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AM Edition: Top 10 Politics Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for July 18, 2026 – Full Text

AM Edition: Top 10 Politics Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for July 18, 2026 – Full Text

AM Edition: Here are the top 10 politics articles on LiveNews.co.nz for July 18, 2026 – Full Text

Generated July 18, 2026 06:00 NZST · Included sources: 10

1. Common sense back at the helm

July 17, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

[Speech delivered 12:30pm, Friday 17 July 2026, Legislative Council Chamber, Parliament, Wellington]

Thank you all for being here today.

Source: New Zealand Government

[Speech delivered 12:30pm, Friday 17 July 2026, Legislative Council Chamber, Parliament, Wellington]

Thank you all for being here today.

We’d like to acknowledge Ferry Holdings, KiwiRail, CentrePort, Port Marlborough, the local councils in Marlborough and Wellington, and officials who have worked to get this programme to this point. We further acknowledge the unions, Interislander customers, iwi, and advocacy groups for freight, infrastructure and tourism.

Specific thanks are due to Ferry Holdings. Chris Mackenzie, Heather Simpson, Greg Lowe, Katherine Rich, and Captain Iain MacLeod, together with their chief executive Sandip Ranchod and his team. They have delivered.

We will take questions after the speech, and representatives of the various groups gathered today will be available for comment afterwards, if they wish.

Today, we are making two important announcements.

First, KiwiRail will operate New Zealand’s two new Cook Strait rail ferries. Second, KiwiRail will pay commercial fees to the ports and Ferry Holdings for the infrastructure and assets that make this service possible.

Together, these decisions secure a practical, affordable, and enduring ferry service across Cook Strait. They preserve rail across the Strait, support freight and passenger resilience, and set up the country for the next generation of service.

As background, iReX was a mess.

The politics around this programme has been immense. After the 2023 election, the cancellation of Project iReX became an example of what this Government was elected to fix.

It had departed far from the simple ferry purchase and wharf upgrade we established in 2020: two rail ferries, necessary infrastructure, and a reasonable budget.

By December 2023, it had blown out to $3.1 billion according to KiwiRail, while Treasury had already warned the previous Government it was on course for $4 billion.

That happened because the project became over-scoped, over-complicated, and untethered from the practical job that needed to be done.

The then Ministers simply furrowed their brows, but then topped it up anyway. And the public was told next to nothing.

They allocated another $750 million ‘in principle’, which was not disclosed to anybody in the pre-election update. Worse, because it was only half the funding KiwiRail requested, this was a cynical decision to snooker the KiwiRail board – enough that meant they could not cancel the project and embarrass the Government, but not enough to proceed.

And all of this prevaricating happened over 12 months of build time. New Zealand experienced an extreme taxpayer blowout and the certainty of a Tasmanian-devil mistake: ferries with the wrong hull construction, arriving with nowhere to berth.

That would have happened here under iReX. Unfinished infrastructure, with ferries idling in the Wellington harbour for years.

They made it our problem. Well, we have fixed their problem.

There is real-world, good honest ballast in our approach: build what is needed, not what is desired. Do what works, not what dazzles. Trust the experts, not the yes-men.

If they aren’t prepared to endorse our solution, then it will show they have learned nothing. 

Indeed, we appointed the experts and have got on with it.

In March 2025, Cabinet agreed to purchase rail ferries supported by new marine infrastructure in Picton and modified marine infrastructure in Wellington.

In November 2025, following a three-stage commercial tender process, Ferry Holdings entered a fixed-price contract for two new rail ferries to arrive in 2029. 

These ferries are being built by Guangzhou Shipyard International, the same shipyard building for the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy currently.

We also announced that the taxpayer will spend no more than $1.7 billion, and we reconfirm that today. For the benefit of the “misleading and inaccurate” Andrea Vance at The Post, that means we are still within budget. That also means this programme remains $2.3 billion cheaper than the project we inherited.

The first announcement: KiwiRail will operate the ferries.

In its various guises from New Zealand Railways, to TranzRail, to Toll, and now KiwiRail, it has managed the Interislander for 64 years. In our book, experience counts.

KiwiRail also operates rail freight services on the critical route between Auckland and Christchurch. We want the system to work as a whole, and splitting it up would be anathema to that outcome.

This is also a company now witnessing a turnaround. Reliability is up. Earnings are up. Revenue is up. 

Pending final audit, KiwiRail has achieved its $160 million earnings target to 30 June 2026, and Interislander reliability now sits at 98 percent. This is a vast improvement on 81 percent in 2021 and 83 percent in 2022.

KiwiRail will be the operator for the 30-year life of the assets. To keep them on their toes, that arrangement will be reviewed in 2039, after the first ten years.

The second announcement: KiwiRail will pay fees to the ports and Ferry Holdings.

This is no gift. In exchange for being the operator, KiwiRail will pay commercially priced port fees.

CentrePort will earn a reasonable profit on its $100 million contribution for assets CentrePort will own. Port Marlborough will earn a reasonable profit on its $110 million contribution for assets Port Marlborough will own.

Because more complex new infrastructure is being built in Picton, with $373 million to be paid by Ferry Holdings, we are establishing a special purpose vehicle to co-own assets between Port Marlborough and Ferry Holdings.

That means the taxpayer will receive the benefit of every cent of its investment in infrastructure. 

This would not have been possible under iReX. Recovering $3 billion in investment would have led to vast increases in Interislander fares, making the business uncompetitive, or leading to one of the largest write-offs in history. 

KiwiRail will also pay Ferry Holdings to lease the ferries and will be required to build up a reserve over the next 30 years so it can directly purchase new ferries in 2059.

This is not just a deal to secure the Strait for another generation. It secures it for the next two generations.

For KiwiRail’s workers, that means a steady future awaits you. For freighters and families using the Cook Strait, that means we have put your interests first.

