Category: AM-NC

  • MIL-OSI Security: Illinois Man Sentenced to 35 Years for Enticing a Minor to Engage in Illegal Sexual Activities

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    DES MOINES, Iowa – An Illinois man was sentenced on Friday, January 17, 2025, to 35 years in federal prison for enticement and attempted enticement of a minor and for committing an offense while a registered sex offender.

    According to public court documents, in 2020, Anthony Alan Anderson, 40, while serving in the United States Air Force, was convicted via general court martial of two counts of attempting to commit a lewd act with a person he believed to be a child who had not attained the age of 16 years old. As a result of that conviction, Anderson was required to register as a sex offender in his state of residence. Anderson moved to Illinois in 2022.

    From May to November 2023, Anderson, from his residence in Illinois, used text messaging and social-media applications to communicate with a 14-year-old child from Ottumwa, Iowa. During their communications, Anderson convinced the child to produce and send him child pornography. In September 2023, Anderson traveled from his home in Illinois to Ottumwa, where he picked the child up from her residence and took her to a hotel. There, he and the child engaged in sex acts. Anderson also captured child sexual abuse material of the child while in the hotel.

    After completing his term of imprisonment, Anderson will be required to serve a ten‑year term of supervised release. There is no parole in the federal system.

    United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The case was investigated by the Ottumwa Police Department with assistance from the Illinois State Police.

    The case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood. In 2006, the Department of Justice created Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative designed to protect children from exploitation and abuse. Led by the U.S. Attorney’s Offices and the Department of Justice’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children, as well as identify and rescue victims. For information about internet safety education, please visit www.usdoj.gov/psc and click on the resources tab.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Minister visits Sri Lanka strengthening UK partnership and boosting growth

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Minister for the Indo-Pacific Catherine West visits Sri Lanka with a focus on boosting exports and economic growth.

    • UK Minister for the Indo-Pacific set to meet with new Sri Lankan government minsters as part of the first official visit of new UK government.  
    • Minister will set out plans to strengthen UK-Sri Lanka partnership – from inclusive economic growth, anti-corruption, human rights to national reconciliation.
    • The Minister will welcome new export initiatives set to bolster UK-Sri Lanka trade.

    Inclusive economic growth, anti-corruption, human rights and national reconciliation are on the agenda as Catherine West, Minister for Indo-Pacific will meet President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and other key government ministers.  

    The visit marks the first ministerial visit to Sri Lanka since the formation of new governments in both countries.  

    The Minister will strengthen valuable UK-Sri Lanka trade links, boosting growth for UK and Sri Lankan businesses. She will launch new export procedure handbooks, helping Sri Lankan businesses better access the UK market through the Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS). 

    The Minister will also travel to Jaffna to emphasise the UK’s ongoing support for human rights, reconciliation, climate resilience and minority rights.  

    She will meet with local political leaders and civil society organisations working on post-conflict rehabilitation, as well as visiting the only FCDO-funded climate adaptation project which directly addresses groundwater depletion and its impact on agriculture and local communities.

    Minister for Indo-Pacific, Catherine West said:  

    I am so pleased to make my first official visit to Sri Lanka and meet the new government so soon after they have taken office. I have heard a lot about the country from my UK constituents of Sri Lankan heritage; and I have experienced their warm hospitality.   

    The UK and Sri Lanka share a dynamic modern partnership. I look forward to exploring our potential to grow our relationship through trade, economic growth and education. 

    I believe social and economic development are vital to sustained growth. The UK remains steadfast in our commitment to tackling corruption, supporting human rights progress including long-standing grievances, and taking action on the impacts of climate and nature.

    The Minister will meet the British Council to discuss the growing education partnership as Sri Lanka positions itself as regional hub for transnational education (TNE).  

    UK High Commissioner to Sri Lanka, Andrew Patrick said: 

    Minister Catherine West’s visit marks an important moment – the first meeting of our two new governments. To see the Minister visit so soon after elections underscores the UK government’s commitment to strengthening our bilateral partnership. We’ll see lots of activity in the months ahead, as we work with the government on their agenda of reform.

    The visit highlights the shared ambition of our two governments to deepen collaboration, and address shared challenges such as economic growth, climate change and human rights. 

    Background

    • The minister will meet with Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya and Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath. 
    • The Developing Countries Trading Scheme cuts tariffs, removes conditions and simplifies trading rules for 65 developing countries.

    Media enquiries

    Email newsdesk@fcdo.gov.uk

    Telephone 020 7008 3100

    Contact the FCDO Communication Team via email (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 January 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Have your say on vision for new Queensferry community hub

    Source: Scotland – City of Edinburgh

    A consultation has opened on proposals to deliver new, fit for purpose services and more school places that support Queensferry’s growing population

    Residents are being asked to share their feedback on new ideas to create a community campus on Burgess Road, bringing together more modern services in a central location for the whole of Queensferry.

    Plans for the new project, which have been designed using the findings of past consultations and reports, focus on:

    • A new Early Years Centre on the north end of Burgess Park, providing children with better quality outdoor space and a modern environment for learning and development. 
    • Enhancing greenspace and extending Burgess Park by removing the Road Depot on adjacent land.
    • Moving an improved and larger Queensferry library to the campus, with more community spaces and provision to deliver expanded services with our partners.
    • Providing additional classrooms at Queensferry Primary School by moving the Early Years facility to a new building and repurposing space within the school.
    • Expanding playground space at Queensferry Primary School, replacing existing buildings in poor condition.

    The proposals for the hub are part of the Queensferry Living Well Locally project to help make Queensferry greener, healthier and safer for everyone.

    The project aligns with the 20-minute neighbourhood strategy to help local people meet most of their daily needs within a short walk, wheel or cycle from their home.

    Information on further plans to improve walking, wheeling and cycling connections to shops, services, and facilities in the local area will follow as related projects are developed.

    Councillor Val Walker, Culture and Communities Convener, said:

    With Queensferry’s population continuing to grow, we need more school places to meet demand, while some of our existing community buildings are reaching the end of their usable life and are no longer fit for purpose. We firmly believe that doing nothing is not an option, and we need to invest in local community facilities for today and tomorrow. We are looking to deliver this through a place-based approach that reflects what people in the area want and need.

    We are keen to hear from as many people as possible who use services in the area. The proposals have been designed partly using the feedback from previous engagement, but we need to make sure they work for everyone. This consultation is a fantastic opportunity to make sure people’s views are heard and considered when plans are developed in more detail.

    Councillor Joan Griffiths, Education, Children and Families Convener, said:

    We know from previous engagement that people would like modern community services and facilities in a central location that is easy for people from all over the local area to access. Our ideas for a new community hub on Burgess Road address these issues.

    The proposals for the new early years centre and expanded primary school have the potential to create a modern learning and development environment for children in Queensferry, while allowing us to provide vital new classroom spaces.

    The survey is now live on the Consultation Hub and will run until Monday 21st April. A number of in-person events will be held in venues across Queensferry, where officers will be available to discuss plans and listen to people’s views. 

    The first of these will take place on Thursday 6th February at Queensferry Library (12pm – 2pm) and Scotmid Co-Op (4pm – 6pm). Details of further dates and times will be published on the Council’s website and Consultation Hub. 

    Beyond this, the project team is also meeting with local community groups and organisations as part of the consultation process. 
     

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2024 Article IV Consultation with Cambodia

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    January 27, 2025

    Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation[1] with Cambodia.

    Cambodia’s economy has continued to recover, albeit at a modest pace. We project real GDP to grow from 5.5 percent in 2024 to 5.8 percent in 2025 and inflation to pick up from 0.5 percent in 2024 to 2 percent in 2025 and remain contained. However, risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside from both external factors and domestic vulnerabilities, including from policy changes by major trading partners, geoeconomic fragmentation, and continued weakness in the construction and real estate sectors.

