2005 in New Zealand
At the beginning of 2005, the news was dominated by the recent "Boxing Day Tsunami". New Zealanders gave time and $25 million (money and goods) for relief in the areas affected.
The Foreshore and seabed legislation came into effect and was criticised by a UN committee.
The general election was the first contested by the MÄori Party and Destiny New Zealand. It resulted in the continuation of the Fifth Labour Government of New Zealand.
Incumbents
Regal and Vice Regal
Government
The 47th New Zealand Parliament continued. Government was a coalition between Labour and the Progressives, with United Future supporting supply votes. At the 17 September election, the government arrangements changed considerably. The Labour-Progressive government is now supported by New Zealand First and United Future, both with their leader as a minister outside Cabinet.
Non-Labour Ministers Jim Anderton (Progressives) (within Cabinet)
- Winston Peters (New Zealand First) - Minister of Foreign Affairs, Racing and Associate Minister of Senior Citizens during the 48th Parliament (outside Cabinet)
- Peter Dunne (United Future), Minister of Revenue and Associate Minister of Health during the 48th Parliament (outside Cabinet)
Opposition Leaders
Main centre leaders
Events
January
February
- 22 February: Social Development minister Steve Maharey announces that seven benefits will be merged into one, with supplements available for accommodation, disability, and childcare. The benefits replaced include unemployment, sickness, disability, and the domestic purposes benefit. The new benefit will apply from 2007 but trial areas will pilot the scheme from May 2005.
March
- 5 March ā 10 March: The Prince of Wales tours New Zealand. The most controversial incident was two women baring their breasts to him, in protest against a misreported objection by the Prince to a topless Aborigine dance in Australia, and the temporary closure of a breast cancer screening caravan due to security concerns during the visit.
- 12 March: The United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination states that the Foreshore and seabed legislation discriminates against MÄori by extinguishing the possibility of establishing MÄori customary title over the foreshore and seabed, and by not providing a means of redress.
- March: Easter road toll the highest for several years.
April
- 4 April: Government member of parliament John Tamihere is involved in a major scandal after speaking candidly and scathingly about his fellow Labour MPs to a reporter (an interview which Tamihere claims was off-the-record). Further details of comments made at the interview were released a week later.
- 12 April: John Tamihere is censured by the Labour Party caucus for his earlier comments, but was not asked to resign from the party.
- 12 April: Northland farmer Paul McIntyre is acquitted of charges of careless use of a firearm. He shot at the vehicle of three thieves who were fleeing after attempting to steal his farmbike in 2002, injuring one of them. An earlier jury found him not guilty of reckless behaviour but could not agree on this charge.
- 21 April: Bus drivers in Auckland working for Stagecoach have voted to strike for six days from 5 May in support of their claim for an extra $2 an hour.[2]
- 21 April: 700 coal miners strike for the day in the first national coal miners' strike in New Zealand for more than a decade. The miners want a 6% wage increase, but their employer, Solid Energy, is offering 2.8%.[3]
- 26 April: The Civil Unions and Relationships Acts come into force. These Acts allow same-sex and de facto couples to form legal unions similar to marriage.
