May 2005 in Australia and New Zealand

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Monthly events, 2005

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[edit] May 31, 2005 (Tuesday)

[edit] May 27, 2005 (Friday)

[edit] May 26, 2005 (Thursday)

[edit] May 25, 2005 (Wednesday)

[edit] May 24, 2005 (Tuesday)

[edit] May 21, 2005 (Saturday)

  • An intellectually handicapped man has been forced to leave New Zealand town of Whitby after being falsely accused of being a paedophile in an anonymous leaflet. (Stuff)

[edit] May 20, 2005 (Friday)

[edit] May 19, 2005 (Thursday)

  • The State of emergency has been lifted in Tauranga. Fifteen houses were badly damaged by the flooding and slips. The settlement of Matata also declared a State of Emergency on May 18 and is still in place. Another 120 mm of rain is expected overnight. (BOP Times) (NZ City) (Newstalk NB)

[edit] May 18, 2005 (Wednesday)

  • A State of emergency is declared in Tauranga after 309 mm of rain fell in the 24 hours up to 4 p.m. NZST on Wednesday. Several houses have been damaged by mud slides and 200 people have been evacuated. (TVNZ)

[edit] May 17, 2005 (Tuesday)

  • Australian pop singer Kylie Minogue announces she has been diagnosed with the early stages of breast cancer and is postponing her upcoming Australian tour. (SMH) (The Age) (BBC) (NineMSN)
  • David Benson-Pope stands down as New Zealand's Associate Education Minister after three people alleged that he had administered cruel punishments to them while he was a high-school teacher in Dunedin. Benson-Pope has previously denied the allegations in Parliament. (NZ Herald)
  • A convicted child sex offender has agreed to leave the New Zealand West Coast town of Blackball after protesters started a vigil outside his house. The man had a medium to high risk of reoffending and had not acknowledged that his crimes were wrong. He will be charged with breaching his release conditions as he did not seek permission to move to the town. (Stuff)

[edit] May 16, 2005 (Monday)

[edit] May 15, 2005 (Sunday)

[edit] May 14, 2005 (Saturday)

  • Telecom New Zealand is planning to increase security for its voicemail service after a hacker managed to access the voicemail famous New Zealanders such as Dick Hubbard, Auckland mayor. Telecom's public affairs manager was only aware that his own voicemail had been accessed after being told by a computer journalist. The voicemail of several policemen was accessed. (NZ Herald) (The Inquirer)

[edit] May 13, 2005 (Friday)

[edit] May 12, 2005 (Thursday)

  • Wrongfully deported Australian citizen, Vivian Solon, was reunited with her Filipino sister, Cicile Solon, who is to care for her. Vivian Solon plans to return to Australia and be reunited with her children. The family has not ruled out suing for compensation. Australian Prime Minister has again offered a qualified apology, calling the case "sad". (ABC)
  • New Zealand MPs begin to debate whether the drinking age should be raised to 20, from 18. It was lowered in 1999. (Stuff)
  • Sydney's fresh water supply will be exhausted by 2008 if action is not taken before then to reduce consumption and/or increase supply, a New South Wales government report says. (Reuters)
  • Livestock on Waiheke Island continue to be checked every 48 hours by vets for symptoms of Foot and Mouth disease. Vets however caution that if the disease was released on Monday, then symptoms would not start to appear until Friday. This is also the day that the letter sent to the Prime Minister Helen Clark said that the disease would be released in the rest of New Zealand. The alert has cost millions of dollars. (Stuff) (TVNZ)

[edit] May 11, 2005 (Wednesday)

[edit] May 10, 2005 (Tuesday)

  • The Stagecoach bus company has offered a deal to its drivers, who have been on strike in Auckland for the last six days. The deal is subject to approval by the drivers at a stopwork meeting tomorrow. (NZ Herald)
  • A letter sent to the New Zealand prime minister alleges that foot and mouth disease has been released on Waiheke Island. The letter writer threatens further releases unless tax reforms are made. While the letter is considered likely to be a hoax, a farm on Waiheke is quarantined. New Zealand has been free of the foot and mouth virus to date. (NZ Herald)
  • New Zealand First leader Winston Peters has said he will not help the government identify anymore undesirable foreigners who have entered New Zealand. Peters has in the past weeks identified several Iraqis who have entered the country including a former Iraqi government minister. (Stuff) (NZ Herald)

[edit] May 9, 2005 (Monday)

  • Hobart's Risdon Prison remained in lock down after a 41 hour siege by inmates demanding better conditions. The siege ended at 8:00 a.m. AEST after the release of a prison guard overnight. Officials said charges would be laid. (ABC News)
  • A planned four day strike by New Zealand radiologists could cause the closure of nine public hospitals according to hospital managers. The strike which will run from May 23 to May 27 will see 420 staff walk off the job. Apex, the radiologists union wants a minimum salary of about $40,000. (Stuff) (TVNZ)
  • New Zealand Police are thankful that a collision between a 40 tonne petrol tanker and another truck was not more serious. The accident killed the driver of the truck and happened at 5.40 a.m. on State Highway 1 at Meremere. The tanker remained upright and didn't rupture, releasing its 30,000 litres of fuel. (NZ Herald) (Stuff)

[edit] May 7, 2005 (Saturday)

  • Risdon Prison in Hobart, Tasmania, is "locked down" after a siege by a group of 20 inmates. The group took control of the prison's reception area and held hostage a prison guard and other inmates, in protest of poor conditions. (ABC News)
  • A New Zealander is arrested by Australian police in relation to a drug syndicate that has seen nine people arrested in Bali. The 21-year-old is unemployed and pregnant and is accused of conspiracy to import heroin into Australia. (Stuff)

[edit] May 6, 2005 (Friday)

  • Fifteen people die in a plane crash near the Lockhart River in the Australian state of Queensland, the worst civilian air disaster in Australia in 36 years. (ABC Online)
  • Australian Prime Minister John Howard has made a qualified apology to an Australian citizen who was deported to the Philippines in 2001. The woman, who was born in the Philippines, is yet to be located. (WikiNews)
  • Graeme Fraser, the chairman of the New Zealand Qualifications Authority resigns after State Services Commission report into the 2004 NCEA scholarship exams. There was a wide discrepancy between the number of scholarships awarded in Arts subjects compared to Science subjects. The report laid most of the blame on NZQA. It said they failed to "see that wide variability in scholarship results could undermine the credibility of the exams". (Stuff) (NZ Herald)
  • A bridge near Wairoa on the East Coast of the North Island collapsed sending two train wagons and a crane on the East Coast into the Nuhaka River below 9 metres below. The accident which happened at about 7:30 a.m. NZST and there was nobody on board the wagons or crane. (TVNZ) (Stuff)
  • New Zealand's Minister of Fisheries, David Benson-Pope, has ordered the country's 35 squid boats to return to port from their sub-Antarctic fishing grounds. He said that the boats were breaking a voluntary code of practice designed to protect seabirds. Once in port an independent observer would be placed on board to monitor the boat's actions. Conservationists claim that 10,000 birds a year are drowned after getting caught in the nets. (Wikinews) (TVNZ) (Stuff)

[edit] May 5, 2005 (Thursday)

[edit] May 4, 2005 (Wednesday)

[edit] May 3, 2005 (Tuesday)

[edit] May 2, 2005 (Monday)