    The recovery remains uneven. Real GDP growth is driven mainly by external demand, with a strong rebound in garment exports and high growth in agricultural exports. Tourism has experienced a structural shift in its composition, resulting in a lagged recovery in tourism receipts. Growth in non-tradable sectors remains weak. After a sustained credit expansion that lifted the credit-to-GDP ratio from 24 percent in 2010 to 135 percent in 2023, credit growth has come to a near halt. The construction and real estate sectors are undergoing a correction, with rising non-performing loans and emerging signs of private-sector debt overhang.

    We project the fiscal deficit at 2.4 percent of GDP in 2025, down from 3 percent in 2024, with a gradual fiscal consolidation envisaged in the medium-term fiscal framework. Public debt remains well-contained, staying below 30 percent of GDP over the next decade. The current account balance is projected to swing back to a deficit of 1.8 percent of GDP in 2024 as strong demand for imports outpaces the recovery in exports and tourism. The deficit is projected to increase somewhat in 2025, reaching 2.5 percent of GDP, with export growth expected to moderate. 

    Executive Board Assessment2

    Executive Directors welcomed the continuing recovery of the Cambodian economy, driven by strong growth in garment and agricultural exports, and improving tourism activity. Nonetheless, the recovery has been uneven, and while growth is expected to continue, risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. Directors underscored the importance of policies to safeguard macro financial stability, ensure a durable and inclusive recovery, and achieve the authorities’ development goals over the medium term.

    Directors supported a neutral fiscal stance in the near term and highlighted the importance of gradual and high-quality consolidation over the medium term underpinned by sound fiscal frameworks to maintain debt sustainability and strengthen economic resilience. They welcomed the recent publication of a medium-term fiscal framework but recommended strengthening it with more conservative and transparent fiscal rules. Directors stressed the need to further mobilize revenues through rationalizing tax exemptions and implementing tax policy reforms, while enhancing spending efficiency and strengthening public investment management, in order to help rebuild fiscal buffers and safeguard priority social and capital spending. Directors welcomed efforts to foster the development of the domestic government bond market as Cambodia’s access to concessional foreign financing will be reduced when it graduates from Least Developed Country status. They also stressed the need for sound management of fiscal risks from state-owned enterprises and public-private partnerships.

    Directors supported the measured pace of monetary policy normalization while maintaining adequate financial system liquidity. They encouraged continuing efforts to modernize the monetary policy framework to enhance policy transmission and support de-dollarization. Noting the ongoing corrections in the construction and real estate sectors, declining FDI inflows, and rising nonperforming loans, Directors encouraged phasing out forbearance measures and developing a comprehensive plan to safeguard financial stability. They recommended strengthening risk-based supervision, improving macroprudential policy, enhancing coordination among financial sector supervisory agencies, and intensifying oversight of the real estate sector.

    Directors highlighted the importance of structural reforms to promote economic diversification and improve competitiveness. They encouraged the authorities’ efforts to enhance human capital, invest in infrastructure, strengthen the business environment, address climate vulnerabilities, and promote renewable energy to attract more diversified FDI. They also underscored the importance of strengthening governance and institutions, improving transparency, enhancing the AML/CFT framework, and addressing data limitations through  capacity development.

    Table 1. Cambodia: Selected Economic Indicators, 2021 – 29 1/

    Per capita GDP (2022, US$): 1,546                   Life expectancy (2019, years): 75.5

    Population (2022, million):    16.7                    Literacy rate (2019, percent):  87.7

     

    2021

    2022

    2023

    2024

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    Est.

    Proj.

    Output and prices (annual percent change)

                     

    GDP at constant prices

    3.1

    5.1

    5.0

    5.5

    5.8

    6.2

    6.0

    6.0

    6.0

    Inflation (end-year)

    3.7

    2.9

    2.7

    1.5

    2.1

    3.2

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    (Annual average)

    2.9

    5.3

    2.1

    0.4

    2.1

    3.2

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

                       

    Saving and investment balance

    (in percent of GDP)

                     

    Gross national saving

    0.8

    15.6

    33.6

    30.7

    30.0

    29.2

    29.2

    29.2

    29.3

    Government saving

    0.3

    3.1

    4.1

    5.1

    6.1

    7.1

    8.1

    9.1

    10.1

    Private saving

    0.5

    12.5

    29.5

    25.6

    23.9

    22.1

    21.1

    20.1

    19.2

    Gross fixed investment

    30.4

    34.6

    32.3

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    Government investment

    6.6

    5.6

    5.8

    5.2

    4.5

    4.3

    4.2

    3.9

    3.8

    Private investment

    23.8

    29.0

    26.5

    27.4

    28.0

    28.2

    28.4

    28.6

    28.7

                       

    Money and credit (annual percent change, unless otherwise indicated)

                     

    Broad money

    16.4

    8.2

    12.5

    8.5

    7.9

    10.5

    11.3

    9.1

    9.0

    Private sector credit

    23.6

    18.5

    3.5

    4.0

    7.0

    10.0

    10.0

    10.0

    10.0

    Velocity of money 2/

    1.1

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

                       

    Public finance (in percent of GDP)

                     

    Revenue

    15.8

    18.1

    15.9

    14.9

    14.9

    14.9

    15.0

    15.1

    15.2

    Domestic revenue

    14.7

    16.4

    14.7

    13.7

    13.7

    13.8

    14.0

    14.1

    14.4

    Of which: Tax revenue

    13.2

    14.7

    13.0

    12.1

    12.1

    12.2

    12.3

    12.5

    12.7

    Grants

    1.1

    1.7

    1.2

    1.2

    1.1

    1.1

    1.0

    0.9

    0.8

    Expenditure

    21.0

    18.4

    18.7

    17.9

    17.3

    17.1

    17.1

    17.2

    17.1

    Expense

    14.4

    12.8

    12.9

    12.7

    12.8

    12.8

    13.0

    13.3

    13.4

    Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets

    6.6

    5.6

    5.8

    5.2

    4.5

    4.3

    4.2

    3.9

    3.8

    Net lending (+)/borrowing(-)

    -5.2

    -0.3

    -2.8

    -3.0

    -2.4

    -2.2

    -2.1

    -2.1

    -2.0

    Net lending (+)/borrowing(-) excluding grants

    -6.3

    -2.0

    -4.0

    -4.2

    -3.6

    -3.3

    -3.2

    -3.0

    -2.8

    Net acquisition of financial assets

    -3.6

    1.4

    -0.3

    -0.2

    0.5

    0.3

    0.2

    0.3

    0.4

    Net incurrence of liabilities 3/

    1.6

    1.7

    2.5

    2.8

    2.9

    2.5

    2.4

    2.4

    2.4

    Total public debt (In percent of GDP)

    25.9

    25.0

    25.7

    26.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.7

    27.7

    Balance of payments (in millions of dollars, unless otherwise indicated)

                     

    Exports, f.o.b.

    19,527

    23,175

    23,569

    26,745

    28,595

    30,942

    33,449

    36,307

    39,457

       (Annual percent change)

    5.7

    18.7

    1.7

    13.5

    6.9

    8.2

    8.1

    8.5

    8.7

    Imports, f.o.b.

    -30,726

    -31,995

    -26,553

    -31,055

    -33,244

    -35,626

    -38,605

    -41,871

    -45,434

       (Annual percent change)

    46.4

    4.1

    -17.0

    17.0

    7.0

    7.2

    8.4

    8.5

    8.5

    Current account (including official transfers)

    -10,886

    -7,572

    555

    -847

    -1,269

    -1,794

    -1,993

    -2,175

    -2,283

        (In percent of GDP)

    -29.6

    -19.0

    1.3

    -1.8

    -2.5

    -3.3

    -3.3

    -3.4

    -3.2

    Gross official reserves 4/

    20,265

    17,805

    19,998

    20,753

    23,064

    26,887

    30,951

    35,422

    40,351

        (In months of prospective imports)

    7.0

    7.3

    6.9

    6.6

    6.9

    7.4

    7.9

    8.3

    8.7

                       

    Total public debt (in millions of dollars)

    9,505

    9,971

    11,187

    12,473

    13,932

    15,218

    16,508

    17,912

    19,453

    (In percent of GDP)

    25.9

    25.0

    25.7

    26.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.7

    27.7

    External debt (in millions of dollars, unless                                    otherwise indicated)

                     

    Public external debt

    9,505

    9,971

    11,187

    12,387

    13,726

    14,939

    16,178

    17,548

    18,978

    (In percent of GDP)

    25.9

    25.0

    25.7

    26.6

    27.4

    27.3

    27.2

    27.1

    27.0

    Public debt service

    397

    427

    449

    418

    439

    458

    482

    506

    533

    (In percent of exports of goods and services)

    2.0

    1.7

    1.6

    1.3

    1.3

    1.2

    1.2

    1.2

    1.1

    Nominal effective exchange rate (index, trade partners by CPI)

    113.3

    122.4

    123.3

    Real effective exchange rate

    (index, based on CPI)

    125.3

    134.0

    132.4

    Memorandum items:

                     

    Nominal GDP (in billions of Riels)

    150,793

    164,059

    177,719

    190,603

    205,946

    225,291

    245,726

    267,845

    292,066

    (In millions of U.S. dollars)

    36,797

    39,838

    43,304

    46,568

    50,180

    54,745

    59,548

    64,733

    70,395

    Sources: Cambodian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.