While no commercial entity can detail exactly the share of fares the port fees will reflect, we can say they will be similar to what is paid today. 

We thank Sue Tindal, KiwiRail’s chair, for advocating her company’s position in a manner that respects the fiscal reality this Government faces.

These agreements set the basis for main works contracts to be entered later this year.

Ferry Holdings, Port Marlborough, CentrePort and KiwiRail have already brought construction partners in through early contractor involvement, engineering and design, demolition, and to build staging zones.

For example, KiwiRail is well underway already having appointed the builder for the Dublin Street overbridge in Picton, CentrePort has built a staging zone for loading gear and equipment onto the barge, and Port Marlborough is demolishing the old rail wharf for the new one to replace it.

We welcome their construction partners – HEB and Vinci in Picton and Brian Perry Civil in Wellington – but this comes with a message: this ship already has a master. You will be their expert crew following orders, and if seas ever get rough, we expect all hands on deck. 

And we know this is a desirable job for your sector too. These are meaty contracts in the hundreds of millions, with good programme life to give meaningful work to construction workers and to make use of your plant and equipment.

You will look back on this project with pride.

Of course, this programme is not without risk, but unlike the last lot we are grown-ups who deal with risk.

There will be no cost-plus construction contracts. Construction firms can expect to make a reasonable profit, with incentives to be on-time and on-budget. But the scope is set.

Ferry Holdings retains the major rights in controlling the programme, while working closely with KiwiRail, CentrePort, and Port Marlborough to sequence work around their operations and construction programmes.

The port agreements mean CentrePort, Port Marlborough, and KiwiRail all stand to gain from on-time, on-budget delivery. Each party has a healthy contingency built into its funding caps, and the project is funded to manage normal infrastructure risk.

Likewise, if they want to pay for additional works using their own money, then so long as it does not delay our delivery then that is their business. As a shareholder of KiwiRail, we retain the right to approve any additional scope paid for by KiwiRail, and will only do so where there is evidence of incremental commercial return. 

That is how infrastructure should be done in this country. Commercial deals where, yes, everyone stands to gain but equally, all parties carry risk. 

You are not looking at a repeat of Transmission Gully, where the lowest bidder gets the contract then litigates their way to higher pricing. 

You are not looking at the wastrels who spent $228 million on Auckland light rail without a single metre of track built either.

You are looking at the people who put taxpayers first, who deal respectfully with council-owned ports to get a good deal for ratepayers, and who keep the conversation focused on the only question that matters: ‘does New Zealand need this?’ If yes, do it. If no, stop.

As a result, we have served freighters and families, taxpayers and ratepayers, and we have preserved rail.

Now, let us look to the future with positive recognition of the past.

The Interislander has crossed Cook Strait since 1962. It was established as a rail ferry service on the recommendation of Parliament in 1958.

That was a time when leaders in this country understood something very simple: New Zealand is an island nation. And a country that cannot connect its own islands is a country that has forgotten the basics.

The first ferry was named Aramoana, meaning sea-path, and every rail ferry since has carried that “Ara” prefix. We respect that tradition, and in particular the role that iwi and Māori railway workers played in their naming.

Sixty-four years on, these ferries have come to represent New Zealand itself. They are more than the connector of our people and our goods, they are part of our tourism offer to the world.

And as such, in honour of the Cook Strait itself, of New Zealand’s history, and in recognition of the service these ferries will provide for generations to come, Ferry Holdings has legally registered the following names:

The first ferry will be named Kupe.
The second ferry will be named Cook.

These are proper names. Historic names. New Zealand names.

They are names that speak to our maritime inheritance, to exploration, to courage, to seamanship, and to the long story of how this country came to be.

Kupe and Cook each left an indelible mark on these islands, and on Cook Strait in particular. Their relevance to this waterway is not some abstract theory. It is obvious. It is historical. It is real.

Kupe named Mātiu Island. Cook named the Queen Charlotte Sound. 

New Zealand’s islands were settled by two great seafaring traditions: Polynesian first, European second. And these names honour that history.

Of course, in between them were the Dutch in 1642 – but they did not make landing. Our ferries will.

Now, we know exactly what will happen. The snivelling wokesters will work themselves into a lather over the name Cook, while offering only passing approval for Kupe. That is how shallow this has become.

It is fashionable now in certain circles to treat Captain Cook as nothing more than a symbol to be condemned, cancelled, and cast out. A harbinger of colonisation, they say. A figure of division, they say. A relic to be erased.

Well, we say this: a mature country does not run from its history. A serious country does not vandalise its memory to satisfy the latest fashion in whinger politics.

Because New Zealand’s history is not simple. It is not tidy. It is not a slogan on a placard. It is deep, difficult, proud, painful, ambitious, and unfinished.

We will not pretend one part of our history exists and another does not. And we will not allow a noisy minority to dictate what the rest of this country is allowed to remember.

These names – Kupe and Cook – reflect New Zealand as it actually is: a country shaped by the sea, by settlement, by risk, by enterprise, and by people who crossed dangerous waters in search of a future.

They also mark a new chapter for the proud men and women of the Interislander, who have kept this country moving across Cook Strait for decades.

So let others sneer. Let them lecture. We are getting on with the job.

We are naming these ferries for the history that made us, for the people who serve us, and for the country we are still building.

And we are saving them $2.3 billion, while getting the rail ferries and infrastructure New Zealanders expect. 

Because, once again, we are charting the practical course on new tides, with new vessels, and with common sense back at the helm.

Thank you.

Original source: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/07/17/common-sense-back-at-the-helm/

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2. Statement on Sir William Birch

July 17, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

Sir William Birch was a giant of the National Party and delivered more for our country than he would ever take credit for.

