Tag: Radio New Zealand

  • At least 10 people have died and 11 missing after a hostel fire in New Zealand

    At least 10 people have died and 11 missing after a hostel fire in New Zealand

    In a fire outbreak at a hostel in New Zealand, 10 people have perished, and 11 more are still missing, making it likely that more have perished.

    At around 12.30am local time, flames engulfed the four-story hostel in Wellington.

    Six deaths have been officially confirmed, according to Prime Minister Chris Hipkins, and it’s likely that there are still others.

    Bruce Stubbs, incident commander for the fire service, said: ‘There is a significant amount of debris from the roof collapse but at this stage we have located six people.’

    Emergency services were called to the Loafers Lodge hostel, and Wellington Fire and Emergency district manager Nick Pyatt said 52 people have been accounted for, but that a number still remained missing.

    He said: ‘I can sadly report that this will be a multi-fatality incident.

    ‘Our thoughts at this time are with the families of those who have perished and with our crews who valiantly rescued those (they could) and attempted to rescue those that they couldn’t.’

    ‘This is our worst nightmare,’ Mr Pyatt said. ‘It doesn’t get worse than this.’

    Police said the cause of the fire remained unexplained, and they would be investigating alongside fire and emergency officials.

    Loafers Lodge resident Tala Sili told news outlet Radio New Zealand (RNZ) that he saw smoke pouring through under his door and opened it to find the hallway pitch black.

    He said: ‘I was on the top floor and I couldn’t go through the hallway because there was just too much smoke, so I jumped out the window.’

    He said he then fell onto a roof two floors below.

    He added: ‘It was just scary, it was really scary, but I knew I had to jump out the window or just burn inside the building.’

    Mr Sili said he was rescued from the roof by paramedics and treated for a sprained ankle.

    Police said the cause of the fire remained unexplained, and they would be investigating alongside fire and emergency officials.

    Wellington City Council spokesman Richard MacLean said it was helping about 50 people who had escaped the fire and were now at an emergency centre the council set up at a local running track that had showers and other facilities.

    He said there were a number of elderly people it was helping who had escaped with only the pyjamas they were wearing.

    ‘A lot are clearly shaken and bewildered about what happened,’ he said.

    Loafers Lodge advertises itself as an affordable place for people to stay while they are in the capital, whether on business or needing to visit the nearby Wellington Hospital.

    It has 92 rooms and promotes them as being available long term.

  • New Zealand radio threatens to quit Twitter over ‘govt’ tag

    New Zealand radio threatens to quit Twitter over ‘govt’ tag

    Radio New Zealand says ‘government-funded’ label does not reflect broadcaster’s editorial independence.

    New Zealand’s public radio broadcaster has threatened to leave Twitter following Elon Musk’s decision to label certain media accounts as “government-funded”.

    Radio New Zealand’s head of content Megan Whelan said on Monday that the label, which Twitter uses to describe outlets that “may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content”, does not reflect the broadcaster’s editorial independence.

    “Not only is our editorial independence protected by the law, we guard it vigorously,” Whelan said in a statement posted on Twitter.

    “Over the next few days, we will be considering our options, including talking to Twitter to have the label removed or revised, or as other public media around the world have done, leave the platform.”

    RNZ’s statement comes after publicly-funded National Public Radio and Public Broadcasting Service in the United States quit Twitter in protest against what they view as Musk’s efforts to undermine their legitimacy.

    Twitter has in recent days added the “government-funded” label to publicly funded outlets, including the UK’s BBC, Canada’s CBC, Voice of America and Al Jazeera, after an earlier decision to apply a “state-affiliated media” tag to NPR drew a backlash.

    Before Musk took control of Twitter last year, the “state-affiliated media” had been reserved for government mouthpieces such as China’s Xinhua and Russia’s RT.

    Musk later suggested the NPR decision was a mistake, saying it “might not be accurate” to describe the broadcaster as state media.