Canterbury Earthquake update
Audio, Radio New Zealand
Canterbury Earthquake updateRadio New Zealand Head of News Don Rood summarises the recent media conferences.
Canterbury Earthquake updateRadio New Zealand Head of News Don Rood summarises the recent media conferences.
The Cowles Stadium welfare centre for Christchurch earthquake evacuees has closed for health reasons.
How much are insurance premiums going to increase by after the Christchurch earthquakes?
Sarah Lockey is a New Zealander in London who is organising a fundraiser for Canterbury earthquake victims.
German pianist and professor of music at Canterbury University previews upcoming earthquake fundraising concert tour of NZ.
Sydney-based NZ soprano who has arranged an Australian fundraising concert for Christchurch earthquake victims.
Public and electoral law professor at Otago University, Andrew Geddis.
The creator of Christchurch's online 'earthquake map' explains its mechanics and its wide appeal around the world.
Daille Rogers is at Hagley Park where people have been evacuated from the central city.
We're joined by the Christchurch earthquake recovery authority head Roger Sutton.
The first police officer at the scene of the collapsed and burning CTV building has recounted harrowing details of his efforts in the hours after the February 2011 earthquake in Christchurch.
Christchurch carpenter Chris Nutfield rescued three women from the collapsed PGC building. He's one of the many to receive a bravery and heroism award one year after the February 2011 earthquake.
The Lyttelton Port Company, owned by Christchurch City Council, will spend $56 million on a new berth for cruise ships, which haven't visited the garden city since the 2011 earthquake.
Mayor of Christchurch, Bob Parker tells Cantabrians to take precautions, and declares a State of Emergency.
Reporter Jessica Horn is at Burnside High School, where a welfare centre has been set up.
The size of Christchurch's devastating February earthquake and its aftershocks have been revised upwards.
Christchurch jazz vocalist performing with many other artists as part of Earthquake fundraising concert in Wellington this weekend.
With us is the chief executive of the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority - Roger Sutton.
Roading contractors are already repairing many Christchurch streets damaged by last week's earthquake.
GNS seismologists explain why the Darfield and Christchurch earthquakes were so damaging and 'punchy'
Legislation setting up the Authority for the Christchurch Earthquake Recovery has passed.
Another landmark hotel in Christchurch has been condemned because of earthquake damage.
Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker says that this earthquake felt as violent as the one in September.
Labour Party leader Phil Goff is outside the Pyne Gould building - where people are trapped inside.
The Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority's manager of demolitions, Warwick Isaacs.
Martin van Beynen is an award-winning journalist with the Christchurch newspaper The Press. His book, 'Trapped: Remarkable Stories of Survival from the 2011 Canterbury Earthquake' documents the experiences of 23 survivors.
The increase began after Christchurch's 2011 earthquakes, but the District Health Board is expecting to face even more challenges following effects of the Port Hills fires and last year's earthquake in Kaikoura.
The cleared site, where 115 lost their lives in the February 22, 2011 earthquake, has been turned into a memorial garden, which is intended to be a place for reflection and rememberance.
The Canterbury Women's Club had their first function since the 22nd Feburary 2011 earthquake last weekend, we speak with their president Margaret Arnald as the club celebrates it's 101st anniversary.
On 22 February 2011, Christchurch police sargeant Dave Harvey was outside the earthquake-damaged Hotel Grand Chancellor on Cashel Street, unsure if anyone was trapped inside. In case they were, he grabbed a can of spray paint and painted 'Help is on the way' in one-metre high letters on the road. Harvey's quick thinking really helped the people trapped in the hotel, says Clare Mackey, producer of the new documentary Help is on the Way.