Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Good morning, I never ready Manu and this is your
morning news books for Thursday, eight tenth of July. In
this update, a warning the volume of online extremist material
will only continue to grow. Almost one thousand web pages
were flanked the Department of Internal Affairs last year for
suspected extremist content. That's a ten percent jump from twenty
(00:26):
twenty three. Mostly dominated by far right ideologies, but with
a resurgence in Islamic motivations. Massy University's John Battersby says
it's a sign of the times, and he says Donald
Trump and the conflict in the Middle East are driving
these wings of extremism. Don't expect the official cash rate
to get much lower. The Reserve Banks kept the OSA
(00:46):
unchanged at three point twenty five percent after previously slashing
it from five point five percent over the past year.
The NZII Shadow Board and Independent Panel of Economists is
forecasting a low of between two point seven five percent
and three point two five percent. Senior economist Ting Huang
says NZIER itself is forecasting one further cut to three percent.
(01:10):
We're expecting the economy to recover gradually. Lower interest rates
should blos through to real activity of the come year.
Most workers at Auckland's Victoria Park New World could soon
have a job elsewhere in the supermarket. Co Op Food
Staffs has confirmed staff at the supermarket are being made redundant,
but staff are being offered roles at other Auckland stores,
(01:33):
including at the soon to open New World Point. Chevalier
Workers First Union Retail secretary Rund Hughes says almost all
of its requests have been met. The floodthat rural sector
in the Upper South Island is welcoming news of beneficiaries
joining the cleanup. The governments activated a beneficiary task force
in Tasman and Marlborough following the last two weeks of
(01:55):
severe weather. Ural Support's Top of the South chair Richard
Kemsorn says only suitable people are selected because it involves
clearing debris and slush. Hundreds of jobs at an Otago
gold miner in doubt after it was denied permission to
expand due to concern about lizards. Tv INZ reveals mccray's
gold mine applied for a permit under the Wildlife Act
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to clear vegetation on its site in a bid to
expand its operation. Last month. The Department of Conservation declined it,
stating there was insufficient information about how the company would
manage the relocation of lizards. No one was meant to
die when two bombs went off on the Rainbow Warrior
forty years ago today. That's according to Colonel Jean Luke Keysteer,
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the French agent who planted the bombs of the Greenpeace
protest vessel in Auckland. Dutch photographer Fernando Pereira drowned as
the boat sank shortly after midnight, but Keysteer told the
Nzed Herald podcast Rainbow Warrior Forgotten History. They didn't think
anyone would be in the machine room at that time.
The first bomb should be the small bomb in order
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to make people evacuate, and the second to sink it.
In sports, read bullet wave the chickered flag to team
principal Christian Horner after twenty years in the role. Queensland,
led by Cameron Munster, four days after his father's death,
have beaten New South Wales twenty four to twelve in
State of Origin League's Game three decider at Sydney. Egosh
(03:26):
Fiontek and Belinda Bencic have powered into the Wimbledon women's
tennis semi finals as his men's top seed Yarnick Singer. Today,
Pagacha has taken the yellow jersey in cyclings Tour de
France after the stage five time trial. I'm never retty,
Manu that your latest news fakes. We'll be back with
the next update at midday from the news talk zb
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news roup