May
- 3 May: An Airwork Fairchild Metro III explodes while flying from Auckland to Woodbourne, about 5 km east of Stratford. The plane had two pilots and was carrying courier parcels. Both men were killed. Residents in the area report hearing a loud noise, with some seeing a fireball and falling debris. Wreckage is spread over a 15 km area.[4]
- 6 May: 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 am NZST and there was nobody on board the wagons or crane.[5]
- 6 May: 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".[6]
- 10 May: 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.[7]
- 14 May: 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.[8]
- 17 May: 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.[9]
- 18 May: Fierce storms lash the Bay of Plenty, forcing the declaration of a state of emergency and the evacuation of homes in Tauranga and Matata.[10][11]
- 24 May The appeal of six Pitcairn men who were sentenced for sexual abuse of young girls fails. An Auckland court has continued their bail until their appeal to the Privy Council is heard, most likely in April 2006. (BBC)
June
- 2 June: New Zealand electricity supplier Meridian Energy announces plans to build one of the world's largest wind farms at Makara, west of Wellington. The farm is planned to have 70 turbines, each over 100 metres high, and to generate 210 MW, which would be sufficient to power the whole of Wellington, Porirua, and Lower Hutt.[12]
- 4 June: At the start of the Queen's Birthday long weekend in New Zealand, rain, snow and ice closed several major highways. State Highway 1 (known as the Desert Road) was closed in the morning between Waiouru and Rangipo in the central North Island, and State Highway 4 between Wanganui and Taumarunui was also closed for some time. A series of slips in the Manawatu Gorge has caused delays to traffic. The year's first major snowfall in Dunedin has caused problems for motorists there.[13]
- 10 June: New Zealand MP Sue Bradford introduces a private member's bill to outlaw the smacking of children. The present law requires that physical discipline of a child use no more than "reasonable force". As a private member's bill, this will be a conscience vote.[14]
- 14 June: The New Zealand High Commissioner to Canada, Graham Kelly, apologises to all New Zealanders for remarks he made to a Canadian Senate committee in April. Kelly insulted MÄori, Pacific Islanders and Asian immigrants to New Zealand in an attempt at humour.[15]
- 18 June: Brian Tamaki, leader of the Destiny Church, was ordained as a bishop on the church's seventh birthday.
- 20: June Two fibre-optic cables failed in the southern North Island of New Zealand, cutting Telecom New Zealand's cellular and internet services, disrupting EFTPOS transactions, and closing the New Zealand Stock Exchange for five hours.[16]
- 22 June: 500 residents of the town of Takaka in the northern South Island are evacuated after a major fire at the town's dairy factory. Evacuation was through fear of an explosion in vats containing caustic soda and sulphuric acid, which could have released toxic gases.[17]
- 24 June: The New Zealand cricket team announced that it would tour Zimbabwe in August, despite calls for a boycott due to Operation Murambatsvina. The New Zealand government will not stop the tour going to Zimbabwe, but says a return tour by the Zimbabwe team will not be welcome.
- 26 June: The Israeli Foreign Minister, Silvan Shalom, apologises to New Zealand for the actions of two Israeli citizens, believed to be Mossad agents, who attempted to gain New Zealand passports under false pretences in 2004. The apology allows diplomatic relations between the two countries to return to normal.[18]
- 30 June: Prince William arrives in New Zealand for an 11-day tour. This was his second trip to New Zealand; he was nine months old on his first visit. During the visit he follows the Lion's tour and has several official engagements.[19][20]
- June and July: The British and Irish Lions rugby tour of New Zealand. The tourists lost all three Test matches to the All Blacks, but won all their other games except the one against New Zealand MÄori.
July
- 7 July The High Court of New Zealand rules that the delays in processing Unitec's application to become a university breach the New Zealand Bill of Rights and that the application should have been considered in 2000.
- 14 July: Graham Capill, former leader of Christian Heritage Party, is sentenced for nine years for sexual abuse of 3 young girls.[21][22]
- 16 July: Bishops of the Catholic Church in New Zealand call for the boycott of the CanWest television channels C4TV and TV3 in protest against C4TV's showing of the irreverent cartoon Popetown.[23]
- 17 July: Heavy rain causes flooding in the Coromandel Peninsula of New Zealand, leaving the holiday town of Pauanui cut off when part of the access road washes away.[24]
- 18 July: Air New Zealand is forced to cancel about 30% of its international flights after flight attendants begin the first of a series of 48-hour strikes. The third strike was called off but flights will not return to normal until Tuesday 26 July.[25]
- 24 July: Former Prime Minister David Lange is in a serious but stable condition at Middlemore Hospital. Lange has suffered from amyloidosis for some years.[26]
- 25 July: The date of the New Zealand general election, 2005 is set for Saturday 17 September.[27]
- 31 July: The New Zealand First party launches its New Zealand general election, 2005 campaign with a promise that no pre-election coalition deal will be made. Party leader Winston Peters says the campaign issues are immigration, law and order, senior citizens, trade, and MÄori affairs.[28][29]
- 26 July: The New Zealand Parliament voted by a substantial margin to ask the New Zealand cricket team to abandon next month's tour of Zimbabwe.[30]
