Missing Person Police
are looking for a 74 year old lady who went missing from a
rest home in Matai Drive, Greenlane. The missing woman is
described as being a Mandarin only speaking Chinese woman,
approximately 145cms (5 feet) in height, thin build, black
hair with a grey upright tuft on the right side of her head
and a distinctive mark near her left eye. She was wearing a
lilac/purple long sleeve top with vertical black streaks,
black trousers and shoes.
She has a black lanyard around
her neck which carries an identification card bearing her
name Xing Juan LI and telephone 09 523 1605. She has been
known to walk around the Great South Rd, Greenlane,
Ellerslie in the past. Miss LI has a medical condition which
is of a concern to Police. Any sightings, please call
Auckland Central Police immediately. Issued By: Senior
Sergeant Anthony Edwards
If you're using Scoop for work, your organisation needs to pay a small license fee with Scoop Pro. We think that's fair, because your organisation is benefiting from using our news resources. In return, we'll also give your team access to pro news tools and keep Scoop free for personal use, because public access to news is important!
Well that didn’t last long, did it? Mere days after taking on what he called the “awesome responsibility” of being Prime Minister, Christopher Luxon has started blaming everyone else and complaining that he's inherited “economic vandalism on an unprecedented scale” - which is how most of us would describe his own coalition agreements, 100-Day Plan, and backdated $3 billion handout to landlords... More
New CTU analysis of the National & ACT coalition agreement has shown the cost of returning interest deductibility to landlords is an extra $900M on top of National’s original proposal. This is because it is going to be implemented earlier and faster, including retrospective rebates from April 2023. More
“The new Government’s plan to expand oil and gas exploration is as dangerous as it is unscientific. Whatever you think about the new government, there is simply no mandate to trash the climate. We need to come together to stop them,” says James Shaw. More
MFAT's decision to remove te reo from correspondence before new Ministers are sworn in risks undermining the important progress the public sector has made in honouring te Tiriti. "We are very disappointed in what is a backward decision - it simply seems to be a Ministry bowing to the racist rhetoric we heard on the election campaign trail," says Marcia Puru. More