    1/ Based on the rebased GDP.

                   

    2/ Ratio of nominal GDP to the average stock of broad money.

                   

    3/ Includes statistical discrepancy.

                   

    4/ Includes unrestricted foreign currency deposits held at the National Bank of Cambodia.

                   

    [1] Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff team visits the country, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the country’s economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the Executive Board.

    [2] At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as Chair of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors, and this summary is transmitted to the country’s authorities. An explanation of any qualifiers used in summing up can be found here: http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm.  

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Alexander Muller

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

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/01/27/pr-25017-cambodia-imf-executive-board-concludes-2024-article-iv-consultation-with-cambodia

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Marking 80 Years Since End of Holocaust, UN Chief Urges World to ‘Never Waver in Fight’ for Human Rights

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    Following is UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ message to International Holocaust Remembrance Service at Park East Synagogue, delivered by Miguel Ángel Moratinos Cuyaubé, High Representative for the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations, in New York today:

    It is an honour to send you a message today.  At this sombre occasion, I want to acknowledge that more than a year has passed since the appalling 7 October 2023 terror attacks by Hamas.  We welcome, at long last, the ceasefire and hostage-release deal.  The deal offers hope, as well as much needed relief.  The United Nations will do our utmost to ensure it leads to the release of all hostages and a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

    This year marks 80 years since the end of the Holocaust.  The history of the Holocaust is one of total moral collapse, dehumanization, complicity and unimaginable atrocities.  But, amidst all the horror, there are also stories of humanity, and of courage.

    I think of those victims who resisted Nazi brutality and supported one another with kindness and solidarity.  I think of those survivors who have told their stories to the world, including Rabbi Schneier and others present today.  We owe you — and the children of survivors who made sure those stories lived on — a profound debt of gratitude.  And I think of those noble people of conscience who may not have been targeted by the Nazis, but were so horrified by what they saw that they felt compelled to act.

    That includes a number of diplomats who used their power to save lives.  They were from a variety of countries, including many represented here today.

    One important example from my own country, Portugal, is Aristides de Sousa Mendes.  Stationed in Bordeaux, as the Nazis approached in 1940, Sr. Sousa Mendes faced crowds desperate for visas out of France.

    The orders of the Portuguese Government were clear.  The infamous “Circular 14” had been issued, denying visas for refugees’ safe passage to Portugal — with Jews named specifically.  Sr. Sousa Mendes decided to disobey and worked quite literally day and night to issue thousands of visas, saving countless lives.

    The Government punished Sr. Sousa Mendes for his defiance.  He died in poverty, after being expelled from the diplomatic corps without pension.  But, his extraordinary efforts have not been forgotten.  In 1966, he was recognized as one of the Righteous Among the Nations, and last year, I was pleased to support the opening of a museum in his honour in Portugal.

    In these days of global turmoil, rising anti-Semitism and growing hate towards many communities, it is vital that we remember the stories of people like Sr. Sousa Mendes, who used their power for good in the worst of times.  They remind us that it is our duty — individually and collectively — to stand with humanity and against bigotry and discrimination.

    In that spirit, I am pleased to report that the United Nations has launched an Action Plan to Enhance Monitoring and Response to Antisemitism.  We have long worked to combat this evil, through a wide range of activities, including our Holocaust Outreach Programme.  This new Plan builds on that work, and the insights of people like Rabbi Schneier, to recommend ways the United Nations system will further enhance efforts to combat antisemitism.

    This goes to the heart of the mission of the United Nations, which was established in the aftermath of the Holocaust.  We will never waver in the fight for a world that promotes and protects the human rights of all.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General Greatly Concerned by Recent Escalation of Fighting in Sudan

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    The following statement was issued today by the Spokesman for UN Secretary-General António Guterres:

    The Secretary-General is following with great concern the recent escalation of fighting in Sudan, in particular around the al-Jili oil refinery north of Khartoum, as well as in El Fasher in Darfur.

    The Secretary-General urges the parties to refrain from all actions that could have dangerous consequences for Sudan and the region, including serious economic and environmental implications.  He further reminds the parties of their obligations under international law, including in relation to the protection of civilians and civilian infrastructure and the facilitation of humanitarian access.  Sudanese women, children and men are paying the price for the continued military offensives by the belligerents.

    The Secretary-General renews his call for urgent and genuine dialogue between the parties to the conflict, aimed at achieving an immediate cessation of hostilities to spare Sudanese civilians from further harm and reiterates that a sustainable resolution to the conflict can only be achieved through an inclusive political process.

    The Personal Envoy of the Secretary-General for Sudan, Ramtane Lamamra, continues to engage the parties and all relevant stakeholders to de-escalate the conflict and promote a Sudanese-led inclusive dialogue that will bring a sustained end to the war.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Remembering victims of the Holocaust and preserving their stories

    Source: Government of Canada – Prime Minister

    Eighty years ago, the Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp was liberated. The cruelty committed within its walls must never be forgotten. During the Holocaust, the Nazis senselessly killed six million Jews. They also murdered 500,000 Roma and Sinti people and millions of others, including Poles, prisoners of war, people with disabilities, and 2SLGBTQI+ people. Today, amid a disturbing rise in antisemitism around the world, we stand united to remember the victims of the Holocaust, listen to the stories of survivors, and reaffirm the solemn vow to never forget.

    The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today concluded the first day of his visit to Poland, where he attended a commemorative event to mark 80 years since the liberation of the Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp. He was accompanied by Canadian Holocaust survivors as well as Canada’s Special Envoy on Preserving Holocaust Remembrance and Combatting Antisemitism, Deborah Lyons.

    In Kraków, Prime Minister Trudeau highlighted a $90.5 million package of measures announced in Budget 2024 to combat antisemitism, preserve Holocaust remembrance, and educate against Holocaust denial and distortion. He also announced almost $3.4 million in new funding to strengthen Holocaust education and awareness efforts in Canada and around the world. This includes new funding to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the Montréal Holocaust Museum, the Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre, the Friends of the Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, the Toronto Holocaust Museum, the Canadian Society for Yad Vashem, and the Jewish Federation of Victoria and Vancouver Island.

    In meetings with Canadian Holocaust survivors, the Prime Minister reaffirmed Canada’s unwavering commitment to building a country where Jewish people can live open and proud Jewish lives, without intimidation or fear.

    Let the resilience, courage, and strength of Holocaust survivors inspire us to be better – and do better. Together, let us honour their memories, re-tell their stories, and continue our work to build a world that is more just and more peaceful.

    Quotes

    “The Holocaust and the unimaginable cruelty of the Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp must never be forgotten. In Kraków today, we announced a new suite of initiatives to increase Holocaust education and awareness in Canada, and we reaffirmed our solemn vow: Never forget. Never again.”