His close to 30 years in Parliament coincided with a period of significant reform as we modernised our economy and grappled with who we are as a country. Throughout, Sir William maintained his legendary diligence and work ethic, knowing that the sacrifices of public life were worth it to leave a better country for future generations.

Source: New Zealand Government

Sir William Birch was a giant of the National Party and delivered more for our country than he would ever take credit for.

His close to 30 years in Parliament coincided with a period of significant reform as we modernised our economy and grappled with who we are as a country. Throughout, Sir William maintained his legendary diligence and work ethic, knowing that the sacrifices of public life were worth it to leave a better country for future generations.

On behalf of the Government and the National Party, I express my deepest condolences to his family and thank them for sharing him with all of us for so many years.

Original source: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/07/17/statement-on-sir-william-birch/

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3. Foreign Minister to travel to the Philippines

July 17, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

Foreign Minister Winston Peters will travel to Manila next week to further strengthen the NZ-Philippines relationship and participate in a series of regional meetings.

“Lifting New Zealand’s relationships in South East Asia has been a core part of the Government’s Foreign Policy Reset, and we are pleased to continue that important work next week,” Mr Peters says. 

Source: New Zealand Government

Foreign Minister Winston Peters will travel to Manila next week to further strengthen the NZ-Philippines relationship and participate in a series of regional meetings.

“Lifting New Zealand’s relationships in South East Asia has been a core part of the Government’s Foreign Policy Reset, and we are pleased to continue that important work next week,” Mr Peters says. 

“This year we are celebrating the 60th anniversary of diplomatic relations with the Philippines and our partnership with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is also going from strength to strength.” 

ASEAN represents a region of around 700 million people, is New Zealand’s fourth largest trading partner by value, a major source of fuel imports, and an increasingly important partner for trade, security and regional stability.

“The past year has underscored how international events can impact New Zealand’s own security and prosperity and reinforced the importance of close partners like ASEAN. By investing in these relationships, we can better navigate a more complex and uncertain world, while strengthening New Zealand’s resilience and prosperity.”

While in Manila, Mr Peters will: 

  • conduct bilateral meetings and sign cooperation arrangements with Philippines Ministers; 
  • participate in the annual ASEAN-New Zealand Foreign Ministers Meeting; 
  • attend the Foreign Ministers’ Meetings of the East Asia Summit (EAS) and the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), which bring together South East Asian countries with key partners including the United States, China, Japan, India and Australia; and
  • hold a series of bilateral meetings with Foreign Minister counterparts.

Mr Peters departs New Zealand on 20 July and returns on 24 July

Original source: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/07/17/foreign-minister-to-travel-to-the-philippines/

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July 17, 2026

Source: Media Outreach

An elevated view across Forest City Golf Resort in Johor, Malaysia — home to two 18-hole championship courses whose Classic Course has ranked among the Top 100 Golf Courses in Asia for seven consecutive years.

Forest City SFZ at a glance

Source: Media Outreach

As Malaysia gears up for Visit Malaysia 2026 and Visit Johor 2026, Forest City expects heightened regional interest in eco and golf tourism

JOHOR, MALAYSIA – Media OutReach Newswire – 17 July 2026 – Forest City Special Financial Zone (Forest City SFZ), Malaysia’s pioneering special financial zone and emerging lifestyle and leisure hub, today released updated visitor data and travel guidance ahead of the upcoming 2026 peak travel season. New visitor data now confirms that Forest City has recorded approximately 4 million coastal visitors, over 100,000 golfers and 57 international events at its golf resort, and more than 260,000 guests at its two hotels in 2025, reinforcing its status as a growing cross-border tourism and leisure destination. The figures come as the Johor Bahru–Singapore Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link approaches completion, with passenger service expected to begin in January 2027, further enhancing transportation convenience.

An elevated view across Forest City Golf Resort in Johor, Malaysia — home to two 18-hole championship courses whose Classic Course has ranked among the Top 100 Golf Courses in Asia for seven consecutive years.

Forest City SFZ at a glance

Forest City SFZ is a coastal development in Johor, Malaysia, located approximately 2 km across the Tebrau Strait from Singapore. It was then designated a Special Financial Zone by the Malaysian government in August 2023. The Malaysian Parliament passed five federal bills in July 2024 designating Pulau Satu as the country’s fifth duty-free island, and the first that visitors can enter directly by vehicle.

For travellers, Forest City SFZ offers a 4 km publicly accessible coastline, two championship-rated golf courses (including its Classic Course, which has ranked in the Top 100 Golf Courses in Asia for seven consecutive years), guided mangrove eco-tours, sea fishing trips, and duty-free shopping. It is currently the only duty-free island in Malaysia that can be entered by vehicle without a ferry.

The Forest City beach experience with open shoreline, mangroves and sea fishing

The 4 km coastline and surrounding environment are designed to make visitors forget they are only minutes away from the city. Soft sand beaches slope gently into the water, shallow enough for children to paddle and deep enough for kayakers, windsurfers, and other water sports enthusiasts to find their rhythm. It is this unpretentious charm that has drawn approximately 4 million coastal visits in 2025 — offering an open, welcoming, and peaceful place that doesn’t feel too far from home.

The wider development sits within roughly 2.86 million m² of green space — including both golf courses, parks, mangrove corridors, and landscaped public zones — with over 400 documented plant and animal species recorded on‑site. For visitors interested in the island’s natural beauty, guided mangrove eco‑tours run along the development’s green corridor. A one‑ to two‑hour trip with a registered boat operator takes travellers past fish nurseries and bird habitats, with a stop to see the ongoing mangrove restoration work along the Johor coastline. Sea fishing trips depart from the marina with expert guides accompanying guests throughout the journey. Bookings can be made either through the hotel concierge or via official Forest Life app.

