sporty or outdoorsy (think floral dress with hiking boots).

MIAMI, FL - MAY 12: In this photo illustration, a Vibram FiveFinger shoe is seen on May 12, 2014 in Miami, Florida. Vibram FiveFinger announced it would offer refunds to buyers to settle a class action lawsuit that said its health benefit claims went too far. (Photo Illustration by Joe Raedle/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

FiveFingers running shoes from Vibram.

JOE RAEDLE

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Race to get aid to Asia flood survivors as toll nears 1300

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Alfath Asmunda with Amal Jayasinghe, AFP

A youth carries an elderly man as they wade through a flooded street after heavy rainfall in Wellampitiya on the outskirts of Colombo on November 30, 2025.

A youth carries an elderly man as they wade through a flooded street after heavy rainfall in Wellampitiya on the outskirts of Colombo on November 30, 2025. Photo: AFP/SUPPLIED

Governments and aid groups in Indonesia and Sri Lanka worked to rush aid on Tuesday to hundreds of thousands stranded by deadly flooding that has killed around 1300 people in four countries.

Torrential monsoon season deluges paired with two separate tropical cyclones last week dumped heavy rain across all of Sri Lanka and parts of Indonesia’s Sumatra, southern Thailand and northern Malaysia.

Climate change is producing more intense rain events because a warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, and warmer oceans can turbocharge storms.

The floodwaters have now largely receded, but the devastation means hundreds of thousands of people are now living in shelters and struggling to secure clean water and food.

In Indonesia’s Aceh, one of the worst-affected regions, residents told AFP that survivors who could afford to were stockpiling supplies.

“Road access is mostly cut off in flood-affected areas,” 29-year-old Erna Mardhiah said as she joined a long queue at a petrol station in Banda Aceh.

“People are worried about running out of fuel,” she added from the line she had been in for two hours.

The pressure has caused skyrocketing prices.

“Most things are already sky-high… chillies alone are up to 300,000 rupiah per kilo (NZ$31), so that’s probably why people are panic-buying,” she said.

On Monday, Indonesia’s government said it was sending 34,000 tons of rice and 6.8 million litres of cooking oil to the three worst-affected provinces, Aceh, North Sumatra and West Sumatra.

“There can be no delays,” Agriculture Minister Andi Amran Sulaiman said.

Food shortage risk

Aid groups said they were working to ship supplies to affected areas, warning that local markets were running out of essential supplies and prices had tripled already.

“Communities across Aceh are at severe risk of food shortages and hunger if supply lines are not reestablished in the next seven days,” charity group Islamic Relief said.

A man walks across mud and debris in a flood affected area in Meureudu, Pidie Jaya district in Indonesia's Aceh province on November 30, 2025.

A man walks across mud and debris in a flood affected area in Meureudu, Pidie Jaya district in Indonesia’s Aceh province on November 30, 2025. Photo: AFP/SUPPLIED

A shipment of 12 tonnes of food from the group aboard an Indonesian navy vessel was due to arrive in Aceh on Tuesday.

At least 631 people were killed in the floods across Sumatra, and 472 are still listed as missing. A million people have evacuated from their homes, according to the disaster agency.

Survivors have described terrifying waves of water that arrived without warning.

In East Aceh, Zamzami said the floodwaters had been “unstoppable, like a tsunami wave”.

“We can’t explain how big the water seemed, it was truly extraordinary,” said the 33-year-old, who like many Indonesians goes by one name.

People in his village sheltered atop a local two-storey fish market to escape the deluge and were now trying to clean the mud and debris left behind while battling power and telecommunications outages.

“It’s difficult for us (to get) clean water,” he told AFP on Monday.

“There are children who are starting to get fevers, and there’s no medicine.”

The weather system that inundated Indonesia also brought heavy rain to southern Thailand, where at least 176 people were killed.

Across the border in Malaysia, two more people were killed.

Colombo floodwaters recede

A separate storm brought heavy rains across all of Sri Lanka, triggering flash floods and deadly landslides that killed at least 465 people.