    “Eighty years ago, humanity saw one the darkest chapters in history with the murder of over six million Jews during the Holocaust. We have a responsibility to never forget and ensure the events of the Holocaust are never repeated. As we see a rise in antisemitism today, we must be reminded that it is our collective responsibility to combat hate in all its forms. That is why we introduced the new National Holocaust Remembrance Program, which will support initiatives to preserve the memory of the Holocaust and teach Canadians how they can play an active role in combatting antisemitism now and into the future.”

    “Every generation must know the enduring significance of ‘never again’. As we mark 80 years since the liberation of Auschwitz Birkenau, let us pay tribute to the lives we have lost during the Holocaust. Because ‘never again’ is not just a reminder – it is our solemn responsibility. Together, we must uphold this promise and always stand against antisemitism and hate.”

    “For the last 80 years, the Holocaust has reminded us of humanity’s capacity for inhumane cruelty. It has also stood as a warning to never again allow such hatred and horror to go unchecked. With antisemitism once again on the rise, we all have a responsibility to take concrete action, and that’s why the federal government is convening provinces, territories, municipalities, police, and civil society to the National Forum on Combatting Antisemitism. Our synagogues, schools and community centres must be safe spaces for our people. Jewish Canadians must be able to live without fear.”

    Quick Facts

    • The Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp was the largest camp under Hitler’s regime. One million Jewish people were murdered in Auschwitz Birkenau alone.
    • Canada has the fourth largest Jewish community in the world, following Israel, the United States, and France. According to the 2021 census, 335,000 Canadians identify as Jewish. As of December 2024, Canada’s Holocaust survivor population is roughly 9,800 – one of the largest around the globe.
    • The position of Special Envoy on Preserving Holocaust Remembrance and Combatting Antisemitism was created in 2020 as part of the federal government’s commitment to strengthening national and international efforts to preserve the memory of the Holocaust and honour the stories of survivors. Irwin Cotler was appointed Canada’s first Special Envoy in November 2020 and was succeeded by Deborah Lyons in October 2023. The Special Envoy works to combat antisemitism, hatred, and racism, while promoting and defending democracy, pluralism, inclusion, and human rights.
    • Canada’s commitment to protecting human rights and combatting antisemitism at home and abroad is anchored in our membership in – and work with – the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA). As the only international institution mandated to focus on issues related to the Holocaust, the IHRA works to raise awareness of the global impact of antisemitism and seeks ways to end it. In 2022, Canada announced it would double its annual contribution to the IHRA.
    • In October 2024, the Government of Canada released the Canadian Handbook on the IHRA Working Definition of Antisemitism. Using Canadian examples, the Handbook serves as a tool to identify and address antisemitism across various sectors. Notably, it is the first such handbook produced by a national government.
    • In 2022, the federal government amended Canada’s Criminal Code to make it a crime to willfully promote antisemitism by condoning, denying, or downplaying the Holocaust.
    • In addition to the $90.5 million package of measures on Holocaust remembrance, Budget 2024 also invested over $273 million over six years to implement Canada’s Action Plan on Combatting Hate, including over $29 million ongoing to combat hate crimes and enhance community security.

    Related Product

    Associated Links

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Hong Kong resident rescued from detention in Southeast Asian country returns to Hong Kong smoothly

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Hong Kong resident rescued from detention in Southeast Asian country returns to Hong Kong smoothly
    Hong Kong resident rescued from detention in Southeast Asian country returns to Hong Kong smoothly
    ******************************************************************************************

         The Security Bureau (SB) today (January 28) said that a Hong Kong resident, who had been detained for illegal work in Myanmar and was recently rescued, has smoothly returned to Hong Kong from Thailand last night (January 27) with members of the SB’s dedicated task force.     The dedicated task force set off for Bangkok on January 21 to follow-up promptly on the case upon confirmation that a Hong Kong resident had been rescued in Myanmar and arrived in Thailand. With the co-ordination and liaison with different units by the task force over the past few days and concerted efforts by various parties, the individual was able to return to Hong Kong in a short period of time and reunite with his family before the Chinese New Year.      The dedicated task force expressed gratitude to the Thai authorities for their humane way of handling the case with the approach of special arrangements for special circumstances by compressing the procedures to within a few days, allowing the Hong Kong resident to return to Hong Kong as soon as possible. While meeting the rescued Hong Kong resident in the detention centre in Bangkok, members of the task force were moved to be able to bring the individual back to Hong Kong and return home together. The Hong Kong resident expressed gratitude for the visit to Thailand by the task force members to follow up on his case. He was also very pleased to learn that he would be able to return to Hong Kong to reunite with his family before the Chinese New Year.      The SB thanked various parties, including the Office of the Commissioner of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, the Chinese Embassy in the Republic of the Union of Myanmar, the Chinese Embassy in the Kingdom of Thailand, the Consulate General of the People’s Republic of China in Chiang Mai, the Consulate-General of Myanmar in Hong Kong, the Royal Thai Consulate-General, Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in Bangkok, and the relevant Thai authorities for their support and assistance.     The dedicated task force has all along been following up proactively on the remaining 10 request-for-assistance cases in which the relevant people have not yet returned to Hong Kong, including maintaining communication, exchanging intelligence and sparing no efforts in following up on each case with the Director of Special Investigation and the Director of Human Trafficking under the Ministry of Justice of Thailand during the team’s stay in Thailand. A member of the dedicated task force will stay in Bangkok to strive to do his utmost for the early return of the remaining 10 people to Hong Kong.

     
    Ends/Tuesday, January 28, 2025Issued at HKT 1:29

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Water system upgrade closes northbound I-5 Scatter Creek Rest Area in Thurston County Feb. 10-28

    Source: Washington State News 2

    GRAND MOUND – Travelers who use the northbound Interstate 5 Scatter Creek Rest Area between Centralia and Olympia will need to make other plans in February. 

    Beginning 8 a.m. Monday, Feb. 10, contractors working for the Washington State Department of Transportation will close the rest area around-the-clock until 5 p.m. Friday, Feb. 28. 

    The planned closure allows crews to update the facility’s water system. The work includes:

    • Installation of new well pumps and pipes.
    • New automated water management systems.
    • Repairs inside and outside of the restrooms.

    The work will reduce long-term maintenance costs and extend the service life of the system. 

    About the rest area

    On average, approximately 2,284 vehicles a day use the Scatter Creek Rest Area. The facility opened 1969 and was rebuilt in 1988. Amenities include water fountains, restrooms, picnic areas, vending machines, a visitor information center, short term parking, and a recreational vehicle wastewater disposal area.

    Alternate facilities

    The nearest rest area with restrooms, short term parking and picnic areas is located three miles north near Maytown along southbound I-5 in Thurston County. 

    The nearest rest area with wastewater disposal for recreational vehicles on I-5 is 50 miles north at the SeaTac Rest Area in King County.

    Travelers are encouraged to sign up for email updates about work on state roads and facilities in Thurston County. Real-time travel information is available from the WSDOT app and statewide travel map.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Syria: Rights probe reveals systematic torture and detention of Assad regime

    Source: United Nations 4

    By Vibhu Mishra

    Peace and Security

    A report from UN human rights investigators for Syria released on Monday has laid bare the systematic use of arbitrary detention, torture and enforced disappearances by the deposed Assad regime.

    The findings from the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria detail crimes against humanity and war crimes that left a legacy of trauma for countless Syrians, representing some of the worst violations of international law committed during more than a decade of brutal conflict.

    We stand at a critical juncture. The caretaker government and future Syrian authorities can now ensure these crimes are never repeated,” said Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, Chair of the Commission.

    We hope our findings from almost 14 years of investigations will help end impunity for these patterns of abuse.”

    The report, titled Web of Agony: Arbitrary Detention, Torture and Ill-Treatment in the Syrian Arab Republic, draws on over 2,000 testimonies, including accounts from more than 550 survivors of torture.

    Torture chambers, mass graves

    The fall of the Assad regime last month and subsequent release of prisoners have been pivotal for many Syrians, but for tens of thousands of families, the agony persists. The discovery of mass graves has deepened fears for those whose loved ones remain missing.

    In December and January, Commission teams visited several grave sites and former detention facilities, including Sednaya Military Prison and branches of the former intelligence services in Damascus.

