A pedestrian has been struck on a highway in the Bay of Plenty – part of which has now been closed as a result. Police said they were told of a crash involving a pedestrian on Waiōeka Rd in Ōpōtiki just before 5am….
Category Archives: headline
Prominent real estate agent Neil van Schaik killed in Invercargill crash
A prominent real estate agent has died following a car crash in Invercargill.Southland Real Estate Ltd agent Neil van Schaik died after a two-vehicle crash in Chelmsford St at 10.20am on Saturday.Police initially said one person…
Pedestrian hit by vehicle, State Highway 2 closed near Ōpōtiki
State Highway 2 is closed between Ōpōtiki and Waioeka Gorge after a pedestrian was hit by a vehicle.A police spokeswoman said the incident, about 6km south of Ōpōtiki, was reported at 4.53am.The road…
Violent attack: Woman charged after man suffers serious injuries in mid-Canterbury incident
A woman has been arrested and charged in relation to an incident that left a man with serious injuries near Christchurch. The 24-year-old has been charged with wounding with intent and is due to appear in the Christchurch District…
Truancy 'crisis': 30,000 chronically absent students out of reach for under-funded services
Government-funded truancy services are so poorly resourced that more than 30,000 students who miss at least three days of school a fortnight are out of reach.The figures are contained in a Ministry of Education briefing note, obtained…
Letters: Full motels, two-tier health system, Covid, mortgages, rugby
Where will tourists stay with motels full? I understand how critical tourism has been to the New Zealand economy. So I, along with a large group of the country, are eager to see tourism return. Businesses and large parts of the…
Herald morning quiz: May 3
Test your brains with the Herald’s morning quiz. Be sure to check back on nzherald.co.nz at 3pm for the afternoon quiz. To challenge yourself with more quizzes, CLICK HERE.
Complaint against Wellington city councillor Simon Woolf revealed after Ombudsman investigation
Wellington City Council (WCC) has released a complaint made against councillor Simon Woolf, alleging he caused staff considerable distress and failed to consider his duty of care to them. The Herald complained to the Ombudsman…
Nevis has received the bulk of severance payments so far – Premier Brantley
By Monique Washington
With over thirty million dollars already paid out in severance payment by the Federal Government, the island of Nevis has received 69 percent of that sum.
This is according to the Premier of Nevis, Hon. Mark Brantley.
Several people lost their jobs due to the COVID-19 pandemic that caused the borders of the twin islands to be closed in March 2020. Since then, 2884 claims have been made to date – 1837 have been processed, 1047 are to be processed. Of the 1837 processed, 1789 persons have received payment, and 48 are awaiting payment. A total of $30,042,565.65 has been paid out. Employees in Nevis have received 69 percent of that sum.
“We know that many of our people who have lost work and have applied for severance payments have up to date not yet received,” the Premier said.
“We are heartened, because we continue to agitate at the federal level, and to encourage a more rapid movement there.”
Brantley said that the task of sorting people’s severance had been deemed overwhelming, as a number of issues have arisen.
“In fairness, they have been overwhelmed. The number of claims has been quite considerable.”
Brantley explained some of the issues that plagued the Nevis claims.
Read more in this week’s Observer Newspaper
The post Nevis has received the bulk of severance payments so far – Premier Brantley appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.
Melbourne nurse stranded in India after mercy dash to see dying father
Nausheen Khatoon has lived in Australia for almost 20 years, yet after making a mercy dash to see her dying father in India the Melbourne nurse is now stranded by the country's coronavirus surge.
"I got four days to spend with him," the mother-of-three told 9News through a video link.
"The last few days, I was there at his bedside holding his hand."
News of the nurse's plight came as Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese described the idea of jailing returning citizens such as her as "extraordinary".
READ MORE: India travel ban on returning Aussies 'violates human rights'
Ms Khatoon is a nurse at the Royal Women's Hospital in Melbourne and was on the frontline during Victoria's second COVID-19 wave last year.
"All through last year, the COVID period, I have been working in the hospital," she said.
"I have been working through the whole corona period in Melbourne.
"I've worked in the COVID theatres and everything."
Despite her sacrifices during the pandemic in Australia, Ms Khatoon now fears for her health.
"I fear if I fall sick now, I won't be able to reach a doctor or get proper medical help in India now," she said.
Ms Khatoon's extended family in India are American citizens and have been free to return home to the US.
But the Australian government is threatening its citizens with hefty fines of up to $66,000 and even jail time if they try to return home.
"The news, the statements given by the Prime Minister, everything contradicted my statement explaining how great my country Australia is," Ms Khatoon said.
READ MORE: The world is in the midst of its worst coronavirus outbreak yet
Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese today weighed in on Ms Khatoon's plight.
"The idea that we would put her in jail upon her return to Australia is quite extraordinary," Mr Albanese said.
He questioned why similar measures had not been applied to other countries.
"Australia has obligations to our citizens, to people who are Australians — not just to abandon them overseas, but then to threaten them is quite extraordinary action," he said, according to Nine newspapers.
"The government's got to justify how it is that the figures from India are similar to what they've been in the past from the UK and the US, but we haven't seen these sort of measures."
Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt has confirmed a temporary pause on travellers will come into effect on Monday.
The penalties are being invoked under the Biosecurity Act to stop people coming to Australia from India via other countries such as Singapore or the United Arab Emirates.
The act empowers Mr Hunt to do whatever is necessary to stop the spread of a listed disease.
Mr Hunt said the new measures were due to an "unmanageable" number of arrivals from the country who had tested positive to COVID-19.
9News understands once hotel quarantine places are freed up in two weeks' time the government will consider evacuation flights.
Mr Hunt has said Australians left stranded in India by the federal government's flight ban are a "top priority".