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  • MIL-OSI China: Beijing reports reduced water use relative to GDP since 2013: ministry

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, Oct. 17 — Beijing has seen a significant reduction in water use relative to GDP generated by the city over the past decade, the Ministry of Water Resources said Thursday.

    Water use per 10,000 yuan (1,404 U.S. dollars) of GDP generated in Beijing dropped 32.6 percent since 2013 to 9.3 cubic meters in 2023, vice minister of water resources Wang Bao’en told a press conference.

    The consumption of recycled water reached 1.28 billion cubic meters last year, accounting for 31.4 percent of the city’s total water use, said Wang.

    The achievements were made due to Beijing’s continuous efforts to restore the glamour of its rivers and lakes under the guidance of the ministry, which has released a guideline and an action plan on reviving the eco-environment of rivers and lakes nationwide, according to the vice minister.

    The Chinese capital has channeled water to replenish its major rivers since 2018, with 10.42 billion cubic meters of water delivered to the city’s rivers and lakes, official data shows.

    Meanwhile, with continuous efforts to curb groundwater overexploitation, Beijing’s groundwater resources have been recovering since 2015.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: SURFLANT Ships Participate in Historic Sleep Study

    Source: United States Navy

    Sleep is critically important to the overall health and wellness of Sailors. In 2017, based in part on extensive research from the Naval Postgraduate School’s (NPS) Crew Endurance Team, the Surface Navy mandated the use of circadian-based watch rotations. To monitor the success of such policy changes, researchers are using wearable technologies and self-report questionnaires to collect data on the sleep and mental health of Sailors. One such effort currently underway by the NPS team shows great progress in this area.

    For the first time, crew members of three warships assigned to the same Carrier Strike Group are participating in a one- to two-year longitudinal study to examine the sleep habits, health, and wellness both while deployed and in port. Outfitted with nearly 100 Oura rings per crew, the three warships assigned to the Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group will deploy to the 5th and 6th Fleet areas, likely participating in combat operations as they relieve the USS Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group on station. “We have already learned a lot about resilience from the IKESG ships, but having wearable monitors on a large percentage of the crews will take it to the next level” said Dr. John Cordle, Human Factors Engineer for Commander Naval Surface Force Atlantic. “We are excited to participate in this important study,” said Commander Mathew Rechkemmer, Commanding Officer of USS The Sullivans (DDG 68). “Our Sailors lined up to volunteer, exceeding the goal of 75 by leaps and bounds!” In addition to the warships headed out on deployment, the NPS team also enrolled nearly 100 Sailors on USS James E. Williams (DDG 95), currently in a 2-year midlife maintenance availability. “Sleep is critically important to both Sailor well-being and operational readiness, and the shipyard environment can be especially challenging,” said Dr. Chris McClernon, a senior researcher for the study. “This is the first time to collect data on a crew executing import maintenance duties over such a long period of time; we will be able to compare the results to their counterparts executing strike group missions downrange – the results will have a lasting impact.”

    “We are serious about this commitment to better sleep,” said Admiral Joe Cahill, the Commander of Naval Surface Forces Atlantic, “This is the future, with the ability for the Commanding Officer to make data-informed decisions about the readiness of their crew in real time.” It is also about personal responsibility, noted Cahill. “This is leadership saying we care about you, and we want to provide tools to improve your personal performance and well-being”. Cahill praised all four crews for the level of participation. “The team made this happen in the space of four months from me asking if it can be done.” Sailors on the four warships will wear Õura rings, receive sleep enhancement kits as part of a separate effort to help Sailors with eye masks, ear plugs, and a Sleep Hygiene card with tips for healthy sleep, and answer periodic questionnaires on their watch and work schedules. In addition to The Sullivans and USS James E. Williams, the USS Stout and USS Jason Dunham and about 30 members of the Destroyer Squadron Twenty Eight staff are also participating in the longitudinal study. This study is part of a much larger longitudinal study funded by the Defense Suicide Prevention Office (DSPO) that is tracking the sleep and mental health of over 1,000 active duty service members. The results will inform future research and policy concerning sleep, fatigue, and mental health.

    “The study was designed by Dr. Nita Shattuck, a professor of Operations Research at the Naval Postgraduate School, who has been leading this foundational research for decades. Her work has enabled effective policy changes in crew rest and operations across the Department of the Navy. It was fitting that in this major study involving an entire Carrier Strike Group, the study builds on Dr. Shattuck’s work, adding to her team’s legacy of fleet impact and crew safety,” said Dr. Cordle, “Their work over the years has changed the way the Navy stands watch at sea and is beyond measure.”

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: NAS Pensacola CO Signs Proclamation for Domestic Violence Awareness Month

    Source: United States Navy

    The signing took place to bring attention to the resources available to military families impacted by domestic violence and to show solidarity with survivors of domestic abuse and continue a culture where they can feel safe seeking help.

    “Domestic violence impacts not only the victims directly involved, but also undermines unit cohesion, morale and overall operational readiness,” said Shashaty. “By addressing domestic violence proactively, we strengthen our teams and enhance the resilience of our service members.”

    The event, hosted in collaboration with the NAS Pensacola Fleet and Family Support Center (FFSC), aimed to raise awareness and provide support for survivors of domestic violence. FFSC representatives emphasized the importance of addressing domestic violence within the military and offering the necessary services to prevent and respond to incidents.

    “It’s vital that we break the silence around domestic violence and offer resources to those affected,” said FFSC Family Advocate Program Victim Advocate Brittany Oehrle. “Knowing the signs of domestic violence is key and speaking up against it is what we need to do to create safe and healthy spaces for people to come forward.”

    Emergency resources are available for military personnel and their families who experience domestic violence. The National Domestic Violence Hotline provides 24/7 confidential support at 1-800-799-7233. Active-duty service members, their families and reservists on active duty can also access assistance through the Fleet and Family Support Center and the DoD Safe Helpline at 877-995-5247.

    NAS Pensacola, referred to as the ‘Cradle of Naval Aviation,’ is designed to support operational and training missions of tenant commands, including the Naval Aviation Technical Training Center, Naval Aviation Schools Command, the Center for Information Warfare Training, Marine Aviation Training Support Groups 21 and 23 and serves as the headquarters for Naval Education and Training Command.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI China: Nearly 70 pct of autumn grains harvested in China

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, Oct. 17 — The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs said Thursday that 69.5 percent of the autumn grain harvest had been reaped across China, 2 percentage points faster than that of the previous year.

    Over 70 percent of corn, more than 69 percent of the middle-season rice, and around 83 percent of soybeans have been reaped so far, said the ministry.

    At the same time, autumn sowing has been steadily advanced. Over 27 percent of winter wheat and over 42 percent of winter rape have been sown across the country.

    More efforts should be made to support the autumn harvest as well as a bumper harvest for whole year, and consolidate the foundation of grain and oil production next summer, according to the ministry. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: World’s smallest dinosaur egg fossils discovered in China

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    Chinese researchers have discovered a new type of dinosaur egg fossils in east China’s Jiangxi Province, with one measuring just 29 mm in length, the smallest ever found globally.
    Following a three-year study, the team comprising researchers from the Jiangxi Geological Survey and Exploration Institute (JGSEI), China University of Geosciences (Wuhan) and the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences confirmed the six egg fossils dating back to the Late Cretaceous period, over 80 million years ago, as dinosaur eggs.
    The relatively complete, irregularly arranged egg fossils were found in a well-preserved nest at a construction site in Meilin Township in Ganxian District in the city of Ganzhou in 2021.
    Using scanning electron microscopy and electron backscatter diffraction, the team of researchers analyzed the microstructure of the eggshells, and determined that their morphology and microstructure suggest they belong to a non-avian theropod, said Lou Fasheng, chief engineer at the JGSEI.
    The most complete egg has a maximum length of only 29 mm, setting a new record for the smallest dinosaur egg fossil, Lou said. The previously known smallest dinosaur egg fossil was found in China’s Zhejiang Province, measuring approximately 45.5 mm X 40.4 mm X 34.4 mm in dimensions.
    This latest discovery expands the diversity of dinosaur eggs from the Late Cretaceous and offers valuable insights into the evolution of theropods during that period, according to Lou.
    The findings were published online on Monday in the journal Historical Biology.
    Lou said the research team will use micro-CT scanning to reconstruct the burial state of the egg fossils, study their formation process and further pinpoint the dinosaur type that laid these eggs as well as the reproductive methods of the species.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Subdivided units’ renaming necessary

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    (To watch the full press conference with sign language interpretation, click here.)

    Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong said that it is necessary to rename compliant subdivided units (SDUs) as Basic Housing Units (BHUs) to highlight the compliance.

    Mr Wong, who heads the Task Force on Tackling the Issue of Subdivided Units, made the statement today during a press conference to elaborate on key initiatives in the Chief Executive’s 2024 Policy Address.

    A new housing policy, which seeks to categorise SDUs that meet required standards as BHUs, has been proposed in the Policy Address unveiled yesterday. SDUs that meet the required standards will be named BHUs, and owners of substandard SDUs that are upgraded to meet these standards can apply for BHU recognition.

    Mr Wong noted that it is never the Government’s intention to try to resolve housing issues just by coining another name for the SDUs, but renaming such units is a necessary step.

    He explained that under the new policy, the meaning of SDUs will become unclear because while there will be SDUs that have complied with the new requirements, some other incompliant SDUs may still exist in the meantime.

    “Basic Housing Units is very clear – they are all in compliance with the applicable requirements.”

    Separately, Mr Wong said it is unlikely that the new housing policy will lead to a drastic drop in the supply of subdivided flats.

    “Our survey has shown that about 70% of the currently existing SDUs will be able to comply with our requirements with minimal alterations, if any.”

