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Auckland relief teacher Ankui Gui named after kissing 3-year-old, loses registration

6 May 2026 at 23:34
Ankui Gui's teacher registration has been cancelled for serious misconduct.

Ankui Gui has had his teacher's registration cancelled after he kissed a 3-year-old while he was a relief teacher.

Ankui Gui has had his teacher's registration cancelled after he kissed a 3-year-old while he was a relief teacher.

Ankui Gui has had his teacher's registration cancelled after he kissed a 3-year-old while he was a relief teacher.

Ankui Gui has had his teacher's registration cancelled after he kissed a 3-year-old while he was a relief teacher.

Australia news live: NSW police to ‘actively monitor’ returning family linked to IS fighters; banks told to support struggling customers

6 May 2026 at 23:33

Woman and child expected to settle in Sydney as part of returning cohort. Follow today’s news live

Bridget McKenzie says rollback of inland rail project sends ‘chill’ through community

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie, the shadow minister for infrastructure, said the Labor party has sent a “chill through the infrastructure pipeline” after the Albanese government abandoned a beleaguered inland rail project connecting NSW with Queensland.

People were surprised and shocked and dismayed at this announcement by the Labor government, they’ve been making their concerns heard loud and clear.

This Labor government has actually derailed this project and, indeed, sent a chill through the infrastructure pipeline investment community because no project would now be safe from some future government turning off the tap.

You’re cutting the wrong things, not the things that are going to drive a productive economy.

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© Photograph: ABC

© Photograph: ABC

© Photograph: ABC

Olympic Gold Medalist Aly Raisman's Mom Inspired How She Gives Gifts

6 May 2026 at 23:30
Olympic Gold Medalist Aly Raisman’s Mom Inspired Her To Give the Best GiftsFor Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman, thoughtful gift-giving, especially choosing the perfect Mother’s Day gift, starts with the example her mom set early on. “My mom is very creative… she’d make...

Tai Po fire probe: Senior surveyor admits gov’t unit gave advance notice before site inspections

6 May 2026 at 23:30
Gov't inspector alerted renovation contractor ahead of inspections, Tai Po fire inquiry hears

A senior surveyor at a government inspection unit has admitted alerting the renovation consultant ahead of site checks at Wang Fuk Court before the estate went up in flames, a public inquiry has heard.

Andy Ku (centre), a senior maintenance surveyor at the Independent Checking Unit (ICU), leaves the Wang Fuk Court independent committee hearing on May 5, 2026. Photo: James Lee/HKFP.
Andy Ku (centre), a senior maintenance surveyor at the Independent Checking Unit (ICU), leaves the Wang Fuk Court independent committee hearing on May 5, 2026. Photo: James Lee/HKFP.

Victor Dawes, lead counsel to the independent committee investigating the fatal fire, questioned Andy Ku, a senior maintenance surveyor at the Housing Bureau’s Independent Checking Unit (ICU), on Wednesday.

Dawes presented to the committee Ku’s written witness statement, in which the senior surveyor said that the ICU had “no particular role in reviewing or confirming the quality, reliability, and integrity of consultants.”

The committee earlier heard in March that one of the directors of Will Power Architects, the consultancy firm overseeing the large-scale maintenance work at the Tai Po housing estate, had not carried out his duties as a “registered inspector” (RI).

“The RI’s work, in effect, is to act as a regulator. If it’s not up to you to keep them in check, who else would it be?” Dawes asked Ku.

Ku replied that the oversight system is essentially “self-regulating” and that the ICU does not have a formal auditing system.

The committee also heard on Wednesday that for most of its inspections, the ICU had notified a Will Power employee, who was also a representative for the RI. The inspector himself was not there for most of the ICU checks.

Dawes remarked that the ICU’s inspection practice deviated from the norm with other government departments, such as the Labour Department and Buildings Department.

The lead counsel also told the hearing that the ICU had conducted a total of 10 inspections at Wang Fuk Court, of which only two were held without advance notice. One of those two inspections was an impromptu check, which Ku conducted himself after a medical appointment in the same district.

“If you didn’t have a medical appointment in Tai Po that day, there wouldn’t have been an inspection?” Dawes asked. Ku agreed.

Wang Fuk Court buildings on December 29, 2025, one month after the deadly fire. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Wang Fuk Court buildings on December 29, 2025, one month after the deadly fire. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Dawes then showed the committee screenshots of ICU maintenance surveyor Amanda Lau’s text conversations scheduling an inspection with the RI representative, who then alerted the contractor, Prestige Construction & Engineering. Ku confirmed that Lau acted on his orders.

After the fire, the ICU began conducting inspections without advance notice, Ku said.

Dawes asked if the new arrangements meant that the ICU realised there were issues with its old system. Ku replied: “There was room for improvement.”

Scaffolding nets, foam boards

Ku was also grilled on his unit’s oversight of scaffolding nets and foam boards, which a preliminary investigation has blamed for contributing to the spread of the blaze.

The lead counsel brought up the ICU’s checks on the fire retardancy of scaffolding nets used at Wang Fuk Court.

He asked Ku why he told the Buildings Department the nets were up to standard, despite the ICU’s own test showing the nets continued to burn for more than 10 seconds before the flame was extinguished.

Ku said that upon two retrials of the same piece of netting, the net did not catch fire.