- 30 July: Shelley Mather, the New Zealand woman killed in the 7 July 2005 London bombings, has her funeral at St Matthew-in-the-City in Auckland. Prime Minister Helen Clark attends.[31]
August
September
- 3 September: The New Zealand team wins four gold medals in the five events they entered in the World Rowing Championships in Gifu, Japan.[46]
- 3 September: The All Blacks defeat Australia's Wallabies 34-24 in the final match of the 2005 Tri Nations Series, and win the title for the sixth time. (SMH)
- 4 September: The ACT party kicks off its election campaign with Rodney Hide claiming that the only way National can form a government is with its help.[47]
- 8 September: Don Brash, leader of the New Zealand National Party, admits that he knew about anonymous pamphlets distributed by members of the Exclusive Brethren attacking the Labour and Green Parties.[48]
- 10 September: New Zealand sold the Skyhawk ground attack and Aermacchi trainer aircraft to an unnamed American company. The planes were put into storage after the disbanding of the Air Force combat wing in 2001.[49]
- 14 September: The Ombudsman forces Treasury to release details of alternative costings for the Labour Party's proposed interest-free student loan scheme. Treasury estimated the scheme would cost $390 million in its third year, but Labour's estimates put the cost at $300 million at that point.[50]
- 14 September: Winston Peters reveals old sexual harassment allegations against his National Party rival in Tauranga, Bob Clarkson. Clarkson claims the allegations were the result of a misunderstanding, but talks about his crotch to a female reporter. (Stuff)
- 15 September: The centre of Tauranga is shut down for 13 hours after a man threatens to blow himself up with a bomb in a hotel. The man, who was upset that he could not get a visa to stay in New Zealand, was arrested just after midnight. The bomb was fake. (Stuff)
- 17 September: A light plane, stolen from Ardmore Airport in Auckland, crashes in the Waitemata Harbour near St Heliers, after the pilot threatens to crash into the Sky Tower.[51][52]
- 17 September: General election: election night figures give Labour 50 seats, National 49, New Zealand First 7, Greens 6, MÄori Party 4 (all electorate seats, an overhang of 2 because party vote earned them only 2), United Future 3, ACT 2, Progressives 1. National leader Don Brash refuses to concede defeat because there are over 200,000 special votes to be counted. (Elections New Zealand)
- 20 September: Helen Clark orders an inquiry into Associate Justice Minister Taito Phillip Field's assistance to a Thai overstayer's work permit application. The Thai man retiled the roof of Field's house in Samoa.[53]
- 24 September: A flotilla of 100 boats meets the Interisland ferry Challenger (Kaitaki) protesting the speed it travels through the Marlborough Sounds. Protesters claim the ferry's wake damages the shoreline. (Stuff) [54]
- 25 September: Green MP Keith Locke walks down Broadway wearing only socks, shoes, a G-string, and body paint, to fulfill a promise he rashly made during the election campaign.[55]
- 30 September: Donna Awatere Huata, a former ACT Member of Parliament, is sentenced to two years nine months in jail for stealing from a MÄori trust for disadvantaged children. Her husband is sentenced to two years.[56]
October
- 1 October: General election special votes are counted and announced: National drops to 48 seats, others unchanged (as the MÄori Party vote share raised its quota to 3, thus overhang of 1). Helen Clark confident she can form a government within 2 weeks. (NZ election results)
- 4 October: Three existing Cabinet Ministers, George Hawkins, Paul Swain and Marian Hobbs, announce they will not be seeking new Cabinet posts once a new government is formed.[57]
- 5 October: Television New Zealand announces it will not renew the NZ$800,000 contract of its newsreader, Judy Bailey, who has presented ONE News for 18 years and has been called "The Mother of the Nation".[58]
- 6 October: A New Zealand District Court rules that HIV-positive people need not tell sexual partners about their status so long as safe sex is practiced. (NZ Herald) (Stuff)
- 14 October: Divers from New Zealand's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) examine the port of Picton for signs of sea squirts, an invasive species which could wreck the mussel farming industry. Sea squirts have also been found at Auckland and Lyttelton.[59]
- 15 October: The Kiwis inflict a surprise defeat on the Australian Kangaroos in the Tri Nations rugby league tournament, defeating Australia in Sydney for the first time since 1959. (ABC News)[60]
- 17 October: Helen Clark announces the formation of a Labour-led Government. The Progressive Party is in coalition. New Zealand First and United Future support the government and are each given ministerial positions outside Cabinet.[61]
- 19 October: Helen Clark announces the New Zealand Cabinet members. Deputy Prime Minister Michael Cullen retains Finance and takes Tertiary Education. Jim Anderton is now the third ranked minister, responsible for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry. Annette King takes Police.[62]
- 19 October: Transparency International ranks New Zealand second equal on its list of least corrupt countries in the world. Australia ranks ninth. (Transparency International)
- 30 October: Ian Fraser resigns as CEO of Television New Zealand after the board of directors insists he become involved in negotiations over salaries of top news presenters.[63]
November
December
- 8 December: One year after the Smokefree Environments Amendment Act was passed, the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation releases a report showing that there has been no reduction in the number of bar patrons or bar takings. There has been an increase in the number of non-smokers at bars and cafes. Rural pubs may have suffered a loss of patronage.[65] (Stuff).