Forest City has developed three core commercial districts, bringing together over 100 shops that cover a diverse range of business formats, including international dining, duty‑free shopping, retail, healthcare, finance, and leisure and entertainment. Regular festivals, sports events, and cultural gatherings along the beachfront bring Forest City’s “Eat · Play · Chill by the Sea” concept to life.

Two championship golf courses with a seven-year ranking streak

A journey through Forest City Golf Resort reveals a landscape designed with nature in mind. Two 18‑hole championship courses sit side by side on a single property: the Classic Course, designed by veteran architect Liang Guokun, runs 7,138 yards across 69 hectares; the Legacy Course, a rare collaboration between Jack Nicklaus and Jack Nicklaus II, stretches 7,386 yards across 74 hectares. Both are GEO Certified, a mark of environmental stewardship that audits water use, biodiversity, energy, and waste.

The Classic Course has placed in the Top 100 Golf Courses in Asia for seven consecutive years (2020–2026), a feat few courses can claim. In 2026, it climbed 14 places to No. 36 in Asia and retained its title as No. 1 in Malaysia. The Legacy Course, meanwhile, ranked No. 49 in the Asia‑Pacific Top 100 (2024–2025). In 2025, the resort welcomed over 100,000 golfers, serving as a vibrant hub for both casual golfers and professionals.

For travellers seeking events to experience, the resort hosts more than 50 tournament dates annually, including pro‑am events and corporate days. 57 major tournaments were held in 2025. The wider development hosts more than 100 international events a year — from endurance races to lifestyle festivals, including the Challenge Malaysia triathlon scheduled for October 2026.

Duty-Free Retail on Pulau Satu

Forest City was gazetted as a duty-free island under five Federal bills passed by the Malaysian Parliament in July 2024. This transformation has positioned Forest City as Malaysia’s fifth duty-free island and the first that visitors can enter directly by vehicle, without a ferry crossing.

Shelf prices on the gazetted categories — alcoholic beverages, chocolate and confectionery, cosmetics, perfumes, and other goods — are typically lower than equivalent purchases on the Malaysian mainland or in Singapore retail.

For vehicle access, visitors should take the following into consideration:

  • Identification: Visitors should ensure they bring valid identification for vehicle entry.
  • Import Allowances: Per-passenger import allowances on goods carried back into mainland Malaysia or into Singapore are strictly governed by the respective customs authorities. Visitors are encouraged to check the latest government guidelines and current allowances for Malaysia or Singapore before making purchases.
  • Singapore Residents: GST relief thresholds and specific allowances for alcohol and tobacco are set by Singapore Customs; please verify these against the official live portal when visiting.

Forest City Accommodation: Marina Hotel, Golf Hotel, long-term stays

Forest City Marina Hotel is the development’s flagship beachfront property, offering 283 rooms with floor-to-ceiling windows that frame a 270-degree view across the Strait of Johor. Multiple dining outlets, a swimming pool, and conference facilities make it a versatile base for both leisure and business travellers. For golf-led trips, the Forest City Golf Hotel, winner of the prestigious Agoda 2025 Gold Circle Award, sits within the resort grounds and offers stay-and-play packages bundled with green fees on either course.

Forest City Golf Hotel is a five-star retreat set within the 800-hectare Forest City Golf Resort, offering 298 spacious guestrooms and suites, including Superior and Deluxe Rooms, Superior and Deluxe Suites, a Family Suite and three Presidential Suites, many with views of the surrounding golf landscape. Guests can enjoy Asian, Western and international cuisine at the Tee-Off Restaurant, private dining spaces for family gatherings and business occasions, as well as café and lounge facilities.

The hotel also provides direct access to championship golf, swimming pools, a gym, spa, golf shop, executive lounge, meeting rooms, a grand ballroom and event venues, making it suitable for leisure stays, golf getaways, corporate meetings and private celebrations.

During tournament weekends and major events, the Marina Hotel typically operates at full occupancy, with overflow demand absorbed by short-term rental units.

For longer stays and family groups, Forest City’s residential blocks offer a substantial inventory of professionally managed serviced apartments, ideal for those seeking more space or a home-away-from-home experience. Blue Horizon Suites, a newly launched sea-view serviced residence in 2026, features panoramic ocean views and a comprehensive suite of modern amenities, including a swimming pool, private beach access, and close proximity to the golf course.

Beyond accommodation, Forest City delivers an integrated lifestyle environment, with year-round dining options, the on-site Forest City International School (a CATS Global Schools campus), and the duty-free retail cluster on Pulau Satu.

Accessibility: getting to Forest City SFZ in 2026

Forest City SFZ sits approximately 2 km across the Tebrau Strait from Singapore, closer to central Singapore than most Singaporeans are to Changi Airport. By road via the Tuas Second Link, the drive is roughly 40 minutes from Singapore CBD(Central Business District) and roughly 60 minutes from Changi Airport.

From Johor Bahru CBD, the journey takes approximately 30 minutes by car, while Senai International Airport is about 50 minutes away. This puts travellers at the coast, close enough for a spontaneous weekend escape, yet far enough to feel like a proper getaway. For Singapore-based visitors, hotel shuttles and chartered coaches via the Second Link are the most convenient option, with the journey offering a scenic Strait crossing as a picturesque introduction to the destination.

The RTS Link, targeted for completion in December 2026, will reduce the Bukit Chagar–Woodlands North crossing time to about five minutes, with an expected fare of approximately S$5–S$7 and peak capacity of 10,000 passengers per hour per direction.