    While significant amounts of evidence and documentation had been destroyed, some materials were preserved, offering a glimmer of hope for families seeking answers.

    For Syrians who did not find their loved ones among the freed, this evidence, alongside testimonies of freed detainees, may be their best hope to uncover the truth about missing relatives,” said Commissioner Lynn Welchman.

    We commend the new authorities for their commitment to protecting mass graves and evidence and encourage further efforts, with the support of relevant Syrian civil society and international actors.”

    The report outlines harrowing accounts of abuse, including severe beatings, electric shocks, rape, mutilation and prolonged psychological and physical torture.

    Survivors and witnesses described dire prison conditions including malnutrition, disease and injuries left untreated. Some detainees were executed, while others succumbed to their injuries in overcrowded, unsanitary cells.

    A path to justice

    Having gained access to Syria for the first time since 2011, the Commission plans to expand its investigations with unprecedented access to sites and survivors who no longer fear reprisals.

    The report emphasises the importance of safeguarding evidence and archives, calling for coordinated efforts with Syrian civil society and international actors.

    “Cases brought before national courts outside Syria, relying on the principle of universal jurisdiction, have led to important convictions of mid- and lower-level perpetrators of war crimes and crimes against humanity,” said Commissioner Hanny Megally.

    We now hope to see credible national justice initiatives, in which survivors and families can play a central role. We stand ready to assist alongside Syrian human rights and family associations and our UN partners.”

    Independent investigators

    The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic was established in August 2011 by the UN Human Rights Council, with a mandate to investigate all alleged violations of international human rights law since March 2011.

    The Council also tasked the Commission with establishing the facts and circumstances surrounding alleged crimes and identifying those responsible, in an effort to hold them accountable.

    © UNHCR/Youssef Badawi

    UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi (left) visits the Immigration and Passports Office at Jdaidet Yabous border crossing between Lebanon and Syria.

    Global action for returnees

    The UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi concluded a visit to Syria on Monday, calling for urgent international support to aid those returning home.

    Since September, over 500,000 refugees have made the journey, but they face overwhelming challenges: destroyed homes, shattered infrastructure and widespread poverty, according to the UN refugee agency, UNHCR.

    The agency is working with Syrian caretaker authorities and neighbouring countries to support returns, provide legal aid, transportation and cash assistance.

    Families returning to cities like Aleppo described harsh realities, such as limited access to electricity and water, emphasising the urgent need for investment in healthcare, education and employment.

    Act now

    This is a pivotal moment,” Mr. Grandi said.

    The world must act now to support Syria’s recovery. Cooperation between neighbouring countries, donors and the Syrian caretaker authorities is essential to bring much-needed peace and stability to Syria and the entire region.”

    UNHCR estimates that 27 per cent of Syrian refugees in neighbouring countries, including Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq, plan to return home within the next year – an increase from less than two per cent before the collapse of the regime.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2024 Article IV Consultation with Cambodia

    Source: International Monetary Fund

    January 27, 2025

    Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation[1] with Cambodia.

    Cambodia’s economy has continued to recover, albeit at a modest pace. We project real GDP to grow from 5.5 percent in 2024 to 5.8 percent in 2025 and inflation to pick up from 0.5 percent in 2024 to 2 percent in 2025 and remain contained. However, risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside from both external factors and domestic vulnerabilities, including from policy changes by major trading partners, geoeconomic fragmentation, and continued weakness in the construction and real estate sectors.

    The recovery remains uneven. Real GDP growth is driven mainly by external demand, with a strong rebound in garment exports and high growth in agricultural exports. Tourism has experienced a structural shift in its composition, resulting in a lagged recovery in tourism receipts. Growth in non-tradable sectors remains weak. After a sustained credit expansion that lifted the credit-to-GDP ratio from 24 percent in 2010 to 135 percent in 2023, credit growth has come to a near halt. The construction and real estate sectors are undergoing a correction, with rising non-performing loans and emerging signs of private-sector debt overhang.

    We project the fiscal deficit at 2.4 percent of GDP in 2025, down from 3 percent in 2024, with a gradual fiscal consolidation envisaged in the medium-term fiscal framework. Public debt remains well-contained, staying below 30 percent of GDP over the next decade. The current account balance is projected to swing back to a deficit of 1.8 percent of GDP in 2024 as strong demand for imports outpaces the recovery in exports and tourism. The deficit is projected to increase somewhat in 2025, reaching 2.5 percent of GDP, with export growth expected to moderate. 

    Executive Board Assessment2

    Executive Directors welcomed the continuing recovery of the Cambodian economy, driven by strong growth in garment and agricultural exports, and improving tourism activity. Nonetheless, the recovery has been uneven, and while growth is expected to continue, risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. Directors underscored the importance of policies to safeguard macro financial stability, ensure a durable and inclusive recovery, and achieve the authorities’ development goals over the medium term.

    Directors supported a neutral fiscal stance in the near term and highlighted the importance of gradual and high-quality consolidation over the medium term underpinned by sound fiscal frameworks to maintain debt sustainability and strengthen economic resilience. They welcomed the recent publication of a medium-term fiscal framework but recommended strengthening it with more conservative and transparent fiscal rules. Directors stressed the need to further mobilize revenues through rationalizing tax exemptions and implementing tax policy reforms, while enhancing spending efficiency and strengthening public investment management, in order to help rebuild fiscal buffers and safeguard priority social and capital spending. Directors welcomed efforts to foster the development of the domestic government bond market as Cambodia’s access to concessional foreign financing will be reduced when it graduates from Least Developed Country status. They also stressed the need for sound management of fiscal risks from state-owned enterprises and public-private partnerships.

    Directors supported the measured pace of monetary policy normalization while maintaining adequate financial system liquidity. They encouraged continuing efforts to modernize the monetary policy framework to enhance policy transmission and support de-dollarization. Noting the ongoing corrections in the construction and real estate sectors, declining FDI inflows, and rising nonperforming loans, Directors encouraged phasing out forbearance measures and developing a comprehensive plan to safeguard financial stability. They recommended strengthening risk-based supervision, improving macroprudential policy, enhancing coordination among financial sector supervisory agencies, and intensifying oversight of the real estate sector.

    Directors highlighted the importance of structural reforms to promote economic diversification and improve competitiveness. They encouraged the authorities’ efforts to enhance human capital, invest in infrastructure, strengthen the business environment, address climate vulnerabilities, and promote renewable energy to attract more diversified FDI. They also underscored the importance of strengthening governance and institutions, improving transparency, enhancing the AML/CFT framework, and addressing data limitations through  capacity development.

    Table 1. Cambodia: Selected Economic Indicators, 2021 – 29 1/

    Per capita GDP (2022, US$): 1,546                   Life expectancy (2019, years): 75.5

    Population (2022, million):    16.7                    Literacy rate (2019, percent):  87.7

     

    2021

    2022

    2023

    2024

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    Est.

    Proj.