- 9 December: To control the spread of the Didymo algae, the whole of the South Island is declared a controlled area. All items, such as boats, fishing gear, clothing, and vehicles, that have been in a stream, river or lake, must be cleaned before they enter another waterway.[66]
- 14 December: King Kong, Peter Jackson's remake of the classic movie about a giant ape, premiers in Wellington. King Kong was filmed in New Zealand. (NZ Herald)
- 15 December: The first successful prosecution under the Smokefree Environments Amendment Act at the Timaru District Court. The defendant, Geoff Mulvihill, received a NZ$9,000 fine (and $6000 in costs).
- 15 December: Bob Clarkson keeps his electorate seat, after the High Court rejects Winston Peters' petition alleging he had spent more on campaigning for the seat of Tauranga than is allowed under the Electoral Act. The Act prescribes a campaign spending limit of $20,000 per local candidate. Peters' petition alleged that Clarkson had spent more than $100,000. The High Court found that he had spent only $18,159. (NZ Herald)
- 19 December: Air New Zealand makes 110 staff redundant in Auckland as it prepares to outsource most of its heavy maintenance. A further 507 staff will find out the status of their jobs in February 2006.[67]
- 21 December: The Government abandons the proposed carbon tax after the New Zealand First and United Future parties opposed it. The Government says the tax would not be effective at lowering emissions. The tax was supposed to help New Zealand meet its obligations under the Kyoto Protocol.[68]
- 21 December: The minimum wage will increase from NZ$9.50 to $10.25 per hour for adults, and from $7.60 to $8.20 for under-18 year olds. The increases take effect on 27 March 2006. (NZ Herald)
- 27 December: The Treaty House at Waitangi is superficially damaged when a man drives a car into it. The Treaty of Waitangi was signed in the grounds of this house, and it has been the focus of protests over recent decades. (Stuff)
Arts and literature
Awards
- Catherine Chidgey wins the Robert Burns Fellowship.