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI China: Beijing issues blue alert for cold wave

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    Beijing released a blue alert for cold wave on Thursday afternoon as the city is expected to embrace a cold wave from Friday to Sunday, with the lowest temperature dropping by over 10 degrees Celsius, according to the municipal meteorological service.
    Zhai Liang, chief forecaster of the municipal meteorological service, said that due to the influence of cold air, Beijing will experience rain, strong winds and significant temperature drops from Thursday to Sunday. The city’s mountainous areas with high altitude are likely to see sleet.
    Starting from Friday night, temperatures in Beijing will decrease by 8 to 10 degrees Celsius. It is forecast that on Sunday, the maximum temperature during the daytime will fall to around 10 degrees Celsius, while the minimum temperature at night will drop to about 3 degrees Celsius, and in mountainous areas, the minimum temperature will fall below 0 degree Celsius.
    The city’s temperatures will rise slowly starting from Oct. 21, Zhai added.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese scientists develop technology for sustainable production of industrial chemicals

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    Chinese scientists have developed a technology for sustainable production of bio-based ethylene glycol (EG), an important bulk energy chemical, with a production capacity of 1,000 tonnes annually, marking a significant step in the green transformation of China’s chemical industry chain.
    This breakthrough will also support China’s sustainable economic development and the realization of the nation’s “dual carbon” goal, which refers to peaking its carbon dioxide emissions by 2030 and achieving carbon neutrality by 2060, according to Zheng Mingyuan, a researcher with the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
    A research team from DICP and SinoSci Bio-EG (Zhengzhou) New Energy Technology Co., Ltd. successfully completed pilot testing of the biomass-to-bio-EG catalytic conversion technology at a scale of 1,000 tonnes annually, which passed evaluation by the China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Federation on Thursday.
    EG, mainly used in the synthesis of polyester fibers, polyester bottles, antifreeze, coatings and pharmaceuticals, has an annual global consumption of over 30 million tonnes. China is a major producer and consumer of EG, with an annual consumption exceeding 20 million tonnes.
    However, EG is primarily produced from petroleum or coal, which has disadvantages such as reliance on non-renewable resources, high carbon dioxide emissions, and high energy consumption. Therefore, the development of green and efficient EG production technologies is urgently needed, Zheng noted.
    In 2008, the research team led by Zhang Tao, an academician at the CAS, pioneered the direct catalytic conversion of cellulose into EG at DICP, establishing a novel pathway for producing bio-based EG.
    In the subsequent years, the team conducted systematic research focusing on fundamental understanding and industrial applications. They achieved significant progress in developing low-cost catalysts, investigating reaction mechanisms, converting raw materials and creating high-efficiency reaction systems.
    In 2022, the team of researchers, in collaboration with SinoSci Bio-EG and other partners, built the world’s first pilot facility for 1,000-tonne bio-EG production through catalysis in Puyang in central China’s Henan Province. The team later carried out technological improvements for the project.
    Zheng explained that the pilot facility employs the biomass feedstock of sugars derived from starch and corn stalks to produce EG through a highly selective catalytic reaction system, combined with an efficient product separation process. The entire process follows a green, low-carbon route.
    With over 40 authorized invention patents, this technology boasts a comprehensive portfolio of independent intellectual property rights, according to Zheng.
    The pilot operation has laid the foundation for the industrial application of the technology at a scale of 10,000 tonnes annually, Zheng said.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Beijing’s 12345 hotline: Helping citizens and businesses

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    The Beijing 12345 Citizen Hotline Service Center, Oct.11, 2024. [Photo by Liao Jiaxin/China.org.cn]
    On Oct. 11, the Beijing 12345 Citizen Hotline Service Center was buzzing with energy. The rhythmic tapping of keyboards echoed through the room, as hundreds of operators were focused on addressing callers’ concerns and crafting tailored solutions for a wide range of needs.
    Each operator works with a “dual-screen” setup: one screen displaying the call management system, the other featuring a knowledge base search interface. “The knowledge base now contains tens of thousands of policies covering all aspects of daily life,” operator Yang Junyao explained.

    The dual-screen setup for operators in the Beijing 12345 Citizen Hotline Service Center, Oct.11, 2024. [Photo by Liao Jiaxin/China.org.cn]
    The center is equipped with a sophisticated real-time data analytics system, presented on a large screen that visually highlights the most common issues reported by the public. Official data reveals that over the past five years, the hotline has processed over 140 million inquiries from citizens and businesses, with a resolution rate of 96.5% and a satisfaction rate of 96.9%.
    In 2019, multiple departmental hotlines in Beijing were streamlined into the unified 12345 service hotline, significantly enhancing the city’s ability to respond swiftly and effectively to the concerns of both citizens and businesses. This initiative is part of a broader effort to refine Beijing’s urban management system in response to the city’s rapid socioeconomic development, incorporating advanced urban management and emergency service practices from around the world.

    A screen presents real-time analytics data at the Beijing 12345 Citizen Hotline Service Center, Oct.11, 2024. [Photo by Liao Jiaxin/China.org.cn]
    Liu Huan, a hotline supervisor with a decade of experience, has observed a shift in the types of issues being reported. “In the past, most calls were about individual problems like power outages or leaks. Nowadays, people also bring up public concerns, such as the need for timely garbage removal in residential compounds,” she said. This shift reflects the growing public expectations for higher standards in urban management and governance.
    Moreover, the 12345 hotline offers streamlined and specialized support services for businesses, such as one-touch direct calling and professional online consultations.
    To enhance its international service capabilities, the hotline began offering support in eight languages in 2008, meeting the diverse needs of the community and better assisting foreign residents, according to Yang.
    The Beijing 12345 service hotline has become a vital conduit for efficient communication between citizens, businesses and the government. The saying, “When in doubt, call 12345 — it works!” has become a common expression among Beijing’s residents, cementing the hotline’s status as a prestigious emblem of the city.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Security: ATF Arrests Armed Robbery Crew After Attempting to Rob Temecula Pharmacy and Fleeing from Law Enforcement

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    TEMECULA, Ca. – ATF arrested several multi-times convicted felons and a Menifee woman earlier this week while attempting an armed robbery following a six-week southern California armed robbery spree.

    Aaron Carter, 39, of Fontana, Calif., Diamond Lucious, 25, of Victorville, Calif., Isaac Penaldoza, 35, of San Bernardino, Calif., and Kamaria Kendrick, 25, of Menifee, Calif., are charged federally with attempted interference with commerce by robbery. The defendants are expected to make their initial court appearances this afternoon in Santa Ana.

    Carter is a multi-convicted felon who was on post release community supervision and was wearing an ankle monitor at the time of arrest – having been recently released from a California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) facility. Lucious, a multi- convicted felon, was on federal probation after being released from federal prison for assault with a deadly weapon, while also on CDCR parole for assault with a deadly weapon. Penaldoza, a multi-convicted felon, was also on post release community supervision for firearm violations.

    Since August, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) Orange County Violent Crime Task Force (OCVCTF) has been investigating a series of armed robberies of pharmacies across Southern California.

    The pharmacy robberies included Delight Pharmacy Robbery, 21230 Ventura Blvd., Woodland Hills, Calif. on Aug. after 28, 2024; Apollo Pharmacy Robbery, 29645 Rancho California Road, Temecula, on Sept. 13, 2024; Mariners Pharmacy Robbery, 320 Superior Ave., #120, Newport Beach, Calif., on Sept. 25, 2024; and Fullerton Express Pharmacy, 105 W. Bastanchury Road, Unit #D, Fullerton, Calif. on Sept. 30, 2024.

    The task force reviewed local police reports related to the pharmacy robberies, surveillance footage, conducted follow up surveillance, and collaborated with other involved law enforcement investigators to identify suspects believed to be responsible for the robberies. The similarities of the robberies included three male suspects entering the businesses wearing hooded sweatshirts and face masks. Two of the suspects were always armed with handguns and would force employees to the ground. The third suspect would grab a trash can from inside the business and put the stolen medications inside. The two suspects, armed with handguns, would steal cash from the registers and violently drag employees around the store, according to the federal affidavit.

    On Monday at about 4 p.m., OCVCTF was conducting surveillance when they observed an attempted armed robbery occurring at Apollo Pharmacy, 29645 Rancho California Road, Temecula.

    Kendrick was observed wearing a medical mask and hat scouting the Apollo Pharmacy by walking around the pharmacy building while on her phone and then driving around the building several times.

    Carter, Lucious, and Penaldoza entered the pharmacy wearing hooded clothing, gloves, and masks while Kendrick waited in the vehicle. All three were observed by ATF running back to the vehicle to flee. The task force attempted to arrest the suspects when Kendrick tried to evade them and struck one of the unmarked law enforcement vehicles. While OCVCTF personnel immobilized the getaway vehicle, a 9 mm pistol was thrown from the car. All four were arrested at the scene without further incident.

    According to the federal affidavit, three of the four arrested had lengthy criminal histories. Carter was first arrested in 2003 for weapons violations. Since then, he has had multiple felony convictions for robbery, burglary and felon in possession of a firearm. Carter was also arrested in Los Angeles County in September, for felony evasion from police while armed with a pistol. At the end of the pursuit, Carter barricaded himself in the vehicle for more than an hour before surrendering to law enforcement. Carter was booked into the Los Angeles County jail where he was released on bail after nine days. The following day, the Newport Beach pharmacy robbery occurred.

    Lucious was released from federal prison a year ago. Lucious was first arrested in 2014, and since has been convicted of carjacking, assault with a deadly weapon, and various firearms offenses.

    Penaldoza was first arrested in 1999. Since then, he has been convicted of sales of narcotics, felon in possession of a firearm, and participating in a criminal street gang.

    The ATF OCVCTF was formed to investigate violent crime, with a focus on serial robberies throughout Southern California. The ATF-led task force is comprised of personnel from the Brea Police Department, the Fullerton Police Department, the Santa Ana Police Department and the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

    Assistant United States Attorneys Kevin J. Butler and Jena A. MacCabe, of the Central District of California, the Violent and Organized Crime Section, are prosecuting this case.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Osceola Man Sentenced to 84 Months in Prison

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    SOUTH BEND – Randolph Ramey, 33 years old, of Osceola, Indiana, was sentenced by United States District Court Judge Cristal C. Brisco after pleading guilty to being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm, announced United States Attorney Clifford D. Johnson.

    Ramey was sentenced to 84 months in prison followed by 2 years of supervised release.

    According to documents in the case, in August 2023, Ramey broke into a business in Mishawaka and was detained while inside. When police arrived and arrested Ramey, they recovered a loaded 9mm firearm from his pocket along with several knives, a rope, bolt cutters, a lock pick kit, and a second loaded magazine for the firearm. Ramey had previously been convicted of a felony offense, and as such, was prohibited from possessing the firearm or ammunition in this case.