Another 352 remain missing, and some of the worst-hit areas in the country’s centre are still difficult to reach.

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has declared a state of emergency to deal with what he called the “most challenging natural disaster in our history”.

Unlike his Indonesian counterpart, he has called for international aid.

Sri Lanka’s air force, backed by counterparts from India and Pakistan, has been evacuating stranded residents and delivering food and other supplies.

In the mountainous Welimada region, security forces on Monday recovered the bodies of 11 residents buried by mudslides, a local official said.

In the capital Colombo meanwhile, floodwaters were slowly subsiding on Tuesday.

The speed with which waters rose around the city surprised local residents used to seasonal flooding.

“Every year we experience minor floods, but this is something else,” delivery driver Dinusha Sanjaya told AFP.

“It is not just the amount of water, but how quickly everything went under.”

Rains have eased across the country, but landslide alerts remain in force across most of the hardest-hit central region, officials said.

AFP

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‘Rage-baiting’ is the word of the year: but what does it mean?

Source: Radio New Zealand

This story was first published on 8 August, 2024

Trolling has been around for almost as long as the internet itself; think of the early days of YouTube clickbait titles, edgy memes posted to Facebook, and nihilistic Twitter threads, all deliberately designed to provoke and enrage the masses. It’s an online terrain most people are familiar with, and yet the rise of TikTok has allowed a new form of trolling to thrive.

Rage baiting, or rage farming, has a new wave of content creators and social media influencers not only inciting rage online – but profiting off viewers’ anger too.

At its core, rage baiting is a manipulative tactic used by content creators to elicit outrage from their viewers. The idea is that if you’re angry, you’re more likely to comment, share, react, and ultimately increase the online engagement of that video, which helps content creators drive more traffic to their channels and earn more revenue.

TikToker Ryan Gawlik does things like intentionally calling espresso "expresso" and biting into a whole KitKat bar because he knows internet audiences find that behaviour upsetting.

TikToker Ryan Gawlik does things like intentionally calling espresso “expresso” and biting into a whole KitKat bar because he knows internet audiences find that behaviour upsetting.

TikTok / Ry Williams

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Oxford’s Word of the Year is utterly infuriating

Source: Radio New Zealand

You know that feeling when you read something online and it seems deliberately provocative, almost manufactured to create outrage? You may have just encountered “rage bait” – content deliberately designed to elicit anger in order to increase engagement.

And it has become so ubiquitous online that the Oxford Dictionary named “rage bait” as its Word of the Year on Sunday.

Use of the term has increased threefold this year, suggesting people know “they are being drawn ever more quickly into polarising debates and arguments as a response to social media algorithms and the addictive nature of outrage content,” the UK-based dictionary said in a statement.

Our lexicon is increasingly shaped by new technologies.

Our lexicon is increasingly shaped by new technologies.

Unsplash

The best books of 2025 so far

Almost every major dictionary has named a word that relates to the internet as their 2025 word of the year, highlighting the technology’s grip on daily life and the language we use to describe it.

Sometimes, rage bait can be relatively harmless – a recipe that contains disgusting food combinations or someone annoying their pet, partner or sibling. But it has also entered political discourse, with outrage used to boost politicians’ profiles and provoke a chain of reaction and counter-reaction.

Collins Dictionary chose “vibe coding,” a form of software development that uses artificial intelligence (AI) to turn natural language into computer code, and the Cambridge Dictionary settled on “parasocial,” referencing the relationships people form online with someone they don’t know, as their words of the year.

And last year Oxford chose “brain rot,” which “captured the mental drain of endless scrolling,” Casper Grathwohl, President of Oxford Languages, said in a statement.

Taken together, rage bait and brain rot “form a powerful cycle where outrage sparks engagement, algorithms amplify it, and constant exposure leaves us mentally exhausted,” Grathwohl said.

“These words don’t just define trends; they reveal how digital platforms are reshaping are thinking and behaviour,” he added.

Oxford Dictionary let the public choose its word of the year from a shortlist that also included “aura farming” and “biohack,” posting parody videos on its Instagram to convey the spirit of each word.

