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Letters to Editor: water, Al Jazeera, Ardern
Letters to Editor: water, Al Jazeera, Ardern

Otago Daily Times

time18-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Otago Daily Times

Letters to Editor: water, Al Jazeera, Ardern

Today's letters to the editor include discussions concerning the Waitaki District Council, Al Jazeera, and opinions on Dame Jacinda Ardern. Recent opposition to the Waitaki District Council's preferred Water Well Done proposal is probably a reflection of the general lack of trust in the council rather than misinformation. Take the Proposed District Plan. This now legally enforceable plan allows that certain people are allowed to access private properties to cut, dig and build without the landowner's permission within the new wahi tupuna overlays. Conversely the same landowners can be required to consult with and pay whatever fee iwi deem appropriate in addition to council's own consenting requirements. The consulting process was haphazard and ultimately ignored the concerns of affected landowners. To their credit, councillors John McCone, Guy Percival and Brent Cowles opposed the plan which to the detriment of the Waitaki District community was approved in December. One councillor even stated that people affected by the PDP can now "share the same feelings of loss and disempowerment and identity ... caused by the Kemp Purchase of 1848". Our community deserves much better representation than being held liable for what happened over 175 years ago. Mark Hay Oamaru In-house backed I am tired of reading Ben Bell's accusations that Waitaki's decision to nix a joint water company with Gore, Clutha and Central Otago is the "misinformed" decision of only 161 submitters in our public consultation. Out of 300 submitters in the consultation, 85% favoured another option instead of the tie-up with those three districts. Only 15% supported Southern Water Done Well. Sentiment throughout the district was strongly in favour of keeping water in-house. Faced with an election in three months, the Waitaki councillors suddenly realised that public sentiment was so strong that it had to be respected. That's why the vote was 9-2 for continued in-house operation. The Gore councillors are wrong to claim that government required them to approve Southern Water Done Well. There are 19 councils nationwide which have chosen in-house. Minister Simon Watts may be trying to bully councils, but this hasn't scared the stronger councils in the past, nor will it in the future. Mike Sweeney Oamaru No, it's dire Dire wolves, mammoths, moa ... .why? Any effort to bring these back from the dead, at this stage is ridiculous, what you get is nothing like the original. What you get is a Claytons version. As has been shown, the dire wolves are only that in name. They are nothing like the originals, simply a white wolf with a few shredded DNA strands that amount to nothing. If there was going to be money sunk into these sorts of folly projects I would much prefer it be spent on saving our current flora and fauna Graham Bulman Dunedin Higher huts Re the tragic death of Wednesday Davis on Mt Ruapehu (ODT 14.7.25). This is very sad indeed and the circumstances appear to be particularly distressing for the family, and they have my full sympathy. I note however that the Whangaehu has been repeatedly reported as the "highest alpine hut in New Zealand". This is not the case by a significant margin. Whangaehu hut is at an altitude of 2080m while Empress Hut (at the top of the Hooker Glacier at Aoraki/Mt Cook) is at an altitude of 2472m, Plateau Hut (also on Aoraki/Mt Cook) is at 2200m, Centennial Hut (on the Franz Josef Glacier) is at 2400m. Stating that Whangaehu is the highest hut in New Zealand puts an erroneous perspective on the story. Derek Chinn Queenstown Overwhelming news and the bare essentials I watch the Al Jazeera news channel. Their news coverage can be difficult to watch. Images can be overwhelming and leave you questioning why some events on this planet are allowed to continue. The only thing on television at the moment that can put a smile on your face is an advertisement. It shows a naked skier, beautiful snow views and the background music is Age of Innocence by Enigma. It is very peaceful and you have to smile. Lorraine Adams Oamaru Enduring legacy I was horrified to read Neville McLay's letter (ODT 14.7.25). Can it really be true that the stadium will only last another 35 years, especially when you think that most old villas were built between 1890 and 1910. Many will have been renovated in the past 35 years when the houses were already nearly 100 years old. So the stadium is only to last about a quarter as long as the average old villa? George Livingstone Roslyn Boo Sir Ian It is so very sad to see all the knives pointed in direction of Dame Jacinda Ardern, the latest poison from Sir Ian Taylor. The combined threats and personal attacks made on her mainly through the cowardly medium of social media disgusted me. Dame Jacinda succeeded in saving many lives when the country faced a relentless and deadly Covid virus. She was applauded and recognised upon the world stage. The mosque massacre and Christchurch earthquakes, she resolutely and bravely faced up to with utmost dignity sincerity and compassion. Clive McNeill North East Valley Bravo Sir Ian "Better late than never" as the saying goes. Recent comments ridiculing and criticising Sir Ian Taylor about his about-face opinion of Jacinda Ardern just goes to show that changing one's mind and an admission of being wrong, is frowned upon and not appreciated by many. I, however applaud his honesty and bravery in publicly admitting his previous error in judgement. Joyce Yee-Murdoch Cromwell Boo Sir Ian I was disappointed by Sir Ian Taylor's article on Jacinda. It read like a lovesick virgin teenager's lament on finding the object of their adoration had feet of plasticene and a far-from-saintly past. Most politicians who get the top job, with some exceptions, and Jacinda was no exception, do the best they can with the hand they are dealt. And with impeccable timing she quit when she realised she was no longer the solution but part of the problem. We don't need to look far in the contemporary world to find exceptions who did neither. So we should be grateful. I am absolutely delighted that Jacinda has found things to do and a means of earning a crust, after leaving us Kiwi ingrates for what she must see as greener and safer pastures. I suggest Sir Ian plants his sour grapes in our great Central soil where they can turn to fine wine, and saves his rocks for his own rockery rather than use them as ammunition. Morley Williams Cromwell