    This case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives with assistance from the Mishawaka Police Department, the South Bend Police Department, and the St. Joseph County Prosecutor’s Office.  The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Lydia T. Lucius.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI China: 15 jailed for building collapse in central China

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    A total of 15 people were sentenced to prison in central China’s Hunan Province on Thursday for their roles in a deadly building collapse that claimed 54 lives in 2022.
    The defendants, including the owner of the illegally built and extended building and officials who were found of dereliction of duty, received jail terms ranging from two years and nine months to 12 years, according to their first-instance verdicts by local courts.
    The incident occurred in Wangcheng District in the provincial capital of Changsha on April 29, 2022, leaving 54 dead and nine wounded. The State Council set up an investigation team to look into the incident shortly after it occurred.
    Wu Zhiyong, the owner of the building, was sentenced to 11 years in prison for negligence leading to the incident. He had hired unqualified construction workers to illegally construct and extend the building, which he then leased as an accommodation and catering venue, according to the verdict.
    Despite clear signs of the building’s imminent collapse, Wu failed to organize emergency evacuations, resulting in heavy casualties. He was also convicted of conspiring with others to repeatedly destroy other people’s property, the verdict showed.
    Zhou Zhengmao, former deputy head of Wangcheng District, was handed a jail term of 12 years for dereliction of duty and accepting bribes.
    Others convicted include inspectors from urban management and market regulation departments, as well as shareholders and testing personnel from a company that issued fake documents for the building project.
    The company, Hunan Xiangda Engineering Testing Co., Ltd., was fined 1 million yuan (about $140,400).
    Lawmakers, political advisors and relatives of the victims and defendants attended the sentencing.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Stratford — Stratford RCMP urges public to secure vehicles to prevent theft

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Stratford RCMP have received reports of thefts from vehicles in recent days, all happening within town limits.

    On October 12th, 2024, at approximately 3:50 p.m. a Stratford resident reported valuables stolen from their vehicle parked on Ducks Landing. Stratford RCMP attended and observed parts of the steering column had also been damaged. On October 15th, 2024, at approximately 8:17 a.m. Stratford RCMP were contacted again, by another resident, who discovered their vehicle was broken into on Harland View Drive. Stratford RCMP learned that tools were stolen from the vehicle. Stratford RCMP make routine patrols in an effort to deter property crime; however, PEI RCMP wish to remind residents to avoid leaving valuables in plain sight, and ask that vehicles are secured as best as possible.

    “Property crime impacts a victim’s sense of security and can create financial hardship when people have to replace items,” says Acting Media Relations Officer Cst. Kevin Mackay. “We encourage residents to report any suspicious activity to your local police, and in some instances this may be a requirement of any insurance claims,” adds Cst. Mackay.

    If you have information about crimes in your community please contact your local police or call anonymously to Crime Stoppers 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Check Your Voting Status, IAM!

    Source: US GOIAM Union

    We’re less than three weeks away from Election Day!

    Now is the time to make sure you’re ready to cast your vote this November and connect with your friends, family, IAM siblings and neighbors to ensure they are prepared to participate in the democratic process. 

    Check your voting status today!

    Knowing your status is an important step in making your voice heard in local and national elections. You can find more information about your state’s voting laws and deadlines through Ballot Ready.

    And don’t forget, early voting has already started in some states. Click here to find the early voting schedule in your state.

    Let’s make sure we’re well prepared this election cycle to cast our votes!

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Big changes underway for multi-use Cape Breton facility

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Government of Canada support for upgrades to Canada Games Complex will increase usage, attract premiere events

    October 17, 2024 · Sydney, Nova Scotia · Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA)

    Atlantic Canadian communities flourish when they have vibrant, welcoming public spaces and infrastructure that benefit visitors and residents alike. The Government of Canada is investing to help upgrade and modernize an important community venue in Cape Breton.

    Creation of convention space  

    Today, Mike Kelloway, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard and Member of Parliament for Cape Breton–Canso, announced a non-repayable contribution of $1,500,000 to Cape Breton University (CBU) to revitalize the Canada Games Complex. The announcement was made on behalf of the Honourable Gudie Hutchings, Minister of Rural Economic Development and Minister responsible for ACOA.

    This investment will help CBU purchase equipment to establish a multi-functional event and conference space, including electric vehicle chargers; audiovisual, digital and sound equipment; stage lighting; floor covering; mobile television screen units; and catering equipment for serving large events. Theupgrades will help the Canada Games Complex attract more national and international events, including academic conferences, bringing in more year-round visitors and boosting the regional economy.

    This announcement further demonstrates the Government of Canada’s commitment to help communities seize new and exciting economic opportunities. 

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NEWS: Sanders Announces HELP Hearing on Food Labeling 

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Vermont – Bernie Sanders
    WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 – Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP), today announced that the committee will hold a hearing on December 5 at 10:00 a.m. ET about the urgent need for the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to adequately protect Americans – especially children – from unhealthy foods that are pushed on consumers by the food and beverage industry.
    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the rate of childhood obesity in America has tripled since the 1970s. Today, one out of every five children and over 40 percent of adults in our country are obese.
    “For far too long, the food and beverage industry has been allowed to use deceptive and misleading tactics to entice children to eat foods and consume beverages loaded up with added sugar, salt, and saturated fats that are purposely designed to be overeaten,” said Sen. Sanders. “The FDA can and must do more to ensure that Americans, especially children, teens, and their parents, understand the health risks associated with the consumption of these unhealthy and ultra-processed foods. It is time to make it clear to the food and beverage industry that their profits are not more important than the health and wellbeing of our children. Other major countries around the world have moved forward aggressively in this area and there is no reason as to why the United States is lagging so far behind.”
    The senator sent a letter to FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf and Jim Jones, Deputy Commissioner of the FDA Human Foods Program, inviting them to testify before the committee and discuss efforts made by the FDA to design front-of-package labels that would help consumers understand which products are harmful to their health.
    DetailsWhat: Senate HELP Committee Hearing on Food Labeling When: 10:00 a.m. ET, Thursday, December 5, 2024Where: Room 562 Dirksen Senate Office Building. The hearing will also be livestreamed on the HELP Committee’s website and Sanders’ socials.Who: Witnesses to be announced

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hickenlooper Leads 124 Members of Congress in Letter Urging Preservation of Governors’ National Guard Authority

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Colorado John Hickenlooper
    Letter encourages the inclusion of language amending the proposal to shift Air National Guard personnel to the Space Force in upcoming defense budget
    WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senator John Hickenlooper led 86 representatives and 38 senators, including Senator Michael Bennet and Representatives Jason Crow, Yadira Caraveo, Diana DeGette, Doug Lamborn, Greg Lopez, Brittany Pettersen, Joe Neguse, and Joe Wilson, in a bipartisan letter urging the House and Senate Armed Services Committees to adopt language in the fiscal year 2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would preserve the authority of governors to oversee National Guard forces within their states. 
    “Should Congress strip governors of the ability to manage National Guard units within their states, it would risk fundamentally altering the Guard’s mission and identity, as well as set a concerning precedent whose impacts may be broader than anticipated,” wrote the lawmakers.
    Title 32 of U.S. Code gives governors authority over National Guard personnel in their states. Legislative Proposal 480 (LP 480) would move Air National Guard units with space missions into the U.S. Space Force without obtaining a governor’s consent prior to the transfer. The House NDAA, however, included amendment language that would allow this transfer only if the governor signs off,  protecting the Guard’s Title 32 mission and maintaining over a century of precedent.
    For 120 years, National Guard forces have served under governors’ command in all 50 states and territories. These service members fulfill important functions in the national defense, as well as Title 32 missions in their communities. The U.S. Air Force proposal disregards this longstanding tradition of the National Guard, as well as the choice by members of the Guard to serve in the branch and state of their choosing. 
    National Guard Association of the United States (NGAUS) and Enlisted Association of the National Guard of the United States (EANGUS) oppose LP 480, as do all 55 of the nation’s state and territorial governors, including Colorado Governor Jared Polis. Hickenlooper, Bennet, Crow, Polis, Colorado Lieutenant Governor Dianne Primavera, and Major General Laura Clellan of the Colorado National Guard joined in support of the National Governors Association Council of Governors calling on the Department of Defense to retract LP 480.
    Today’s letter comes after Hickenlooper led a letter with 85 other members of Congress opposing the inclusion of LP 480 in the NDAA and joined in support of the National Governors Association Council of Governors calling on the Department of Defense to retract LP 480. He also led 31 of his colleagues in submitting an amendment to the NDAA to permit the transfer only with gubernatorial approval. However, the amendment was not included in the final package for the Senate bill and did not have the opportunity for floor consideration.
    Colorado is home to a robust Space Force presence and the most National Guard members performing space missions of any state.
    The letter can be found HERE, or below:
    Dear Chairman Reed, Ranking Member Wicker, Chairman Rogers, and Ranking Member Smith,
    As you begin conference negotiations for the FY2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), we urge you to retain the House-passed language regarding the U.S. Air Force’s Legislative Proposal 480 (LP 480) in the final bill. This straightforward and commonsense amendment preserves the statutory authority of governors to oversee National Guard forces under Title 32, while permitting the one-time personnel transfer that the U.S. Air Force requested.
    LP 480 seeks to transfer National Guard members performing space missions into the U.S. Space Force without gubernatorial approval. Such a change would undermine Sections 104 of Title 32 and 18238 of Title 10, which ensure that adjustments to the structure, organization, or mission of National Guard units have the consent of the state’s governor. For over a century, this authority has helped the National Guard fulfill the role of a flexible fighting force, able to respond swiftly to both domestic emergencies and national security needs. Should Congress strip governors of the ability to manage National Guard units within their states, it would risk fundamentally altering the Guard’s mission and identity, as well as set a concerning precedent whose impacts may be broader than anticipated.
    We recognize the urgency of the future threats facing our national security, and we support the Department of the Air Force’s efforts to prepare. We also believe that the desired end can be achieved through dialogue with affected states, without undermining the foundational principles that have guided the National Guard for over a century. This goal is shared by all 55 governors, who voiced their opposition to LP 480 in April letters to Secretary Austin. As this year’s NDAA process did not allow for amendment floor votes in the Senate, a companion measure with 32 bipartisan cosponsors was not able to be considered before the full chamber. To that end, we strongly urge the Senate and House Armed Services Committees to preserve the House-passed protections for governor oversight in the FY2025 NDAA.
    Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The government will finance the implementation of priority investment projects in the Far East and support transportation along the Northern Sea Route

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Order dated October 17, 2024 No. 2883-r

    Document

    Order dated October 17, 2024 No. 2883-r

    More than 14.3 billion rubles will be allocated for the implementation of priority investment projects in the Far Eastern Federal District, as well as for subsidizing transportation along the Northern Sea Route. The order to this effect was signed by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.