Aura farming, “the cultivation of an impressive, attractive, or charismatic persona … by presenting oneself in a way intended subtly to convey an air of confidence, coolness or mystique,” was portrayed as a cardigan-wearing, tote bag-carrying man, “always one matcha away from finishing (an) experimental screenplay.”

And biohack, “an attempt … to optimise one’s … health, longevity or wellbeing by altering one’s diet, exercise routine, or lifestyle, or by using other means such as drugs, supplements or technological devices,” was visualised as someone hooked up to a green IV drip and wearing an LED face mask, who had taken “27 phytonutrient-dense plants” by 6.34am.

Rage bait, meanwhile, slopped milk and sugar everywhere while he made a cup of tea, before picking his toenails and pouring the milk over himself.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Ozempic-type drugs backed by WHO for treating obesity

Source: Radio New Zealand

The preparations Ozempic and Wegovy from Novo Nordisk are used to treat type 2 diabetes and as a slimming agent, photographed in Copenhagen, Thursday 23 March 2023.. (Photo: Ida Marie Odgaard/Ritzau Scanpix) (Photo by Ida Marie Odgaard / Ritzau Scanpix via AFP)

WHO guidelines said GLP-1 medications such as Ozempic or Wegovy could be used by adults as part of a comprehensive approach to obesity treatment. Photo: Ida Marie Odgaard / Ritzau Scanpix via AFP

The World Health Organization has released its first guidelines on the Ozempic-type drugs, conditionally recommending their use for long-term treatment of obesity.

To tackle what it said was a serious health challenge, its guidelines said Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) medications such as Ozempic or Wegovy could be used by adults as part of a comprehensive approach. That included healthy diets, physical activity and support from health professionals.

Obesity was associated with 3.7 million deaths worldwide in 2024 and was major driver of diseases such as cardiovascular diseases and type 2 diabetes, it said.

“Our new guidance recognises that obesity is a chronic disease that can be treated with comprehensive and lifelong care,” WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

The WHO also called for fair access to the drugs and said they should be made affordable for those who needed them.

Peter Shepherd, professor of molecular medicine and pathology at University of Auckland, said obesity affected between 20 percent and 30 percent of the New Zealand population and was major driver of health problems.

He told Morning Report the therapies weren’t without problems, but “nothing else has really worked”.

“Levels of obesity globally have continued to rise despite the best efforts of diet and exercise and behavioural programmes to do otherwise over the years.

“And now we for the first time are seeing a reduction in levels of obesity, in the US of all places, reductions in people eating at fast food, restaurants, etcetera. So these drugs really do work.”

Professor Peter Shepherd

University of Auckland profressor Peter Shepherd. Photo: University of Auckland

At a cost of $6000 a year in New Zealand, Shepherd said the drugs were out of reach for many people, but the price was likely to fall.

“These drugs are coming off patent as many biosimilars in the pipeline in China already, for example. So in the next few years, we’re going to see these prices come down even more.”

Australia’s medicines regulator has issued a safety warning over the potential risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviours when taking Ozempic-style drugs.

The Therapeutic Goods Administration said people using the medicines should tell their health professional if they experienced new or worsening depression but stressed there was enough evidence to conclude the drugs caused those changes.

Shepherd said there was limited evidence of risk of suicidal thoughts among those taking the drugs.

There were gastric side effects and “more worryingly” people seemed to be losing not just fat but muscle mass.

“Particularly for older people, loss of muscle is not a good idea. So these probably will need to be supplanted by different types of weight loss drugs going forward that don’t have these side effects”.

The drugs were originally designed for type 2 diabetes treatment but became known as a weight loss solution.

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Our Changing World: Planning for good days

Source: Radio New Zealand

A portrait photo of Scott from torso up. He is smiling at the camera wearing a black t-shirt. His arms are draped over a metal fence, fingers interlaced. Behind him is the out-of-focus background is a playground, with a large tree and two children playing on a slide and a climbing frame.