Dawes showed a fire retardancy certificate to the committee and asked Ku whether the ICU could verify the legitimacy of the certificate and whether it really corresponded to the same lot of scaffold nets.

Ku said the unit could not verify, as it relied on the contractor’s word.

Despite residents’ complaints, the senior surveyor told the hearing that he did not notice the estate’s windows were covered with foam boards during an ICU inspection in September because scaffolding nets were in the way.

The blackened exterior of an apartment block in Wang Fuk Court, Tai Po, on November 27, 2025, with what appears to be styrofoam boards attached to the windows. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
The blackened exterior of an apartment block in Wang Fuk Court, Tai Po, on November 27, 2025, with what appears to be styrofoam boards attached to the windows. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

A month later, the contractor and the inspector told Ku that only three floors would have windows covered with foam boards whenever spalling works were carried out.

Ku said he did not ask to see a fire retardancy certificate for the foam boards as he believed the phased arrangement would mitigate fire risks. “There was no basis to ask for a certificate,” he said.

Dawes scrolled through about a dozen photos from the site, most of which showed windows covered with foam boards in clear view. The photos were part of a slideshow report that Ku had previously seen.

Dawes questioned how Ku could have been unaware of the foam boards, to which the government surveyor said he was “focused on the concrete works.”

Ku added that in retrospect, he “had been lied to” and that he did not follow up on the matter because there were no further complaints from residents.

Republicans propose $1 billion in taxpayer money for Trump's ballroom

6 May 2026 at 23:28
NBC News' Peter Nicholas joins "Here's the Scoop" to report on a new reconciliation bill proposed by Republicans that would allocate $1 billion in taxpayer money to go towards “security adjustments and upgrades" for President Trump's ballroom and East Wing renovation.

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NBC News' Peter Nicholas joins "Here's the Scoop" to report on a new reconciliation bill proposed by Republicans that would allocate $1 billion in taxpayer money to go towards “security adjustments and upgrades" for President Trump's ballroom and East Wing renovation.

Hantavirus patients evacuated as cruise ship steams for the Canary Islands

6 May 2026 at 23:26
A vessel grappling with a deadly outbreak of hantavirus evacuated three people on Wednesday, including two in serious condition, and will head toward Spain’s Canary Islands to disembark the roughly 150 passengers still on board. Read More
  • ✇RT - Daily news
  • Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged ‘suicide note’ unsealed (PHOTO) RT
    The handwritten message was reportedly found by his former cellmate after an earlier suicide attempt A US federal judge has unsealed an alleged suicide note written by Jeffrey Epstein, nearly seven years after the disgraced financier died in a Manhattan jail while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. The note was reportedly found in July 2019 by Epstein’s then-cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, after Epstein was discovered injured in what offi
     

Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged ‘suicide note’ unsealed (PHOTO)

By: RT
6 May 2026 at 23:24

The handwritten message was reportedly found by his former cellmate after an earlier suicide attempt

A US federal judge has unsealed an alleged suicide note written by Jeffrey Epstein, nearly seven years after the disgraced financier died in a Manhattan jail while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges.

The note was reportedly found in July 2019 by Epstein’s then-cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, after Epstein was discovered injured in what officials later described as a failed suicide attempt. Tartaglione, a former police officer later convicted of quadruple murder, said he found the note tucked inside a book and gave it to his lawyers.

“They investigated me for months – found nothing!!! So 15-year-old charges resurface,” the barely legible handwritten note appears to read.

BREAKING

A federal judge has unsealed a purported suicide note written by Jeffrey Epstein, which was reportedly found by his former cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, after Epstein’s July 2019 suicide attempt.

The note had been under seal for years.

(Link below) pic.twitter.com/JveOpZhkSi

— Yashar Ali 🐘 (@yashar) May 6, 2026

“It is a treat to be able to choose one’s time to say goodbye. What do you want me to do – burst out crying!! NO FUN – NOT WORTH IT!!” it adds.

Read more
Mona Juul and Terje Rod-Larsen
Epstein inheritor kills himself

The document was kept under seal in Tartaglione’s court file until a federal judge ordered its release following a petition by the New York Times. Prosecutors reportedly supported making the note public, arguing that transparency is vital.

Epstein was found dead in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York in August 2019. His death was officially ruled a suicide, though it has continued to fuel public scrutiny and conspiracy theories because of his connections to wealthy and politically powerful figures.

While his longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell was later convicted of sex-trafficking offenses, none of his other high-profile contacts have been charged with any crimes in connection with Epstein’s case.

Matamata-Piako Mayor and Local Government Minister clash over expenditure

6 May 2026 at 23:20
Ash Tanner's message has prompted a pithy comeback from the Local Government Minister.

Matamata-Piako Mayor Ash Tanner says the ratepayer deserves to know what their money is being spent on. Photo / Christel Yardley, Waikato Times

Matamata-Piako Mayor Ash Tanner says the ratepayer deserves to know what their money is being spent on. Photo / Christel Yardley, Waikato Times

Matamata-Piako Mayor Ash Tanner says the ratepayer deserves to know what their money is being spent on. Photo / Christel Yardley, Waikato Times

Matamata-Piako Mayor Ash Tanner says the ratepayer deserves to know what their money is being spent on. Photo / Christel Yardley, Waikato Times
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