    Of the total amount, over 14 billion rubles will go towards launching priority projects, including the implementation of master plans for Far Eastern cities, including Ulan-Ude, Vladivostok, Khabarovsk, Birobidzhan, Magadan, and Svobodny.

    Announcing this decision atGovernment meeting on October 17, Mikhail Mishustin noted that the Government, on the instructions of the President, continues to rapidly develop social and industrial infrastructure in the Far East and the Arctic, create new points of economic growth, and improve the quality of life of people.

    In addition, federal funds will be used to subsidize regular transportation along the Northern Sea Route. 300 million rubles will be allocated for these purposes. They will be sent to shipping companies to compensate for lost income due to preferential tariffs, as well as expenses related to ship calls at ports.

    The work is being carried out within the framework of the federal projects “New Opportunities for the Far East” and “Development of the Northern Sea Route”.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://government.ru/nevs/53029/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Medical school proposals welcomed

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for Health Prof Lo Chung-mau said establishing Hong Kong’s third medical school will be a huge task with very important implications for the future for the city’s medical education, and stressed that the Government welcomes institutes to submit proposals for the new medical school’s development.
     
    While elaborating on the healthcare related measures announced in yesterday’s Policy Address at a press conference today, Prof Lo highlighted that establishing a third medical school will cultivate a positive outcome for the city’s sustainable healthcare service, its high-quality service, as well as its planned mission for a medical innovation hub.
     
    Apart from pointing out that the Government is open to any proposal, he explained that it also has to be very cautious when it comes to planning for the new medical school.
     
    “It involves a lot of resource implications, not just in term of finance, but in the teaching hospital, the faculty facilities. One of the areas is in the piece of land and the potential teaching hospital.
     
    “We are mindful that in Hong Kong, we are short of space, land. Of course, we would welcome the institutes which submit proposals for the development of this new medical school to provide us with a proposal as to how they can start the medical school, what time, the timeline of this plan. Of course, the major issue that we have to consider is the campus, as well as the teaching hospital.
     
    “The institutes that would propose the new medical school can certainly explore other opportunities and possibilities. For example, they can consider any existing hospitals as teaching hospitals or they can find alternative sites to build the campus.”
     
    The health chief added that setting up the new medical school’s campus and teaching hospital in the Northern Metropolis’s Ngau Tam Mei could be a long-term plan, and institutes can consider some temporary facilities in their proposals.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Minister for Development speech at Chatham House

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    UK Minister for Development outlines a new “modern approach to development” in first major speech at Chatham House today

    It is an immense honour and privilege to be here today for the first time as Minister for Development and for Women and Equalities.

    Chatham House of course has a long history of being at the cutting edge of foreign policy and development thinking. It is the perfect place to share my vision for a modern approach to international development. I am delighted to see so many of you here, including so many of our partners – from Gates, to Gavi, to the Global Fund.

    I am proud to be able to say to you all – Britain is back on the world stage, with a minister at the top table, advocating for projects and assistance to advance that goal just mentioned of a world free from poverty on a liveable planet.

    [political content redacted]

    Today is the ‘International Day for the Eradication of Poverty’. Between the late 1990s and the early2020s, the world did make headway in lifting hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. Lives saved and lives changed.

    Many of these gains can never be undone. But as was mentioned the geopolitical challenges now are stark – and progress against the Sustainable Development Goals is stalling.

    We do live in a multipolar world with intense competition. We need to adapt and respond to to that world. The world is different – first – because over the last four years, the number of people in humanitarian need has doubled. A vicious cycle of an unprecedented profusion of conflicts and the climate crisis, which is now compounding the suffering of some of the most vulnerable people in the world. And many women, girls, and marginalised people are experiencing a devastating roll-back of hard-won rights, services, and democratic freedoms.

    I saw this first-hand during my recent trip to South Sudan. In the horrendous conditions of the camp in Bentiu for internally displaced people, I heard heart-breaking accounts from those who were forced to flee the brutal civil war in Sudan, as well as meeting people suffering from South Sudan’s own humanitarian emergency, caused by the legacy of civil war and the climate crisis.

    The conflict in Sudan has now forced more people from their homes than any other conflict – some ten million people. It has pushed nearly nine million people into emergency or famine levels of food insecurity, and as I raised at the UN last month – there is a real risk that without global action to prevent it, the worst famine in several generations could happen on the world’s watch.

    Around the globe, millions of people, who long to return home are beginning to despair that they ever will – including the Syrian refugees I met in Jordan, still there over a decade after they fled the conflict, and so many communities enduring such suffering – from the DRC, to Yemen, Ukraine, and Myanmar, to Gaza and the wider Middle East.

    In all this, political efforts have been vital to get aid in – including our reinstatement of £21m of UK funding to UNRWA, as the only Agency able to deliver at scale in Gaza, and the further £10-million of wider humanitarian support for Lebanon we announced earlier this month.

    By the end of this decade, unless more action is taken, some two-thirds of those living in extreme poverty will be living in fragile and conflict-affected states. At the same time courageous humanitarian aid workers on the front lines of getting help to them around the globe are under attack.

    We have a moral imperative to help turn things around. People everywhere – including the British people – understand instinctively that this is the right thing to do, Compassion, fairness, and refusing to look the other way when someone is in need are all British values. And action is in all our interests as well.

    The new government’s commitment to tackle irregular migration at source is important for those who would otherwise be forced to leave their homes, and important for people in the UK too. That is why, during the European Political Community meeting, the Prime Minister announced up to £84 million for projects across Africa and the Middle East – to address the factors that end up pushing people into small boats.

    The world is also changing because we see new leadership from the likes of President Lula of Brazil, and Prime Minister Mia Mottley of Barbados, on everything from reforming the global financial system, to tackling hunger and poverty around the world – through the emerging G20 Global Alliance for which I was so proud to announce UK support in Brazil.

    I have seen leadership among the women forest rangers who I met in Sulawesi in September. Visiting them gave me an inspiring reminder of the difference we can make to our planet and to peoples’ lives, when we work together as genuine partners – where action to preserve forests also promotes sustainable livelihoods, and where economic development goes hand in hand with combatting climate disaster.

    Today’s world is very different. But as our Foreign Secretary set out, our progressive, realistic approach draws on the same spirit that Ernest Bevin and Robin Cook animated and energised. For our country to once again lead on development, we will need a new, modern approach, based on genuine partnership, trust, and respect.

    It will mean recognising that for our partners, tackling the climate and nature crises is not separate from promoting economic growth and meeting humanitarian need, but intrinsic to both. And it will mean making good on our word, not leaving our partners high and dry and making the most of British talent and expertise to improve peoples’ lives, now and in the future.

    [political content redacted]

    We have to turn the page, if we are genuinely to work in partnership again. Consider that asylum costs, which have spiralled in recent years, at present account for almost 30% of our development spending while the backlog has soared, with people waiting years to receive a decision – which the Home Secretary is now taking action to rectify.

    Consider too that so much of our country’s current international climate finance commitment was backloaded into these final two years – but we are now committed to make good on the promise that the UK will get help to those who need it.

    [political content redacted]

    While we do not underestimate the significance or the complexity of these challenges in the shorter term. Neither should we underestimate our ability to respond under pressure in the long term. The UK has been ambitious on international development before. I am determined it will be again. Of course, that starts with boosting the effectiveness of our efforts.

    I want to thank everyone from the sector who fed into the White Paper, and the civil servants who worked so hard – and I want to reassure you that I value it, as a diagnosis of the problems we face and how UK development can help meet them.

    But I must be clear that we must now prioritise, and provide the strategy and the plan that has been lacking – and that is what I am now building. A core element of this is increasing our capability and capacity.

    The Development Review, led by Baroness Minouche Shafik, is about building on the breadth and depth of development experience, expertise, and innovation represented here today. In addition, we will work closely with the Independent Commission for Aid Impact – making sure our official development assistance reaches those who need it most, and where and when it is most effective.

    [political content redacted]

    Yet we must go further still if we are to shift our approach, quite determinedly – so it is truly modern. First and foremost – that means genuine partnership. Britain is back. Back in business. Back on the world stage.

    And back pursuing our mission of a world free from poverty, on a liveable planet. And my message is that we will work with others, in good faith, to build genuine partnership, underpinned by our respect for other governments, organisations, communities, and individuals.

    That means building shared plans for the future – not imposing our own, and – to quote the Prime Minister – listening a lot more, speaking a bit less.

    This is exactly the approach the Foreign Secretary is taking – as he recently set out so movingly in his speech at Kew Gardens, to friends from across the Commonwealth, and at the United Nations in New York.

    Currently, we are seeing those nations which were unable to industrialise bearing the brunt of the climate crisis – with a terrible cycle of floods, droughts, and hurricanes. Because climate and development are interlinked and interdependent, we will put tackling the climate and nature crisis at the heart of everything we do. Domestically, this government has an ambitious climate policy.

    The drive for cheaper, cleaner power, being led by Ed Miliband, will not only bring down bills here, help us achieve energy security, and meet our goals to decarbonise – it also gives us credibility and expertise abroad, as we lead the response to the climate and nature crisis both bilaterally and through multilateral organisations.

    Secondly – we will champion reform for a global, multilateral system that includes everyone, works for everyone, and is fit for the future.

    [political content redacted]

    That means not just listening to our partners, as a priority – but making sure we take action together. When it comes to the humanitarian and development system that is so stretched, we look forward to seeing Tom Fletcher making the most of his new role as UN Relief Chief, and to working with our partners to take a less siloed, more joined up approach – across everything from climate, to the needs of women and girls, to humanitarian relief.