Professor Scott Duncan wants to help people make better use of their time, including increasing physical activity. Photo: Supplied / Marcel Tromp

Work, ferry the kids, do the shopping, tidy the house, laundry, meal prep – our lives are busy, and filled with responsibilities, so how do we make sure to leave some time to do the things we want?

Time use epidemiology might help.

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“You cannot have a good day, every day of your life,” says Professor Scott Duncan. We all know this to be true. But what Scott would like to enable us to do is to plan for good days rather than just hoping we stumble across one.

“If you can add up more good days than days that have just sort of taken the control out of your hands, then you’ll end up building that wellbeing so that your feelings of life satisfaction… will start to grow because you’re accumulating these good days” he says.

Scott is a professor of population health at Auckland University of Technology, investigating wellbeing and ways to improve it at both a community and individual level.

A key part of this is increasing physical activity, says Scott. “It’s such a perfect medicine.”

Exercise can lead to benefits in the realms of mental health, physical health, physical function and social connection. But there are also only so many waking hours in the day. That’s where time use epidemiology comes in. Instead of simply saying ‘you need to do more physical activity’ the idea is to look at how a person uses their time, every minute of every day, and ask what could be changed or adjusted to leave more time for the good stuff.

Which is not just exercise. There are many ways to look at holistic wellbeing, but Scott uses the Mental Health Foundation’s five ways to wellbeing – Be Active, Connect, Give, Keep Learning and Take Notice.

The important thing about this approach is that it is individualised, says Scott. “Some of the issues that you have with population guidelines that come out, around physical activity or nutrition or whatever it might be, they tend to be one size fits all and they don’t always fit everyone. So, the good thing about time use is when you’re talking to people about their day, you’re asking them about what they want to do, what they want to achieve… And so the day that you might create would depend on what they want to see at the end of it.”

Our days can look quite different depending on our life stages, and what we do. For example, someone working in pest control out in the bush works a physically demanding, socially isolated job. Compare that to someone working in a busy office, with multiple sit-down team meetings in a day.

A portrait photo of Anantha against a beige wall, under stencilled black words that say 'AUT Millennium'. Anantha is wearing a Black hoodie, and holding the small sensor in his right hand, and the larger plaster-like sticker to attach it to the participants leg.

Dr Anantha Narayanan is currently running the pilot study to collect data from the sensors. Photo: Claire Concannon

To get into the nitty gritty of how people spend their time, Scott and research fellow Dr Anantha Narayanan are asking a group of study participants to wear a sensor that tracks their movement. Using a mesh sticky plaster, the small, light sensor is attached to the participant’s thigh, where it takes acceleration readings every five seconds across an entire week.

An algorithm then converts this raw data into activities – sitting, sleeping or low, medium, or high intensity exercise, resulting in a detailed outline of a person’s day. “We could basically look at the number of transitions from a sit to stand, like how many times you stood up during the day,” says Anantha.

A data representation of time use information taken from a sensor. It's a circular diagram with time in hours mapped around the circumference. Each day is represented by a full turn of the circle, broken down into different activities from sitting, lying, standing walking and running. Different colours represent the different activities. There are two circles - one for a child, and one for an adult. They majority of both circles is either orange (lying) or red (sitting).

Time use data representation. Each turn of the circle represents a full day. Photo: Professor Scott Duncan

This detailed activity tracking is coupled with momentary wellbeing surveys. Three times a day each participant is asked to fill in a short survey on an app on their phone. The person is asked what they are doing in that moment and who they are doing it with, and then they are asked to rank, on a sliding scale, how happy, respected, energized, stressed and lonely they are feeling. “So you can look at how people are feeling during the day and the value comes in when you overlap this data, with the time use data that we collect,” says Anantha.

This pilot study, with 50 participants, is the first step in investigating whether this individualised time use approach will work. The data they gather will be used to develop and train an AI model that will then suggest time use prompts to each person, depending on what their goals are. After that, they’ll scale up to 500 participants.

It is early in the research, but Scott sees a potential to help many people have better days.