Tourism faces drastic funding cut
Tourism faces drastic funding cut

Otago Daily Times

time03-05-2025

  • Business
  • Otago Daily Times

Tourism faces drastic funding cut

Waitaki tourism funding is likely to be slashed by the district council as it trims budgets in the face of a potential double-digit rate rise — throwing the Unesco-accredited Waitaki Whitestone Geopark's future funding in doubt. The Waitaki District Council approved its draft 2025-34 Long Term Plan (LTP) in early February. It subsequently attracted "a record" 650 submissions between February 4 and March 3. However, the original draft proposals would have meant an average 10% rate hike for most ratepayers — and some Ahuriri Ward rural ratepayers were facing a projected 24% rates increase. Now, council staff have been tasked by councillors with finding ways to pare down the LTP's proposed budget allocations to ease the burden on ratepayers. At a council workshop on Monday the mayor and councillors were told a review of 16 in-house digital services projects had now resulted in a more realistic budget. This would see a $5.6million forecast spending slashed from the LTP over the next nine years. To do that, staff had removed $2.2m forecast for the Pathway to Progress project, $1.5m forecast for digitisation property trials and eliminated five projects completely — removing a further $1.9m of forecast spending on digital services projects initially projected through the LTP budget. At the workshop, councillors directed staff to decline $500,000 in funding for tourism promotion. Councillors suggested staff ask the regional tourism promotion team where it could spend funding of just $455,000 over three years. Councillors declined to go along with Tourism Waitaki's suggestion a reduction in funds should be from the Waitaki Business Park and Waitaki Whitestone Geopark. Mayor Gary Kircher recognised the "brutal and tough" nature of leaving the decision of allocating the money to Tourism Waitaki alone. The Whitestone Geopark, Oamaru and Waitaki Visitor Centre, general tourism promotion and the Waitaki Business Park were all in need of funding. Councillors were divided on funding for the Geopark — which requires $200,000 per year for the next three years. Cr John McCone was not a fan of subsidising tourism. "I say this for the simple reason this is a private enterprise. "It's about tourism, which only brings in 4% of the GDP in the district, as opposed to 45%-50% of the primary industries. "I don't see anyone in that business putting their hands in the pocket to actually help support it," he said. Cr Tim Blackler said he disagreed. "I think anyone that thinks the purpose of the Geopark is just solely to deliver tourism [has missed] what the purpose of the Geopark is. "We've really got to familiarise ourselves with what it's meant to represent and in fact what they actually are achieving out in the community at the moment." Other potential LTP savings could be forthcoming after councillors declined to spend a penny on a new $400,000 toilet strategy. The workshop also directed staff to look at removing $17,000 a year for the Gardens Aviaries by 2027. Mr Kircher said given the state of the current aviaries, "it's probably done". Councillors were in agreement, with Cr Jim Hopkins summing up the feeling: "It's a substandard facility." "It is not what one would establish as an aviary if you were building it new," he said. "I think there is an element of cruelty in keeping those birds here, even though they're probably acclimatised." Cr Hopkins said it "warrants us closing it", as attitudes and standards of animal welfare had changed.