    And when it comes to finance, time and again, we have heard from small islands and other vulnerable states, how difficult it is to access what they need to pursue their ambitions and priorities, escape the trap of unsustainable debt, and get on a sustainable footing.

    That is why, in his speech to the UN General Assembly, the Prime Minister set out the case for accelerating reform of the multilateral development banks, including shouldering more risk so they can unlock hundreds of billions of dollars so they can do more to unlock hundreds of billions of dollars and do more to build a more sustainable economy and help the poorest.

    Next week I will go to the World Bank Annual Meetings in Washington so they to press them to shoulder more risk so they can unlock the money that is so desperately needed. We will work with our partners – including fragile and climate vulnerable states to help them access more, better-quality, well-targeted, multiannual finance, including for adaptation, through a global financial system that is reformed and ready for the future, and through wider global forums where they have greater representation in the bodies that help shape our shared future – including the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

    We will champion financial innovation – from the insurance and guarantees our partners are seeking, to the Climate Resilient Debt Clauses promoted by the UK, that we are calling on all creditors to offer in their current and future lending.

    Both within government and working with the financial services industry, we will make sure there is more to come – including helping countries tackle the barriers to investment that choke off the flow of private finance.

    On so many fronts, from trade to taxation – globally, momentum is now building for the sort of change we need to see, and we are committed to making the most of every opportunity to urge it ahead.

    That is why at the UN, the Prime Minister called on all donors to make the most of the International Development Association replenishment, as a critical milestone in the fight against poverty.

    It can be bigger, better, and help more people, especially those in fragile states and conflict zones. So, on that basis, under this new government, the UK will be ambitious too – increasing our pledge, and encouraging others to play their part. And as the Prime Minister highlighted at the UN in recent weeks, there are measures that we can crack on with right now, to unlock further resources for sustainability, resilience, and renewal – like a new levy on global shipping that takes account of the true cost of emissions, and puts the proceeds cutting them even further, and helping communities cope with their impacts.

    Third – we will make sure the UK’s expertise and ideas are at the heart of reliable development partnerships. When we work together across development and diplomacy, we maximise our impact – in everything from helping countries harness the opportunities of renewable energy, to reversing the vicious cycle of conflict, to empowering women and girls. This government will be proactive about all that the UK has to offer the world. Our country is brimming with talent and brilliance.

    We are home to research and innovation on everything from nutritious and resilient crops, to new medicines and vaccines, cleaner mining, and emerging technologies. We have world-class universities, finance institutions, and expertise in leveraging private capital into low-income emerging countries – including through BII.

    Both within government and in the City of London, we will make sure there is more to come, Including helping countries tackle the barriers that choke off the flow of private finance.

    We also of course harbour top-tier businesses ready to share their insights and innovation with peers around the world. And we harbour dedicated volunteers in everything from health to education, to search and rescue, to the protection of nature – and so much more.

    We are determined to put this talent and commitment to work, making sure we can connect British expertise and British solutions with international partners, in the spirit of collaboration and partnership.

    And as the Member of Parliament representing a large part of Oxford, a city full of people who have dedicated their entire working lives to serving others in need, this is personal priority for me.

    Fourthly – in doing all of this, the new government will be confident in publicly championing the power of international development – so we all feel the benefits of working together to make headway.

    At a time when the Prime Minister and Chancellor have set us all a challenge to grow our economy and bring opportunity to people across our country, we know our partners around the world share these goals for their countries and their people as well – from clean energy, to protecting and restoring nature – land and sea – and from trade, to tackling illicit finance.

    So that means no more apologising for making progress where we can, and more recognition that putting our best foot forward, in all we do at home and around the world, is in everyone’s best interests.

    Finally – I want to emphasise how much I look forward to working with all of you in the months and years ahead. In the last fourteen weeks, I have seen what development can achieve. From promoting green growth in Indonesia to helping keeping Syrian girls in school in Jordan, to promoting a literal life-line in South Sudan.

    I have seen how the UK can promote modern partnerships – at big global meetings from Rio to New York to Hamburg. And time and again, I have been reminded that as Mandela said, our human compassion binds us to one another, not in pity or paternalism, but in pursuit of our common purpose – of relieving suffering, and reinvigorating hope for our shared future by working towards it together.

    Mandela also said that together, as you all know, we could make poverty history. Well, much has changed since that time, twenty years ago, under a Labour government – for good and for bad.

    But it remains the case that the only way we can tackle shared challenges – from getting help to those in need, to preventing global health crises –i s by working towards it together.

    That is the only way we can make the most of shared opportunities – from reforming the global financial system, to healing the natural world. And that is the only way we can make good on the promises we have made at home as well – from the first duty of government to keep our nation safe, to our mission to grow our economy, so we bring opportunity to all.

    Sadly, there are forces hell-bent on setting the Global North in opposition to the Global South. Yet partnership is part and parcel of how we overcome them, and make sure that those of us who care about our shared future are able to work towards it together – ministers and civil servants, everyone here today, medics, firefighters, teachers volunteering their services, brave journalists, and people up and down our country – including our proud diasporas doing so much for our communities here and their families overseas.

    The British people understand this deeply, and it is extraordinary that even in such challenging times, people find a way to help – I have no doubt that the compassion of the British people will shine through once again now.

    Today, I am delighted to announce that the government will match public donations to a new Disaster Emergency Committee appeal, to help charities do more to get life-saving help to civilians caught up in the conflict in the Middle East, across Gaza, Lebanon and the West Bank, people who find themselves in desperate need of humanitarian relief. This support builds on the humanitarian aid this government has announced for Gaza, Lebanon, and Syria, since July. We will match public donations to the new appeal up to £10 million – and together, we will make a difference.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: “We must show up for Black children in the youth justice system”

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Jacob Sakil, YJB Board Member and race champion reflects on Black History Month, identity, and how he’s showing up for Black children in youth justice.

    Jacob Sakil, YJB Board Member

    I moved from Brooklyn New York when I was 11 years old to Lewisham in South London. My mum was British and after she had my youngest brother decided she wanted us to move back to the UK. The first things I noticed were the differences in language, customs, and culture. My mother’s family heritage is from Jamaica and Cuba, and I was beginning to recognise the links between my identity and my Caribbean roots.  

    I wanted to understand the history of the UK and how it’s applied to my identity. What was interesting, is that Black British history was not covered in school in the same way I learnt about Black American history during my time at elementary school in the US. Some people don’t realise that Black British history is British history – it’s for everyone. It helps us to understand our past and recognise the impact of inequality and inequity, and to understand that children and young adults should be able to show up as their best selves without discrimination. 

    At home, my family would often watch the news together and we would discuss our opinions on things that were happening in the world and what needed to change to make things better and fairer. I loved this because when adults where exchanging ideas, my siblings and I were included. I suppose this is where my interest in social action and community stems from. Recognising that our ideas and dreams were just a valid as any adult’s. These interests led to me campaigning to become elected as the Young Mayor of Lewisham at just 16, and taking a greater role and a greater stake in my community. 

    As an adult, I enjoyed youth work; in fact, it became my passion. I was so motivated by how you could bring change for children and young adults. I wanted to inspire them to better understand their heritage and get a real sense of who they are. As a Black man, the importance of role models is important to me. For professionals in youth justice, those of us from Black communities, it’s vital to show up and show who we are and show our heritage, so children feel represented. It is also about occupying space and giving back to a society which at times may not have always been inclusive but has benefited from the duty and determination of people like the Windrush generation.  

    Becoming a YJB Board member

    This is what brought me to the Youth Justice Board. I wanted to be in spaces and places where decisions are being made and to use my identity and lived experiences to bring a greater impact and influence system change. I use my position on the Board as an opportunity to be reflective and demonstrate how we as professionals must show up for children. This coupled with still being an active Youth Worker is one way of staying grounded and remembering the best solutions come from collective and informed decision making. 

    Just last week I recorded a podcast for the YJB with Ricky Otto from Walsall. He works with children in custody and spoke at the Youth Justice Leaders’ Summit earlier this year. That conversation with him about his journey showed me the richness and importance of telling our stories, and reflected how through telling our stories we can create change within the youth justice system. Speaking to Ricky, I was inspired by his pride and his sense of purpose. The importance to him of fatherhood, and what this means to boys in custody was inspirational. He represents the impact and meaning of showing up in the lives of these children. If you get time, please do listen to the podcast.

    Jacob Sakil and Ricky Otto recording a podcast

    The statistics on overrepresentation of Black and Mixed heritage boys tell me that they are not being seen and not being supported. It is so important to allow the conversation of custody to widen and include a renewed focus on rehabilitation and prevention. We need to look towards their futures, their opportunities and at their potential. These boys are more than just numbers.  

    Black History Month, of all the months, is a great chance to reignite the conversation about what change looks like in the UK. It serves as an annual opportunity to deepen the impact of reflection and inform how we go forward. 

    I am proud to be a Black man. I am proud to work with children and young adults, and I am proud to be a YJB Board member. As part of my role on the Board, I am the lead for Equity Diversity and Inclusion. I am showing up for Black and Mixed heritage boys and girls who are overrepresented in the justice system and working to bring change. I am proud to do this because who we are, our identity and our heritage should and does reflect the richness and diversity of the communities we serve.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Transport Minister celebrates community transport in West London

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Government is committed to improving local transport networks and making them more inclusive to enable vulnerable people to travel safely and confidently.

    • Local Transport Minister, Simon Lightwood, visited Westway Community Transport in West London to celebrate the work of operators across the country
    • Minister heard first-hand how services help passengers to reach hospital appointments on time, shop and socialise
    • follows government commitment to hand bus powers back to local authorities to support the sector

    Elderly and vulnerable passengers that benefit from on-demand bus and taxi services met with Local Transport Minister, Simon Lightwood, in West London today (17 October 2024) to mark Community Transport Week.

    The Local Transport Minister celebrated the work of operators as he visited Westway community transport in Westbourne Park.

    The minister heard first-hand how services step in to fill the gap where users might not be able to use conventional public transport or drive. This provides a lifeline, allowing users to attend vital hospital appointments, undertake important tasks like food shopping and ensure users can see friends and family.