“It may not work, but if it does work, I think an approach like this could be really useful to be picked up at a national scale by whatever government agency feels that it’s useful to them… if you can show that actually these sort of systems give people what they need, not only what they need to hear, but when they need to hear it to improve their lives, then I think it can only be a good investment.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

8 ways to drink less during the silly season

Source: Radio New Zealand

“We must have a drink before the end of the year!”

December is a perfect storm for anyone trying to cut back on drinking. Between end-of-year deadlines, work parties, family gatherings and school events, alcohol is suddenly everywhere.

It can make drinking feel not just normal, but expected.

If your aim is to cut back, try alternating each alcoholic drink with something non-alcoholic.

If your aim is to cut back, try alternating each alcoholic drink with something non-alcoholic.

Unsplash

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Israel’s Netanyahu seeks pardon in years-long corruption trial

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Alexander Cornwell, Tamar Uriel-Beeri and Omri Taasan

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu participates in a joint press conference with US President Donald Trump (off frame) in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC on September 29, 2025. US President Donald Trump said on Monday that Washington was "very close" to securing peace in the Gaza war, after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and releasing a 20-point peace plan. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Photo: AFP / ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has asked the country’s president for a pardon in his long-running corruption trial, arguing that criminal proceedings were hindering his ability to govern and a pardon would be good for Israel.

Netanyahu, the country’s longest-serving prime minister, denies the bribery, fraud, and breach of trust charges. His lawyers said in a letter to the president’s office that the prime minister still believes the legal proceedings would result in a complete acquittal.

“My lawyers sent a request for pardon to the president of the country today. I expect that anyone who wishes for the good of the country support this step,” Netanyahu said in a brief video statement released by his political party, the Likud.

Neither the prime minister, who has been on trial for five years, nor his lawyers made any admission of guilt.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid said Netanyahu should not be pardoned without admitting guilt, expressing remorse, and immediately retiring from political life.

Pardons in Israel have typically been granted only after legal proceedings have concluded and the accused has been convicted. Netanyahu’s lawyers argued that the president can intervene when public interest is at stake, as in this case, with a view to healing divisions and strengthening national unity.

President Isaac Herzog’s office described the request as “extraordinary” with “significant implications”. The president “will responsibly and sincerely consider the request” after receiving relevant opinions, his office said.

US President Donald Trump wrote to Herzog this month, urging him to consider granting the prime minister a pardon, saying the case against him was “a political, unjustified prosecution”.

Herzog’s office said the request would be forwarded to the pardons department in the justice ministry, as is standard practice, to collect opinions, which would be submitted to the president’s legal adviser, who will formulate a recommendation for the president.

Israel’s Justice Minister, Yariv Levin, is a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party and a close ally of the prime minister.

In the letter, Netanyahu’s lawyers argued that criminal proceedings against him had deepened societal divisions and that ending the trial was necessary for national reconciliation. They also wrote that increasingly frequent court hearings were burdensome while the prime minister was attempting to govern.

“I am required to testify three times a week … That is an impossible demand that is not made of any other citizen,” Netanyahu said in the video statement, emphasising that he had received the public’s trust by repeatedly winning elections.

Netanyahu was indicted in 2019 in three separate but related cases that centre around accusations that he granted favours to prominent business figures in exchange for gifts and sympathetic media coverage.

The prime minister has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.

Coalition allies issued statements supporting Netanyahu’s request for a pardon, including National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.

Opposition politician Yair Golan, a former deputy chief of the military, called on the prime minister to resign, urging the president not to grant a pardon.

Netanyahu is one of the country’s most polarising political figures, who was first elected prime minister in 1996. He has since served in government and opposition and returned to the prime minister’s office following the 2022 election.

The next election is due by October 2026, and many polls indicate that his coalition, the most right-wing in Israel’s history, would struggle to win enough seats to form a government.

Throughout his career, Netanyahu has cultivated a reputation for prioritising security and economic issues, but he has also been dogged by the corruption charges. He was prime minister on 7 October 2023, when Hamas launched its attack on Israel, widely regarded as the most traumatic event in the country’s history and the deadliest assault on Jews since the Holocaust.

