RNZ NATIONAL. NINE TO NOON 3/07/2020

Rights Information
Year
2020
Reference
A306895
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
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Rights Information
Year
2020
Reference
A306895
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Nine to Noon
Place of production
New Zealand/Aotearoa
Categories
Radio
Broadcast Date
3/07/2020
Production company
Radio New Zealand
Credits
Newsreader: Nicola Wright
Presenter: Lynn Freeman

From nine to noon every weekday, Kathryn Ryan talks to the people driving the news - in New Zealand and around the world. Delve beneath the headlines to find out the real story, listen to Nine to Noon's expert commentators and reviewers and catch up with the latest lifestyle trends on this award-winning programme.

Nine To Noon for Friday 3 July 2020:

9:08 Cervical cancer - smearing smears 9:25 Hong Kong pro-democracy campaigner Bonnie Leung 9:40 Ted talks - Smart toys and the security risk to children 9:50 Pacific correspondent Koro Vaka'uta 10:07 From Uganda to Auckland - A dance teacher's journey 10:35 Book review - The Winter Agent by Gareth Rubin 11:06 Music review with Grant Smithies 11:30 Sports commentator Dana Johannsen - unravelleing the ETNZ mess 11:50 The Week that Was.

Cervical cancer: smearing smears
A prominent women's health expert says women are needlessly getting cervical cancer. Professor Bev Lawton from Victoria University of Wellington's Faculty of Health says the cervical screening programme is failing women, and a less invasive test should have been introduced three years ago. Professor Lawton's team has received funding to trial DIY HPV screening in partnership with Hawke's Bay iwi Ngāti Pāhauwera. Twice as many Māori women register as having cervical cancer as non-Māori. Professor Lawton says the home HPV test, coupled with technology that delivers almost instant results, will make a big difference to wahine presenting for screening, especially in rural areas.

Hong Kong pro-democracy campaigner Bonnie Leung
More mass pro-democracy demonstrations are expected in Hong Kong this weekend over the Beijing-imposed security law which critics say ends freedoms guaranteed for 50 years after British rule ended in the territory in 1997. The legislation allows for punishments of up to life in prison for crimes of secession, collusion, terrorism or subversion.US lawmakers have unanimously approved new sanctions which penalise banks doing business with Chinese officials and the United Kingdom has offered a path to citizenship for up to three million Hong Kong residents. Lynn speaks with pro-democacy campaigner Bonnie Leung, in Hong Hong.

Ted talks: Smart toys and the security risk to children
They might look cute and inviting, but a researcher is warning consumers to look carefully at the smart toys they're buying for children. Nicole Girvan is a researcher at Auckland University of Technology who's looked at the security risks that can come with toys that can connect in various ways to the internet. While her research found parents had expectations their privacy was being protected, that's not always the reality. She joins Lynn to talk about what parents should keep in mind if their children are using such toys.

Pacific correspondent Koro Vaka'uta
RNZ's Pacific news editor talks to Lynn about Fiji looking to a "Bula Bubble" as country faces economic crisis.

From Uganda to Auckland: A dance teacher's journey
Dr Alfdaniels Mivule Basibye Mabingo could technically be described as a dance teacher - but his lessons are wider than that. Bucking the family trend of law and engineering, he fell instead into dance studies at university in his home country of Uganda. He'd applied for a scholarship to study law, but was given one for dance instead. The unexpected gift has turned into an educational journey that's taken him from Uganda, to a second masters degree at New York University to a PhD at the University of Auckland. He's just joined Auckland's teaching staff as a lecturer in East African-style dance, and joins Lynn Freeman to talk about how he challenges his students to examine their own backgrounds and rationalisation of the world through dance.

Book review - The Winter Agent by Gareth Rubin
Jane Westaway reviews The Winter Agent by Gareth Rubin, published by Penguin Books NZ.

The Reading
The Writer's Festival, part 5. Written by Stephanie Johnson, read by Judith Gibson.

Music reviewer Grant Smithies​
Rough, raw, dirty and loud, the new compilation from Auckland's 1: 12 Records was released last week "just in time to kick-off your first Level 1 house party". We'll hear two tracks from that today alongside gems from Jamaican vocal group Wailing Souls and 70's U.S. soul-jazz pioneer, Lonnie Liston Smith.

Sports commentator Dana Johannsen - unravelling the ETNZ mess
Dana talks to Lynn about the murky waters surrounding Emirates Team NZ's finances, the details of plans for a North versus South rugby match and there's more drama in the Warriors camp.

The week that was
Our comedians Te Radar and Pinky Agnew with some levity at the end of the week.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/ninetonoon/20200703