    To support services, the government currently makes up to £3.8 million available annually to community transport operators. As plans to hand back control of bus services to local authorities gather pace, the government is exploring how this initiative can incorporate the community transport sector.

    Under these plans to deliver the biggest overhaul to bus services in a generation, this government wants to grow passenger numbers and offer more frequent, widespread services, with scope for local authorities and community transport providers to work together to achieve this.

    Local Transport Minister, Simon Lightwood, said:

    Community transport services are a lifeline for so many people, which is why I was delighted to visit Westway today to celebrate the incredible work of operators up and down the country.

    We’re committed to improving our local networks, to make them more inclusive and enable vulnerable people to travel safely, confidently and with dignity.

    Community transport plays a vital role in providing these services, so we are working to ensure they are part of the solution.

    At the visit, the Minister also spoke to Westway Deputy CEO, Ryan Price, about ways that the government can further support the great work of operators.

    For 30 years, Westway has played a vital role in connecting communities and improving lives across Kensington and Chelsea, Westminster and Hammersmith and Fulham, serving passengers who struggle to use the tube, buses and other public transport.

    Westway Community Transport CEO, Kathleen Lyons, said:

    We were delighted to welcome Simon Lightwood to Westway Community Transport.

    It’s never been more important to showcase the work of community transport. We’re an essential part of the local transport mix – particularly for those who find public transport difficult to use – and a key component in any plan to tackle loneliness and social isolation.

    Community Transport Association (CTA) CEO, Victoria Armstrong, said:

    CTA are delighted that the Local Transport Minister recognises the importance of CTWeek24 by visiting one of our members.

    Community transport is vital to so many people across the UK and this week we celebrate the range of community solutions to transport barriers across the country.

    I am pleased that the minister was able to celebrate with us and to support what community transport is all about.

    The government is ensuring community transport operators, accessibility groups and professionals in the bus industry are in the driving seat as these plans progress.

    Last week marked another step towards handing control back to local authorities, as a consultation on updating guidance to reduce barriers to franchising closed, with over 70 responses from industry.

    Roads media enquiries

    Media enquiries 0300 7777 878

    Switchboard 0300 330 3000

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Applications for free education for foreign citizens have begun to be accepted

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The selection campaign for the 2025-2026 academic year has started for foreign citizens wishing to study in Russia at the expense of the budgetary funds of the Russian Federation. Registration forportal of the information system will last until January 15, 2025, and all interested parties must submit applications by the established deadline.

    To participate in the selection tests, candidates must register on the specified website and fill out a questionnaire. Those planning to study in graduate school must provide not only a questionnaire, but also a list of published scientific papers and/or a motivation letter. This letter must include information about education, university, specialty, as well as achievements in scientific activity. This will help the commission assess the level of preparation and motivation of candidates.

    The completed application form must be transferred to the status “for verification” within the established timeframe, since applications in the status “draft” will not be considered. Candidates can also provide information about their individual achievements, which will be taken into account during the selection: participation in internships, conferences and other scientific events.

    If any questions or difficulties with registration arise, candidates can contact technical support via their personal account on the website or contact the Rossotrudnichestvo Representative Office in their country.

    Faryal Dehkan, a postgraduate student at the Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade of SPbPU, is studying under the Rossotrudnichestvo quota. Here is what she said about her admission to the Polytechnic University: This is an important step in my life, and like many other students, I experienced mixed feelings of joy and anxiety. The first days on the Polytechnic campus were filled with curiosity about new subjects, teachers and teaching methods. Students here feel like part of a large and diverse group, which inspires us to learn and develop.

    International students are given a unique opportunity to receive a high-level education in Russia and become part of the international university community.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/education/accepting-applications-for-free-training-for-foreign-citizens has begun/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Black History Month 2024 – a message from Christine Jardine MP

    Source: Liberal Democrats UK

    October is Black History Month – a chance to celebrate the Black British community, acknowledge their contributions and discover their stories.

    It feels particularly timely given this year’s theme of ‘Reclaiming Narratives’, which encourages us to challenge how we perceive history and the world around us. We owe an enormous amount to the Black British community for their contributions to our society – not least the Windrush generation’s key role in building the NHS.

    But here in the UK, far too many people’s lives are still blighted by prejudice, discrimination, and inequality. As we saw in the riots this summer, racism is still far too prevalent in our society. We all have a responsibility to recognise this reality – but also the role that we can play in challenging this injustice.

    I’m proud that Liberal Democrats are committed to fighting for racial equality. That means unequivocally condemning racism in all its forms and tackling injustice wherever we see it.

    Take the Windrush scandal, for example. The previous Conservative government utterly failed to deliver the justice that Windrush victims so deeply deserve. They dithered and delayed with implementing the recommendations of the Lessons Learned review, and just last month the Parliamentary Ombudsman found that the Home Office was wrongly denying compensation payments to victims.

    Liberal Democrats will keep pushing to right these wrongs – including by urgently implementing the Lessons Learned review in full, and making the compensation scheme independent from the Home Office.

    And we will strive to put racial equality at the heart of everything we do. Whether that’s bringing forward a specific plan to reduce the disproportionately high maternal mortality rates for Black women, or improving diversity in the workplace and public life.

    As we honour the stories of so many Black pioneers this month, we owe it to them to stand up to hate and injustice wherever we see it.

    Christine Jardine MP

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: UK: David Lammy must use China visit to challenge Beijing’s brutal suppression of human rights

    Source: Amnesty International –

    © AFP via Getty Images

    ‘The Government should ensure that talks on trade and security relations with China aren’t pursued at the expense of human rights’- Sacha Deshmukh

    Commenting on Foreign Secretary David Lammy’s first visit to China expected to take place tomorrow and Saturday, Sacha Deshmukh, Amnesty International UK’s Chief Executive, said:

    “This visit is a crucial opportunity for the Foreign Secretary to demonstrate the Government’s true commitment to challenging publicly and privately Beijing’s brutal suppression of human rights in China and Hong Kong.

    “Behind closed doors but also in public, David Lammy needs to tackle the Chinese government over its systematic, industrial-scale repression of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang and Tibet, its widespread imprisonment of peaceful activists and its completely unacceptable intimidation of students and campaigners here in the UK.  

    “The Prime Minister’s statement that the immediate release of the unjustly-imprisoned UK businessman Jimmy Lai is a UK priority is welcome, and Mr Lammy should also seek to secure the immediate release of fellow prisoners of conscience Hong Kong lawyer-activist Chow Hang-tung and Chinese human rights lawyer Ding Jiaxi, as well as the long-held Uighur economist Ilham Tohti and #MeToo activists Sophia Huang Xueqin and Wang Jianbing.

    “Throughout this trip, the Government should ensure that talks on trade and security relations with China aren’t pursued at the expense of human rights.”

    Long arm of Chinese state repression

    The Chinese authorities routinely target peaceful critics via pervasive online censorship, arbitrary arrest, detention and torture. Human rights defenders, pro-democracy activists and religious leaders and practitioners have been among those subjected to systematic persecution. The widespread repression of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang and Tibet has continued despite significant international criticism.

    In Hong Kong, journalists, broadcasters and book publishers have been among those prosecuted and imprisoned under the territory’s notorious National Security Law and other repressive legislation, while civil society organisations both in Hong Kong and abroad have faced criminal charges or harassment for their legitimate activities. The long arm of Chinese state repression has meant that Chinese and Hong Kong communities in the UK, other parts of Europe and North America have all suffered various kinds of threats and intimidation, part of a sinister pattern of “transnational repression”.

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    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Time for $5: Over 200,000 people support MSF’s call for Danaher to make medical tests more affordable News Oct 17, 2024

    Source: Doctors Without Borders –

    To make sure everyone has adequate access to testing and save more lives, Danaher, the company that owns Cepheid and its GeneXpert tests, must drop the price to $5 for all GeneXpert medical tests sold in low- and middle-income countries. The petition has been signed by 206,937 people from 194 countries. 

    Testing is essential as it’s the first step to diagnosing someone who is sick, getting them on the treatment they need, and preventing further spread of infectious diseases—especially in the places MSF works where health care services are often limited for those who fall ill. Danaher’s GeneXpert medical test is critical for diagnosing diseases at the “point of care,” meaning close to where people live and are seeking medical care. Access to “point of care” testing is critical since laboratories are often scarce in lower-resource settings. The GeneXpert tests are used to diagnose people with diseases like drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB), HIV, hepatitis, sexually transmitted infections, and Ebola.

    “Danaher and Cepheid, it’s time for you to listen to the more than 200,000 people around the world demanding immediate access to affordable lifesaving medical tests for people in low- and middle-income countries,” said Mihir Mankad, director of global health advocacy and policy at MSF USA. “Our research shows that Danaher and Cepheid could charge $5 per test and still make a reasonable profit, so it’s inexcusable that they are still charging more than triple that price in even the poorest countries for most of the tests they produce.”

    More timely diagnosis means more lives saved

    MSF published research in 2019 estimating that each GeneXpert test produced by Cepheid could be sold at a profit for $5 at the sales volumes that Cepheid and Danaher reached long ago. In response to pressure mounted by the Time for $5 coalition and TB activists in September 2023, Danaher announced it would lower the price of the primary test used to diagnose TB from $10 to $8, which was an important first step. According to The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, this price reduction is expected to result in annual savings of $32 million, enabling the purchase of an additional 3.6 million tests every year. This means that many more people with TB will receive timely diagnosis and treatment, and ultimately more lives will be saved.

    However, Cepheid and Danaher intend to continue to charge between $15 and $20 for the same type of test used to diagnose extensively drug-resistant TB ($15), HIV ($15), hepatitis ($15), STIs ($16-$19) and Ebola ($20). These prices are 200 percent to 400 percent higher than the $5 it’s estimated to cost Cepheid and Danaher to make one test and still be able to sell it at a profit. This is especially egregious considering that Danaher and Cepheid benefitted from $252 million in public funding to help develop the product. MSF purchases more than $2 million worth of GeneXpert tests each year for use in its medical programs in approximately 70 countries.