- Montana New Zealand Book Awards
- Montana Medal: Douglas Lloyd Jenkins, At Home: A Century of New Zealand Design
- Deutz Medal: Patricia Grace, Tu
- Reader's Choice: Julie Le Clerc and John Bougen, Made in Morocco
- First Book Awards:
- Fiction: Julian Novitz, My Real Life and Other Stories
- Poetry: Sonja Yelich, Clung
- Non-fiction: Douglas Wright, Ghost Dance
Music
- New Zealand Music Awards:
- Album of the Year: Fat Freddy's Drop - Based on a True Story
- Single of the Year: Breaks Co-Op - The Otherside
- Best Group: Fat Freddy's Drop - Based on a True Story
- Breakthrough Artist of the Year: The Checks - What You Heard
- People's Choice Award: Fat Freddy's Drop - Based on a True Story
- Songwriter of the Year: Dave Dobbyn - Welcome Home
- Best Rock Album: Shihad - Love is the New Hate
- Best Urban/Hip Hop Album: P-Money - Magic City
- Best Music Video: Chris Graham & Dei Hamo - We Gon Ride
- Best Male Solo Artist: P-Money - Magic City
- Best Female Solo Artist: Yulia - Into the West
- Highest Selling NZ Album: Yulia - Into the West
- Highest Selling NZ Single: Dei Hamo - We Gon Ride
- Best Producer: Angus Mcnaughton & Sean Donnelly - Southern Lights (SJD)
- Best Engineer: Angus Mcnaughton - Southern Lights (SJD)
- Best Dance/Electronica Album: Del Rey System - Del Rey System
- Best Classical Album: Dan Poynton - The Complete Piano Music of Douglas Lilburn, Volume 1
- Best Classical Album: Jonathan Lemalu - Opera Arias
- Best Album Cover: K. Futialo, A. Morton, G. Osborne & A. B. White - Break It To Pieces (Tha Feelstyle)
- Best Aotearoa Roots Album: Fat Freddy's Drop - Based on a True Story
- International Achievement Award: Evermore
- International Achievement Award: Scribe
- International Achievement Award: Finn Brothers - Everyone Is Here
Television
Radio
Film
Internet
Sport
Athletics
- Matt Dravitski wins his first national title in the men's marathon, clocking 2:22:03 on 5 June in Christchurch, while Shireen Crumpton claims her first as well in the women's championship (2:37:24).
Basketball
Cricket
- March: New Zealand cricket team beaten in test and ODI series by Australia.
- December: New Zealand cricket team beaten 2-1 in an ODI series for the Chappell-Hadlee trophy, but New Zealand sets a world record by successfully chasing a target of 332 runs in the final game.
Golf
Horse racing
Harness racing
Thoroughbred racing
Rowing
Rugby league
Rugby union
- 9 July - The All Blacks complete a 3-0 whitewash of the touring British and Irish Lions.
- 3 September: The All Blacks defeat Australia's Wallabies 34-24 in the final match of the 2005 Tri Nations Series, and win the title for the sixth time.
- 27 November - The All Blacks defeat Scotland at Edinburgh to become only the second All Black touring team to complete the "Grand Slam" of rugby - beating Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland on one tour (the first being in 1978).
Soccer
Births
Deaths
- 2 January: John Ziman, physicist and humanist.
- 19 January: Bill Andersen, trade union leader.
- 21 January: Neville Scott, 1958 Commonwealth Games bronze medalist in 3 mile race.
- 26 February: Ian Colquhoun, QSM, cricketer.[73]
- 9 March: Brian Turner (RNZN) OBE, DSO, Legion of Merit (US), Navy Commander.
- 23 April: Joh Bjelke-Petersen, Queensland politician.
- 11 May: Bob Stuart, All Black captain and later manager.
- 13 May: Owen Wilkes, peace activist and convicted spy.
- 29 May: Admiral Sir Gordon Tait KCB, DSC, Submariner. Later headed Royal Naval College and became Second Sea Lord.
- 12 June: Sonja Davies, trade unionist and MP.
- 17 June: Jonathan Elworthy, Minister of Lands 1981-84.
- 11 July: Sir John Kennedy-Good, KBE, QSO. Mayor of Lower Hutt 1970-86.
- 21 July: Nick Unkovich, Lawn bowls national title holder.
- 24 July: John Drawbridge MBE, artist and printmaker.
- 5 August: Roy Scott, cricketer.
- 13 August: David Lange, former Prime Minister.
- 16 August: Kevin Smith, conservationist.[74]
- 29 August: Jack Luxton, National MP 1966-87, deputy speaker 1978-84.
- 4 October: John Falloon, National MP and Cabinet Minister.
- 14 October: Peter Brown, Artist [75]
- 5 November: Rod Donald, Green Party co-leader.[76]
- 20 November: Bob Rudd (aged 104). New Zealand's last resident World War I veteran.
- 1 December: Ray Hanna, Former Leader of The Red Arrows.
- 18 December: Doug Dye, microbiologist.
See also
For world events and topics in 2005 not specifically related to New Zealand see: 2005
References
External links
Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:2005_in_New_Zealand 2005 in New Zealand] at Wikimedia Commons