Category: Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Cassava Republic Press named the inaugural winner of Afreximbank’s CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa, 2024

    Source: Africa Press Organisation – English (2) – Report:

    ALGIERS, Algeria, October 24, 2024/APO Group/ —

    Afreximbank’s (www.Afreximbank.com) CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa, a partnership between the CANEX Book Factory and the Narrative Landscape Press Limited announced Cassava Republic Press, Nigeria as its inaugural winner for the 2024 CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa.

    The award, which celebrates excellence in African publishing, recognised Cassava Republic Press for their book Female Fear Factory: Unveiling Patriarchy’s Culture of Violence by Pumla Dineo Gqola. The book was recognised for its striking cover design, elegant layout, and reader-friendly text. It was also lauded for its imaginative approach to gender issues, offering a compelling contribution to feminist literature.

    Female Fear Factory explores how patriarchal society fosters violence against women, providing both a sobering account of this violence and a hopeful vision for the work of feminists worldwide. The award, which included a $20,000 prize, was presented at CANEX WKND 2024 in Algiers, Algeria, during a dinner hosted by the Honourable Soraya Mouloudji, Algeria’s Minister of Culture and Arts.

    The CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa, launched in Cairo in November 2023 on the sidelines of the Intra African Trade Fair (IATF2023), aims to promote a vibrant literary culture across Global Africa and foster a sustainable business ecosystem in the literary sector. CANEX, initiated by Afreximbank in 2020, serves as a key driver for development and job creation in Africa, recognising the opportunities within the creative and cultural industries.

    The award evaluates entries based on the quality of writing, editing, and production, with particular emphasis on books printed and produced in Africa, as well as those published in indigenous African languages. This year, 85 entries were received from 49 publishers across Africa, representing a diverse range of languages, including English, French, Portuguese, and Swahili. From these submissions, the prize administrators selected five finalists for their exceptional work. The finalists included:

    • Cassava Republic Press (Nigeria), shortlisted for Female Fear Factory: Unravelling Patriarchy’s Culture of Violence by Pumla Dineo Gqola, was praised for its “solid cover design, elegant layout, and contribution to feminist literature.”  Layla Mohamed, Editor at Cassava Republic, received the award on behalf of the publishing house.
    • Jacana Media (South Africa) was honoured for Paperless by Buntu Siwisa, which the judges described as “a beautifully written story of the hidden lives of migrant workers in Africa.” Kelly Mawa, Publishing Assistant at Jacana Media, accepted the award on behalf of the company.
    • Kachifo Limited (Nigeria), recognised for Half Hour Hara by Ugo Anidi, was celebrated for being “a delightful and engaging children’s story” with “well-crafted illustrations.” Coco Anetor-Sokei, Managing Editor, collected the award for Kachifo Limited.
    • La Case des Lucioles (Côte d’Ivoire), shortlisted for Reine Or by Fatou Sy, was praised for its “brave design and theatrical presentation.”
    • Masobe Books (Nigeria) was shortlisted for When We Were Fireflies by Abubakar Adam Ibrahim, which the judges commended for its “meticulous writing and eye-catching cover design.” Othuke Ominiabohs, Managing Director, received the medal for Masobe Books.

    The awards were presented to the finalists by Honourable Mouloudji and Mrs. Kanayo Awani, Executive Vice President of the Intra-African Trade Bank at Afreximbank.

    Speaking at the award ceremony, the Chair of The Judges, Dr Wale Okediran said;

    “In line with our mandate to ‘judge the book as a physical object while also paying attention to its editorial work, including topical relevance and editorial risk’, the judges recognised the selected books as having met the required standard of ‘exceptional work and professionalism.”

    The CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa rewards the best trade book publishers in Africa. A prize of $20,000 is awarded to the publisher – selected from a shortlist of five (5) finalists – of the best trade book (defined as books published for a general audience, including fiction, non-fiction, and poetry; and excluding textbooks and academic books) published in the year in question. Additionally, the remaining four (4) finalists in the shortlist are awarded the amount of $2,000 each.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Secretary-General’s remarks to the 16th BRICS Summit [as delivered]

    Source: United Nations – English

    xcellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
     
    I am grateful to participate in the 16th BRICS Summit. 
     
    Collectively, your countries represent nearly half of the world’s population.
     
    And I salute your valuable commitment and support for international problem-solving as clearly reflected in your theme this year.
     
    But no single group and no single country can act alone or in isolation.
     
    It takes a community of nations, working as one global family, to address global challenges.
     
    Challenges like the rising number of conflicts.
     
    The devastation of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss…
     
    Rising inequalities and lingering poverty and hunger…
     
    A debt crisis that threatens to smother plans for the future of many vulnerable countries… 
     
    The fact that fewer than one-fifth of the Sustainable Development Goals are on-track…
     
    A growing digital divide, and a lack of guardrails for artificial intelligence and other frontier technologies…
     
    And a lack of representation and voice for developing countries at global decision-making tables. From the Security Council to the Bretton-Woods institution and beyond. This must change.
     
    September’s Summit of the Future offered a roadmap for strengthening multilateralism, and advancing peace, sustainable development and human rights.
     
    I see four areas for action.
     
    First — finance.
     
    Today’s international financial system is not offering many vulnerable countries the safety net or level of support they need.
     
    The Pact for the Future calls for accelerating reform of the international financial architecture that is outdated, ineffective and unfair.
     
    And it includes a commitment to move forward with an SDG Stimulus to change the business model to substantially increase the lending capacity of Multilateral Development Banks to developing countries.
     
    To recycle more Special Drawing Rights…
     
    To restructure loans for countries drowning in debt…
     
    And to mobilize more international and domestic resources, public and private, for vital investments in developing countries.
     
    Next year’s Conference on Financing for Development and the Summit on Social Development are two milestones to carry these efforts forward.
     
    We must also recognize the importance of South-South cooperation.
     
    It doesn’t replace the commitments and obligations of developed countries.
     
    But it is providing a growing contribution to supporting developing countries in overcoming obstacles to reaching the SDGs. 
     
    Second — climate.
     
    Every country has committed to limit temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
     
    That requires dramatic action to reduce emissions now — with the G20 in the lead.
     
    COP29 is just weeks away. 
     
    That starts the clock for countries to produce new Nationally Determined Contributions plans with 2035 targets that are aligned with the 1.5 degree goal.
     
    COP29 must deliver an ambitious and credible outcome on the new climate finance goal.
     
    Developed countries must also keep promises to double adaptation finance, and ensure meaningful contributions to the Loss and Damage Fund, which was not the case when it was created.
     
    Third — technology.
     
    Every country must be able to access the benefits of technology.
     
    The Global Digital Compact commits to enhanced global cooperation and capacity-building.
     
    It includes the first truly universal agreement on the international governance of Artificial Intelligence to give every country a seat at the AI table.
     
    It calls for an independent international Scientific Panel on AI and initiating a global dialogue on its governance within the United Nations with the participations of all countries.
     
    And it requests options for innovative financing for AI capacity-building in developing countries.
     
    And fourth — peace.
     
    We must strengthen and update the machinery of peace.
     
    This includes reforms to make the United Nations Security Council reflective of today’s world.
     
    The Pact for the Future includes important steps on disarmament — including the first multilateral agreement on nuclear disarmament in more than a decade — and steps that address the weaponization of outer space and the use of lethal autonomous weapons.
     
    Across the board, we need peace.
     
    We need peace in Gaza with an immediate cease-fire, the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages, the effective delivery of humanitarian aid without obstacles, and we need to make irreversible progress to end the occupation and establish the two state solution, as it was recently reaffirmed once again by a UN General Assembly resolution.
     
    We need peace in Lebanon with an immediate cessation of hostilities, moving to the full implementation of Security Council resolution 1701. 

    We need peace in Ukraine. A just peace in line with the UN Charter, international law and General Assembly resolutions.
     
    We need peace in Sudan, with all parties silencing their guns and committing to a path towards sustainable peace.
     
    Those were the messages I have delivered to the High-Level segment of the General Assembly in September in New York. Unfortunately, they remain valid here and now.
     
    Everywhere, we must uphold the values of the UN Charter, the rule of law, and the principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence of all States. 
     
    Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
     
    The Summit of the Future charted a course to strengthen multilateralism for global development and security.
     
    Now we must turn words into deeds and we believe BRICS can play a very important role in this direction.
     
    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI China: BRICS countries enhance cooperation through close economic, trade exchanges

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

    BEIJING, Oct. 24 — Economic and trade ties among BRICS countries are becoming increasingly close, and China is playing an important role in driving mutually beneficial BRICS cooperation.

    The term BRIC was initially coined in 2001 as a concept referring to the emerging market economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China. With South Africa’s inclusion in 2010, BRICS officially took shape.

    Following last year’s expansion, the BRICS grouping now represents approximately 30 percent of global GDP, nearly half of the world’s population, and one-fifth of global trade. It has become the world’s most important platform for solidarity and cooperation among emerging markets and developing countries.

    The 16th BRICS Summit, held Tuesday to Thursday in Kazan, Russia, has drawn global attention and is believed to bring new economic and trade cooperation opportunities between China and other BRICS nations.

    China’s foreign trade with other BRICS member countries reached 4.62 trillion yuan (648 billion U.S. dollars) in the first nine months of 2024, a year-on-year increase of 5.1 percent, customs data showed.

    The trade growth can be attributed to a high degree of economic complementarity, as well as China’s commitment to high-level opening up and the free trade agreements between China and other BRICS countries, said Hong Yong, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation under the Ministry of Commerce.

    In the industrial sector, China’s exports of steel and textile raw materials to other BRICS nations grew by 8.6 percent and 13.4 percent year on year in the first three quarters.

    During the same period, China’s exports of intermediate goods such as integrated circuits, tablet display modules and aircraft parts to other BRICS countries achieved double-digit growth, helping other BRICS members boost their emerging industries.

    Trade in agricultural products has also been robust. In the first three quarters, over 80 percent of poultry and frozen pollack and over 50 percent of crabs imported by China came from BRICS members.

    “For BRICS countries, trade cooperation is not only conducive to promoting technological exchanges and innovation but also to bringing more development opportunities for member countries and even the world,” Hong added.

    Regarding the financial sector, the New Development Bank is a flagship project of BRICS cooperation. As the first multilateral development bank established by emerging economies, the Shanghai-headquartered institution provides financing support for infrastructure development, clean energy, environmental protection, and the building of cyber infrastructure across BRICS countries.

    Funding a raft of projects ranging from India’s urban rail to Brazil’s wind power complexes, the bank has cumulatively approved loans of 35 billion U.S. dollars for more than 100 projects to date.

    Building on its commitment to multilateralism, BRICS has taken practical steps to unlock the potential of economic and trade cooperation and create new growth areas. These include policy coordination and joint initiatives to enhance trade and investment opportunities among member states.

    At the 14th BRICS Economic and Foreign Trade Ministers’ Meeting held in Moscow in July, participants agreed to step up exchanges and cooperation in emerging areas such as global value chains, digital technologies and special economic zones, conduct practical cooperation in green product standards, electronic documentation and e-commerce, and strengthen policy exchanges, capacity building and best practice sharing.

    By enhancing economic and trade exchanges, BRICS countries have capitalized on their complementary advantages, serving as an important force to oppose trade protectionism and promote global economic growth, noted Liu Ying, a researcher with the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: BRICS charts path at milestone summit, Xi offers five suggestions

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

    KAZAN, Russia, Oct. 24 — Heels clicked and shoes shuffled across the media center floors at the BRICS Kazan summit on Wednesday, as journalists from around the world rushed to cover the landmark first in-person summit since the group’s expansion.

    Amid global uncertainties, BRICS embarked on a new chapter, cementing its growing influence on the world stage. Chinese President Xi Jinping, addressing the leaders in an expanded format, put forward five suggestions: building a BRICS committed to peace, innovation, green development, justice, and closer people-to-people exchanges.

    “We must build on this milestone summit to set off anew and forge ahead with one heart and one mind,” Xi said. “China is willing to work with all BRICS countries to open a new horizon in the high-quality development of greater BRICS cooperation.”

    This year’s summit also marked another major progress with the decision to invite a number of nations as partner countries, further advancing the group’s development.