    People cannot wait any longer

    In September 2023, Danaher committed to an annual third-party assessment of what it costs them to make GeneXpert tests—an important opportunity to demonstrate it was not heavily marking up its prices. However, over one year has passed since that promise, and no information has been made available by the corporation about how the audit will be conducted and who will be allowed to see the results.

    “It’s been over a year since Danaher committed to coming clean about what it costs them to make the GeneXpert tests, but all we have so far is deafening silence from the corporation,” said Stijn Deborggraeve, diagnostics advisor for the MSF Access Campaign. “This silence comes even after we published recommendations for how Danaher can ensure the audit is rigorous and transparent. And now, the people who need these tests around the world cannot wait any longer: Danaher must immediately make public the information about its planned audit and ensure affordable access to lifesaving tests.”

    MSF has sent an open letter asking Danaher and Cepheid to respond to the demands and concerns raised in the petition by October 25. 

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Canadian Armed Forces and Partner Nations gather at CFB Gagetown for Exercise ARDENT DEFENDER

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    Over 400 members of the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), alongside soldiers from nine partner nations, are participating in Exercise ARDENT DEFENDER 2024…

    October 17, 2024 – Ottawa – National Defence / Canadian Armed Forces

    Over 400 members of the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), alongside soldiers from nine partner nations, are participating in Exercise ARDENT DEFENDER 2024, a Canadian Army-led international counter-explosive exercise, at 5th Canadian Division Support Base Gagetown in Oromocto, New Brunswick.

    The exercise brings together forces from Canada, Australia, Austria, Belgium, France, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. This training provides an opportunity to strengthen skills and build capacity to counter and dispose of explosive threats, as well as exploit capabilities to counter future threats.

    This year, emerging technologies, such as Uncrewed Aerial Systems and Additive Manufacturing, will be leveraged and integrated into the training to demonstrate ways to enhance operational efficiency and security on a unified front against adversaries.

    Exercise ARDENT DEFENDER is a key activity that allows the CAF and partner nations to incorporate lessons observed from Ukraine and adapt their training.

    “Interoperability is crucial to the Canadian Army’s ability to fulfill Government of Canada objectives, ensure readiness, respond to emerging threats, and meet defence priorities. Exercise ARDENT DEFENDER highlights our commitment to collective security efforts alongside our NATO allies and partner nations.”

    Lieutenant-General Michael Wright, Commander Canadian Army

    Lt Jerome Downey
    Public Affairs Officer, Exercise ARDENT DEFENDER
    Phone: 438-468-7439
    Email: jerome.downey@forces.gc.ca

    Media Relations
    Department of National Defence
    Phone: 613-904-3333
    Email: mlo-blm@forces.gc.ca

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Things to Know: Personalizing your Home Décor with Music Frame

    Source: Samsung

    Next up in our “Things to Know” series, we’re pressing play on a closer look at Music Frame by Samsung, our new customizable speaker that doubles as a picture frame.
    With Music Frame, we’ve introduced an entirely new category of audio designed to make your favorite music or podcasts look as good as they sound. You can use it to display your printed photos or favorite artwork in an 8” by 8” inside the photo mat.1 It can operate as a standalone speaker using Wi-Fi or Bluetooth – and can even sync with your Samsung TV’s audio or soundbar for a more immersive, three-dimensional sound experience. No matter how you choose to use it – Music Frame can transform your living space, beautifully blending functionality and design.

    Make Music Frame Uniquely Yours
    You can easily swap out your favorite printed photos in the Music Frame – using it to showcase pictures from your summer travels, wedding snapshots, or even school graduation memories. Or, you could opt to turn your cherished moments or favorite art piece into a premium, custom 13”x13” acrylic Art Panel, provided exclusively by Shutterfly.2

    Music Frame comes with both a table stand, and wall mount fixture – so you can choose whether to hang it as part of a gallery wall, or set it on a bookshelf.
    New to Music Frame’s customization features is a White Bezel3 option. This White Bezel is magnetic, so you can easily snap it on and off as your aesthetic needs evolve. It provides another way for you to express your style, and curate your space.
    We’ve also introduced a new In-Wall Cable for Music Frame.4 You can use it to hide your power cable securely in your wall, minimizing clutter for a cleaner look that blends perfectly into your home design.

    For an entirely unique and enchanting Music Frame experience, you can also consider Music Frame WICKED Edition – created in partnership with Universal Pictures’ spectacular film adaptation of the spellbinding stage musical, Wicked. Experience magic unleashed with a Wicked edition Photo Frame and three photo cards featuring autographs and images of the film’s beloved characters, including one exclusive picture only available with Music Frame WICKED Edition. It’s also specially designed with a limited edition Wicked-themed bezel and customized Wicked-themed packaging. Sign up now to be notified when Music Frame WICKED Edition is available.

    Amplify Your Personality
    Packing four speakers and two subwoofers, Music Frame creates a rich, expansive sound that fills the room. You can hear balanced audio no matter where it’s setup in your space, thanks to its patented Wide Range Speaker Technology. It also offers multi-dimensional surround sound and a truly immersive listening experience with Dolby Atmos.5 Additionally, with SpaceFit Sound Pro, you get room-filling sound precisely tailored to your unique home. This feature enables Music Frame to analyze your environment and automatically optimize the audio for you, delivering accurate and clear sound.

    Create Perfect Harmony with Music Frame
    Music Frame can seamlessly connect to any TV, soundbar or smartphone via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi, delivering powerful audio no matter your listening preference. Plus, Q-Symphony Technology unlocks an elevated audio experience when you sync Music Frame with your Samsung TV or soundbar. This feature synchronizes your audio across Samsung devices so your TV, soundbar and Music Frame speakers work together as one, providing a perfectly orchestrated experience that envelopes you in every scene or song.6 Streaming music from your Samsung phone to Music Frame is also just a tap away – with Tap Sound technology. Simply tap Music Frame with your phone7 – and start listening.

    Seamless Connections for Smart Integration
    Music Frame is designed with Alexa Built-In8 and supports Chromecast, Airplay, and more. That means you can effortlessly use it as a smart speaker with your favorite voice assistants and services. It can even serve as the centralized home hub to connect your devices and take control of your world. Simply setup Music Frame using the SmartThings app on your phone, and use it to instantly connect and begin controlling your smart home devices.

    Music Frame is available on Samsung.com, the Shop App, at Samsung Experience Stores, and at major carriers and retailers.
    For more information visit: https://www.samsung.com/us/

    1 Included mat holds photos 8″x10″ or 8″x8″; viewable area is 8″x8″.
    2 13”x13” Music Frame Art Panel sold separately. Available for purchase on Shutterfly.com/music-frame-art-panel.
    3 Music Frame sold separately.
    4 Music Frame sold separately. Installation should be performed in accordance with all applicable local, building and electrical codes and ordinances. Refer to the user manual for installation instructions.
    5 Requires compatible source content.
    6 Q-Symphony using the Music Frame is available only when connected with a (1) 2023-2024 Samsung TV, or (2) 2023-2024 Samsung TV and 2024 Samsung Soundbar.
    7 Tap sound is only compatible with select Samsung mobile devices, with Android 8.1 and above. Tap Sound requires SmartThings app to activate and set up. This service only works when Music Frame and mobile are on.
    8 Content Services may vary by region & are subject to change without notification. Amazon, Alexa, and all related logos are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Russia: We Can Do Better

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    October 17, 2024

    Thank you, Andrea, for your kind words. And thanks to all of you for coming.

    Five years ago in this hall I delivered my first curtain-raiser as head of the IMF.

    At that time my main concern was a synchronized slowdown in global growth. Only months later it paled in comparison with the sudden shock of the pandemic, followed by other dramatic events—the tragic wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, the cost-of-living crisis, and a further fracturing of the global economy.

    Next week, the world’s finance ministers and central bank governors will converge here to reflect on where we are, where we are headed, and what to do about it. Let me offer you a preview of what this conversation will look like.

    First, we will cherish the good news—and rightly so, because we haven’t had much of it lately. The big global inflation wave is in retreat. A combination of resolute monetary policy action, easing supply chain constraints, and moderating food and energy prices is guiding us back in the direction of price stability.

    And this has been done without tipping the global economy into recession and large-scale job losses—something we saw during the pandemic and after past inflation episodes, and which many feared we would see again. Both the US and euro area labor markets, to take two examples, are cooling in an orderly manner.

    This is a big achievement.

    Where did this resilience come from? Answer: from strong policy and institutional foundations built over time, and from international policy cooperation as countries learned to act fast and act together. We are benefiting from central bank independence in advanced economies and many emerging markets; years of prudential reforms in banking; progress made in building fiscal institutions; and capacity development worldwide.

    But, despite the good news, don’t expect any victory parties next week—for at least three reasons:

    • For one thing, inflation rates may be falling, but the higher price level that we feel in our wallets is here to stay. Families are hurting, people are angry. Advanced economies saw inflation rates at once-in-a-generation highs. So too did many emerging market economies. But look how bad the situation was for the low-income countries. At the country level and at the level of individuals, inflation always hits the poor the hardest.
    • Even worse, we are in a difficult geopolitical environment. We are all very worried about the expanding conflict in the Middle East and its potential to destabilize regional economies and global oil and gas markets. Its humanitarian impact, alongside the prolonged wars in Ukraine and elsewhere, is heartbreaking.
    • And on top of it all, this is happening at a time when our forecasts point to an unforgiving combination of low growth andhigh debt—a difficult future.

    Let’s take a closer look: medium-term growth is forecast to be lackluster—not sharply lower than pre-pandemic, but far from good enough. Not enough to eradicate world poverty. Nor to create the number of jobs we require. Nor to generate the tax revenues that governments need to service heavy debt loads while attending to vast investment needs, including the green transition.

    The picture is made more troubling by high and rising public debt—way higher than before the pandemic, even after the brief but significant fall in debt-to-GDP as inflation lifted nominal GDP. And do please notice the shaded area in the chart—what it shows is that, in a severe but plausible adverse scenario, debt could climb some 20 percentage points of GDP above our baseline.

    What does this mean for “fiscal space”? To answer this, let’s look at the share of government revenue consumed by interest payments. This is where high debt, high interest rates, and low growth come together—because it is growth that generates the revenues governments need to function and invest. As debt increases, fiscal space contracts disproportionately more in low-income countries—not all debt burdens are made the same.

