A new buzz is heading to downtown Auckland – where a new beer and food festival is set to show off some of the country’s tastiest delicacies. More than 50 breweries will come together for the Auckland Craft Beer and Food Festival,…
Category Archives: headline
Festivities start despite Napier Art Deco Festival cancellation
The notion that Napier is the little art deco city that could was looking pretty good as arrivals started to swing in the city on Friday despite the cancellation of the festival they had come to see.Couples from such places as Whangaparaoa…
Frontline heroes feature on five new stamps from Australia Post
Australia Post has released a new set of stamps honouring healthcare workers,
ADF members and police, educators, and essential services including
postal workers and supermarket staff.
Herald afternoon quiz: February 19
Test your brains with the Herald’s afternoon quiz. Be sure to check back on nzherald.co.nz for the morning quiz tomorrow. To challenge yourself with more quizzes, CLICK HERE.
Red Fox Tavern: Jury learn one of the accused committed a prior aggravated robbery
One of the men accused of the infamous fatal 1987 Red Fox Tavern robbery had earlier been convicted of an aggravated robbery in Auckland. Mark Joseph Hoggart, 60, and a man with name suppression are on trial for the aggravated…
The barber with a surname a cut above the rest
He’s known locally as Bob the Barber from Birkenhead but this small business owner happens to have the single most popular last name in the country. According to latest data from the Registrar-General of Births, Deaths and Marriages…
'Unusual find' inside Spanish bar
Archeologists have uncovered the remains of a 12th century bathhouse at a popular bar in the city of Seville, southern Spain.
Cerveceria Giralda has been operating in the heart of the city since 1923, but the bar is housed in a building with a far longer history.
While the vaulted ceilings suggested it could have been a bathhouse, and historical records said there had been one in the area, no one had found concrete evidence of its existence, archeologist Fernando Amores of the University of Seville told CNN Thursday.
READ MORE: French, Spanish police bust thieves of rare 'purple' diamond
Now skylights and red geometric paintings dating from the 12th century have been uncovered during recent renovation work.
In the 12th century, Seville was ruled by the Almohad caliphate, a North African Berber Muslim empire, which controlled much of the Iberian peninsula – modern day Spain and Portugal – at the time.
Mr Amores was part of a team of experts that collaborated on the restoration of what he called a "very unusual" find.
READ MORE: 'Original Stonehenge' found in Wales, new study suggests
The skylights are made in the form of eight-pointed stars, and the red ocher paintings make up interlinking geometric patterns.
The star-shaped windows are typical of hammams, and there are four different kinds in different sizes, said Mr Amores. However, the fact that the paintings completely covered the walls and ceiling is unusual, he added.
"It forms a beautiful sky," said Mr Amores, with light streaming through the windows reminiscent of the stars at night.
The complicated craftsmanship shows the importance of the bathhouse, which was located close to the city's main mosque when it was built, he said.
There is more restoration work to be done, said Mr Amores, but additional funding will be needed.
Archeologists are also carrying out carbon dating on the stucco — a fine plaster — to get a more precise date of construction, added Amores.
The project has been a collaboration between the owners of the building, the owners of the bar and the team of archeologists, said Mr Amores, explaining that the whole process has been a triumph of cooperation.
"We are very happy," he said.
The owners decided to carry out some renovation work last summer, a spokesperson for the bar told CNN. Until then, the original features had been covered up by a layer of decoration installed at the beginning of the 20th century.
As the work revealed evidence of the bathhouse, archeologists were brought in to supervise, the spokesperson added. The baths had at least three rooms, they said, which are now used as a kitchen and two dining rooms.
Architect Francisco Diaz told local TV station Canal Sur that archeologists didn't initially find anything of interest, but then one skylight was found in the ceiling. "From there it was like drawing back a veil and all of the skylights started to appear," said Mr Diaz.
Cerveceria Giralda serves tapas and beer, and is well-known in Seville.
"We think it (the bar) could open to the public in a month, combining restaurant operations with possible visits at certain times," said the spokesperson.
Vaccination rollout to make 'significant impact' in virus fight
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he will be receiving his coronavirus vaccine "very, very soon" and flagged the vaccination rollout should make a "significant impact" in combating the pandemic.
Mr Morrison and NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian visited the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney this morning, one of the state's vaccine hubs, ahead of next week's rollout.
The prime minister said that he and Chief Health Officer Paul Kelly would receive the Pfizer vaccine soon.
LIVE BLOG: Australia 'ready to go' with vaccine
Mr Morrison said the vaccine rollout should make a "significant impact" in curbing the pandemic in Australia.
"I think it is a reasonable expectation that as time goes on, as the vaccination rolls out across the world and here in Australia, you should rightly expect that things will change and how we manage the virus," he said.
"I'm confident that as we move through the vaccination process, we can significantly change how things are down here in Australia."