    The growing interest from countries seeking to join BRICS cooperation each year demonstrates that in today’s troubled world, BRICS is important and essential, said Bunn Nagara, director and senior fellow at Belt and Road Initiative Caucus for Asia-Pacific.

    “China, led by President Xi, has contributed significantly to BRICS’ success with a progressive and enlightened approach,” said Nagara.

    During Wednesday’s meetings, leaders exchanged views on BRICS cooperation and key international issues under the theme “Strengthening Multilateralism for Just Global Development and Security,” focusing on global and regional security, sustainable development, climate change, and reforms in global economic governance.

    A major emphasis of the summit was the call for increased funding to support sustainable development in developing countries. Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi said BRICS is set to “strengthen a multipolar international system,” particularly through “innovative and effective” financing for these countries.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin, who chaired the Kazan summit, said that “the trend for the BRICS’ leading role in the global economy will only strengthen.”

    He warned against the ongoing risks from geopolitical tensions and the rise of unilateral sanctions and protectionism, emphasizing “a key task is to promote the use of national currencies to finance trade and investment.”

    Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who participated in the summit via video link due to a head injury, echoed this sentiment. “It’s not about replacing our currencies, but we need to work so that the multipolar order we aim for is reflected in the international financial system,” said Lula.

    BRICS has already made strides with the New Development Bank (NDB), headquartered in Shanghai. The BRICS countries agreed on Wednesday to support the NDB in implementing its general strategy for 2022-2026 and in expanding local currency financing.

    In a declaration issued at the 16th BRICS Summit, they also agreed to jointly build the NDB into a new type of multilateral development bank for the 21st century, support its further expansion of membership, and expedite the review of membership applications from BRICS countries in accordance with its general strategy and related policies.

    The BRICS countries are also encouraged to strengthen financial cooperation and promote local currency settlement, according to the declaration.

    During the summit, leaders also emphasized the need for a fairer global order for the Global South. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said that BRICS is an inclusive formation capable of changing the trajectory of the Global South. “To do this we must realize the full potential of our economic partnership, to ensure sustainable development for all and not just for some,” he said.

    “The period of unilateralism is coming to an end,” added Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, calling for a more equitable global system.

    Several speakers also highlighted the need for differentiated responsibilities in addressing climate change, urging that developing nations’ emissions reduction efforts should align with their capacities.

    BRICS, initially known as “BRIC” when it was coined in 2001 by Jim O’Neill, former chief economist at Goldman Sachs, originally represented emerging market economies of Brazil, Russia, India, and China. South Africa joined in 2010, officially forming BRICS.

    In a recent interview with Xinhua, O’Neill acknowledged the need for policymakers to collaborate in creating an optimal system that benefits all. “I think as we pass through time, we will find a new equilibrium where countries will be more at ease with what other countries are doing,” he said.

    Other than the new full members joining on Jan. 1, 2024, over 30 countries, including Thailand, Malaysia, Türkiye and Azerbaijan, have either formally applied for or expressed interest in BRICS membership. Many other developing countries are seeking deeper cooperation with the group.

    Observers view BRICS as a vital platform for developing countries to pursue growth. Ahmed Al-Ali, a political and strategic researcher at the Gulf Research Center in Dubai, noted that BRICS aims to foster a more equitable, effective, and rational international system.

    It will play a crucial role in promoting development and growth opportunities for Global South countries while ensuring the sustainability of economic and social progress, said Al-Ali.

    Echoing that view, Sithembiso Bhengu, a senior research fellow with the Sociology Department, University of Johannesburg, said, “The BRICS mechanism presents real possibilities for making the globe a fairer community of nations, with possibilities for mutual support and cooperation towards our respective goals in modernization and development.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: The Managing Director’s Global Policy Agenda, Annual Meeting 2024: Secure A Soft Landing And Break From The Low Growth–High Debt Path

    Source: International Monetary Fund

    Summary

    The global economy has proven resilient, and a soft landing is within reach. Inflation has moderated thanks to tight monetary policy and fading supply shocks, and growth is expected to remain steady. But uncertainty remains significant, with risks tilted to the downside; medium-term growth prospects are lackluster; public debt has reached record highs and is expected to approach 100 percent of GDP by 2030; and geoeconomic fragmentation threatens to undo decades of gains from cross-border economic integration. At the same time, transformative changes—the green transition, demographic shifts, and digitalization, including artificial intelligence—are poised to reshape the global economy, creating challenges but also opportunities. Against this background, the key policy priorities are to secure a soft landing and break from the low growth-high debt path, and address other medium-term challenges. Monetary policy should ensure inflation returns durably to the target, and fiscal policy needs to decisively pivot toward consolidation to rebuild buffers and safeguard debt sustainability. Growth-enhancing reforms are urgently needed to lift growth prospects by boosting investment, job creation, and productivity. Domestic policies must be complemented by multilateral efforts to support countries with debt vulnerabilities, protect gains from economic integration, accelerate climate action, and harness benefits of new technologies while mitigating the risks. As it has done since its founding 80 years ago, the IMF will continue to adapt to serve its members with tailored policy advice, financial lifelines when needed, and capacity development. The Fund will remain a strong advocate for multilateralism and economic integration as foundations on which to build a resilient and inclusive global economy.

    Subject: Artificial intelligence, Balance of payments, Capital flows, Climate change, Credit, Debt sustainability, Digitalization, Environment, External debt, Fiscal policy, Inflation, Money, Poverty, Poverty reduction strategy, Prices, Revenue mobilization, Technology

    Keywords: Republic of, Advanced Economies, Artificial intelligence, Artificial intelligence, Capital flows, Capital flows, Climate change, Climate change, Credit, Debt sustainability, Debt sustainability, Digitalization, Digitalization, Economic integration, Economic integration, Global, Growth, Inflation, Inflation, Integrated Policy Framework, Integrated Policy Framework, Moldova, Poverty reduction strategy, Poverty reduction strategy, Reforms, Revenue mobilization, Revenue mobilization, Senegal

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI: TopLine Credit Union Foundation Awards $36,500 in Scholarships

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MAPLE GROVE, Minn., Oct. 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In its tenth year, TopLine Credit Union Foundation has awarded a total of $36,500 in scholarship money to 35 TopLine members who are continuing their education, and $1,500 in scholarship funds to support post-secondary educational needs and goals of students in Nigeria through partnership with African Education and Health Initiative (AFEDHI), a local non-profit organization with a vision to assist African students with access to education, books and school supplies.

    TopLine Credit Union Foundation received 127 applications. Any TopLine member pursuing post-secondary education by attending a college or university, graduate school, or a 2-to-4-year community, vocational or technical college in the fall of 2024 was eligible.

    Scholarship applicants needed to complete a one-page application form and submit an essay (500 words or less) that answered the question: “Discuss a hobby, interest, or passion that is important to you. How has this influenced your personal growth and academic journey?”

    As one of our scholarship recipients commented, “Unlike most twin sisters, I grew up not just as a sibling, but as a caregiver. Her ability to navigate the world was often reliant on my hearing, and I was responsible for filling her in on our learning in school. From an early age, I became my sister’s advocate and ally. I witnessed firsthand the challenges she faced in navigating a predominantly hearing world. My sister’s journey has shown me the significance of empathy, understanding, and hard work, ultimately steering me toward my aspiration to become an audiologist. I hope to create a space where people feel heard, empowered, and understood, much like I’ve strived to do for my sister.”

    “It’s was so rewarding to read all the personal stories written by applicants based on the influences they have experienced to help them along their personal growth and academic journeys,” said Vicki Roscoe Erickson, President, TopLine Credit Union Foundation. “Our foundation board had an extremely difficult decision of just selecting 35 scholarship recipients, and we celebrate their dedication and drive as they embark on their learning journey.”

    TopLine Credit Union Foundation, guided by its mission of “working within the community to build a better tomorrow,” will continue to support the cooperative spirit of “people helping people” by living the mantra – to care, connect and contribute in the communities they serve.

    Scholarship recipients will be recognized with a reception at the credit union, on TopLine Credit Union Foundation’s website page and on their Facebook page.

    TopLine Credit Union Foundation, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, is dedicated to providing members with an array of financial education opportunities and counseling for members of all ages, awarding scholarships, contributing to community charitable organizations and sponsoring other community give-back efforts. Since inception in 2014, TopLine Credit Union Foundation has given out $175,000 in scholarship monies to assist with the affordability of post-secondary education. Donations are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. For further information visit www.TopLinecu.com/foundation, email Foundation@TopLinecu.com, call 763-391-9494, or stop by any branch location or write to: 9353 Jefferson Hwy, Maple Grove, MN 55369. Federal Tax ID # is 46-4335752.

    CONTACT:
    Vicki Roscoe Erickson
    President, TopLine Credit Union Foundation
    verickson@toplinecu.com
    763.391.0872

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/70b1950d-0cdb-42e0-a7bf-213f59799195

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Tomarket Hits 40M Users, Gearing Up For $TOMA Token Launch

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, Oct. 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Tomarket, the leading mini-app in the TON ecosystem, has hit a major milestone with 40 million users just four months after launch. This explosive growth comes alongside the announcement of its new token, $TOMA, set to debut during its Token Generation Event (TGE) on October 31. This rapid growth reflects the platform’s appeal and effectiveness in engaging users within the dynamic Web3 space.

    Tomarket is preparing to host its Token Generation Event (TGE) for the new token, $TOMA, on October 31 at 23:59 (GMT+8). To qualify for tokens during the TGE, users must add the tomato emoji and achieve at least bronze level in the Tomarket Level System. This event represents a significant milestone in Tomarket’s ongoing evolution and expansion of its offerings. For more details about the TGE, please refer to Tomarket’s Telegram announcement.

    Since its launch in July, Tomarket has rapidly grown, leveraging the popularity of its tomato drop game to attract a large user base on Telegram. The game offers an engaging way for users to join the TON ecosystem by collecting Tomato points through activities like drops, farming, and referrals. In just five days, Tomarket amassed over 1 million users and has since surged past 40 million, with more than 10 million wallet connections within four months.

    Key to this remarkable growth is Tomarket’s community of over 200 dedicated ambassadors worldwide, who passionately promote the platform while nurturing local connections. Additionally, Tomarket has partnered with Bitget Wallet to drive innovation within the TON ecosystem, providing rewards and gas subsidies to users exploring new features, further fueling its rapid expansion.

    Miles, Core Contributor of Tomarket team, commented, “The TGE is just the beginning. With $TOMA, we’re not just launching a token; we’re creating an integrated ecosystem that puts users first. Our mission is to deliver long-term value through innovative solutions. Backed by Foresight X and Bitget Wallet, we’re ready to experiment and lead the next wave of innovation in the TON ecosystem.”

    About Tomarket

    Tomarket is your all-in-one platform for gaming, earning, and trading on Telegram & TON. No more jumping between different platforms—play games, earn tokens, and trade them all in one place. Tomarket is backed by Foresight X and Bitget Wallet. 

    For more information: Website |  Twitter |  Telegram

    For media inquiries, users can contact media@tomarket.ai

    Contact

    PR team
    media@tomarket.ai

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI China: Xi advocates high-quality development of greater BRICS cooperation at milestone summit

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

    Xi advocates high-quality development of greater BRICS cooperation at milestone summit

    KAZAN, Russia, Oct. 24 — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday called on BRICS countries to work for the high-quality development of greater BRICS cooperation as leaders gathered here for the 16th BRICS Summit.

    In his address to the summit, Xi emphasized the need for BRICS countries to seize the historical opportunity and work together to strengthen solidarity and cooperation among Global South nations.

    STRENGTHENING SOLIDARITY

    During a small-group meeting, President Xi welcomed new members to the BRICS family and extended invitations to many other countries to become partner countries.

    Xi pointed out that the enlargement of BRICS is a major milestone in its development history, and a landmark event in the evolution of the international situation. It is for their shared pursuit and for the overarching trend of peace and development that BRICS countries have come together, he said.

    Stressing that the world is undergoing accelerated changes unseen in a century, marked by new trends of multipolarity and the risks of a “new Cold War,” Xi said BRICS countries should seize the historical opportunity, take proactive steps, remain committed to the original aspiration and mission of openness, inclusiveness and win-win cooperation, conform to the general trend of the rise of the Global South, seek common ground while reserving differences, work in concert to further consolidate common values, safeguard common interests, and strengthen BRICS countries through unity.