    And fiscal space keeps shrinking. Just look at the frightening evolution of the interest-to-revenue ratio over time. We can immediately see how the tough spending choices have become tougher with higher debt payments. Schools or climate? Digital connectivity or roads and bridges? That is what it comes down to.

    To make matters worse, we live in deeply troubled times. The peace dividend from the end of the Cold War is increasingly at risk. In a world of more wars and more insecurity, defense expenditures may well keep rising while aid budgets fall further behind the growing needs of developing countries.

    Not only is development assistance too small, but major players, driven by national security concerns, are increasingly resorting to industrial policy and protectionism, creating one trade restriction after another. Going forward, trade will not be the same engine of growth as before. It is the fracturing I warned of back in 2019—but worse. It is like pouring cold water on an already-lukewarm world economy.

    My message today: we can do better.

    As Ajay Banga, President of the World Bank and my dear colleague from across the street, likes to say: forecasts are not destiny. There is plenty we can and must do to lift our growth potential, reduce debt, and build a more resilient world economy.

    Let me start with the domestic agenda. Governments must work to reduce debt and rebuild buffers for the next shock—which will surely come, and maybe sooner than we expect. Budgets need to be consolidated—credibly, yet gradually in most countries. This will involve difficult choices on how to raise revenues and make spending more efficient, while also making sure that policy actions are well-explained to earn the trust of the people.

    Here is the problem though: fiscal restraint is never popular. And, as a new paper by IMF staff shows, it’s only getting harder. Across a wide sample of countries, political discourse increasingly favors fiscal expansion. Even the traditionally fiscally conservative political parties are developing a taste for borrow-to-spend. Fiscal reforms are not easy, but they are necessary and they can enhance inclusion and opportunity. Countries have shown that it can be done.

    Ultimately, over the medium term, growth is key—to deliver jobs, tax revenues, fiscal space, and debt sustainability. Everywhere I go, I hear the same: an aspiration for higher growth and better opportunities. The question is: how?

    Answer: focus on reforms—there is no time to waste:

    • First area of reforms: make job markets work for people. We confront a world of deeply uneven demography: surging young populations in some places, aging societies elsewhere. Economic migration can help, but only up to a point given the anxieties in many countries. So too can supportive steps to help get more women into the workforce. Above all, there is a need for reforms to enhance skill sets and match the right people to the right jobs.
    • Second area: mobilize capital. There is an abundance of it globally, but often not in the right places or right types of investments—just think of all the money from all corners of the globe poured into liquid but less-productive assets in a few major financial centers. Putting savings to work for maximum economic benefit requires policymakers to focus on eliminating barriers such as weak investment environments and shallow capital markets. Financial sector oversight must not only ensure stability and resilience, but also encourage prudent risk-taking and value creation.
    • Third area: enhance productivity. This is what yields more output per unit of input, and there are many ways to raise it, from improving governance and institutions to cutting red tape to harnessing the power of AI. More and better spending on education and R&D help. Among advanced economies, those that lead on innovation show what works: venture capital industries, ecosystems that bring not only financing but knowledge, advice, and professional networks—screening new ideas, identifying winners, feeding them from birth to graduation. There are many lessons for others to learn.

    Globally, the pace of reforms has been slowing since the global financial crisis as discontent has risen.

    But progress is possible. A new IMF study shows that resistance to reforms is often driven by beliefs and misperceptions about the reforms themselves as well as the distributional effects. Reforms are best developed through two-way dialogue with the public, with measures to mitigate the impact on those who risk losing out. We have learnt how much this matters.

    As policymakers pursue reforms at home, they must also look outward.

    There is much that countries can do together as members of an integrated economic community, each benefitting from its own comparative advantage.

    The forces of technology, trade, and capital mobility have delivered a hugely valuable degree of interconnectedness.

    Yet still, we live in a mistrustful, fragmented world where national security has risen to the top of the list of concerns for many countries. This has happened before—but never in a time of such high economic co-dependence.

    My argument is that we must not allow this reality to become an excuse to do nothing to prevent a further fracturing of the global economy. Quite the opposite. My appeal during these Annual Meetings will be: let us work together, in an enlightened way, to lift our collective prospects.

    Let us not take the global tensions as given, but rather resolve to work to lower the geopolitical temperature and attend to the tasks that can only be tackled together:

    • Exhibit one: trade, which has lowered prices, improved quality, and created jobs. Thus far, trade has shown remarkable resilience in the face of new barriers, often flowing around them via third countries. But such redirection is not efficient, nor can we assume it will continue indefinitely. Countries would do well to recognize that the rules-based global trading system delivered many benefits and is worth preserving.
    • Two: climate, where we face an existential challenge, with countries that contributed the least to global emissions now first to suffer. Unexpectedly fast global warming should be ringing alarm bells. The glaciers are melting, the icecaps crumbling. Adverse weather events have telegraphed a frightening message from the future. We know what we must do: create fiscal space for the green transition, eliminate fossil-fuel subsidies, and get capital to where it is most needed. But we must do it!
    • Three: artificial intelligence, our single best shot at higher productivity. IMF research finds that AI, if managed well, has the potential to lift world growth by up to 0.8 percentage points—with that alone, we would go to a higher growth path than in the years before the pandemic. Yet AI is urgently in need of regulatory and ethical codes that are fundamentally global. Why? Because AI is borderless—it is already on smartphones everywhere. We better hurry. This technology will not wait!

    In all these areas and many more, the bottom line is that countries need to relearn how to work together. And institutions like the IMF—born from the basic idea that pooling resources together is efficient—play a vital role.

    In my first term as Managing Director—an unprecedented crisis period—we acted decisively to help our membership. We provided one trillion dollars’ worth of liquidity, and we delivered critical economic analysis and advice that helped policymakers synchronize their actions.

    Now, in the first days of my second term we have delivered again.

    Our Executive Board, in full consensus, has just approved important reforms that reinforce our strong financial position and directly benefit our membership. We are reducing charges and surcharges on our regular lending, and putting in place a comprehensive package that secures our concessional lending capacity to support low-income countries.

    And on November 1 our Board will welcome a third Director for Sub-Saharan Africa, ensuring more voice for what has been an underrepresented region.

    Combined with the fifty percent quota increase agreed at our last Annual Meetings, these actions give us the strength to continue to deliver high value-added to a membership that engages not out of charity but self-interest.

    It is the value we bring to our members that has resulted in our membership growing—and on that note, a very warm welcome to the Principality of Liechtenstein as it joins us as our 191st member!

    From our founding at Bretton Woods in the dark days of 1944 to today, the IMF has established a tradition of adapting to the changing world around it. Today, I give you my word: this will continue. We will stand with our members, always looking for the most impactful ways to serve.

    By the time I complete my second term at the helm of the IMF, I will have led it for most of this decade. And if I were granted one wish, it would simply be this: let not this decade be remembered as one where we allowed conflict to get in the way of existential tasks, storing up vast costs and potential calamity for those to follow. Let it be remembered as a time when we rose above our differences for the good of all.

    For our mutual prosperity—and ultimately for our survival—I say we can do better: let there be peace on earth and a revival of cooperation.

    Thank you!

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Mayada Ghazala

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    @IMFSpokesperson

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2024/10/17/sp101724-annual-meetings-2024-curtain-raiser

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Salford City Council approve major funding support for Salford Lads Club

    Source: City of Salford

    • Council approve £100k funding support for the club
    • Funding includes £20k match funding from Salford Crowdfunder and up to an additional £80k from the City Council Revenue Budget.
    • Decision is in response Salford Lad’s Club announcement of need to raise £250k to enable it to keep operating
    • Funding confirmation follows news of Manchester Evening News setting up a Go Fund Me page to support the club 

    Salford City Council has confirmed an agreement to provide significant funding to help support Salford Lads Club. The decision will see £100k committed to the club with immediate effect to help the club keep its doors open, remain operating and providing essential support to local children and young people.
     
    The funding package will consist of a £20k match funding contribution from the city’s Crowdfunder programme. The additional funding, up to £80k will be provided in the form of a grant from the City Council Revenue Budget.
     
    The council has acknowledged not only the significance of Salford Lads Club as an iconic cultural venue for the city, but also its important role in supporting and shaping the lives of children and young people in the city. The decision to act fast and activate this package of support is a reflection of the vital work done by the club and its volunteers and the need to secure its future.
     
    The support provided by the council will not just be financial. A further commitment has been agreed for council officers from across different departments to work more closely with the club to help ensure its survival. Salford City Council will also work closely with partners from across the city to garner further long term support for the club. 
     
    The council has recognised the important role of Manchester Evening News’ in raising awareness of the plight of the club and the creation of their Salford Lads and Girls Club Legacy Fund, to ensure the clubs future survival. 
     
    Salford City Mayor Paul Dennett said: “I’m delighted to be able to confirm this significant funding package for Salford Lads Club. Having worked closely with the club for many years, we are acutely aware of the current financial difficulties and the challenging operating times it faces. So, I’m pleased we have been able to act swiftly and provide this funding support now.  
     
    As a council, we are committed to creating a fairer, greener, healthier and more inclusive city for all and this includes working with organisations and institutions such as Salford Lads Club, who can help us achieve this goal.
     
    What better recipient of this support is there than an institution that wholly embodies the true Spirt of Salford? An institution that has been there, providing, support, guidance, activities and education, as well as being a safe haven for generations of Salfordians and a venue that has contributed to putting the city on a global stage. 
     
    There will be people around the world who are only aware of Salford, because of the Lads Club, via the lens of the famous Smiths photograph. So it is only right that the council provides this much need funding now and a commitment to support in the future. 
     
    The council has a history of making positive steps to invest in the city’s sport, heritage and culture. This decision follows previous commitments to purchase the Salford Community Stadium, investment in sporting facilities and positioning the city as a culture hotspot through the funding of The Lowry, the BBC Philharmonic and RHS Bridgewater.
     
    I’d also urge those who have benefitted from the great work of the club over the years and anyone who is able to donate, to contribute to the Manchester Evening News’ Salford Lads and Girls Club Legacy Fund, to further support the clubs future survival.” 

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    Date published
    Thursday 17 October 2024

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