But Mr Morrison said a vaccine passport for travellers remained some way off and depends largely on airlines.
"Once we get a greater understanding of everybody's systems that can give the airlines in particular… they can have confidence about what is being loaded up, who has had a vaccine, what vaccine they had."
READ MORE: AstraZeneca vaccine approved for use in Australia
Mr Morrison also hinted that the initial vaccination of frontline health and quarantine workers will impact how state governments respond to virus clusters.
"The risk is going to change, it will go down with the vaccination, it will go down because of the improvement of practices," the prime minister said.
"So when the risk goes down, what does that mean for the other responses that states have been using up until this time?
"You only use a tool for as long as you need that tool. If you don't need the tool anymore, you put it back in the box. We are getting to that point on this and we are looking forward to that."
Ms Berejiklian confirmed frontline health workers in NSW will receive the vaccine from Monday.
EXPLAINED: How to get the second $250 coronavirus payment
The premier also said she supported "incentives" for people in taking the vaccine.
She said they are a better policy to encourage people rather than penalties.
"I think that's a positive way to do it rather than penalise people who don't take the vaccine, I'd like incentives for people who do take the vaccine," she said.
Ms Berejiklian also said she understands the reluctance of some people about the jab.
"I know there are a minority in the community who don't feel it's good for the community but the vast majority of residents will welcome the vaccine's arrival and appreciate what it can do in our fight against COVID," she said
Ms Berejiklian said NSW Health officials were looking at giving vaccine priority to the families of hotel quarantine staff.
Morrison denies knowing about alleged rape two years ago
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has denied knowing about the alleged rape of staffer Brittany Higgins in 2019.
Mr Morrison denied misleading the Australian public after a series of text messages emerged that appeared to show his office was told of the rape soon after it allegedly took place.
"I have sought to be as open and honest as I can be about this matter," he said.
"I have told you everything I know about this matter."
READ MORE: Former Liberal staffer Brittany Higgins says review 'long overdue'
The text messages were between Ms Higgins and another Liberal Party staffer in early April of 2019, soon after the alleged rape took place.
In the texts, the male staffer wrote that he spoke to the Prime Minister's Office (PMO).
"He was mortified to hear about it and how things have been handled," the man's text message said.
"He's going to discuss with COS (chief-of-staff) – no-one else."
It is not clear who the "he" is in the text messages.
The prime minister said the reports from this morning would be part of an internal review into the handling of the alleged rape.
"I set out in the parliament this week the timetable of when I am advised my office knew about it," he said.
"I knew about it on Monday.
"It shattered me. It absolutely shattered me."
Mr Morrison said he has been listening to the issues raised over the alleged sexual assault, and is seeking to "address them in the best possible way I can".
"We have to deal with issues of culture which I'm sure you would agree are not confined to the offices of parliamentarians," he said.
"This is an issue that every workplace deals with.
"I have no doubt it occurs in the media workplaces, offices in law professions or whatever it might be."
Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese said Mr Morrison's explanation "doesn't pass the pub test".
"It's not credible that the prime minister continues to say that his office only found out about it this week," Mr Albanese said.
"And the dissembling nature of his answers before the Parliament are not good enough."
Mr Albanese said Ms Higgins deserves better than the way she was treated by the government this week.
"For her to not get the respect of getting straight and clear answers about what the response was at the time, about who was told and what they were told at the time, is disrespectful of Ms Higgins," he said.
"I believe Brittany Higgins."
Ms Higgins alleges that she was taken into the office of then-Defence Industry Minister and current Defence Minister Linda Reynolds by a government staffer when she was drunk and then raped.
Hours after security guards found Ms Higgins in a state of undress, the office was steam-cleaned.
Security guards considered calling an ambulance for her when she was found.
Days later Ms Higgins was called into a meeting with Senator Reynolds to discuss the alleged rape in the same room.
Ms Higgins is considering pressing charges against the alleged rapist.
The alleged rape took place little more than a month before the 2019 federal election.
French, Spanish police bust thieves of rare 'purple' diamond
A suspected gang of diamond thieves who posed as potential buyers to steal a precious purple-hued diamond worth millions in Barcelona has been busted by French and Spanish police, officials say.
Police in Spain's northeast Catalonia region said that eight suspected members of the criminal ring were arrested in Bondy, France, near Paris.
The police investigation started in Barcelona after the January 2020 robbery of the rare diamond, estimated to be worth up to 15 million euros ($23 million), according to Catalan police.
LIVE UPDATES: NASA Rover lands on Mars
The investigation later linked the suspects with the theft of another diamond worth 4.5 million euros ($7 million) in Cannes, France, in August 2020.
READ MORE: US senator travels to Mexico, as millions without power
Police said the thieves pretended to be interested in the purchase of the gemstones, only to switch the diamond case for a similar one after distracting the seller.