Since then, he has overseen the devastating war in Gaza, which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and levelled much of the territory, drawing broad international criticism and condemnation. Israel has severely weakened Hamas and also Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and this year launched a war against Iran that destroyed critical military infrastructure.

– Reuters

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Calls for accountability over lethal Hong Kong fire silenced

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Holmes Chan

Miles Kwan, a 24-year-old student, speaks to AFP while handing out flyers outside a train station in Hong Kong's Tai Po district on November 28, 2025, following the deadly fire at the Wang Fuk Court residential complex. Local media reported that Kwan was arrested by national security police for sedition on November 29 after starting an online petition with "four key demands", which include an independent probe into the fire. (Photo by Holmes CHAN / AFPTV / AFP)

Miles Kwan. Photo: AFP / HOLMES CHAN

Not long before he was reportedly detained, Miles Kwan approached commuters outside a Hong Kong train station, urging them to demand accountability for the deadly inferno that tore through nearby apartment blocks.

“We all feel unhappy that (Hong Kong) has come to this and we want things to improve,” the 24-year-old student told AFP on Friday while handing out flyers that called for an independent probe into the blaze, which killed at least 146 people this week.

“We need to be frank about how today’s Hong Kong is riddled with holes, inside and out.”

The demands by Kwan and other organisers turned into an online petition that gained more than 10,000 signatures in less than a day.

However, Hong Kong media reported on Saturday night that Kwan was arrested by national security police on suspicion of sedition and the text of the online petition had been deleted, showing how, under Beijing’s watchful eye, dissenting voices in Hong Kong can vanish as quickly as they appear.

Police declined to confirm the arrest on Saturday, saying only that they “will take actions according to actual circumstances and in accordance with the law”.

Thick smoke and flames rise as a major fire engulfs several apartment blocks at Wang Fuk Court in Hong Kong's Tai Po district on November 26, 2025. Four people died after multiple blocks in a Hong Kong residential estate went up in flames on November 26, with local media earlier reporting that some residents were trapped. (Photo by Yan ZHAO / AFP)

Thick smoke and flames rise as a major fire engulfs several apartment blocks at Wang Fuk Court in Hong Kong’s Tai Po district on November 26, 2025. Photo: Yan Zhao / AFP

AFP sought further comment from the police on Sunday, while calls to Kwan went unanswered.

Hong Kong was once home to spirited political activism, but that has faded since Beijing imposed a strict national security law in 2020 following huge pro-democracy protests in the Chinese finance hub.

Kwan was reportedly detained not long after Beijing’s national security arm in Hong Kong publicly condemned “anti-China forces” for exploiting the disaster and “inciting social division and stirring hatred against authorities”.

Asked on Friday if he feared arrest, Kwan said he was only “proposing very basic demands”.

“If these ideas are deemed seditious or ‘crossing the line’, then I feel I can’t predict the consequences of anything anymore, and I can only do what I truly believe.”

Grenfell comparisons

The flyers Kwan and a handful of activists gave out at the train station near the charred residential estate demanded government accountability, an independent probe into possible corruption, proper resettlement for residents and a review of construction oversight.

The demands reflected a belief that the fire was “not an accident” but a man-made disaster, he said.

Authorities have arrested 11 people in connection to the blaze that tore through seven of the eight high-rise blocks of Wang Fuk Court, the world’s deadliest residential building fire since 1980.

Hong Kong has previously used judge-led commissions of inquiry to undertake complex fact-finding exercises in a public forum — a practice left over from British colonial rule.

By contrast, city officials have so far announced only an inter-departmental task force to investigate the blaze.

When Britain was grappling with public fury over the devastating Grenfell Tower fire in 2017, which killed 72 people, the government there announced a public inquiry.

Lawyer Imran Khan, who represented the bereaved and survivors in the inquiry, told AFP “the lessons from Grenfell apply around the world” because all governments need to ensure high-rise residential buildings are safe.

Khan said a public inquiry with court-like powers was a better option for the situation in Hong Kong because “an internal investigation will not get to the truth and there will be no faith in it by the bereaved, survivors and residents”.