    “We must work together to build BRICS into a primary channel for strengthening solidarity and cooperation among Global South nations and a vanguard for advancing global governance reform,” Xi said.

    Xi stressed that the more turbulent the world is, the more BRICS countries should uphold the banner of peace, development and win-win cooperation, refining the essence of BRICS and demonstrating its strength. BRICS countries should raise the voice of peace, advocating a new path to security that features dialogue over confrontation and partnership over alliance.

    Xi also urged BRICS countries to jointly pursue a path of development, advocate a universally beneficial and inclusive economic globalization, and stay committed to the principle of common development. He said BRICS countries should consolidate the foundation of cooperation, deepen cooperation in traditional areas such as agriculture, energy, minerals, economy and trade, expand cooperation in emerging areas such as green, low-carbon and artificial intelligence, and safeguard trade, investment and financial security.

    ADVANCING DEVELOPMENT

    As the high-profile gathering unfolded amid global uncertainties, BRICS embarked on a new chapter, cementing its growing influence on the world stage.

    President Xi, addressing the leaders in an expanded format, put forward five suggestions: building a BRICS committed to peace, innovation, green development, justice, and closer people-to-people exchanges.

    “We must build on this milestone summit to set off anew and forge ahead with one heart and one mind,” Xi said. “China is willing to work with all BRICS countries to open a new horizon in the high-quality development of greater BRICS cooperation.”

    This year’s summit also marked another major milestone with the decision to invite a number of nations as partner countries, further advancing the group’s development.

    During Wednesday’s meetings, leaders exchanged views on BRICS cooperation and crucial international issues of shared concern under the theme “Strengthening Multilateralism for Just Global Development and Security.” Central to their discussions were global and regional security, sustainable development, climate change, and reforms in global economic governance.

    A notable focus of the summit was the call for increased funding to support the sustainable development of developing countries. Egyptian President Abdelfattah al-Sisi said that BRICS aims to “strengthen a multipolar international system,” particularly through facilitating “innovative and effective” financing for developing nations.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said that “the trend for the BRICS’ leading role in the global economy will only strengthen.” He cautioned against the ongoing risks posed by geopolitical tensions, unilateral sanctions, and protectionism. “A key task is to promote the use of national currencies to finance trade and investment,” Putin said.

    Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who participated in the summit via video link due to a head injury, said, “It’s not about replacing our currencies, but we need to work so that the multipolar order we aim for is reflected in the international financial system.”

    BRICS has already made strides with the New Development Bank (NDB), headquartered in Shanghai. On Wednesday, the BRICS countries agreed to support the NDB in implementing its general strategy for 2022-2026 and in expanding local currency financing.

    In a declaration issued at the 16th BRICS Summit, they also agreed to jointly build the NDB into a new type of multilateral development bank for the 21st century, support its further expansion of membership, and expedite the review of membership applications from BRICS countries in accordance with its general strategy and related policies.

    Leaders also advocated for a fairer global order for the Global South. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said that BRICS is an inclusive bloc capable of changing the trajectory of the Global South. “To do this we must realize the full potential of our economic partnership, to ensure sustainable development for all and not just for some,” he said.

    “The period of unilateralism is coming to an end,” said Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, calling for a more equitable global system.

    GROWING APPEAL

    The term BRIC was initially coined in 2001 by Jim O’Neill, former chief economist at Goldman Sachs, as an investment concept referring to emerging market economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China. With South Africa’s inclusion in 2010, BRICS officially took shape.

    In a recent interview with Xinhua, O’Neill acknowledged the need for policymakers to collaborate in creating an optimal system that benefits all. “I think as we pass through time, we will find a new equilibrium where countries will be more at ease with what other countries are doing,” he said.

    In recent years, BRICS has garnered attention from countries around the world. Over 30 countries, including Thailand, Malaysia, Türkiye, and Azerbaijan, have either formally applied for or expressed interest in joining the group. Many other developing countries are also seeking stronger cooperation with BRICS.

    The growing interest from countries seeking to join BRICS cooperation each year demonstrates that in today’s troubled world, BRICS is not only important but essential, said Bunn Nagara, director and senior fellow at the Belt and Road Initiative Caucus for Asia-Pacific.

    “China, led by President Xi, has contributed significantly to BRICS’ success with a progressive and enlightened approach,” said Nagara.

    BRICS is seen as a vital platform for developing countries to pursue growth and address global imbalances.

    The enlargement of BRICS is “important in tipping the financial and technological balance in favor of the majority Global South rather than the minority Global North,” Webby Kalikiti, a lecturer and researcher at the Department of History, University of Zambia noted. He believed that the future of the world depends on the cooperative energies of all countries and the transition to a multipolar world.

    Ahmed Al-Ali, a political and strategic researcher at the Gulf Research Center in Dubai, believed that BRICS aims to foster a more equitable, effective, and rational international system.

    It will play a crucial role in promoting development and growth opportunities for Global South countries, while also ensuring the sustainability of economic and social progress, said Al-Ali.

    Similarly, Sithembiso Bhengu, a senior research fellow with the Sociology Department, University of Johannesburg said that “the BRICS mechanism presents real possibilities for making the globe a fairer community of nations, with possibilities for mutual support and cooperation towards our respective goals in modernization and development.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget lists Piggy Piggy Coin (PGC) on Pre-market for Advance Trading Orders

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, Oct. 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —

    Bitget, the leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company, has announced the listing of PiggyPiggy Coin (PGC) in its Pre-market allowing users to place buy and sell orders prior to its launch. The pre-market period started on October 22nd, 2024, 10:00 (UTC), with spot trading beginning shortly after. This early trading option is designed to give users an opportunity to participate in the PCG market prior to its full availability.

    Bitget’s pre-market trading platform allows users to engage in over-the-counter transactions of new tokens before their official listing. This feature offers a peer-to-peer marketplace where buyers and sellers can negotiate prices, facilitating advanced liquidity and strategic investment opportunities. Participants can secure coins at favorable prices, allowing for optimized investments without the immediate need for sellers to possess the coins.

    PiggyPiggy Coin (PGC), produced by FunKing Studio, is launching its first token, $PPT, through a highly developed TG Bot-based mini-game that offers 100% token airdrops. Players can earn a daily minimum salary of $2, with higher earnings available by inviting friends. The project has significant traffic, with over 57K Twitter followers and strong engagement across Telegram channels. FunKing Studio has reportedly secured $3 million in equity investment from prominent firms like IDG Capital, KuCoin Ventures, Opta, and Sportsbet.

    Bitget’s introduction of PGC through its pre-market mechanism shows the platform’s strategy to provide users early access to emerging blockchain projects. This early engagement benefits both the token’s market exposure and user participation, making it an integral part of Bitget’s expanding crypto ecosystem.

    Bitget has established itself as one of the leading crypto spot trading platforms, offering a diverse selection of over 800 coins and more than 900 trading pairs across various ecosystems, including Ethereum, Solana, Base, and recently, TON. The pre-market platform, launched in April 2024, has facilitated early access to over 150 high-profile projects such as EigenLayer (EIGEN), Zerolend (ZERO), Notcoin (NOT), and ZkSync (ZKSYNC), providing a unique opportunity for investors to engage with emerging tokens at an early stage. The addition of PGC to this lineup further enhances Bitget’s commitment to offering users access to promising Web3 projects.

    PGC’s introduction on Bitget’s platform signifies a growing interest in Telegram-based projects that incorporate both gaming mechanics and financial elements, creating a symbiotic relationship between entertainment and decentralized finance. This listing is expected to attract a diverse range of participants, from avid gamers to crypto enthusiasts, who are eager to explore and invest in the evolving landscape of blockchain.

    For more information on PGC, please visit here.

    About Bitget

    Established in 2018, Bitget is the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company. Serving over 45 million users in 150+ countries and regions, the Bitget exchange is committed to helping users trade smarter with its pioneering copy trading, AI bot and other trading solutions. Bitget Wallet is a world-class multi-chain crypto wallet that offers an array of comprehensive Web3 solutions and features including wallet functionality, swap, NFT Marketplace, DApp browser, and more. Bitget inspires individuals to embrace crypto through collaborations with credible partners, including being the Official Crypto Partner of the World’s Top Professional Football League, LALIGA, in EASTERN, SEA and LATAM, as well as a global partner of Olympic Athletes Buse Tosun Çavuşoğlu (Wrestling world champion), Samet Gümüş (Boxing gold medalist) and İlkin Aydın (Volleyball national team).

    For more information, users can visit: Website | Twitter | Telegram | LinkedIn | Discord | Bitget Wallet

    For media inquiries, users can contact: media@bitget.com

    Risk Warning: Digital asset prices may fluctuate and experience price volatility. Only invest what you can afford to lose. The value of your investment may be impacted and it is possible that you may not achieve your financial goals or be able to recover your principal investment. You should always seek independent financial advice and consider your own financial experience and financial standing. Past performance is not a reliable measure of future performance. Bitget shall not be liable for any losses you may incur. Nothing here shall be construed as financial advice.

    Contact

    Public Relations
    Simran A
    Bitget
    media@bitget.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: Naked protests in South Africa: a psychologist explores the emotional power of this form of activism

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Mpho Mathebula, Lecturer, University of the Witwatersrand

    Naked protests are a form of public demonstration where individuals, often women, use the symbolic power of their naked bodies to challenge injustices. These protests have become an increasingly visible form of resistance, particularly in response to state violence, economic exploitation, and the oppression of women by men.

    While naked protests might seem provocative or shocking, they have a long and storied history in Africa. They are not only a powerful statement but also a direct challenge to norms in society around decency, control and vulnerability.

    As a research psychologist, I was drawn to the study of naked body protests because of their profound affective power. That’s to say I study how emotions like anger, fear, joy and empowerment are expressed and experienced by both the protester and the observer. I’ve interviewed numerous South African women who have taken part in naked protests in the past decade.




    Read more:
    Undressing for redress: the significance of Nigerian women’s naked protests


    My studies, which take an African feminist approach, show that these protests are not just acts of desperation or shock tactics. They’re rooted in a long tradition of resistance and decolonisation, drawing on generational power and emotional expressions. They are a feminist tactic that embodies both vulnerability and strength, using the body as a site of resistance and empowerment.

    Naked protests are complex – and, I argue, a powerful tool for reclaiming African women’s agency, dignity and voices.

    Colonialism and nakedness

    During colonialism, European countries ruled over African nations. Colonisers imposed their values, laws and social systems – including strict ideas about how women should behave and dress. These replaced many traditional African practices and beliefs. African women were required to cover their bodies because nakedness was seen as shameful or improper according to European moral standards.




    Read more:
    Naked protest: how ordinary citizens reveal truth to repressive regimes


    By protesting naked, African women are rejecting these colonial ideas and reclaiming their bodies as a form of resistance. They’re saying they refuse to be controlled by these outdated beliefs. So, naked protests are a decolonial action.

    African feminism sheds further light. It highlights the unique historical and social conditions that shape African women’s struggles. It recognises that African women’s bodies have been sites of both oppression and resistance for a long time, subjected to patriarchal and colonial control.

    Naked body protests in South Africa

    In South Africa, colonialism was followed by white minority rule. Apartheid was a system of racial segregation and discrimination, made law from 1948 to 1994. Black South Africans were denied political rights, restricted from owning land in white areas, and subjected to pass laws that controlled their movement. Black women bore the brunt of this oppression.

    In Durban in 1959, South African women protested against the 1908 Native Beer Act, which banned them from brewing traditional beer. Protesters attacked state beerhalls and, in a bold act of defiance, exposed their bodies as they faced police barricades. The police were often hesitant to confront or harm the women.

    In 1990, during the Dobsonville housing protest, women in Soweto stripped and protested against the demolition of their shacks by municipal police. They successfully drew media attention to their demands.

    This form of protest has endured, even in the country’s democratic era. As recently as 2024, women from the South African Cleaners, Security and Allied Workers’ Union staged a naked protest against the sudden termination of their contracts by private security companies.

    Psychology study

    But a primary focus of my research was the South African student protests that began in 2015. The #FeesMustFall movement saw students protesting against sexual violence and the high cost of education. Naked protests took place at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg and related #RUReferenceList protests against rape at Rhodes University in Makhanda.

    My PhD study set out to understand naked body protests and contribute to their psychological understanding. I wanted to find out why women in particular use this form of decolonialist protest and what its emotional and social role is during and after the actions.

