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Judith Collins looking into how Australian warship was able to knock parts of New Zealand offline

Judith Collins looking into how Australian warship was able to knock parts of New Zealand offline

RNZ News4 hours ago

HMAS Canberra.
Photo:
ABC News / Department of Defence
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon remains unaware of how an Australian warship was allowed accidentally to knock out mobile internet access across Taranaki and Marlborough last week.
Navigation radar interference from HMAS Canberra, the Royal Australian Navy's largest warship, disrupted 5 GHz wireless access points on Wednesday as it sailed through the Cook Strait.
The interference triggered in-built switches in the devices that caused them to go offline,
ABC News reported
- a safety precaution to prevent wireless signals interfering with radar systems in New Zealand's airspace.
Luxon told
Morning Report
on Monday he was yet to have an explanation how the situation was allowed to happen, but he was "sure" Defence Minister Judith Collins would find out.
He said it was not a "deliberate" act from the Australians.
"Look, we are very pleased that they're here. They are our only ally. We work very closely with the Australians, as you know, I'm not sure what's happened here. Again, that'll be something the defense minister will look into."
Asked if it had exposed a vulnerability in our communications network, Luxon said it was "the nature" of it.
"There's a whole bunch of technology… in the defence space and the cyberspace and how wars are being fought, and will be fought in the future will be a big component of it…
"Judith Collins will be checking into that and understanding exactly what has happened there, but I'm very proud of that relationship. I'm very proud that they're here. It's great that they've come."
The blackout came the same week "human error"
knocked out fibre-based internet to much of the lower North Island
.
Communications Minister Paul Goldsmith
told RNZ last week
he would be discussing the Australian warship situation with officials.
Helen Clark and Don Brash.
Photo:
RNZ
Also last week, two former prime ministers and an ex-governor of the Reserve Bank put their names to a letter questioning the government's foreign policy - in particular "positioning New Zealand alongside the United States as an adversary of China".
It was signed, among others, by Helen Clark, Sir Geoffrey Palmer and Dr Don Brash, questioning whether New Zealand was risking its economic and trade relationship with China by
aligning itself closer with the US
.
"Like 192 other countries, we've got an independent foreign policy. There'll be lots of different views on foreign policy, I get that," Luxon told
Morning Report
.
"But, you know, frankly, my job as prime minister is to advance our national interests - that is both… around our security and our economic interests. And I think you've also got to acknowledge that the strategic environment from 25 or 35 years ago is very different from what we have today, and it will continue to evolve."
He said he disagreed with the view that working more closely with the US on defence, under the adversarial Trump administration, would sour New Zealand's relationship with China.
I think, you know, we have important relationships with both the US and China. We will make our own assessment based on our own needs, as to, you know, how we navigate those relationships.
"But in both cases, you know, we have, you know, deep engagement and cooperation. We also have differences with the US - we've raised concerns around tariffs. With the Chinese, we've raised concerns around cyber attacks on our parliamentary system."
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'Government doesn't really know what's going on'- rural ISP boss after warship blocked signals
'Government doesn't really know what's going on'- rural ISP boss after warship blocked signals

RNZ News

timean hour ago

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'Government doesn't really know what's going on'- rural ISP boss after warship blocked signals

HMAS Canberra. Photo: AFP A Taranaki internet provider says the government is failing rural New Zealanders by not responding properly to one of last week's internet outages, in particular one caused by a visiting Australian warship. Interference from the HMAS Canberra took out internet and radio services in Taranaki and Marlborough on Wednesday as it sailed into Wellington. Matthew Harrison, managing director of Taranaki Broadband company Primo, said the outage began in the early hours of the morning. "I was quite happily asleep - most people would be at two o'clock in the morning - but [our] alert systems went absolutely nuts with a lot of our access points all going offline and rebooting, and then [staff] raised the alarm to me." While their systems were back online quickly, as the ship continued southwards, it took out other areas, Harrison said. "The poor guys down in Marlborough and Blenheim, it was parked off the coast for most of the day, and it just sat there doing the same thing to them." Harrison said the systems acted as expected - to "vacate channels" for military or aviation radar. But he said internet and phone providers had been asking for years for the spectrum to be increased so different groups were not forced to share frequencies. "Everything that we use for WiFi and mobile coverage and all of that sort of stuff is all using a radio spectrum, and there's only a finite amount that can be shared out for everybody to use… "We've been asking for our own spectrum around this for a long time now, and it's not been forthcoming. And now this is a prime example of what can happen when we're not… afforded the same spectrum as what some of the bigger players may be like, you know, Starlink and Spark and those sort of guys." Prime Minister Christopher Luxon on Morning Report on Monday that Defence Minister Judith Collins ] would be looking into it]. "It seems like the government doesn't really know what's going on," Harrison said. "It's not the fact that, you know, we were taken offline. It's the fact that we don't have spectrum to avoid this happening… the more spectrum that we have, the less likely this is going to happen in the future." He said it should be the job of Communications Minister Paul Goldsmith to sort out, not Collins. Goldsmith told RNZ last week he would be discussing the incident with officials. The blackout came the same week "human error" knocked out fibre-based internet to much of the lower North Island . Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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