    Output and prices (annual percent change)

                     

    GDP at constant prices

    3.1

    5.1

    5.0

    5.5

    5.8

    6.2

    6.0

    6.0

    6.0

    Inflation (end-year)

    3.7

    2.9

    2.7

    1.5

    2.1

    3.2

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    (Annual average)

    2.9

    5.3

    2.1

    0.4

    2.1

    3.2

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

                       

    Saving and investment balance

    (in percent of GDP)

                     

    Gross national saving

    0.8

    15.6

    33.6

    30.7

    30.0

    29.2

    29.2

    29.2

    29.3

    Government saving

    0.3

    3.1

    4.1

    5.1

    6.1

    7.1

    8.1

    9.1

    10.1

    Private saving

    0.5

    12.5

    29.5

    25.6

    23.9

    22.1

    21.1

    20.1

    19.2

    Gross fixed investment

    30.4

    34.6

    32.3

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    32.5

    Government investment

    6.6

    5.6

    5.8

    5.2

    4.5

    4.3

    4.2

    3.9

    3.8

    Private investment

    23.8

    29.0

    26.5

    27.4

    28.0

    28.2

    28.4

    28.6

    28.7

                       

    Money and credit (annual percent change, unless otherwise indicated)

                     

    Broad money

    16.4

    8.2

    12.5

    8.5

    7.9

    10.5

    11.3

    9.1

    9.0

    Private sector credit

    23.6

    18.5

    3.5

    4.0

    7.0

    10.0

    10.0

    10.0

    10.0

    Velocity of money 2/

    1.1

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

    1.0

                       

    Public finance (in percent of GDP)

                     

    Revenue

    15.8

    18.1

    15.9

    14.9

    14.9

    14.9

    15.0

    15.1

    15.2

    Domestic revenue

    14.7

    16.4

    14.7

    13.7

    13.7

    13.8

    14.0

    14.1

    14.4

    Of which: Tax revenue

    13.2

    14.7

    13.0

    12.1

    12.1

    12.2

    12.3

    12.5

    12.7

    Grants

    1.1

    1.7

    1.2

    1.2

    1.1

    1.1

    1.0

    0.9

    0.8

    Expenditure

    21.0

    18.4

    18.7

    17.9

    17.3

    17.1

    17.1

    17.2

    17.1

    Expense

    14.4

    12.8

    12.9

    12.7

    12.8

    12.8

    13.0

    13.3

    13.4

    Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets

    6.6

    5.6

    5.8

    5.2

    4.5

    4.3

    4.2

    3.9

    3.8

    Net lending (+)/borrowing(-)

    -5.2

    -0.3

    -2.8

    -3.0

    -2.4

    -2.2

    -2.1

    -2.1

    -2.0

    Net lending (+)/borrowing(-) excluding grants

    -6.3

    -2.0

    -4.0

    -4.2

    -3.6

    -3.3

    -3.2

    -3.0

    -2.8

    Net acquisition of financial assets

    -3.6

    1.4

    -0.3

    -0.2

    0.5

    0.3

    0.2

    0.3

    0.4

    Net incurrence of liabilities 3/

    1.6

    1.7

    2.5

    2.8

    2.9

    2.5

    2.4

    2.4

    2.4

    Total public debt (In percent of GDP)

    25.9

    25.0

    25.7

    26.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.7

    27.7

    Balance of payments (in millions of dollars, unless otherwise indicated)

                     

    Exports, f.o.b.

    19,527

    23,175

    23,569

    26,745

    28,595

    30,942

    33,449

    36,307

    39,457

       (Annual percent change)

    5.7

    18.7

    1.7

    13.5

    6.9

    8.2

    8.1

    8.5

    8.7

    Imports, f.o.b.

    -30,726

    -31,995

    -26,553

    -31,055

    -33,244

    -35,626

    -38,605

    -41,871

    -45,434

       (Annual percent change)

    46.4

    4.1

    -17.0

    17.0

    7.0

    7.2

    8.4

    8.5

    8.5

    Current account (including official transfers)

    -10,886

    -7,572

    555

    -847

    -1,269

    -1,794

    -1,993

    -2,175

    -2,283

        (In percent of GDP)

    -29.6

    -19.0

    1.3

    -1.8

    -2.5

    -3.3

    -3.3

    -3.4

    -3.2

    Gross official reserves 4/

    20,265

    17,805

    19,998

    20,753

    23,064

    26,887

    30,951

    35,422

    40,351

        (In months of prospective imports)

    7.0

    7.3

    6.9

    6.6

    6.9

    7.4

    7.9

    8.3

    8.7

                       

    Total public debt (in millions of dollars)

    9,505

    9,971

    11,187

    12,473

    13,932

    15,218

    16,508

    17,912

    19,453

    (In percent of GDP)

    25.9

    25.0

    25.7

    26.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.8

    27.7

    27.7

    External debt (in millions of dollars, unless                                    otherwise indicated)

                     

    Public external debt

    9,505

    9,971

    11,187

    12,387

    13,726

    14,939

    16,178

    17,548

    18,978

    (In percent of GDP)

    25.9

    25.0

    25.7

    26.6

    27.4

    27.3

    27.2

    27.1

    27.0

    Public debt service

    397

    427

    449

    418

    439

    458

    482

    506

    533

    (In percent of exports of goods and services)

    2.0

    1.7

    1.6

    1.3

    1.3

    1.2

    1.2

    1.2

    1.1

    Nominal effective exchange rate (index, trade partners by CPI)

    113.3

    122.4

    123.3

    Real effective exchange rate

    (index, based on CPI)

    125.3

    134.0

    132.4

    Memorandum items:

                     

    Nominal GDP (in billions of Riels)

    150,793

    164,059

    177,719

    190,603

    205,946

    225,291

    245,726

    267,845

    292,066

    (In millions of U.S. dollars)

    36,797

    39,838

    43,304

    46,568

    50,180

    54,745

    59,548

    64,733

    70,395

    Sources: Cambodian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.

    1/ Based on the rebased GDP.

                   

    2/ Ratio of nominal GDP to the average stock of broad money.

                   

    3/ Includes statistical discrepancy.

                   

    4/ Includes unrestricted foreign currency deposits held at the National Bank of Cambodia.

                   

    [1] Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff team visits the country, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the country’s economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the Executive Board.

    [2] At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as Chair of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors, and this summary is transmitted to the country’s authorities. An explanation of any qualifiers used in summing up can be found here: http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm.  

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Alexander Muller

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

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: Sen. Scott Op-ed Highlights Importance of Education Savings Accounts to School Choice

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for South Carolina Tim Scott
    WASHINGTON — U.S. Senator Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Dr. Mick Zais, former deputy and acting U.S. Secretary of Education, penned an op-ed in the Post and Courier discussing school choice and the benefit of Education Savings Accounts for students in South Carolina. 
    Commentary: SC students lose in fight over education savings accounts
    The Post and Courier
    By Senator Tim Scott and Dr. Mick Zais
    We live in a society where we can personalize anything based on our individual needs and preferences, whether it’s the channels we watch, the food we order or the cars we drive. Ironically, there remains so much resistance to parents being able to choose the education that is best-suited to help their children succeed.
    No two children are the same. Each child has different interests, talents and needs. So what should we expect from a one-size-fits-all school system where every child learns the same material, on the same schedule, in the same way? Mediocrity, at best — and that’s exactly what we’re getting.
    Only 26% of eighth graders are proficient in math, and just 31% are proficient in reading. South Carolina’s eighth graders ranked 39th in math proficiency and 38th in reading proficiency nationwide. Our students deserve better. Disastrous school closures galvanized the most powerful interest group in education: parents. Now, more than ever, parents are exercising their right to oversee their children’s education. They want a say in where, how, what and by whom their children are taught. As a result, school choice — in its many forms — is rapidly expanding across the country, including here in South Carolina.
    In South Carolina, we are fortunate to have 95 charter schools serving 49,000 students. Another 49 schools are in the planning stage to help serve the 15,000 students on waiting lists. Charter schools work, and parents know it. From 2009 to 2023, Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes studied more than 2 million students across 29 states, and while it had significant concerns about S.C. charters, it concluded that nationally, charter schools “produce superior student gains despite enrolling a more challenging student population.”
    Education savings accounts can provide parents with yet another option. With these scholarships, parents can choose which education best meets their child’s needs from numerous state-approved, public or private providers. These accounts are efficient — the funds go directly to the student’s education, not the school system’s operation.
    South Carolina’s program provides opportunities for lower- and middle-income families to attend private K-12 schools, a privilege that affluent families have always enjoyed. Under the program, qualifying students could receive scholarships of up to $6,000 to attend state-approved private schools. But the scholarships are not limited to private school tuition. Public-school students can benefit as well. Parents are permitted to use these dollars to pay transfer fees between school districts, or to pay for individual classes or services. Parents can also use the dollars to pay for textbooks, tutoring, computers, online courses, transportation and other instructional expenses. This year, nearly 2,000 South Carolina students used these scholarships. And the number of scholarships was set to increase to 10,000 next year and 15,000 the year after.
    However, much of that came to a halt when South Carolina’s Supreme Court ruled that using money from the program for private school tuition violates our state constitution because it provides taxpayer dollars directly to private schools. We disagree. The scholarships do not fund schools; they fund students. And the parents of the students can direct the money to an educational provider of their choice.
    Using food stamps, a single mom can choose the grocery store from which she will buy her family’s food. Using Medicare, a senior can choose the hospital from which he will receive care. Using  federal and state grants, a low-income student can choose the college she will attend. The Education Scholarship Trust Fund program was no different. The South Carolina Legislature thought it wise to give parents the ability to choose the best education for their child.
    Relatedly, the court’s decision also begs the question: If the scholarships for K-12 education are unconstitutional, what other programs are? Is the LIFE scholarship unconstitutional because a student can use it to attend Presbyterian College? Is the SC HOPE scholarship unconstitutional because a student can use it to attend Bob Jones University? Is the Palmetto Fellows program unconstitutional because a student can use it to attend Newberry College? Is South Carolina’s tuition grants program unconstitutional because it can be used at private institutions?
    In the back-and-forth between the court and the Legislature, families are caught in the crosshairs. For many, South Carolina’s program was a chance to escape a one-size-fits-all system and find a school that meets the unique needs of their child. This is especially true for low-income families whose students are often trapped in perennially failing schools.
    School choice is a lifeline to opportunity. Whether in the form of charters, education scholarships or other programs, we must continue the work of making educational freedom a reality for all students. Students and their parents are counting on us.
    Click here to read the op-ed.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Rural communities in Québec are embracing ‘mushroom tourism’ to boost local economies