    I interviewed 16 women who participated in the protests, as well as drawing from podcast interviews with two other participants and a video of the 1990 Dobsonville protests.

    Anger and confrontation

    I found that anger and confrontation played a central role. During the #FeesMustFall protests, women’s decision to use their naked bodies was a deliberate, transgressive act aimed at disrupting structures that wanted to silence them.

    They weaponised their vulnerability and exposed the contradictions within these systems – where women’s bodies are often sexually objectified but deemed unacceptable when used as instruments of protest. By baring their bodies, these women confronted the state, universities, and society at large by placing their physical bodies in direct opposition to deeply ingrained social hierarchies.




    Read more:
    Angry student protests have put rape back on South Africa’s agenda


    The anger expressed in these protests is not random; it’s rooted in a collective and historical sense of injustice. The women told me they were responding to both the immediate issue of being excluded from higher education facilities and also broader, generational experiences of gender-based violence, racism and economic disenfranchisement. Anger became a way to assert control over their bodies in spaces where their presence had been marginalised, ignored or actively suppressed.

    By channelling their anger, these women redefined their relationship to both their own bodies and the public spaces they occupied. Their protests highlighted the connection between personal anger and systemic oppression.

    Joy in struggle

    Joy is another important affect in these protests. Women often experience a sense of joy and empowerment when they achieve the goals of their protests.

    This joy is not just a personal feeling but a collective one that binds women together. Joy is a form of resistance in itself because it defies the narrative of women as passive victims.

    Empowered and powerful

    When women take part in naked protests, they show that they have the power to make their own decisions. They feel more confident and in control.

    Participants made it clear that being part of these protests can deeply change how women feel about themselves. They discover their strength and ability to fight back.

    The #IAmOneInThree hashtag was based on the United Nations estimate that one in three women around the world will be sexually abused in their lifetime. A #IAmOneInThree naked protest took place at the University of the Witwatersrand in solidarity with #RUReferenceList protests at Rhodes University. Sibu, who took part, shared how carrying a sjambok (a whip) and singing struggle songs with other women made her feel:

    For me that moment was affirming … I felt powerful somehow. Because when you … have been raped … it made me feel weak … It made me feel like an object and not a person. And so I remember that moment feeling empowered, right, I have my sjambok, I have my sisters around me.

    Naked body protests in South Africa are a powerful form of feminist resistance that draws on deep historical and cultural traditions. These protests are strategic and affective forms of resistance that challenge patriarchy, sexism and colonialism.

    Mpho Mathebula does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Naked protests in South Africa: a psychologist explores the emotional power of this form of activism – https://theconversation.com/naked-protests-in-south-africa-a-psychologist-explores-the-emotional-power-of-this-form-of-activism-238530

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Rwandan-backed M23 rebel group seeks local power in DRC, not just control over mining operations

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Ken Matthysen, Researcher, IPIS

    The violence wrought by the Rwandan-backed rebel group M23 Movement is often narrowly framed as intended to control eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s resource-rich mining sites. The rebel group launched its most recent offensive in 2021 and currently controls vast territories in the south-east of North Kivu province, surrounding and cutting off the main city of Goma.

    Eastern DR Congo mines produce crucial raw materials such as tin, tantalum and tungsten, as well as abundant quantities of gold. It therefore seems logical to reduce explanations of conflict to the ambition by M23, and Rwanda behind it, to control the mines directly.

    We belong to a team of researchers who examine the various dimensions of conflict from different perspectives. Our findings, based on fieldwork and conducted in collaboration with in-country experts, show that this popular analysis does not paint the full picture.

    Conflict analysis often ignores historical and local dimensions. Our investigation with the Goma-based civil society organisation Association pour le Développement des Initiatives Paysannes therefore explored the local stakes and impacts of the M23 crisis. We interviewed more than 55 people in North Kivu (DR Congo), including members of M23, as well as soldiers and armed groups fighting them, local chiefs, state agents, teachers, taximen, traders and farmers who live on the frontline of the conflict.

    Our research reveals that M23 employs a more profound strategy to boost its position and military strength (through Rwandan support) in local struggles over land, authority and rents. M23’s disruptive strategy aims to replace Congolese authorities and overhaul local governance in areas it controls in eastern DR Congo. Key to this strategy is:

    • undermining and replacing local (customary) authorities

    • taking over strategic trade routes

    • the installation of an elaborate taxation regime.

    These strategies also allow M23 – and Rwanda – to generate revenues from the local economy, including rents from DR Congo’s mineral wealth, without necessarily directly controlling mines.

    Historical struggles over land

    Interviewees attached great importance to the historical context of the M23 conflict, explaining how struggles over land date back to independence in 1960. Going back to the 1930s and 1940s, the Belgian colonial administrators already organised large movements of migrant workers from Rwanda to work on plantations in DR Congo. The Rwandophone migrants and their descendants settled in North Kivu, becoming part of the local population.

    After independence, Hutu and Tutsi (Rwandophone) communities began to jostle for control over North Kivu’s fertile farmland with the Hunde and Nyanga communities there. As grievances over access to land and property rights increased, Rwandophone communities were stigmatised as “non-indigenous” and their land claims as illegitimate.

    As the Congo Wars broke out in the 1990s, people began seeking recourse to armed groups to settle land conflicts. Before the rise of M23 in 2012, two other groups (Rassemblement Congolais pour la Démocratie and later Congrès National pour la Défense du Peuple) rose to protect the Rwandophone population in eastern DRC. They also grabbed and sold vast concessions of land – held by the state or other communities – to allied farmers and business people. These were typically from the Tutsi community.

    Given the country’s complex and under-enforced land laws, land claims became exceedingly difficult to verify or prove. This has strengthened the belief that the only way to secure access to land is by resorting to armed groups. Thus, M23 is perceived as the guardian of the Tutsi community’s access to land.

    This perception is well illustrated by a testimony of a local leader in Masisi territory:

    The wars of the last three decades have been motivated by a struggle for control over land … Indigenous people are driven out, dispossessed of their land in favour of others who are considered foreigners and refugees. … the M23 is made up of (Tutsi) pastoralists … and there are fields that their rivals had seized … it was one of their (M23) first concerns to start exploiting them.

    Most Congolese Tutsi have not asked for this “protection” by M23. But the ensuing grievances and ethnic tensions will haunt the relations between communities for years to come.

    Struggles over customary authority

    In DR Congo, customary chiefs play an important role in local land governance. They also adjudicate conflicts, bind people together through rituals, and represent the symbolic claim by a specific community to a given place.

    Many Congolese we spoke to perceive M23’s main aim to be control of power at the local level — undermining the existing authorities. The group has indeed sought to replace customary authorities with M23-appointed ones, at times assassinating Congolese chiefs. Local sources said M23 even burnt chiefdom archives, destroying evidence of claims to customary authority.

    M23’s economic grip

    Wherever M23 has a foothold, it installs an elaborate taxation regime. This involves checkpoint tolls, household taxes, dues on business, harvest taxes and forced labour. In doing so, the group generates the revenues to sustain the conflict. But this also strengthens its politico-administrative hold on the population, as taxation is a symbolic interface of public authority.

    Local armed groups that joined with the Congolese army to combat M23 deepen the problem. Called wazalendo (“patriots”), they are often unpaid and therefore rely on payments from the population to sustain their counter-offensive. As a result, taxation in eastern Congo has become heavily “militiarised”. Taxed by government forces, wazalendo and M23, civilians pay a heavy toll.

    The military nature of local governance could jeopardise future efforts to bring peace to eastern DRC.

    What about minerals?

    M23 has an impact on all aspects of local governance in eastern DR Congo. It has found ways to control and profit from the local economy in North Kivu, including mineral supply chains. It operates checkpoints along arteries and taxes minerals smuggled to Rwanda, alongside other trade flows.

    Having M23 control strategic trade routes in DR Congo, including those crossing into Uganda, is a benefit for Rwanda. From Kigali’s perspective, the resurgence of M23 in 2021 came at a perfect time to block Uganda’s efforts to improve the road network in eastern DR Congo towards its own territory. Rwanda and Uganda are locked in intense competition for Congolese informal trade, re-exporting its timber and minerals as their own, gaining taxes and foreign earnings that ought to benefit the Congolese treasury and population.

    What must be done?

    DR Congo’s resources play a large role in the M23 conflict, but our study underscores the historical roots of the conflict and its profound local impacts. These findings should inform locally meaningful and sustainable conflict resolution strategies.

    Since the M23 revival, land access, trade and security have become increasingly mediated by armed actors. Even after a possible M23 defeat, it will take years of local dialogue and mediation to undo this involvement of militia in local governance, resolve land issues, repair inter-community relations and remake customary authority. But that’s the only way to reach sustainable peace in North Kivu.

    Ken Matthysen works for the International Peace Information Service (IPIS)

    This publication has been produced with the financial assistance of the Belgian Directorate-General for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid (DGD). The contents of this document are the sole responsibility of IPIS and can under no circumstances be regarded as reflecting the position of the Belgian Development Cooperation.

    ref. Rwandan-backed M23 rebel group seeks local power in DRC, not just control over mining operations – https://theconversation.com/rwandan-backed-m23-rebel-group-seeks-local-power-in-drc-not-just-control-over-mining-operations-231318

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Avian architects: weaver birds in Africa have unique building styles

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Maria Cristina Tello Ramos, Lecturer, University of Hull

    A white-browed sparrow weaver looks up at a neighbouring roost. Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images

    From afar, the acacia trees look like they have been decorated with grass pom-poms. The birds have been busy, building shelters of straw and grass. Up close the real shape of the “pom-poms” becomes clear: grass tubes in the form of an upside down “U”, with an opening at each end.

    These structures are the work of white-browed sparrow weavers (Plocepasser mahali).

    White-browed sparrow weavers are cooperative breeders. Within a multi-generational family group, only one dominant pair will reproduce; all other birds, which are mostly kin (related), will help with the rearing of chicks. These birds do everything together: forage, defend their territory, feed new chicks – and build each of the many roosts that decorate the acacia trees they live in. The birds are found throughout central and north-central southern Africa.

    Year after year, family groups get bigger and, as they do, the number of roosts they build increases. Families might have as many as 14 individuals, so the birds need to build multiple roosts, including a few “spares”.

    There’s something intriguing about these roosts. Sometimes different families set up territories next to each other, in trees as close together as 10 metres.

    How do you tell families apart? By their roosts. Some families build roosts that are very long, with long entrance and exit tubes; others will build roosts that are much shorter, with hardly any tubes. Essentially, it looks like different white-browed sparrow weaver families have different architectural styles. Why?

    To find out, we studied more than 400 roosts built by 43 families in the Tswalu Kalahari Reserve in South Africa’s Northern Cape province. We confirmed that the roosts and nests built by groups that live next to each other have their own architectural style, and that environmental, physical or genetic attributes of these different family groups do not influence the structures’ configuration.

    We think that the birds’ building behaviour and the shape of the structures might be the result of social interactions. Animals often learn from each other how to do things, whether it is how to use tools (chimpanzees), how to sing the correct song (some bird species, humpback whales), or how to exploit new food resources (cockatoos). Learning from others within a group often results in animals showing group-specific behaviours, or animal cultures. In this sense animals, like humans, develop their own cultures.

    Measuring various factors

    There is a lot of diversity in the nests different bird species build, both in the shapes and the materials used, as well as the number of nests an individual might build.

    For example, sociable weavers (Philetairus socius) build massive multiple occupant “apartment buildings” made out of grass. Cape penduline tits (Anthoscopus minutus) build nests that look like satchels made out of vegetable fibres with the texture of a wool sweater. Male southern mask weavers (Ploceus velatus) will weave thousands of grass leaves to build multiple nests at one time, and swallows collect and stack together one mud pellet at a time to build their pottery nests.

    To better understand the lack of uniformity among different white-browed sparrow weaver families’ roosts, we measured 400 roosts, all still on the trees, built by 43 families in the Tswalu Kalahari Reserve. Some were new – less than a year old – and others were at least two years old. (All structures that we measured were also identified with a small ring. We did this for three years in a row, so we could tell if a structure was there before we started measuring and marking the structures or if it was built during our time there.)

    Those measurements confirmed that different families build roosts with different sizes and that, across years, families maintain their own architectural style.