Based on his experience with Grenfell residents, he said, “without justice they cannot grieve”.

Many commuters took the flyers at the Hong Kong station on Friday, although few stopped to chat with Kwan or his companions.

A short walk away near the site of the blaze, a long queue snaked through a park as mourners brought flowers and handwritten notes of remembrance.

One unsigned note left on the ground read: “This is not just an accident, it is the evil fruit of an unjust system, which landed on you. It’s not right.”

– AFP

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Sri Lanka flooding: ‘Entire lives swept away in a single night’

Source: Radio New Zealand

People in New Zealand with family in Sri Lanka are describing the widespread devastation caused by severe flooding from Cyclone Ditwah.

The [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/world/331910/death-toll-continues-to-rise-half-a-million-displaced-by-sri-lanka-floods extreme weather system has destroyed homes, leaving thousands displaced. A state of emergency has also been declared.

There are also reports that entire villages have been washed away in landslides and many villages have been completely cut off.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka. Photo: Supplied / Lasitha Buddika

Statistics from the Sri Lanka Disaster Management Centre [DMC] showed 212 people had died and 218 people were missing as of Sunday evening.

Aucklander Sachindra Amarasekara grew up in Sri Lanka and has family in Hanwella near the capital of Colombo.

“They are surrounded by flood water. Fortunately, their house itself has not been severely damaged, but they are in complete isolation.

“And also, the electricity lines are destructed [damaged], leaving them without power, and all internet connections are down due to damage to the service providers.

‘We heard reports that the flooding has affected the main water treatment plant in Colombo at the moment, which means they may soon lose access to drinking water as well, unfortunately.”

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka. Photo: Supplied / Lasitha Buddika

Amarasekara said it is a really hard time for many people.

“I’m very sure many people have seen their entire lives swept away in a single night. There’s a sense of helplessness, that’s what I felt from my father when I last I spoke to him.

“And also most of my friends and families, when I speak to them or when they’re receiving the text messages, I felt like they are quite feeling like hopeless.

“I’m sure many of them are mentally scattered, trying to understand what comes next.”

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka. Photo: Supplied / Lasitha Buddika

Amarasekara said many communities are isolated due to landslides, making it hard to get supplies and rescue teams to some areas.

“All three forces and the police are working really hard to reach the affected areas and get people out, and communities are also stepping to collect dry food and preparing warm meals to distribute.

“Unfortunately, most of the places, they can’t reach still because of the severe landslides, and also, the roads are not there some places and there is still floods going on.

“So many people trapped inside, so many people missing at the moment.” she said.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka. Photo: Supplied / Lasitha Buddika

She said it is hard to see, as her country had already been through so much recently.

“I feel so sorry for my people because we’re just coming out from the economic crisis and we’re just about to stand on our own feet, and this is the worst we faced so far.

“We have faced wars, we have faced tsunamis, we have faced so many things, we lost so many people along the way.”

Amarasekara said as a nation, the country always comes back stronger but: “This is the very first time in Sri Lanka, I have seen that we are seeking for international help,” she said.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka. Photo: Supplied / Lasitha Buddika

Samith Hettiarachchi lives in Mulleriyawa, and was told to evacuate, leaving everything behind, and said water would reach up to 20 feet and was rising 1 foot an hour.

Hansana Yaddehige also told RNZ his friends entire village was flooded, causing homes to collapse, power to go out, with no access to water.

Nipun Fernando said it was hard to get access to food.

“There is a shortage of grocery supply due to transportation issues. Devastation is pretty bad.

“Access to some areas totally blocked due to landslides and bridges been damaged. No more rain but as a result of all that rain rivers are overflowing, this is the worst ever flooding in the recent past,” he said.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka.

Cyclone Ditwah in the Spring Valley area (part of Badulla) in Sri Lanka. Photo: Supplied / Lasitha Buddika

The New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it is providing consular assistance to a family travelling in Sri Lanka.

There are 200 New Zealanders registered on SafeTravel in Sri Lanka.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand