Son to be buried week after dad

Posted on 16th November 2008 by Sydney News in news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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Son to be buried week after dad

By FLORENCE KERR – Monday, 17 November 2008

Renee Metu will bury her partner, Kupa Tearoa, today not far from where the family buried his father less than a week ago.
Mr Tearoa was found dead in his Tokoroa home last Wednesday.
His father, Nooanga Mataora Tearoa, died after a heart attack the previous week and was buried at the Tokoroa Lawn Cemetery last Tuesday.
He had been stabbed but police are not treating his death as suspicious.
The couple had only been back in New Zealand six months after moving from Melbourne. It is same cemetery where Mr Tearoa was to be laid to rest today.
"He would sing his favourite island songs while our daughter Alexis would dance around," Miss Metu said.
The death of Mr Tearoa, described as a doting dad and at times an affectionate "teddy bear," has shocked the town's close-knit Cook Island community. I know I am going to miss that so much.
"He loved his culture."
In the early hours of last Wednesday morning Mr Tearoa kissed Renee, their children Jon-Haze, 3, and baby Alexis and told Miss Metu that he was going back to Dreghorn Pl, where his family were celebrating his late father's life. . I thought nothing of it at all. "He told us he loved us, then went.
"I went to go and get the rubbish from the bathroom."
Later that morning Miss Metu woke to prepare breakfast for her children and put the rubbish out. I thought gosh he has drunk heaps and crashed out on the floor, so I ran outside to bang on the window and still nothing.
"I banged on the door and couldn't get in.
"I just screamed."
Miss Metu knew something was wrong so went back inside and kicked the door open. I quickly grabbed him and Alexis and ran to his mother's place on Dreghorn Pl to tell them. I didn't realise my son was behind me.
She said she felt like a suspect with both she and Mr Tearoa's family interviewed by police."
She said the hours after finding Kupa were a nightmare.
She was thankful of the support the town had shown her and her children.
She was thankful of the support the town had shown her and her children.
"It has been overwhelming."
But she said family parties would never be the same again.
"He was the life of the party. He would make everyone laugh to the point where you would end up in stitches.
"I think that's what attracted me to him."
A funeral service for Mr Tearoa was to be held at St Lukes Pacific Island Church before his burial.

Child rapist already in jail for sex crimes

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Child rapist already in jail for sex crimes

Friday, 07 November 2008

A Napierman found guilty of sexually abusing two young girls was already behind bars awaiting sentence for abusing another two girls.
An interim order for name suppression was lifted yesterday. Richard Miller was waiting to be sentenced for sexual offending when a jury this week found him guilty of raping a young girl and abusing another. He had been barred from associating with anyone under 16.
Miller has been in custody since April when his electronic bail was revoked after it was found he had breached bail conditions by holding birthday parties for toddlers.
He was found guilty of committing an indecent act on the six-year-old in a car at Nelson Park on September 19.
Miller, 46, was found guilty in the High Court at Napier on Wednesday of six charges relating to girls aged 6 and 10. Five other convictions, including two of rape, involved a 10-year-old girl and occurred in 1990.
He was convicted on two representative charges of indecently assaulting two girls, aged 15 and 16, between February 2006 and February 2007.
His other convictions came after an earlier trial in August. The 16-year-old had stayed with Miller and his wife for a short time.
The 15-year-old was a family friend.
He is due to be sentenced on December 16 – eight days after he is due to be sentenced in the High Court on the other convictions.
Miller was found guilty on August 14 after a two-day trial in Napier District Court.

Teen seriously injured in Auckland hit and run

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Teen seriously injured in Auckland hit and run

– Friday, 31 October 2008

West Auckland police are appealing to the public for help after a teenager was seriously injured in a hit and run.
Police are calling for sightings of a silver Subaru Legacy that was involved in the Tuesday night accident on Henderson Valley Road. .
He remains in a critical condition in Auckland Hospital.15pm.
Waitemata Police communication manager Kevin Loughlin said thedriver did not stop after hitting the man, fleeing towards Te Atatu South.
None of the man’s friends were injured.
The car, which is thought to have been stolen, was recovered by police early on Wednesday morning on Glynbrook Road just off Roberts Road.
Police say a large number of people would have witnessed the vehicle’s movements between Henderson and Te Atatu.
Loughlin saidcar's front plastic bumper and front windscreen were extensively damaged in the incident.

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Anyone with sightings or other information are asked to contact Senior Constable Karl Bevin at the Waitematä Police Serious Crash Unit on 09 481 0307

Many students bored in class

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Many students bored in class

– Tuesday, 28 October 2008

More than half of 14-year-old Kiwi schoolchildren are often bored in class, a new survey shows.
Schools are so interested in the new figures they are buying reports to compare how engaged their students are compared with the rest of the country.
The New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER) survey of about 8500 students from more than 50 schools was released in the Seeing Yourself in Science report issued late last week.
A scale measured student attitudes to school.
It shows students lose interest in school as each year passes from Year 7 to Year 10. By Year 10, both boys and girls dropped to 53. . A score of 55 was the level at which students said they were often bored in class.
The report says there is an emerging trend for disengagement with science learning in Year 7 and 8 students.
"If you had anybody scoring down around 20 at the bottom of the scale, you would have to say that they would be very sad students who probably had some things going on in their lives that were nothing to do with school at all," said Rose Hipkins, a NZCER chief researcher and co-author of the report.
Students who left school at 16 had started disengaging in early primary years. Disengagement from science sat within a general trend to disengagement from school.
Hipkins said that while the number of students reporting boredom was a concern, there were also positive sentiments expressed by the same students.
"At 12, the young people who left school by 16 were giving up, playing up and increasingly alienated, and this trend was even more marked at age 14," the report says. A score of 55 included sentiments that their culture was treated with respect, they were proud to be at the school and their classes were not a waste of time. A score of 55 included sentiments that their culture was treated with respect, they were proud to be at the school and their classes were not a waste of time.
"They can get the data for their own individual school and see it compared to the national pattern, so they can get a snapshot of how their students are compared to students nationally," Hipkins said.
Schools were able, for the first time, to buy data about the attitudes of their students.
"They've got hugely more choices than we had.
The report highlights the need for a continued shift in curriculum and teaching methods to respond to the more individualistic "late-modern youth".
"They have a level of flexibility that simply wasn't available to us as a result of the way society was organised. They're used to everything being personalised and individualised for them," Hipkins said."