    At the same time, we measured the temperature and wind speed at each of the families’ territories, the size of the birds, the height of the trees, how genetically related different families were to each other, and how far away the different families lived from each other.

    This allowed us to determine whether any of these factors could explain why different families build different roosts. For instance, maybe families living in hotter territories build roosts with shorter tubes than in cooler areas, since they would not need much material to insulate them from the cold at night. The similarity in their environment, we reasoned, might explain why weaver families living in close proximity to each other created similar roosts. Or perhaps families that were more closely related to each other (something like cousins and second cousins) would build similar structures?

    However, one by one, we excluded all environmental and genetic explanations for the differences in the structures built by different families.

    So what happens next?

    We plan to continue documenting the architectural styles of different white-browed sparrow weaver families and to record their building behaviour so we can determine how these birds coordinate their behaviour when building together.

    Looking in more detail at how the roosts built by these birds across Africa might differ could help us understand to what extent the environment, material availability, individual experiences, and social interactions between individuals affect the building behaviour of these birds.

    Maybe, like humans, some species of birds have their own architectural traditions passed on across generations through social interactions.




    Read more:
    Kalahari weaver birds lay bigger eggs when they have female helpers to feed nestlings


    Maria Cristina Tello Ramos received funding from the National Geographic Foundation and The Templeton World Charity Foundation.

    ref. Avian architects: weaver birds in Africa have unique building styles – https://theconversation.com/avian-architects-weaver-birds-in-africa-have-unique-building-styles-240950

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Naked protests in South Africa: a psychologist explores the emotional power of this form of activism

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Mpho Mathebula, Lecturer, University of the Witwatersrand

    Naked protests are a form of public demonstration where individuals, often women, use the symbolic power of their naked bodies to challenge injustices. These protests have become an increasingly visible form of resistance, particularly in response to state violence, economic exploitation, and the oppression of women by men.

    While naked protests might seem provocative or shocking, they have a long and storied history in Africa. They are not only a powerful statement but also a direct challenge to norms in society around decency, control and vulnerability.

    As a research psychologist, I was drawn to the study of naked body protests because of their profound affective power. That’s to say I study how emotions like anger, fear, joy and empowerment are expressed and experienced by both the protester and the observer. I’ve interviewed numerous South African women who have taken part in naked protests in the past decade.


    Read more: Undressing for redress: the significance of Nigerian women’s naked protests


    My studies, which take an African feminist approach, show that these protests are not just acts of desperation or shock tactics. They’re rooted in a long tradition of resistance and decolonisation, drawing on generational power and emotional expressions. They are a feminist tactic that embodies both vulnerability and strength, using the body as a site of resistance and empowerment.

    Naked protests are complex – and, I argue, a powerful tool for reclaiming African women’s agency, dignity and voices.

    Colonialism and nakedness

    During colonialism, European countries ruled over African nations. Colonisers imposed their values, laws and social systems – including strict ideas about how women should behave and dress. These replaced many traditional African practices and beliefs. African women were required to cover their bodies because nakedness was seen as shameful or improper according to European moral standards.


    Read more: Naked protest: how ordinary citizens reveal truth to repressive regimes


    By protesting naked, African women are rejecting these colonial ideas and reclaiming their bodies as a form of resistance. They’re saying they refuse to be controlled by these outdated beliefs. So, naked protests are a decolonial action.

    African feminism sheds further light. It highlights the unique historical and social conditions that shape African women’s struggles. It recognises that African women’s bodies have been sites of both oppression and resistance for a long time, subjected to patriarchal and colonial control.

    Naked body protests in South Africa

    In South Africa, colonialism was followed by white minority rule. Apartheid was a system of racial segregation and discrimination, made law from 1948 to 1994. Black South Africans were denied political rights, restricted from owning land in white areas, and subjected to pass laws that controlled their movement. Black women bore the brunt of this oppression.

    In Durban in 1959, South African women protested against the 1908 Native Beer Act, which banned them from brewing traditional beer. Protesters attacked state beerhalls and, in a bold act of defiance, exposed their bodies as they faced police barricades. The police were often hesitant to confront or harm the women.

    #FeesMustFall protests in South Africa in 2016. Alon Skuy/The Times/Gallo Images/Getty Images

    In 1990, during the Dobsonville housing protest, women in Soweto stripped and protested against the demolition of their shacks by municipal police. They successfully drew media attention to their demands.

    This form of protest has endured, even in the country’s democratic era. As recently as 2024, women from the South African Cleaners, Security and Allied Workers’ Union staged a naked protest against the sudden termination of their contracts by private security companies.

    Psychology study

    But a primary focus of my research was the South African student protests that began in 2015. The #FeesMustFall movement saw students protesting against sexual violence and the high cost of education. Naked protests took place at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg and related #RUReferenceList protests against rape at Rhodes University in Makhanda.

    My PhD study set out to understand naked body protests and contribute to their psychological understanding. I wanted to find out why women in particular use this form of decolonialist protest and what its emotional and social role is during and after the actions.

    I interviewed 16 women who participated in the protests, as well as drawing from podcast interviews with two other participants and a video of the 1990 Dobsonville protests.

    Anger and confrontation

    I found that anger and confrontation played a central role. During the #FeesMustFall protests, women’s decision to use their naked bodies was a deliberate, transgressive act aimed at disrupting structures that wanted to silence them.

    They weaponised their vulnerability and exposed the contradictions within these systems – where women’s bodies are often sexually objectified but deemed unacceptable when used as instruments of protest. By baring their bodies, these women confronted the state, universities, and society at large by placing their physical bodies in direct opposition to deeply ingrained social hierarchies.


    Read more: Angry student protests have put rape back on South Africa’s agenda


    The anger expressed in these protests is not random; it’s rooted in a collective and historical sense of injustice. The women told me they were responding to both the immediate issue of being excluded from higher education facilities and also broader, generational experiences of gender-based violence, racism and economic disenfranchisement. Anger became a way to assert control over their bodies in spaces where their presence had been marginalised, ignored or actively suppressed.

    By channelling their anger, these women redefined their relationship to both their own bodies and the public spaces they occupied. Their protests highlighted the connection between personal anger and systemic oppression.

    Joy in struggle

    Joy is another important affect in these protests. Women often experience a sense of joy and empowerment when they achieve the goals of their protests.

    This joy is not just a personal feeling but a collective one that binds women together. Joy is a form of resistance in itself because it defies the narrative of women as passive victims.

    Empowered and powerful

    When women take part in naked protests, they show that they have the power to make their own decisions. They feel more confident and in control.

    Participants made it clear that being part of these protests can deeply change how women feel about themselves. They discover their strength and ability to fight back.

    The #IAmOneInThree hashtag was based on the United Nations estimate that one in three women around the world will be sexually abused in their lifetime. A #IAmOneInThree naked protest took place at the University of the Witwatersrand in solidarity with #RUReferenceList protests at Rhodes University. Sibu, who took part, shared how carrying a sjambok (a whip) and singing struggle songs with other women made her feel:

    For me that moment was affirming … I felt powerful somehow. Because when you … have been raped … it made me feel weak … It made me feel like an object and not a person. And so I remember that moment feeling empowered, right, I have my sjambok, I have my sisters around me.

    Naked body protests in South Africa are a powerful form of feminist resistance that draws on deep historical and cultural traditions. These protests are strategic and affective forms of resistance that challenge patriarchy, sexism and colonialism.

    – Naked protests in South Africa: a psychologist explores the emotional power of this form of activism
    – https://theconversation.com/naked-protests-in-south-africa-a-psychologist-explores-the-emotional-power-of-this-form-of-activism-238530

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Rwandan-backed M23 rebel group seeks local power in DRC, not just control over mining operations

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Ken Matthysen, Researcher, IPIS

    The violence wrought by the Rwandan-backed rebel group M23 Movement is often narrowly framed as intended to control eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s resource-rich mining sites. The rebel group launched its most recent offensive in 2021 and currently controls vast territories in the south-east of North Kivu province, surrounding and cutting off the main city of Goma.

    Eastern DR Congo mines produce crucial raw materials such as tin, tantalum and tungsten, as well as abundant quantities of gold. It therefore seems logical to reduce explanations of conflict to the ambition by M23, and Rwanda behind it, to control the mines directly.

    We belong to a team of researchers who examine the various dimensions of conflict from different perspectives. Our findings, based on fieldwork and conducted in collaboration with in-country experts, show that this popular analysis does not paint the full picture.

    Conflict analysis often ignores historical and local dimensions. Our investigation with the Goma-based civil society organisation Association pour le Développement des Initiatives Paysannes therefore explored the local stakes and impacts of the M23 crisis. We interviewed more than 55 people in North Kivu (DR Congo), including members of M23, as well as soldiers and armed groups fighting them, local chiefs, state agents, teachers, taximen, traders and farmers who live on the frontline of the conflict.

    Our research reveals that M23 employs a more profound strategy to boost its position and military strength (through Rwandan support) in local struggles over land, authority and rents. M23’s disruptive strategy aims to replace Congolese authorities and overhaul local governance in areas it controls in eastern DR Congo. Key to this strategy is:

    • undermining and replacing local (customary) authorities

    • taking over strategic trade routes

    • the installation of an elaborate taxation regime.

    These strategies also allow M23 – and Rwanda – to generate revenues from the local economy, including rents from DR Congo’s mineral wealth, without necessarily directly controlling mines.

    Historical struggles over land

    Interviewees attached great importance to the historical context of the M23 conflict, explaining how struggles over land date back to independence in 1960. Going back to the 1930s and 1940s, the Belgian colonial administrators already organised large movements of migrant workers from Rwanda to work on plantations in DR Congo. The Rwandophone migrants and their descendants settled in North Kivu, becoming part of the local population.

    After independence, Hutu and Tutsi (Rwandophone) communities began to jostle for control over North Kivu’s fertile farmland with the Hunde and Nyanga communities there. As grievances over access to land and property rights increased, Rwandophone communities were stigmatised as “non-indigenous” and their land claims as illegitimate.

    As the Congo Wars broke out in the 1990s, people began seeking recourse to armed groups to settle land conflicts. Before the rise of M23 in 2012, two other groups (Rassemblement Congolais pour la Démocratie and later Congrès National pour la Défense du Peuple) rose to protect the Rwandophone population in eastern DRC. They also grabbed and sold vast concessions of land – held by the state or other communities – to allied farmers and business people. These were typically from the Tutsi community.

    Given the country’s complex and under-enforced land laws, land claims became exceedingly difficult to verify or prove. This has strengthened the belief that the only way to secure access to land is by resorting to armed groups. Thus, M23 is perceived as the guardian of the Tutsi community’s access to land.

    This perception is well illustrated by a testimony of a local leader in Masisi territory:

    The wars of the last three decades have been motivated by a struggle for control over land … Indigenous people are driven out, dispossessed of their land in favour of others who are considered foreigners and refugees. … the M23 is made up of (Tutsi) pastoralists … and there are fields that their rivals had seized … it was one of their (M23) first concerns to start exploiting them.

    Most Congolese Tutsi have not asked for this “protection” by M23. But the ensuing grievances and ethnic tensions will haunt the relations between communities for years to come.

    Struggles over customary authority

    In DR Congo, customary chiefs play an important role in local land governance. They also adjudicate conflicts, bind people together through rituals, and represent the symbolic claim by a specific community to a given place.

    Many Congolese we spoke to perceive M23’s main aim to be control of power at the local level — undermining the existing authorities. The group has indeed sought to replace customary authorities with M23-appointed ones, at times assassinating Congolese chiefs. Local sources said M23 even burnt chiefdom archives, destroying evidence of claims to customary authority.

    M23’s economic grip

    Wherever M23 has a foothold, it installs an elaborate taxation regime. This involves checkpoint tolls, household taxes, dues on business, harvest taxes and forced labour. In doing so, the group generates the revenues to sustain the conflict. But this also strengthens its politico-administrative hold on the population, as taxation is a symbolic interface of public authority.

    Local armed groups that joined with the Congolese army to combat M23 deepen the problem. Called wazalendo (“patriots”), they are often unpaid and therefore rely on payments from the population to sustain their counter-offensive. As a result, taxation in eastern Congo has become heavily “militiarised”. Taxed by government forces, wazalendo and M23, civilians pay a heavy toll.

