2007 in New Zealand


The following lists events that happened during 2007 in New Zealand.

Population

  • Estimated population as of 31 December: 4,245,700
  • Increase since 31 December 2006: 36,600
  • Males per 100 Females: 95.8

Incumbents

Regal and viceregal

Government

2007 was the second full year since the election of the 48th Parliament. The government was a [New Zealand New Zealand Labour Party|Labour Party|Labour]-Progressive coalition with supply and confidence from
United Future and New Zealand First in exchange for two ministerial spots outside Cabinet.
Non-Labour ministers

Other party leaders

Judiciary

Main centre leaders

Events

January

  • 3 January – The official Christmas-New Year holiday period ends with the lowest holiday road toll since 1981. Nine people died on the roads.
  • 3 January – An extensive manhunt is launched for convicted murderer Graeme Burton, wanted for breaching parole.
  • 4 January – A large Tegel Foods chicken processing plant in the Christchurch suburb of Sockburn is razed. Authorities rule out arson.
  • 6 January – Graeme Burton is recaptured in Wellington, after fatally shooting one man and wounding two others.
  • 12 January – New Line Cinema announces that it will never work with Peter Jackson again after Jackson's allegations of financial impropriety and breach of contract.
  • 16 January – The Department of Conservation declares the South Island kōkako to be extinct.
  • 17 January – The lawyer for Algerian refugee and alleged security risk Ahmed Zaoui lodges a formal request to be reunited with his family with the Minister of Immigration.
  • 17 January – Sir Edmund Hillary returns to Antarctica to take part in the celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Scott Base.
  • 18 January – Officials in Auckland announce four cases of typhoid have been diagnosed in the South Auckland suburb of Clendon since mid-December.
  • 20 January – The chainsaw used to cut down the sole Monterey pine on One Tree Hill in 1994 is found for sale on auction site TradeMe.
  • 22 January – New Zealand stays resolute as the newly self-installed government of Fiji's military Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama threatens unspecified consequences if sanctions continue.
  • 23 January – Six-year-old Jayden Headley is handed into Hamilton police by his grandfather, after being missing for five months.

February

  • 5 February – Former National Party leader Don Brash's resignation from Parliament takes effect. (wikinews)
  • 5 February – Google removes a number of posts from a blog called CYFSWATCH NEW ZEALAND, at the behest of the government, who allege the blog invites users to 'name and shame' staff at the New Zealand Department of Child, Youth and Family Services. (wikinews)
  • 7 February – former Immigration Minister Tuariki Delamere appears in court to face allegations that he had devised a fraudulent scheme designed to help ineligible Chinese migrants immigrate to New Zealand. He is cleared of all charges on 2 March.
  • 9 February – Ahmed Zaoui's request to have his family join him in New Zealand is turned down by the Minister of Immigration.
  • 10 February – A tour bus crashes near Tokoroa injuring several of the Korean tourists on board.
  • 13 February – Disgraced MP Taito Phillip Field is expelled from the Labour Party caucus after announcing in an interview that he will stand for election at the next general election, either with Labour or as an independent.
  • 28 February – Parliament passes the Unsolicited Electronic Messages Act, making spam originating from within New Zealand illegal. (wikinews)

March

April

  • 1 April – Severe flooding in Northland results in millions of dollars' worth of damage.
  • 2 April – Auckland Hospital reveals that one of its patients is suffering from Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease, and that up to 43 of its patients could be at risk.
  • 3 April – the Bazley Report into police conduct is released, citing "disgraceful" conduct among policemen going back to 1979. The release of the report prompts a public apology from police commissioner Howard Broad.

May

June

July

  • 1 July – Introduction of several government reforms, including 20 hours funded childcare for 3- and 4-year-olds and the KiwiSaver retirement savings scheme.
  • 2 July – Corporal Willie Apiata of the SAS is awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery under fire in Afghanistan. This is the first time the VC has been awarded to a [List of List of New Zealander Victoria Cross recipients|New Zealander Victoria Cross recipients|New Zealander] since World War II.
  • 4 July – The first of a swarm of tornadoes hits New Plymouth. No injuries are reported, but the tornadoes have inflicted major structural damage to buildings in a 140 km radius, and on 6 July, a seven-day state of emergency is declared in Taranaki.
  • 11 July – Major storms cause flooding and cut off communities, leaving up to 50,000 people without power in Northland and the Coromandel Peninsula.
  • 11 July – The Government greenlights oil and gas exploration worth over a billion dollars off in four areas off the Southland coast
  • 12 July – Two New Zealand oil workers kidnapped at gunpoint on 4 July in Nigeria's Niger Delta are released unharmed.
  • 12 July – Spotless dispute – an industrial dispute between contracting company Spotless and 800 of their employees.
  • 23 July – The first Rail Safety Week is held.
  • 30 July – A state of emergency is declared in Otago due to flooding.
  • July – The Springfield Doughnut is installed in Springfield as promotion for The Simpsons Movie.

August

  • 25 August – 69 people are arrested following Undie 500 student riots in Dunedin.

October

  • 13 October – Elections were held for all of New Zealand's city, district and regional councils, and all District Health Boards.
  • 15 October – Police conduct a series of raids across the country, charging 17 people with various firearms offences. They state that they are acting in response to an alleged paramilitary-style training camp in Te Urewera.
  • 16 October – A magnitude 6.7 earthquake strikes west of Milford Sound.
  • 31 October – Cabinet reshuffle prepares Helen Clark's Labour government for the coming election year.

December

Holidays and observances

Media, arts and literature

Music

Performing arts

Television

Film

Internet

Sport

Cricket

see also 2007 in cricket

Horse racing

Harness racing

Motorsport

Netball

Rugby league

see also Rugby league in New Zealand and Rugby league in 2007

Rugby union

Rowing

  • 22–24 June – the second of three legs of the World Rowing Cup is held in Amsterdam. New Zealand rowers win three gold and three silver medals.

Shooting

  • Ballinger Belt –
  • * Mark Buchanan
  • * Bill Tabor, second, top New Zealander

Soccer

Tennis

  • 6 January: Top seed Jelena Janković wins the ASB Classic women's pro tournament held in Auckland, beating Vera Zvonareva 7-6 5–7 6-3 in the final.
  • 13 January: Third seed David Ferrer of Spain wins the Heineken Open men's pro tournament held in Auckland, after he defeated top seed and compatriot Tommy Robredo 6-4 6-2

Yachting

Births

Deaths

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December