From Mode Approx. time Notes
Singapore CBD Car via Second Link ~40 min Tuas Checkpoint; allow weekend buffer
Singapore Changi Airport Car via Second Link ~60 min Most direct from arrival
Singapore Woodlands RTS Link (passenger Jan 2027) ~5 min crossing + transfer S$5–S$7 fare; confirm onward connection
Johor Bahru CBD Car ~30 min Local taxi or e-hailing
Senai International Airport Car ~50 min Domestic + regional gateway
Itinerary options: weekend getaways, family breaks and corporate stays

Singapore weekend visitors can arrive on Friday evening via the Second Link, with the journey from Singapore’s CBD taking approximately 40 minutes. The stay-and-play package offers a low-friction entry point: two nights’ accommodation at the Forest City Golf Hotel, daily breakfast, and one round of 18 holes on the Classic Course. Saturday and Sunday can be split between golf and the 4 km public coastline, with duty‑free shopping and a long brunch on Pulau Satu before the return crossing.
Malaysian families on a long weekend can fill an unhurried two‑day itinerary with the 4 km coastline, mangrove eco‑tours and water sports. The coastline has drawn approximately 4 million visitors in 2025, with school‑holiday weeks bringing the most coastal events. For families with children, the Forest City Water Park offers gentle water play zones and casual aquatic recreation suitable for younger visitors.

Corporate groups, MICE planners and cross‑border professionals can utilise the Forest City Hotel’s conference facilities and block-booking capabilities. The resort’s 57 major golf tournaments in 2025 demonstrate its capacity to absorb large groups. The Marina Hotel spans over 830,000 sq. ft with 283 rooms, multiple dining outlets, a fitness centre and a swimming pool. Once the RTS Link begins passenger service in January 2027, Forest City will become viable as a same‑day cross‑border meeting venue for Singapore‑based groups, with the Bukit Chagar–Woodlands North crossing reduced to approximately five minutes.

A destination backed by policy, infrastructure, and visitor data

A single weekend at any leisure destination can tell only a small part of the bigger story. But the data — 4 km of public coastline, two championship golf courses with a seven-year Asia’s Top 100 streak, status as Malaysia’s fifth duty-free island, more than 100 events a year, and located just 2 km from Singapore, with an RTS Link offering passenger service from January 2027 — point to a growing travel destination backed by infrastructure and policy support.

Hashtag: #ForestCity

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

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5. New ferries operator announced, vessels named

July 17, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

The Government has confirmed KiwiRail will operate New Zealand’s two new Cook Strait rail ferries, with the vessels to be named Kupe and Cook.

Minister for Rail Winston Peters says the decision secures a practical, affordable, and enduring Cook Strait ferry service for the next generation and beyond.

Source: New Zealand Government

The Government has confirmed KiwiRail will operate New Zealand’s two new Cook Strait rail ferries, with the vessels to be named Kupe and Cook.

Minister for Rail Winston Peters says the decision secures a practical, affordable, and enduring Cook Strait ferry service for the next generation and beyond.

“KiwiRail has run the Interislander since its inception in 1962, and in our book, experience counts,” Mr Peters says.

“This decision keeps the rail freight network and ferry operation working as one system, supporting the critical domestic freight route between Auckland and Christchurch.

“KiwiRail has demonstrated improved performance, with Interislander reliability now at 98 percent and KiwiRail is poised, pending final audit, to achieve its $160 million earnings target to 30 June 2026,” Mr Peters says.

Under the confirmed arrangements, KiwiRail will operate the new ferries when they arrive in 2029 for the 30-year life of the assets, with the arrangement to be reviewed in 2039 after the first ten years.

“This is no gift. It is a commercial arrangement that protects ratepayers, recognises the investments made by the ports, and ensures taxpayers receive the benefit of every cent invested in infrastructure,” Mr Peters says.

“KiwiRail will pay commercially priced port fees to CentrePort, Port Marlborough and Ferry Holdings. CentrePort and Port Marlborough will earn a reasonable return on their $100 million and $110 million contributions respectively.

“Because more complex new infrastructure is being built in Picton with $373 million to be paid by Ferry Holdings, a special purpose vehicle will be established to co-own assets between Port Marlborough and Ferry Holdings.

The Government has reconfirmed the taxpayer contribution to the programme will be no more than $1.7 billion, as announced in November 2025 alongside confirmation of a fixed price contract with Guangzhou Shipyard International. Ferries will arrive in 2029 with ship construction on schedule to start in 2027. 

“The new ferry programme saves New Zealanders $2.3 billion compared to the previous project, while still delivering the rail ferries and infrastructure New Zealand needs,” Mr Peters says.

“Project iReX had blown out to $3.1 billion according to KiwiRail, while Treasury had already warned the previous Government it was on course to $4 billion.

“Our approach is simple: build what is needed, not what is desired. Do what works, not what dazzles. Trust the experts, not the yes-men.

“The ferries will be supported by new marine infrastructure in Picton and modified marine infrastructure in Wellington, funded with appropriate contingency and incentives to keep Ferry Holdings, KiwiRail, both ports and their builders focused on on-time, on-budget delivery.

“There will be no cost-plus construction contracts and no lazy project management. Ferry Holdings holds the purse strings and retains the major rights in controlling the programme,” Mr Peters says.

The ferries have been legally registered with new names honouring New Zealand’s maritime history and the enduring role of Cook Strait in connecting the country.

“The first ferry will be called Kupe, and the second ferry will be called Cook,” Mr Peters says.

“These are proper names. Historic names. New Zealand names.

“Kupe and Cook reflect New Zealand as it actually is: a country shaped by the sea, by settlement, by risk, by enterprise, and by people who crossed dangerous waters in search of a future.”

The new ferry programme preserves rail across Cook Strait, supports freight and passenger resilience, and sets up a long-term pathway for KiwiRail to build a reserve to purchase replacement ferries in 2059.

“This is not just a deal to secure the Strait for another generation; it secures it for the next two generations.

“Once again, we are charting the practical course on new tides, with new vessels, and with common sense back at the helm,” Mr Peters says.