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Amélie Cloutier, Professor of Strategy and Innovation, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM)

    Mycotourism combines mushroom foraging in natural habitats with culinary traditions and rural culture, offering a unique experience distinct from traditional tourism. (Shutterstock)

    Mycotourism, or mushroom tourism, is becoming increasingly popular as travellers seek out more nature-focused experiences. This unique tourism niche combines guided mushroom foraging with culinary traditions and rural culture to offer travellers an experience distinct from more traditional forms of tourism.

    Mycotourism has significant economic and environmental potential to boost local economies, particularly in rural areas, while also fostering a deeper connection between visitors and nature. When it is practised sustainably, it can also help conserve local ecosystems and cultural traditions by sharing traditional mushroom harvesting methods and ecological knowledge with the public.

    The growing popularity of mycotourism reflects a larger shift toward forest-related and gastronomy tourism. Forest-related tourism includes activities like foraging and product harvesting as travellers seek closer connections to nature, while gastronomy tourism involves travellers seeking out culinary experiences.

    Rural tourism, too, has seen growing interest in recent years. United Nations Tourism designated 2020 as the “Year of Tourism and Rural Development” and mycotourism aligns with this focus, as it is tied closely to rural economies, often involving small, seasonal businesses that face seasonal and visibility challenges.

    In response to this trend, the Québec government has revealed a 2024-2029 strategy to establish the province as a premier culinary destination with a promising future. As mycotourism grows, it aligns with Québec’s broader culinary and tourism goals.

    Mycotourism: A brief overview

    While mushroom foraging has long been practised informally in many parts of the world, it’s now evolving into a formalized tourism industry, led by local experts to ensure safety. Countries such as Mexico, Spain, Portugal, Scotland and South Africa are current pioneers in this market.

    Spain, where mycotourism originated, leads the way with its well-established “micoturismo” industry, especially in the Castilla y León region.

    While mushroom foraging has long been practised informally in many parts of the world, it’s now evolving into a formalized tourism industry.
    (Shutterstock)

    In Canada, Québec has become a hotspot for mycotourism thanks to its rich natural landscapes, including vast forests and diverse ecosystems. The province has seen increased demand from both local and international visitors.

    The Québec regions of Kamouraska and Mauricie, in particular, have emerged as leaders in North American mycotourism. This surge, which was boosted by the COVID-19 pandemic, has positioned these regions as key destinations for mushroom enthusiasts.

    The number of amateur mycology circles and their members has also risen sharply in the province, reflecting a growing interest in wild mushrooms.

    However, despite its growth, mycotourism remains relatively unfamiliar to many Canadians. It signals an untapped opportunity for the tourism industry in the country.

    Overcoming industry challenges

    The mycotourism sector faces several challenges, including fragmented initiatives, which presents challenges in areas like promotion, infrastructure and knowledge sharing.

    There is a need for better co-ordination among mycotourism stakeholders. In Québec, these stakeholders include regional tourism associations, sectoral tourism associations like Terroir et Saveurs du Québec.

    Establishing a unified platform or network for mycotourism stakeholders stakeholders could facilitate the exchange of best practices, improve promotion and support its sustainable growth.

    By closely monitoring new initiatives, researchers, entrepreneurs and tourism professionals can better understand the challenges and opportunities in this field.

    This collaborative approach would identify potential partners for future collaborations, highlight resources and tools and ensure the development of this industry respects all the stakeholders, including Indigenous communities.

    Canada is well-positioned to become a global leader in mycotourism.
    (Shutterstock)

    Our mushroom tourism research

    Our recent research study sheds light on the growth of the mycotourism industry in Québec. Through an in-depth environmental scan, we identified 57 providers across the province, with the majority concentrated in Mauricie and Bas-Saint-Laurent, including the region of Kamouraska.

    We found that most mycotourism businesses in Québec are micro or very small enterprises, which means collaboration and networking are both essential for supporting their growth and sustainability.

    The activities offered by these providers fell into five main categories:

    1. Events and learning: Includes festivals, conferences, training sessions and courses.
    2. Culinary experiences: Features culinary workshops and tasting sessions.
    3. Guided tours and hosting: Encompasses guided tours and group hosting events.
    4. Nature exploration and foraging: Includes guided, self-picking foraging expeditions.
    5. Accommodations with mushroom picking: Lodging experiences that allow guests to participate in mushroom picking during their stay.

    In addition, our study identified four types of enterprises in the sector. These ranged from solo ventures specializing in niche activities, to versatile solo ventures with a diverse range and experiences and services, to slightly larger businesses focusing on targeted services.

    It’s clear that Québec’s mycotourism sector is dynamic, with businesses continually developing new and innovative offerings. The wide range of experiences offered are designed to attract new segments of tourists interested in agritourism, gastronomy or other unique accommodations.

    Unlocking mycotourism potential

    As mycotourism continues to grow, it is crucial for small-scale initiatives in this sector to gain stronger support and recognition from tourism authorities, regional organizations and government agencies.

    Without this support, these businesses may struggle to overcome challenges like limited visibility, fragmented efforts and insufficient resources. If these challenges are not addressed, it could hinder the growth of the sector and its ability to contribute to local economies and rural development.

    With its vast forests, rich biodiversity and developing agritourism and gastronomy sectors, Canada is well-positioned to establish itself as a top destination for mushroom enthusiasts. But to fully realize its full potential, Canada must create an environment that promotes innovation, collaboration and investment in mycotourism.

    Amélie Cloutier receives funding from FRQSC.

    Marc-Antoine Vachon receives funding from Développement Économique Canada pour les régions du Québec et de la Fondation de l’UQAM grâce à un don de Transat A.T..

    Patrick Coulombe 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. Rural communities in Québec are embracing ‘mushroom tourism’ to boost local economies – https://theconversation.com/rural-communities-in-quebec-are-embracing-mushroom-tourism-to-boost-local-economies-246392

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Woodland restoration boost after Teesside company civil sanction

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    A woodland restoration project has received a boost after a Teesside company paid £290,000 to Tees Valley Wildlife Trust for breaching its Environmental Permit.

    An area of cleared woodland.

    The Lazenby Bank Woodland Restoration Project includes improvements to 215 acres of woodland near Wilton International industrial complex at Teesside.

    It comes after Sembcorp Utilities (UK) Ltd, which operates a biomass power station at Wilton, breached its environmental permit by wrongly classifying hazardous waste as non-hazardous during its disposal at landfill.

    It submitted an Enforcement Undertaking to the Environment Agency proposing a charitable donation to Tees Valley Wildlife Trust of £290,000. It’s also introduced new operating procedures to ensure waste is disposed of correctly in future.