    The military nature of local governance could jeopardise future efforts to bring peace to eastern DRC.

    What about minerals?

    M23 has an impact on all aspects of local governance in eastern DR Congo. It has found ways to control and profit from the local economy in North Kivu, including mineral supply chains. It operates checkpoints along arteries and taxes minerals smuggled to Rwanda, alongside other trade flows.

    Having M23 control strategic trade routes in DR Congo, including those crossing into Uganda, is a benefit for Rwanda. From Kigali’s perspective, the resurgence of M23 in 2021 came at a perfect time to block Uganda’s efforts to improve the road network in eastern DR Congo towards its own territory. Rwanda and Uganda are locked in intense competition for Congolese informal trade, re-exporting its timber and minerals as their own, gaining taxes and foreign earnings that ought to benefit the Congolese treasury and population.

    What must be done?

    DR Congo’s resources play a large role in the M23 conflict, but our study underscores the historical roots of the conflict and its profound local impacts. These findings should inform locally meaningful and sustainable conflict resolution strategies.

    Since the M23 revival, land access, trade and security have become increasingly mediated by armed actors. Even after a possible M23 defeat, it will take years of local dialogue and mediation to undo this involvement of militia in local governance, resolve land issues, repair inter-community relations and remake customary authority. But that’s the only way to reach sustainable peace in North Kivu.

    – Rwandan-backed M23 rebel group seeks local power in DRC, not just control over mining operations
    – https://theconversation.com/rwandan-backed-m23-rebel-group-seeks-local-power-in-drc-not-just-control-over-mining-operations-231318

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Avian architects: weaver birds in Africa have unique building styles

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Maria Cristina Tello Ramos, Lecturer, University of Hull

    From afar, the acacia trees look like they have been decorated with grass pom-poms. The birds have been busy, building shelters of straw and grass. Up close the real shape of the “pom-poms” becomes clear: grass tubes in the form of an upside down “U”, with an opening at each end.

    These structures are the work of white-browed sparrow weavers (Plocepasser mahali).

    White-browed sparrow weavers are cooperative breeders. Within a multi-generational family group, only one dominant pair will reproduce; all other birds, which are mostly kin (related), will help with the rearing of chicks. These birds do everything together: forage, defend their territory, feed new chicks – and build each of the many roosts that decorate the acacia trees they live in. The birds are found throughout central and north-central southern Africa.

    Year after year, family groups get bigger and, as they do, the number of roosts they build increases. Families might have as many as 14 individuals, so the birds need to build multiple roosts, including a few “spares”.

    There’s something intriguing about these roosts. Sometimes different families set up territories next to each other, in trees as close together as 10 metres.

    How do you tell families apart? By their roosts. Some families build roosts that are very long, with long entrance and exit tubes; others will build roosts that are much shorter, with hardly any tubes. Essentially, it looks like different white-browed sparrow weaver families have different architectural styles. Why?

    To find out, we studied more than 400 roosts built by 43 families in the Tswalu Kalahari Reserve in South Africa’s Northern Cape province. We confirmed that the roosts and nests built by groups that live next to each other have their own architectural style, and that environmental, physical or genetic attributes of these different family groups do not influence the structures’ configuration.

    We think that the birds’ building behaviour and the shape of the structures might be the result of social interactions. Animals often learn from each other how to do things, whether it is how to use tools (chimpanzees), how to sing the correct song (some bird species, humpback whales), or how to exploit new food resources (cockatoos). Learning from others within a group often results in animals showing group-specific behaviours, or animal cultures. In this sense animals, like humans, develop their own cultures.

    Measuring various factors

    There is a lot of diversity in the nests different bird species build, both in the shapes and the materials used, as well as the number of nests an individual might build.

    For example, sociable weavers (Philetairus socius) build massive multiple occupant “apartment buildings” made out of grass. Cape penduline tits (Anthoscopus minutus) build nests that look like satchels made out of vegetable fibres with the texture of a wool sweater. Male southern mask weavers (Ploceus velatus) will weave thousands of grass leaves to build multiple nests at one time, and swallows collect and stack together one mud pellet at a time to build their pottery nests.

    To better understand the lack of uniformity among different white-browed sparrow weaver families’ roosts, we measured 400 roosts, all still on the trees, built by 43 families in the Tswalu Kalahari Reserve. Some were new – less than a year old – and others were at least two years old. (All structures that we measured were also identified with a small ring. We did this for three years in a row, so we could tell if a structure was there before we started measuring and marking the structures or if it was built during our time there.)

    Measuring the structures built by different family groups. Maria Tello-Ramos, Author provided (no reuse)

    Those measurements confirmed that different families build roosts with different sizes and that, across years, families maintain their own architectural style.

    At the same time, we measured the temperature and wind speed at each of the families’ territories, the size of the birds, the height of the trees, how genetically related different families were to each other, and how far away the different families lived from each other.

    This allowed us to determine whether any of these factors could explain why different families build different roosts. For instance, maybe families living in hotter territories build roosts with shorter tubes than in cooler areas, since they would not need much material to insulate them from the cold at night. The similarity in their environment, we reasoned, might explain why weaver families living in close proximity to each other created similar roosts. Or perhaps families that were more closely related to each other (something like cousins and second cousins) would build similar structures?

    However, one by one, we excluded all environmental and genetic explanations for the differences in the structures built by different families.

    The variety in roosts built by different families was clear. Maria Tello-Ramos, Author provided (no reuse)

    So what happens next?

    We plan to continue documenting the architectural styles of different white-browed sparrow weaver families and to record their building behaviour so we can determine how these birds coordinate their behaviour when building together.

    Looking in more detail at how the roosts built by these birds across Africa might differ could help us understand to what extent the environment, material availability, individual experiences, and social interactions between individuals affect the building behaviour of these birds.

    Maybe, like humans, some species of birds have their own architectural traditions passed on across generations through social interactions.


    Read more: Kalahari weaver birds lay bigger eggs when they have female helpers to feed nestlings


    – Avian architects: weaver birds in Africa have unique building styles
    – https://theconversation.com/avian-architects-weaver-birds-in-africa-have-unique-building-styles-240950

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Europe: AFRICA/MOZAMBIQUE – Presidential and parliamentary elections: Bishops denounce irregularities and violence

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Maputo (Agenzia Fides) – “The post-election period was marked by a cowardly attack to silence, if not the truth, then at least democracy”. With these words, the Episcopal Conference of Mozambique condemned the murder of the two members of the opposition party PODEMOS, Elvino Dias and Paulo Guambe, killed in an ambush after the parliamentary elections on October 9 (see Fides, 22/10/2024).”We condemn the barbaric murder of two political figures, because it recalls, with similar methods, other murders of political or civil society figures, also linked to opposition parties, that took place following previous elections,” said the Mozambican bishops in their statement of October 22.The bishops also complain that there were serious irregularities in the election on October 9, such as “serious fraud, repeated insertion of ballot papers that had already been cast into the ballot box, falsification of news.” Following the allegations of alleged electoral fraud and in connection with the murder of the two opposition representatives, protests broke out in Maputo and other cities on October 21, which were violently suppressed by the police. According to the Mozambican Business Association, the day of protest had serious economic consequences, with a loss of 203 million euros for the private sector.The bishops are meanwhile calling for the right to demonstrate to be respected, but are appealing to the young demonstrators not to allow themselves to be instrumentalized in acts of violence.In conclusion, the Bishops’ Conference notes that “more than half of the registered voters did not go to the polls”, stressing that “we have experienced the highest abstention in our history of multi-party elections, which seems to indicate that the irregularities and fraud recorded in previous elections have shown a large part of the population that their will expressed at the ballot box is not respected and the exercise of this important civil right is useless”.In conclusion, the Bishops called on everyone to take the path of forgiveness and courage towards the truth in order to return the country to normality. So far only some partial results of the election have been published, which point to a victory for FRELIMO, the party that has been in power since independence in 1975. The final official results are expected tomorrow, October 25. (L.M.) (Agenzia Fides, 24/10/2024)
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    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI USA: McCaul, Hill, McCormick, McClintock on the Release of Tigran Gambaryan

    Source: US House Committee on Foreign Affairs

    Media Contact 202-226-8467

    Austin, Texas  Today, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-Texas), Representatives French Hill (R-Ark.), Rich McCormick (R-Ga.), and Tom McClintock (R-Calif.) released the following statement on the release of U.S. citizen Tigran Gambaryan, who was unjustly detained by the Government of Nigeria since February 2024.

    “While long overdue, we are extremely pleased that Tigran Gambaryan has finally been released from his unjust detention by the Government of Nigeria. During his detainment, Tigran was unfairly subjected to routine violations of his rights of due process, including restricted access to his counsel and U.S. consular support, and inadequate healthcare. This treatment of an upstanding American citizen is wholly unacceptable. Our hearts go out to Tigran and his family, and we hope for an expeditious recovery from this shameful ordeal.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Secretary-General’s video message to the Virtual Launch of the UNEP Emissions Gap Report

    Source: United Nations – English

    ownload the video: https://s3.amazonaws.com/downloads2.unmultimedia.org/public/video/evergr…

    The message of today’s Emissions Gap report is clear:

    We are teetering on a planetary tight rope.

    Either leaders bridge the emissions gap, or we plunge headlong into climate disaster – with the poorest and most vulnerable suffering the most.

    This report shows annual greenhouse gas emissions at an all-time high – rising 1.3 per cent last year.  They must fall 9 per cent each year to 2030 to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius and avoid the very worst of climate change.

    Current policies are taking us towards a catastrophic 3.1 degrees Celsius temperature rise by the end of the century.

    As this report rightly puts it, people and planet cannot afford more hot air.

    The emissions gap is not an abstract notion.  There is a direct link between increasing emissions and increasingly frequent and intense climate disasters. 

    Around the world, people are paying a terrible price.

    Record emissions mean record sea temperatures supercharging monster hurricanes;

    Record heat is turning forests into tinder boxes and cities into saunas;
     
    Record rains are resulting in biblical floods.

    Today’s report shows affordable, existing technologies can achieve the emissions reductions we need to 2030 and 2035 to meet the 1.5 degree limit.

    But only with a surge in ambition and support.

    The upcoming United Nations climate conference – COP29 – must drive progress in two ways. 

    First, COP29 starts the clock for countries to deliver new national climate action plans – or NDCs – by next year. 

    Governments have agreed to align these plans with 1.5 degrees.

    That means they must drive down all greenhouse gas emissions and cover the whole economy – pushing progress in every sector.

    And they must wean us off our fossil fuel addiction: showing how governments will phase them out – fast and fairly; and contributing to global goals to accelerate renewables rollout and halt and reverse deforestation.

    The largest economies – the G20 members, responsible for around 80 per cent of all emissions – must lead. I urge first-movers to come forward.

    Second, finance will be front and centre at COP29. 

    Developing countries urgently need serious support to accelerate the transition to clean energy and deal with the violent weather they are already facing. 

    COP29 must agree a new finance goal that unlocks the trillions of dollars they need. And provides confidence it will be delivered.

    We know the price of climate inaction is far greater.

    This would require a significant increase in concessional public finance, that can be complemented by innovative sources, such as fossil fuel extraction levies.

    The COP29 outcome must also send clear signals, to drive action on debt relief and reform of the Multilateral Development Banks to make them bigger and bolder.

    Today’s Emissions Gap report is clear: we’re playing with fire; but there can be no more playing for time.

    We’re out of time.

    Closing the emissions gap means closing the ambition gap, the implementation gap, and the finance gap.

    Starting at COP29.

    Thank you.
     

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI USA: Statement from National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan on Tigran  Gambaryan

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    I am pleased that American citizen and former U.S. law enforcement official Tigran Gambaryan has been released on humanitarian grounds by the Nigerian Government and is on his way back to the United States so that he can receive needed medical attention. As soon as we secured Mr. Gambaryan’s release, I called his wife Yuki to share this good news. I am grateful to my Nigerian colleagues and partners for the productive discussions that have resulted in this step and look forward to working closely with them on the many areas of cooperation and collaboration critical to the bilateral partnership between our two countries.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: RELEASE: REPS. HILL, MCCAUL, MCCORMICK, MCCLINTOCK ON THE RELEASE OF TIGRAN GAMBARYAN

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman French Hill (AR-02)

    RELEASE: REPS. HILL, MCCAUL, MCCORMICK, MCCLINTOCK ON THE RELEASE OF TIGRAN GAMBARYAN

    WASHINGTON, D.C., October 24, 2024

    LITTLE ROCK, AR – Rep. French Hill (R-AR), House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-TX), Rep. Rich McCormick (R-GA), and Rep. Tom McClintock (R-CA) today released the following statement on the release of U.S. citizen Tigran Gambaryan, who was unjustly detained by the Government of Nigeria since February 2024.