[Ferries images / video at Downloadable Assets – Ferry Holdings

Original source: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/07/17/new-ferries-operator-announced-vessels-named/

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6. Bird flu work steps up – second case confirmed

July 17, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

Work on the ground will step up after confirmation today a single Kāhu, swamp harrier hawk, which was found in the Wairarapa, is the second bird in New Zealand confirmed to have H5 bird flu, says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard and Conservation Minister Tama Potaka.

“While it’s disappointing to find a native bird with H5 bird flu, it’s not unexpected following the confirmation earlier this week of our first case in a single brown skua seabird found at Petone Beach,” says Mr Hoggard.  “There has been no detection in poultry.”

Source: New Zealand Government

Work on the ground will step up after confirmation today a single Kāhu, swamp harrier hawk, which was found in the Wairarapa, is the second bird in New Zealand confirmed to have H5 bird flu, says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard and Conservation Minister Tama Potaka.

“While it’s disappointing to find a native bird with H5 bird flu, it’s not unexpected following the confirmation earlier this week of our first case in a single brown skua seabird found at Petone Beach,” says Mr Hoggard.  “There has been no detection in poultry.”

“The find shows our continuous bird flu surveillance and testing programme is working well, and as a result, we will step up our actions in response to bird flu in close co-ordination with our industry partners and others.”

Mr Hoggard said that work would include:

  • Extra checking of birds at selected sites in the Wairarapa over coming days.
  • Alongside industry, MPI will offer one-on-one support and advice to poultry and egg operations in Wellington and the Wairarapa.  
  • Establishing a technical advisory group of expert scientists to supplement advice from MPI’s internationally recognised experts.
  • The Department of Conservation continues its vaccination programme for 300 core breeding birds from five of our most endangered birds – kākāpō, takahē, tūturuatu/shore plover, kakī/black stilt and kākāriki karaka/orange-fronted parakeet. 

“This hawk can go out to the coast – especially in winter to hunt. Hawks can get bird flu by hunting, eating, or scavenging infected birds,” says Mr Hoggard.

“It’s important we continue to work closely with the egg and poultry industry as we have over the past several years preparing for bird flu’s arrival. On-site biosecurity plans and measures are very important for chicken and egg producers, and we will up our work alongside sector groups to provide support and advice.

“While it’s an individual decision for businesses, we support free range farmers taking precautionary action to protect their birds by temporarily housing them while we continue to gather more information about the spread of H5 bird flu. 

“We will have to learn to live with bird flu as it cannot be eradicated, and overseas experience shows strong biosecurity measures on-farm help.” 

Chicken and eggs remain safe to eat and bird flu is a very low risk to human health. 

“Most countries do not have a surveillance programme like ours and its value has been highlighted in the past week. We will continue to test birds so we can closely monitor what is happening and keep people updated. 

“I thank the public who have responded well to our call for notifications in the past week, and I remind New Zealanders to be alert and follow advice about reporting sick or dead birds. It is vital that people do not touch or handle unwell birds,” Mr Hoggard says.

Conservation Minister Tama Potaka says the Department of Conservation Te Papa Atawhai (DOC) activated its wildlife response, working alongside MPI, Iwi, conservation partners, and wildlife facilities, as soon as the first case of H5N1 bird flu was detected in Australia.  

“DOC has been preparing for the arrival of bird flu for several years, with a focus on minimising the impact to wildlife populations on public conservation land through strong biosecurity practices, surveillance, and action to support the health and resilience of threatened native birds. 

“The vaccination programme for some of our most endangered birds is progressing well. So far, 67 birds from six species or populations have received their first vaccination, with further vaccinations and booster doses continuing over the coming weeks. 

“As of last night, MPI’s Chief Veterinary Officer approved the second tranche of DOC’s vaccination response. This approval gives DOC the ability to extend vaccination to further priority species and populations where it will provide the greatest protection. 

“A final list of species has deliberately not been fixed. This gives DOC the flexibility to respond to new detections, emerging risks, and what our experts are seeing on the ground as we build a clearer understanding of how the virus may affect New Zealand’s wildlife. 

“Vaccination is one part of DOC’s wider response. Staff are continuing surveillance, strengthening biosecurity measures, supporting wildlife facilities, working with Iwi and conservation partners, and preparing to act quickly if further cases are identified. 

“DOC teams will continue working hard to protect our most vulnerable native species and support the wider MPI-led response.” 

What people can do

If you see three or more sick or dead wild birds in a group, report it immediately to the exotic pest and disease hotline on 0800 80 99 66 from anywhere in New Zealand or online at report.mpi.govt.nz

If you report online, select the ‘dead or dying wild birds’ option from the dropdown list and then the type of bird you have found.

Don’t handle or move the birds. Go to www.mpi.govt.nz/bird-flu to find out more.

Provide as much detail as you can, including:

  • common name or species of sick or dead bird if known
  • how many are sick or freshly dead, and the total number of birds present
  • a GPS reading or other precise location information
  • photographs and videos of sick and dead birds

MPI will contact notifiers if more information is required.

More information about H5 bird flu and the work New Zealand is doing to prepare is available at mpi.govt.nz/hpai.

Original source: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/07/17/bird-flu-work-steps-up-second-case-confirmed/

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7. New Zealand and Switzerland agree trade discussions

July 17, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

New Zealand and Switzerland have today agreed to establish a Trade and Investment Dialogue to explore an agreement on trade, economic security, e-commerce, investment and sustainability, says Trade and Investment Minister Todd McClay.

The announcement was made following a meeting between Minister McClay and Swiss State Secretary for Economic Affairs Helene Budliger Artieda, in the margins of the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership Ministerial Meeting in Auckland. 

Source: New Zealand Government

New Zealand and Switzerland have today agreed to establish a Trade and Investment Dialogue to explore an agreement on trade, economic security, e-commerce, investment and sustainability, says Trade and Investment Minister Todd McClay.