JFK assassination-related docs lift secrecy veil from CIA covert ops
JFK assassination-related docs lift secrecy veil from CIA covert ops

AllAfrica

time20-03-2025

  • Politics
  • AllAfrica

JFK assassination-related docs lift secrecy veil from CIA covert ops

These materials are reproduced from with the permission of the National Security Archive. On the day of President John F. Kennedy's inauguration in January 1961, '47 percent of the political officers serving in United States embassies were CAS' – intelligence agents working under diplomatic cover known as Controlled American Sources, White House aide, Arthur Schlesinger Jr. reported in a Top Secret memorandum on 'CIA Reorganization.' In the U.S. Embassy in Paris, 123 'diplomats' were actually CIA undercover agents; in Chile, 11 of the 13 Embassy 'political officers' were CIA undercover operatives. 'CIA today has nearly as many people under official cover overseas as [the] State [Department] – 3900 to 3700,' Schlesinger reported to President Kennedy. 'About 1500 of those are under State Department cover (the other 2200 are presumably under military or other non-State official cover).' (Document 1) The memorandum, declassified in full for the first time, is part of a final release of records on the Kennedy assassination under the Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992. Pursuant to a directive from President Trump on January 23, the National Archives released 2,182 records (63,400 pages) in two tranches on the evening of March 18 and noted that more would be released as they were digitalized. The new release includes hundreds of CIA records as well as White House and NSC documents relating to covert operations abroad – particularly in Latin American nations such as Cuba and Mexico, which are fixtures in the history of the Kennedy assassination. Most of them were released before but with key redactions to protect intelligence sources and methods and covert operations abroad from being revealed. For the first time, these records on CIA covert operations are being released uncensored. Among the revelations are completely unredacted copies of: A key document from the CIA's famed 'Family Jewels' series describing 'examples of activities exceeding the CIA's charter,' including a CIA counterespionage operation against the French embassy in Washington, DC, that included 'breaking and entering and the removal of documents from the French consulate' and Director of Central Intelligence John McCone's dealings with the Vatican, including Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VI, which 'could and would raise eyebrows in some quarters.' (Document 4) The CIA Inspector General's report on the 1961 assassination of Rafael Trujillo, dictator of the Dominican Republic, revealing the names of CIA officers and others who assisted in the plot. (Document 6) A series of summaries of briefings by DCI John McCone to members of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB) that provide more details about known CIA political action programs and previously unknown details about 'the Agency's covert financial support to political parties in the fight against communism' around the world. (Document 2) A CIA inspector general report on the workings of the CIA station in Mexico City providing one of the most detailed views of how the CIA organizes its operations on the ground. (Document 3) A history of CIA operations in the Western Hemisphere covering 1946-1965, including expenditures by CIA stations in Latin America, and details on CIA payments and influence operations in Bolivia to orchestrate the election of their chosen candidate General René Barrientos. (Document 5) 'There is no doubt that the JFK Records Act has advanced public knowledge of CIA covert operations – who they targeted, how they were conducted and who conducted them – more than any other declassification in the history of access to information,' said National Security Archive senior analyst Peter Kornbluh, who has studied CIA operations for decades. 