    “While long overdue, we are extremely pleased that Tigran Gambaryan has finally been released from his unjust detention by the Government of Nigeria. During his detainment, Tigran was unfairly subjected to routine violations of his rights of due process, including restricted access to his counsel and U.S. consular support, and inadequate healthcare. This treatment of an upstanding American citizen is wholly unacceptable. Our hearts go out to Tigran and his family, and we hope for an expeditious recovery from this shameful ordeal.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Africa: GE Vernova Provides GridOS® Orchestration Software to Help West African Power Pool (WAPP) Facilitate Energy Exchange Among Its Member States

    Source: Africa Press Organisation – English (2) – Report:

    GE Vernova Provides GridOS® Orchestration Software to Help West African Power Pool (WAPP) Facilitate Energy Exchange Among Its Member States The ICC technology platform has also been upgraded with GE Vernova’s GridOS forecasting solution to enhance the value of Variable Renewable Energy (VRE) on the electricity market with advanced forecasting and ramping tools LAGOS, Nigeria, October 24, 2024/APO Group/ — GE Vernova Inc. (www.GEVernova.com) (NYSE: GEV) today announced that its GridOS® orchestration software is deployed in the newly completed Information and Coordination Centre (ICC) in Abomey-Calavi, Benin for the West African Power Pool (WAPP), a groundbreaking initiative aimed at transforming the region’s energy landscape. The recently inaugurated ICC will serve as the centralized command centre for the mainland member countries of the Economic Community of West Africa States (ECOWAS), overseeing the interconnected power grids of 14 nations, namely Benin, Burkina-Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Togo. This milestone marks a significant step towards establishing a unified power market across the region, paving the way for a more reliable, sustainable, and affordable energy infrastructure for West Africa.  According to the International Energy Agency (IEA) Africa Energy Outlook 2022 report1, Africa’s GDP is expected to grow by an average of 4.6% per year between 2022 and 2040. This economic growth is expected to drive up energy demand by 2.8% per year, with electricity consumption expected to double by 2040. By expanding power capacity, enhancing forecasting capabilities, and ensuring a seamless balance between generation and demand across borders, the West Africa Power Pool powered by the ICC is bridging the gap between energy needs and reliable supply.  The ICC is a state-of-the art facility equipped with the latest electric grid management technologies. Elements of GE Vernova’s GridOS software portfolio are deployed in the facility to enable more secure, reliable grid orchestration. The software is designed to help utilities achieve the resiliency and flexibility needed for a more sustainable energy grid. The ICC is using several of the portfolio’s intelligent grid applications, including: 

    • Energy Management System (EMS) engineered for dispatching 
    • Wide Area Monitoring System (WAMS) designed for grid stability 
    • Advanced Market Management System designed to support the trading of power among ECOWAS countries 

    The ICC technology platform has also been upgraded with GE Vernova’s GridOS forecasting solution to enhance the value of Variable Renewable Energy (VRE) on the electricity market with advanced forecasting and ramping tools. Through this integration, engineers will have near real-time access to data on energy flow across the WAPP interconnected network, enabling them to monitor, analyze, and optimize the distribution of power.  “We are honored to partner with WAPP in their mission to promote and develop power generation and transmission infrastructures, as well as to coordinate power exchange among the ECOWAS member states. Our GridOS portfolio provides the ICC with modern software capabilities to automate grid operations and help increase the energy transaction rate across the region, helping overcome energy challenges in the ECOWAS zone,” said Mahesh Sudhakaran, General Manager for GE Vernova’s Grid Software business.  GE Vernova has long worked with national electric utilities and regional power pools from the region, helping them adopt best-in-class technologies for grid modernization. In November 2022, the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP) inaugurated a new Coordination Control Center equipped with the latest Energy Management System (EMS) from GE Vernova’s Grid Software business. With more projects underway, GE Vernova is proud to be contributing to the energy transition in Africa.  Distributed by APO Group on behalf of GE. Media Inquiries:  Winnie Gathage  GE Vernova | Africa Communications Leader  winnie.gathage@ge.com   Rachael Van Reen  GE Vernova | External Communications  +1 (678) 896-6754 rachael.vanreen@ge.com About GE Vernova: GE Vernova Inc. (NYSE: GEV) is a purpose-built global energy company that includes Power, Wind, and Electrification segments and is supported by its accelerator businesses. Building on over 130 years of experience tackling the world’s challenges, GE Vernova is uniquely positioned to help lead the energy transition by continuing to electrify the world while simultaneously working to decarbonize it. GE Vernova helps customers power economies and deliver electricity that is vital to health, safety, security, and improved quality of life. GE Vernova is headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., with more than 75,000 employees across 100+ countries around the world. Supported by the Company’s purpose, The Energy to Change the World, GE Vernova technology helps deliver a more affordable, reliable, sustainable, and secure energy future. Learn more: GE Vernova (https://apo-opa.co/48mJgut) and LinkedIn (https://apo-opa.co/3Uj1pDO). GE Vernova’s Electrification Software business is focused on delivering the intelligent applications and insights needed to accelerate electrification and decarbonization across the entire energy ecosystem – from how it’s created, how it’s orchestrated, to how it’s consumed. Its Grid Software business and GridOS® portfolio is trusted by global utilities to orchestrate a more sustainable energy grid and help deliver reliable and affordable electricity to their customers.  Forward-Looking Statements: This document contains forward-looking statements (https://apo-opa.co/4hfGwmV) – that is, statements related to future events that by their nature address matters that are, to different degrees, uncertain. These forward-looking statements often address GE Vernova’s expected future business and financial performance and financial condition, and the expected performance of its products, the impact of its services and the results they may generate or produce, often contain words such as “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “seek,” “see,” “will,” “would,” “estimate,” “forecast,” “target,” “preliminary,” or “range.” Forward-looking statements by their nature address matters that are, to different degrees, uncertain, such as statements about planned and potential transactions, investments or projects and their expected results and the impacts of macroeconomic and market conditions and volatility on the Company’s business operations, financial results and financial position and on the global supply chain and world economy. 

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    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Video: Vuk Talks season 2 episode 24: ADV Richard Sizani

    Source: Republic of South Africa (video statements-2)

    ADV Richard Sizani talks about the implementation of the South African Electoral System reforms

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFojFnmYrTo

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The full and safe participation of women is crucial to successful peacebuilding efforts: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Statement by Lord Richard Hermer, Attorney General for England and Wales and Advocate General for Northern Ireland, at the UN Security Council meeting on women building peace in a changing environment.

    On UN day, I want to start by recalling that last month my Prime Minister gave a clear recommitment to the United Nations, to the rule of law, and to the need to work together for peace, progress and equality. 

    And empowering women and girls is a vital part of this. Addressing structural gender inequality is a vital part of this, tackling misogyny is a vital part of this, and ending impunity for conflict related sexual violence is a vital part of this.

    We are approaching the 25-year anniversary of the Women, Peace and Security agenda and I’m proud of the role the UK has played.

    There is much to celebrate. Yet the overall implementation is lagging. Not one of the peace agreements reached in 2023 included a women’s representative or women’s representative group as signatory. The proportion of women killed in conflict has doubled compared to 2022.

    Building on her excellency Thomas-Greenfield’s essential three I’s. May I propose three areas for our collective action?

    First, conflict prevention.

    Conflict is at a post-WWII high. Women and children are disproportionately impacted. And we need to reinvigorate conflict prevention efforts, taking a gender-responsive approach.

    Through our ‘Resourcing Change’ project, the UK is supporting women’s participation in formal and informal mechanisms for the prevention and resolution of conflict, including in Nigeria and in South Sudan. 

    Second, we must stand together to prevent conflict-related sexual violence and end impunity.

    The UK remains committed to the Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict Initiative and our work with the International Alliance to build a stronger international response. PSVI programmes have contributed to vital legislative changes around the world.

    We have sanctioned perpetrators for CRSV crimes in seven countries. And I call upon all states to redouble efforts to seek justice and accountability and support the survivors.

    Third, I call upon member states to support women’s right’s organisations as the driving force behind the WPS agenda.

    I am proud of the UK’s £33 million partnership with the Equality Fund who have supported over 1000 women’s right’s organisations, including in conflict settings, since 2019.

    In Sudan, the UK has supported the establishment of the anti-war, pro-democracy coalition, working with 200 women. 

    In Myanmar, the UK is contributing over $1.3 million over three years in long-term support to grassroots women and LGBTQ+ led organisations to build capacity and support inclusive and strategic cooperation amongst local-level women leaders and community representatives.  

    Women’s full, equal, meaningful and safe participation is crucial to achieving lasting peace, and we condemn the shocking levels of reprisals against women peacebuilders.

    But we must also recognise this, that the long-term solution to gender based violence in conflicts requires all societies to address its root causes. It requires addressing gender inequality systemically, not just in criminal courts or in peace negotiations halls, but in how girls and boys, men and women relate to each other in classrooms, in playgrounds, workplaces, public life and online.

    The link between gender inequality and gender-based violence in conflict must be systematically addressed.

    So as we approach the 25th anniversary, we must celebrate women’s rights organisations and peacebuilders who have championed this agenda. We welcome the Secretary General’s Common Pledge to prioritise women’s participation in peace processes to address this gap.

    But we must go further and faster to build a more inclusive, sustainable, and peaceful future for all.

    Updates to this page

    Published 24 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Video: Phone -in- Programme with the South African Military Ombud General(Ret) Vusumuzi Masondo

    Source: Republic of South Africa (video statements-2)

    Phone -in- Programme with the South African Military Ombud General(Ret) Vusumuzi Masondo

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QH851dC8oWY

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Deputy Secretary-General’s remarks to the Security Council – on Women, Peace and Security [as delivered]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Madam President, Excellencies,

    First, let me begin by wishing everyone a happy UN Day.

    Every year, in this Chamber, the global community reaffirms its commitment to ensuring women’s full, equal, and meaningful participation in conflict prevention, resolution, and recovery, and to upholding their rights during times of war.

    Yet, progress remains dishearteningly slow. 
     
    Peace and security decision-making is overwhelmingly dominated by men.

    And ending impunity for atrocities against women and girls is still but a distant goal.

    And the past year has been especially difficult.

    In Gaza, tens of thousands of Palestinian women and girls have been killed and injured amidst continued war and a terrible humanitarian crisis.

    Meanwhile, the plight of Israeli women still held hostage demands urgent action to ensure their safety and immediate release.

    In Lebanon, an escalation of destruction and displacement threatens women and girls’ safety and livelihood.  

    In Sudan, women are enduring extreme suffering, facing not only the loss of loved ones but also the dire lack of access to essential services and medical care.

    I reiterate the Secretary-General’s calls:

    Civilians must be protected, civilian infrastructure must not be targeted, and international law must be upheld.

    The United Nations remains steadfast.

    We will not look away or lose hope.

    The women, peace and security agenda will always guide our work and show a path forward. 

    Despite attacks on our offices, and the detention and killings of our staff in unprecedented numbers, allow me to honor the work of my colleagues and share examples of what they do.

    In peacekeeping missions, the women, peace and security agenda is a key political and strategic imperative.

    Our teams work tirelessly to help protect and assist women – from relocating human rights defenders to aiding women after their release from abduction by armed groups, from ensuring women’s representation in local dialogues to helping bring justice to women in places where sexual violence has long been met with impunity.

    In the Democratic Republic of Congo, for example, 57 percent of cases supported by the mission’s Prosecution Support Cells in 2023 involved conflict-related sexual violence, contributing to the conviction of dozens of members of armed groups and state security forces.

    In Abyei, earlier this year, one-third of participants in a post-migration conference were women – this was a first.

    In the Central African Republic, the mission is helping mobilize women for local elections that have not been held in 38 years.

    Deploying more diverse teams to peacekeeping operations has helped us deliver better on our mandates.