The announcement was made following a meeting between Minister McClay and Swiss State Secretary for Economic Affairs Helene Budliger Artieda, in the margins of the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership Ministerial Meeting in Auckland. 

“Switzerland is an important partner for New Zealand and one of the world’s most innovative and advanced economies,” Mr McClay says. “Establishing a Trade and Investment Dialogue will lead to closer economic cooperation and enhanced collaboration, through bilateral trade and international forums like the World Trade Organization, the OECD and the FIT Partnership.

“At a time of growing global economic uncertainty, it is more important than ever that like-minded countries work together to strengthen trade and investment.”

Two-way trade between New Zealand and Switzerland was worth NZ$1.88 billion in the year ending December 2025. New Zealand exports to Switzerland were NZ$429 million, comprising NZ$100 million in goods and NZ$324 million in services. Key exports included travel services, meat and edible offal, and hides and skins.

New Zealand imports from Switzerland were NZ$1.45 billion, comprising NZ$624 million in goods and NZ$825 million in services. Key imports included transportation services, pharmaceuticals, clocks and watches, insurance and pension services, and charges for the use of intellectual property.

Officials will hold their first meeting in September. 

Original source: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/07/17/new-zealand-and-switzerland-agree-trade-discussions/

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8. Northland News – NRC members support single authority

July 17, 2026

Source: Northland Regional Council

Northland Regional Council members have (subs: Thurs 16 July) backed development of a Northland local government reform proposal that would see a single unitary body being developed through a staged transition process.
Council Chair Pita Tipene says the decision was made at an Extraordinary Council Meeting in Whangārei during which councillors considered the recommendation for a staged transition model from the Taitokerau Local Government Reform Elected Member Steering Group (EMSG).
Chair Tipene says a staged approach provides a pathway towards greater regional integration while allowing additional time to work through complex design matters and areas where regional alignment may require further consideration.
Importantly, a transition process would provide quality time to consult with the Northland public on the detailed design phase.
Chair Tipene says regional councillors agreed to progress the development of a ‘head start’ proposal based on a staged transition model. (Central government’s head start pathway allows two or more district councils to develop and submit a locally-led reform proposal. If councils choose not to submit a head start proposal, the Government will instead impose reform through a broader ‘back stop’ process.)
Chair Tipene says councillors are determined that any local government reorganisation in the region should be done on a ‘by Northland, for Northland’ basis. “We’d rather design something for Northland along with our fellow councils than have something designed for us in Wellington.”
In reaching its decision, the NRC had also considered early engagement all four councils had undertaken across the region through public surveys (which had collectively resulted in more than 2300 responses) plus an independent analysis by Morrison Low Advisory.
“Northlanders care deeply about the future of local government.” “As this work progresses, local voice must remain at the heart of any future model.” “While there are still a number of steps to be taken in the reorganisation journey, our job as councillors is to ensure that we deliver the best outcome for Taitokerau.”
Chair Tipene says if government approves the Northland proposal, it will be subject to further analysis, detailed design and public consultation in late 2026 and early 2027. 

MIL OSI

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9. Cook’s Strait Ferries – Ferry Holdings welcomes today’s Government announcement

July 17, 2026

Source: Ferry Holdings Ltd

Ferry Holdings welcomes today’s Government announcement about progress of the Cook Strait Ferry Replacement Programme.
“Shareholding Ministers’ approval of a range of infrastructure delivery, funding, asset ownership and commercial arrangements is a welcome endorsement of the huge collaborative effort by all partner agencies to get to this point,” said Chris Mackenzie, Chair of Ferry Holdings.
“It’s exciting for everyone involved that we’re now officially heading into the delivery phase of the programme as major works get underway at both ports and we enter the final stages of the ships’ design before construction begins in May 2027.”
Mr Mackenzie reiterated that Ferry Holdings and its partners remain sharply focused on delivering the rail-enabled ferries on schedule in 2029 and within the $1.7 billion funding envelope approved by Cabinet, using a maximum re-use, minimum viable value-for-money approach to port upgrades.
“The new rail-enabled ships are a landmark investment in inter-island connectivity and will bring resilience, reliability and sustainability to one of New Zealand’s most important transport corridors and one of its iconic journeys,” he said.
“We look forward to continuing to work closely with our partners to deliver modern, safe, reliable and sustainable ferry services for New Zealand in 2029.”

MIL OSI

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10. Security and Tech – Gen Half-Year Threat Report: Attackers are Moving Closer to Systems People Trust

July 17, 2026

New research finds cybercriminals are increasingly exploiting the trusted digital experiences Kiwis depend on, rather than relying on obvious malware or technical exploits.

Auckland, July 17, 2026 – As New Zealanders move more online in a cold winter, attackers are moving with them, closer to the trusted parts of digital life.  Gen (NASDAQ: GEN) today published its H1 2026 Threat Report to help people understand what cyber threats are emerging and what risks are shaping digital life today. A common thread runs through the report: attackers are exploiting digital trust. Not only are they sending malicious links or dropping malware, they are also abusing context, sessions, workflows, brands, updating systems, advertising platforms and delegated authority.

Trust Has Become the New Attack Surface

Source: Botica Butler Raudon Partners

New research finds cybercriminals are increasingly exploiting the trusted digital experiences Kiwis depend on, rather than relying on obvious malware or technical exploits.

Auckland, July 17, 2026 – As New Zealanders move more online in a cold winter, attackers are moving with them, closer to the trusted parts of digital life.  Gen (NASDAQ: GEN) today published its H1 2026 Threat Report to help people understand what cyber threats are emerging and what risks are shaping digital life today. A common thread runs through the report: attackers are exploiting digital trust. Not only are they sending malicious links or dropping malware, they are also abusing context, sessions, workflows, brands, updating systems, advertising platforms and delegated authority.

