Ann Robbie is being celebrated for her efforts.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade is calling on "both sides" - Palestinians and Israeli - to "exercise restraint".
Over the next 10 weeks, a new waiata will be released each weekday, some by award winning artists.
The awards celebrate those creating tunes for tamariki.
A homicide investigation is underway.
Projects are going unfinished as workers take time off to recover.
Police are seeking witnesses to an alleged assault.
Fisher drew first blood in the clash between the titans for NZ's only K1 500m World Championship spot by the slimmest of margins on Lake Karapiro.
The person arrived in Aotearoa on April 19 and was tested the following day. Whole genome sequencing subsequently confirmed the variant.
Hansen believes Whitney will learn plenty off former colleagues Wayne Smith, Sir Graham Henry and Mike Cron in the Black Ferns' new set-up.
There are 494 people in hospital with Covid-19.
Alongside the two children who died, one person was in their 20s; four in their 60s; two in their 70s; and 10 were aged over 80.
Madoka Watanabe came to stay with the Ardern family in Morrinsville on a homestay when Jacinda was 10.
The fatal crash in Northland involved a motorcycle and vehicle.
Despite Covid-19, the Prime Minister says the delegation was still able to do what it set out to do.
The Rangiriri Pā opened to the public on Saturday as part of new iwi-led tourism venture.
Three were aged 16 and the fourth was 17. The three 16-year-olds were from Bluff.
While the request for a meeting was accepted by the Kremlin, there's little sign of Russia easing up on its lethal bombardment of its neighbour.
The pair have nothing but respect for each other as they clash for NZ's one spot in the K1 500m at the world champs.
There are now 1500 families on the waiting list for emergency housing, a 600% increase in demand in just five years.
Last year was a bumper turn out at Auckland's Domain service after Covid disrupted the year before, but numbers are expected to be low this year.
Sergeant George Vivian Thomas Moore was one of many Kiwis based in Stevenage before heading to the Western Front and was buried there after he died from the flu in the pandemic.
Police said the accident happened on State Highway 30 in Awakeri on Saturday afternoon.