    The representation of women in most categories of uniformed personnel has doubled in the last five years, and initiatives have been put in place to foster gender-responsive work environments for all peacekeepers.

    Yet, much more remains to be done to improve the gender balance of our deployments and reap the benefits of inclusion and diversity.

    Success in peacekeeping hinges on the political support from Member States, especially those with the great honor of sitting in this Chamber to protect international peace and security.

    I commend the efforts of the United Arab Emirates to empower Women in Peace and Security. This initiative has provided training and capacity building opportunities for over 600 women from the Middle East, Africa and Asia in military and peacekeeping. The UN is a proud partner in these efforts that advance the Women, Peace and Security Agenda.

    Throughout the world, the UN reaches millions of displaced women and girls and survivors of violence with food, medical support, legal aid, shelter, access to safe spaces, psychosocial support, education, and jobs and livelihood opportunities.

    Yesterday, survivors of conflict-related sexual violence from many war-torn corners of the globe gathered for a Survivor’s Hearing to mark the 15th anniversary of resolution 1888.

    Effective protection from sexual violence is fundamental to women’s effective participation in peacebuilding, conflict recovery, and sustainable development that leaves no one behind. 

    None of this would happen without women’s organizations in the frontlines of crises, and we are trying to find ways of channeling more resources to them.

    The Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund has supported over 1,300 local women’s civil society organizations since 2016, nearly half of them accessing UN funds for the first time, and 582 women human rights defenders and their families.

    Last year, the Secretary-General invited all partners to contribute to the goal of raising 300 million dollars for women’s organizations in conflict-affected countries.

    We still have a long way to go to get there.

    40 percent of all funding of the 25-million-dollar GBV-focused grant by the Central Emergency Response Fund to UN Women and UNFPA was sub-granted to local women’s organizations and delivered remarkable results, a powerful demonstration that localization is both feasible and effective.

    The Peacebuilding Fund has now exceeded its internal target allocation of 30 percent to gender equality for seven years in a row.

    We know that the inclusion of women and gender-related provisions in peace processes not only advances gender equality, but also results in more durable peace agreements. From Guatemala to Northern Ireland, from Colombia to Liberia, research has shown how women in formal processes worked with diverse women’s groups to not only reach an agreement but also to strengthen the substance of peace agreements and opportunities for implementation.

    Yet, women remain starkly under-represented from peace negotiations and conflict resolution efforts – including in some of the most intractable conflicts over the last year.

    Historical data underscores this challenge: between 1992 and 2019, women constituted only 13 per cent of negotiators and six per cent of mediators in major peace processes.

    More recent data from UN Women for 2023 shows that women on average made up less than ten per cent of peace negotiators and 13.5 per cent of mediators.

    The processes in Libya and Yemen, where conflict parties have not included women, highlight a continued resistance to progress.

    In Afghanistan, the regression of women’s rights highlights the severe impact of excluding women from governance – and society altogether.

    It is imperative that we reinforce our resolve to support women in Afghanistan and elsewhere, advocating for their rights, agency and inclusion at every opportunity.

    Collective action and solidarity are crucial.

    In today’s broader global mediation landscape, the United Nations is not always present.

    In fact, a diverse set of regional, state and other mediation actors initiates and leads mediation processes.

    Many contexts feature joint or overlapping peace initiatives.

    This means that no single mediator can affect global and meaningful change on women’s participation.

    It is why, today, on behalf of the Secretary-General, I am pleased to launch the “Common Pledge on Women’s Participation in Peace Processes”, an initiative that brings together a broad array of mediation actors. 

    By endorsing this Common Pledge, Member States, regional organizations and other mediation actors commit to join the United Nations in taking concrete steps on women’s participation in all peace processes they are involved in.   

    These commitments include: 

    Appointing women as lead mediators and ensuring women are an integral part of mediation teams;

    Ensuring mediators advocate with conflict parties for concrete targets and measures that promote women’s direct and meaningful participation in peace processes, including as members of their delegations;

    Consulting with a broad range of women leaders and women-led civil society organizations in all stages of peace processes; and

    Embedding gender expertise in their mediation teams to foster gender-responsive peace processes and agreements.

    This Pledge targets mediating entities and is intended as an operational initiative, and not another general statement of principle. 

    It focuses on measures and decisions that are under the control of mediators and their organizations.

    The Secretary-General invites Member States, regional organizations and other actors who are actively engaged in mediation to join this initiative and report on their progress at next year’s 25th Anniversary Security Council Open Debate on women, peace and security.

    Madam President,

    We have no illusions about the challenges posed by today’s geopolitical landscape and the complexity of achieving diplomatic outcomes.

     As long as gendered power inequalities, patriarchal social structures, systematic biases, violence and discrimination continues to hold back half our societies, peace will remain elusive.

    Yet, our collective experience has shown that progress is possible.

    Together, we can have an impact that is greater than the sum of our individual efforts.

    By leveraging our respective political capital and roles, let us dismantle the patriarchal power structures and advance gender equality, ensuring women’s full, equal and meaningful participation in political and public life.

    Thank you.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: WTO hosts event on role of youth in promoting “Trade for Peace” in fragile states

    Source: WTO

    Headline: WTO hosts event on role of youth in promoting “Trade for Peace” in fragile states

    In his opening remarks, Deputy Director-General Xiangchen Zhang said: “The youth are not just the leaders of tomorrow; they are the change-makers of today.” He stressed the importance of including young voices in decision-making, noting that the WTO’s Trade for Peace (T4P) Programme’s Future Leaders Initiative aims to empower youth as active agents of stability and prosperity.
    An “Intergenerational Perspectives on Trade and Peace” panel brought together Ambassador Alan Wolff, Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Ms. Afomia Andualem, CEO and Co-Founder of Agelgil Eco- Packaging in Ethiopia, Mr. Eric Andrew, a WTO Young Trade Leader and Founder of AgrofixiNG in Nigeria, and Ms. Maria Guterres, Vice-Coordinator of the Timorese Youth Initiative for Development.
    The panelists explored the historical connection between trade and peace, with each speaker sharing their perspectives on how youth can contribute to fostering peace through trade.
    The event saw the launch of videos showcasing findings from students of the University of St. Gallen University in Switzerland and from experts in the area of trade and peace. These videos stemmed from a project with the University of St. Gallen undertaken from September to December 2023 aimed at delving into the intersection of trade and peace.
    The videos sparked lively breakout discussions, where participants explored practical steps to enhance youth involvement in the link between trade and peace. The discussions also encompassed the research findings of students taking part in the autumn 2023 TradeLab International Economic Law Clinic at the Geneva Graduate Institute, who explored the interlinkages between trade and peace agreements and negotiations.
    The event culminated in a collective call to action, delivered by Kérshia Cavele, Project Coordinator of the Trade for Peace Programme, urging policymakers to support youth-driven initiatives and create pathways for sustainable peace through trade. She noted that the event underscored the growing recognition of youth as essential players in addressing the challenges facing fragile and conflict affected states. By fostering academic insights with real-world experiences, the “Trade for Peace: Future Leaders Initiative” continues to pave the way for innovative solutions that leverage the multilateral trading system as a tool for peacebuilding.
    The youth event was organized during the 2024 Geneva Peace Week, which brings together organizations in Geneva and their international partners to share knowledge and best practice. At the Opening Ceremony, Ms. Milzat Salime of the WTO’s Trade for Peace team emphasized the vital role of youth in peacebuilding. WTO Deputy Director General Xiangchen Zhang participated in a high-level panel titled Peace, Trade, Development and Innovations: Insights from International Leaders and Ms Maika Oshikawa, Director of the WTO’s Accessions Division, delivered opening remarks in the session titled Trade and SME-led Growth in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Settings: Key Principles for Inter-Agency Collaboration.
    Background
    The Trade for Peace (T4P) Programme emerged from the vision of the g7+ WTO Accessions Group, a group of fragile and conflict-affected states (FCS) associated with WTO accession. Launched at the 11th WTO Ministerial Conference in 2017, the Group’s aim is to integrate FCS into the multilateral trading system through WTO membership, strengthening economic and trade policy frameworks while promoting transparency and good governance. Initially organized under the “Trade for Peace through WTO Accession” initiative, it expanded into the T4P Programme in 2021.
    The T4P Programme highlights trade and economic integration as key components in fostering durable peace and stability in fragile regions. Building on this foundation, the Trade for Peace: Future Leaders Initiative extends these efforts by engaging youth, focusing on raising awareness of their role in peacebuilding through trade, providing platforms for their voices, and fostering innovative solutions.

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    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Human rights go hand in hand with sustainable development: UK Statement at the UN Third Committee

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Statement by Alex Berelowitz, Second Secretary Human Rights at the General Debate of the UN Third Committee.

    Almost eighty years ago, the UN Charter established the three founding pillars of the UN system: peace and security, development and human rights.

    As our Prime Minister said before the General Assembly, one of these – human rights – speaks to the very essence of what it is to be human.

    We have made many advances in the years since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    But we cannot ignore the challenges we now face.

    Widespread conflict and violence, misuse of new technologies, entrenched inequality, rollback of women and girls’ rights, climate vulnerability, and – all too often – downright impunity where power is abused.

    In seeking solutions we must have human rights and the rule of law front and centre. As all member states agreed in the Pact for the Future, human rights are key to meeting the needs of everyone – especially the most vulnerable.

    This includes women and children in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Lebanon.

    The humanitarian implications of the conflict are devastating and compounding an existing crisis in Lebanon.

    We remain deeply concerned at the escalation of violence, the number of deaths and injuries, the displacement of families from their homes, and unacceptable attacks on UN Peacekeepers.

    We call for an immediate ceasefire, and the release of all hostages in Gaza and the rapid provision of humanitarian aid into Gaza and Lebanon.

    Diplomacy, not violence, is the way to achieve peace, stability and security across the region.

    In Ukraine, Russia continues to disregard the UN Charter through its illegal invasion.

    Many Russian atrocities amount to war crimes. Russia’s attacks on energy infrastructure, as well as the widespread and systematic use of torture against Ukrainian POWs are beyond reprehensible. We must hold perpetrators to account.

    With conflict driving most of the world’s humanitarian needs, the UN’s role in independently monitoring and documenting human rights abuses and violations is more critical than ever.

    We welcome the Human Rights Council’s recent renewal of the Fact-Finding Mission in Sudan. While international attention is on the Middle East and Ukraine, a brutal war has displaced over 10 million people, with atrocities carried out by both warring parties.

    But in non conflict situations too, human rights are under threat.

    Two years after the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Right’s Assessment on Xinjiang, China continues to persecute and arbitrarily detain Uyghurs and Tibetans, restricting civil society and independent media, and targeting human rights defenders and lawyers.

    We again call upon China to implement its OHCHRs recommendations

    The use of the death penalty in Iran has also reached a critical level – we cannot ignore politically motivated executions of protesters, dissidents, and juvenile offenders.

    With so many global challenges we must recommit to collective action underpinned by responsible global leadership.

    In 2025 the United Kingdom will stand for election to the Human Rights Council. We will do all we can to advert greater conflict, instability and injustice. 

    Realising human rights goes hand-in-hand with sustainable development. But that too is throttled in places like Afghanistan, where we have seen a wholesale regression of the rights of women and girls. Banned from education and employment, with numerous restrictions on their presence in public spaces.

    And in Syria we have seen the targeting of girls, subjected to forced marriage, and forced to take on increased care-giving responsibilities.

    We will not progress on sustainable development if women and girls are denied their human rights.

    Let us recommit, together, to the UN Charter and Universal Declaration and continue to strive for a world where nobody is left behind.

    Updates to this page

    Published 23 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Video: President Ramaphosa’ remarks during the closed session of the 16th BRICS Summit

    Source: Republic of South Africa (video statements)

    President Ramaphosa’ remarks during the closed session of the 16th BRICS Summit

    Checkout more: http://www.thepresidency.gov.za

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  • MIL-OSI Video: President Ramaphosa on a bilateral meeting with President Putin of Russia

    Source: Republic of South Africa (video statements)

    President Ramaphosa on a bilateral meeting with President Putin of Russia

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  • MIL-OSI Video: President Ramaphosa arrives in Russia for the 16th BRICS Summit

    Source: Republic of South Africa (video statements)

    President Ramaphosa arrives in Russia for the 16th BRICS Summit

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