Trust Has Become the New Attack Surface

The Threat Report’s central finding is a shift in how attacks work. The most effective threats in the first half of 2026 did not rely on technical exploits or obvious deception, they succeeded because they were hard to distinguish from normal digital life. Scams arrived through a hotel booking platform, referencing a real reservation. WhatsApp accounts were compromised not through a password breach, but by tricking users into approving an attacker’s browser as a linked device. Fraud moved through real, verified financial accounts because the people owning those accounts had been recruited through social media with offers of quick cash. And AI agents, running with permissions the user had already granted, were empowered to execute a reverse shell.

“The most effective attacks in the first half of 2026 didn’t look like attacks,” said Vita Santrucek, Chief Technology & Development Officer at Gen. “They arrived through booking platforms, family message threads, software update channels and AI agent workflows, all places people already trust. As attackers blend into everyday digital experiences, protection has to move closer to the moments where confidence is earned, exploited or broken.”

Across scams, identity breaches, and privacy violations, the pattern is the same: the attack moved inside trusted systems before the danger became visible.

A Cold, Wet Winter, and Where Kiwis Shop

One of the fastest-growing threats in New Zealand is the e-shop scam, up 87% in the first half of the year, likely because people spend more time indoors and shopping moves online when it’s cold and wet outside. Fake online stores are now built so well they are almost impossible to tell from the real thing, and the moment you enter your payment details, your card information goes straight to the scammer.

“Your guard can slip when you’re scrolling and shopping from a warm room,” says Mark Gorrie, VP APAC at Norton. “A price that’s too good, a shop name you’ve never heard of, and a message tugging at your emotions to rush you. If you feel any of those, stop right there. Rather than following a link straight from an ad or a social post, search the shop’s name and check it’s a real business. That small extra step prevents most of the harm.”

And Handing Over the Device Itself

Another fastest-growing threat of all in New Zealand is malicious remote access (MRA), up 73%.

MRA is where an attacker gains the ability to control your device from afar. They don’t just steal information; they take over the computer or phone itself. In many cases, victims grant that access with their own hands, following a message that says, “your computer is infected” and giving control to someone posing as support. Tech support scams rose 27% in New Zealand as well, and the two are closely linked.

Furthermore, Scam-Yourself attacks, where following a tutorial promising free downloads, cracked software or fixing a technical issue installs the malware yourself, climbed 45%.

Fastest-Growing Threats in New Zealand (H1 2026)

  • E-shop scams: up 87%
  • Malicious remote access (MRA): up 73%
  • Droppers: up 56%

A dropper causes little direct harm itself but quietly delivers and installs other malware such as ransomware or spyware, slipping past initial antivirus defences.

  • Trojans: up 55%

A Trojan is malicious software disguised as a legitimate program.

  • Scam-Yourself attacks: up 45%.

Threat Report Highlights (Global)

Gen’s telemetry from H1 2026 shows the trend activity across key threat areas over the last six months globally.

Key findings about growing threats include:

·       A 387% increase in government impersonation scams – showing criminals are increasingly exploiting trust in public institutions to steal money and information.

·       A more than 454% increase in family impersonation scams, while separate “GhostPairing” activity showed how WhatsApp’s linked-device feature can be abused to gain persistent access to an account and allow people to impersonate loved ones.

·       More than 304 million scam-ad impressions identified across the EU and UK in less than one month, underscoring how easily fraudulent ads can reach people.

·       Norton and LifeLock breach notification alerts with attributed lead sources increased 628.1% up to 3.3 million, with more than 10 million breach notifications sent in total – proving more people’s personal information is being exposed in data breaches.

·       More than 15.7 million breached records containing email addresses identified, giving cybercriminals more opportunities to target consumers with phishing, scams, and account takeover attempts.

·       734% increase in bank account (depository) activity alerts – further evidence of the rapid financial exploitation that follows a breach.

Key findings about blocked attacks and defences include:

·       114.2 million e-shop scam attacks blocked, up 109% – highlighting the growing risk of fake online stores targeting shoppers.

·       20.3 million tech support scam attacks blocked – reflecting continued attempts to trick people into giving scammers remote access to their devices or financial information.

·       1 million web skimming attacks blocked, up 212% – showing how attackers continued to target checkout flows where users already expect to enter payment details.

·       Roughly 1.9 billion tracking attempts blocked during H1 2026 – demonstrating the scale of online tracking that can erode consumer privacy.

The report also identifies agentic AI as an emerging security frontier. As AI systems gain the ability to browse, install software, access files, connect to services and take action on behalf of users, attackers are increasingly targeting the permissions and trust these systems rely on. Early telemetry from Sage, Gen’s agentic security platform behind features like Norton and Avast’s AI Agent Protection, found the most common high-risk AI agent behaviours involved:

1. Trying to run dangerous system commands

2.     Attempting to open a remote command channel, which could let an attacker control the system

3.     Downloading and running code from the internet

4.     Reading credential files without authorisation

5.     Trying to create persistent remote access, such as adding a trusted SSH key

6.     Trying to override the agent’s instructions.

 

The full Gen H1 2026 Threat Report is available at https://www.gendigital.com/blog/insights/reports/threat-report-h1-2026 

 

About Gen

Gen (NASDAQ: GEN) is a global company dedicated to powering Digital Freedom through its trusted consumer brands including Norton, Avast, LifeLock, MoneyLion and more. The Gen family of consumer brands is rooted in providing financial empowerment and cyber safety for the first digital generations. Today, Gen empowers people to live their digital lives safely, privately and confidently for generations to come. Gen brings award-winning products and services in cybersecurity, online privacy, identity protection and financial wellness to nearly 500 million users in more than 150 countries. Learn more at GenDigital.com.

MIL OSI

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