'Without this law and its implementation over the last 27 years, these operational CIA files would likely have stayed Top Secret for eternity.' Comparison of page from 1964 CIA history of Mexico City station. The JFK Records Act Congress passed the 1992 JFK Act in the wake of a public uproar over Oliver Stone's popular conspiratorial movie, JFK. The film – starring Kevin Costner as New Orleans District Attorney James Garrison, who mounted a failed, conspiracy-driven prosecution of a local businessman for killing Kennedy – finished with a statement that over five million pages of records on the assassination remained secret. 'The suspicions created by government secrecy eroded confidence in the truthfulness of federal agencies in general and damaged their credibility,' noted the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) in its final report. 'Finally, frustrated by the lack of access and disturbed by the conclusions of Oliver Stone's JFK, Congress passed the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 (JFK Act), mandating the gathering and opening of all records concerned with the death of the President.' After the JFK Act was passed, the National Security Archive played a role in advising the five-member oversight board and its staff to establish a broad definition of an 'assassination-related' document. The ARRB mandated the full release of thousands of documents related not only to the immediate crime, but on covert action and espionage operations in Cuba, and Mexico, among other countries, and on FBI operations and the mafia. To date, the documents have produced countless revelations of the CIA and FBI's operational histories. CIA expenditures in Latin America by country for FY 1961. (See Doc 5) 'The Review Board has worked hard to obtain all records relating to the assassination of President Kennedy and to release the records to the fullest extent possible to the American people,' the Assassination Records Review Board members wrote in a letter to President Clinton in September 1998, when they turned in their final report. 'We have done so in the hope that release of these records will shed new evidentiary light on the assassination of President Kennedy, enrich the historical understanding of that tragic moment in American history, and help restore public confidence in the government's handling of the assassination and its aftermath.' The National Security Archive is just starting to sort through this treasure trove of new revelations. Watch this space for future postings on CIA operations and much more. Click on a title for full-sized document and discussion: Document 1 Arthur Schlesinger Jr. to President Kennedy, 'CIA Reorganization,' Secret, June 10, 1961, 5 pp. Jun 10, 1961 Source National Archives, JFK Assassination Records, 2025 release, Doc ID: 157-10002-10056 Compare to 2023 release. Document 2 CIA, Minutes from Meetings of the Presidents Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB), Top Secret, various dates from 1962-1963, 41 pp. 1962-1963 Source National Archives, JFK Assassination Records, 2025 release, Doc ID: 104-10302-10000 Compare to 2023 release. Document 3 CIA, Extracts of Inspector General's Survey of Mexico City Station, Secret, 1964, 11 pp. 1964 Source National Archives, JFK Assassination Records, 2025 release, Doc ID: 104-10301-10010 Compare to 2022 release. Document 4 CIA, Walter Elder 'Family Jewels' memorandum for William E. Colby, 'Special Activities,' Secret/Sensitive/Eyes Only, June 1, 1973, 7 pp. Jun 1, 1973 Source National Archives, JFK Assassination Records, 2025 release, Doc ID: 104-10303-10007 Compare to 2023 release. Document 5 CIA Historical Staff, 'Western Hemisphere Division, 1946-1965,' Secret, December 1973, 24 pp. Dec 1973 Source National Archives, JFK Assassination Records, 2025 release, Doc ID: 104-10301-10001 Compare to 2023 release. Document 6 CIA Inspector General's Report, 'Trujillo Report' [Report on Assassination of Dominican Dictator Rafael Trujillo], Secret-Eyes Only, Undated [Circa Spring 1967], 64 pp. Spring 1967 Source National Archives, JFK Assassination Records, 2025 release, Doc ID: 104-10214-10034 Compare to previous release. Related links Final Report of the Assassination Records Review Board Understanding the CIA: How Covert (and Overt) Operations Were Proposed and Approved during the Cold War Mar 4, 2019 The Family Jewels: The CIA, Secrecy, and Presidential Power book by John Prados The CIA's Family Jewels Jun 21, 2007 LITEMPO: The CIA's Eyes on Tlatelolco Oct 18, 2006

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