    An Enforcement Undertaking is a voluntary offer made by companies or individuals to make amends for their offending, and usually includes a payment to an environmental charity to carry out environmental improvements in the local area.

    Work carried out on the site, next to Wilton International, includes:

    • Clearing unmanaged coniferous woodland to restore habitats where ancient woodland is present – a high priority nationally for conservation.
    • Seeding and re-planting with a greater variety of native trees to improve wildlife biodiversity and diversity of woodland, delivering long-term carbon sequestration.
    • Improved access to the area through new and improved access gates, footpaths and tracks to improve community access to the natural environment in what is an urban area.
    • Community engagement to encourage volunteers to get involved in tree planting as well as training placements with young people from the community to reduce anti-social behaviour.

    The image shows an example of improved natural woodland.

    The Trust will also use the funds to carry out river channel management over three years at nearby Coatham Marsh nature reserve to maintain good habitat conditions for wildlife.

    Ian Preston, Installations Team Leader at the Environment Agency in the North East, said:

    We always consider enforcement options on a case by case basis and Enforcement Undertakings allow companies to put right what went wrong and contribute to environmental improvements and outcomes.

    In this case the payment has allowed a planned and important community project to be delivered at pace – an environmental investment that has enhanced the local area for people and wildlife.

    Tom Harman, Chief Executive of Tees Valley Wildlife Trust, added:

    It’s vital to see funds like this being reinvested into protecting our landscapes for people and wildlife.

    Lazenby Bank Woodland and Coatham Marsh are incredible nature assets for our communities in the Tees Valley. The project will help restore nationally important habitats for priority species and secure improvements for public access.

    Image shows an example of improved natural woodland. Credit: Tees Valley Wildlife Trust.

    Waste was misclassified

    In September 2019 the Environment Agency carried out an audit into Sembcorp’s disposal of Incinerator Bottom Ash (IBA), which is a product of the incineration process.

    Enquiries revealed Sembcorp had classified all its IBA as non-hazardous and disposed of it at a non-hazardous landfill.

    But data showed that its IBA contained concentrations of lead, copper, zinc and nickel – waste that should be classified as hazardous.

    Data supplied from 2015 onwards showed the misclassification had been taking place since at least that date.

    An independent report from a company instructed by Sembcorp concluded that while the IBA should have been classified as hazardous, there was no significant risk to human health or the environment as a result of the wrong disposal. Environment Agency specialists agreed with this conclusion.

    Sembcorp accepted responsibility for the misclassification and set out all the steps it had taken to prevent it happening in the future. As soon as the issue had been identified the company started disposing of its IBA at a hazardous landfill facility.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 January 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s remarks at the United Nations Memorial Ceremony marking the International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust [as delivered]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    It is an honour to be here with you.

     
    I am humbled to have Holocaust survivors and their families with us today.
     
    Before we begin, I want to acknowledge that more than a year has passed since the appalling 7th October terror attacks by Hamas.
     
    We welcome, at long last, the ceasefire and hostage release deal.
     
    The deal offers hope, as well as much needed relief.
     
    We will do our utmost to ensure it leads to the release of all hostages.  Since the beginning, we have asked for the unconditional immediate release of all hostages and a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.
     
    Dear Friends,
     
    Every year on this day, we come together to mark the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau.
     
    We mourn the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators, as they sought to destroy an entire people.
     
    We grieve the Roma and Sinti also targeted for genocide, the people with disabilities, LGBTIQ+ people, and all those enslaved, persecuted, tortured, and killed. 
     
    We stand alongside victims, survivors and their families. 
     
    And we renew our resolve never to forget:
     
    Never to forget the atrocities that so “outraged the conscience” of humankind.
     
    And never to forget their putrid foundations: millennia of antisemitic hate – manifest in marginalisation, discrimination, expulsions, and murder.
     
    Dear Friends,
     
    This year, our commemoration marks a milestone.
     
    80 years ago, the Holocaust ended.
     
    And our efforts began to keep the terrible truth alive; building on the work of those who chronicled Nazi atrocities as they were perpetrated around them – and against them.
     
    The courage of survivors in telling their stories has played an enormous role.
     
    We are deeply grateful to them all. 
     
    But the responsibility belongs to every one of us.
     
    Remembrance is not only a moral act. Remembrance is a call to action.
     
    To allow the Holocaust to fade from memory would dishonour the past and betray the future.
     
    The extraordinary Auschwitz survivor, Primo Levi – who bore witness to all he had seen and endured – urged us to carve the knowledge into our hearts.
     
    And we must.
     
    To know the history of the Holocaust is to know the depths to which humanity can sink.
     
    It is to understand how the Nazis were able to commit their heinous crimes, with the complicity of others.
     
    And it is to comprehend our solemn duty to speak-up against hate, to stand-up for the human rights of all, and to make those rights a reality.
     
    Dear Friends,
     
    Following the hell of the Holocaust, countries came together:
     
    They created the United Nations and our Charter 80 years ago – affirming the worth of every human person…
     
    They adopted the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide – for which we owe a debt of gratitude to the Polish Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin…
     
    And they established the Universal Declaration of Human Rights – the foundation of all international human rights law.
     
    As one of the drafters, Lebanese diplomat and intellectual, Charles Malik, said, the Declaration was:
     
    “…Inspired by opposition to the barbarous doctrines of Nazism and fascism.”
     
    The dignity of every member of our human family is enshrined in that document, which draws from traditions around the world.
     
    It is a pure expression of our shared humanity.
     
    And in dark times it remains a shining light.
     
    Dear Friends,
     
    Today, our world is fractured and dangerous.
     
    Eighty years since the Holocaust’s end, antisemitism is still with us – fuelled by the same lies and loathing that made the Nazi genocide possible.
     
    And it is rising.
     
    Discrimination is rife.
     
    Hatred is being stirred-up across the globe.
     
    One of the clearest and most troubling examples is the spreading cancer of Holocaust denial.
     
    Indisputable historical facts are being distorted, diminished, and dismissed.
     
    Efforts are being made to recast and rehabilitate Nazis and their collaborators. 
     
    We must stand up to these outrages.
     
    We must promote education, combat lies, and speak the truth.
     
    And we must condemn antisemitism wherever and whenever it appears – as we must condemn all forms of racism, prejudice and religious bigotry which we see proliferating today.
     
    Because we know these evils wither our morality, corrode our compassion, and seek to blind us to suffering – opening the door to atrocities.
     
    The United Nations has long worked to combat antisemitism, through a wide range of activities, including our Holocaust Outreach programs.
     
    And we recently launched our Action Plan on antisemitism, recommending the ways the United Nations System can further enhance those efforts.  
     
    In these days of division it is all the more important – that we hold fast to our common humanity… 
     
    And renew our resolve to defend the dignity and human rights of all.
     
    Every one of us has a duty.
     
    The history of the Holocaust shows us what can happen when people choose not to see and not to act.
     
    And the Universal Declaration of Human Rights prescribes that:
     
    “…every individual and every organ of society… shall strive by teaching and education to promote respect for these rights and freedoms…”
     
    Each of us must answer that call: denounce lies; resist hate; and ensure our common humanity overcomes division.  
     
    These causes are at the very core of the United Nations.
     
    We will never forget. And we will never waver in that fight.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: New intake open for connectivity funding applications

    The sixth intake of the Connecting Communities BC funding program will be open for applications until June 30, 2025.

    In March 2022, B.C. and Canada announced a partnership to invest as much as $830 million, contributing $415 million each, toward high-speed connectivity infrastructure projects in rural and remote areas.

    Through Connecting Communities BC, the Province aims to provide all remaining underserved households and First Nation communities with access to high-speed internet by 2027. This program also fulfils a Call to Action in the Declaration Act Action Plan.

    Eligible applicants can apply for funding to support the expansion of high-speed internet in any area of the province, with a focus on specific areas that do not have access to internet speeds of at least 50 megabits per second (Mbps) download speed and 10 Mbps per second upload speed.

    The Connecting Communities BC program completed five intakes between September 2022 and December 2024. Projects applying for the sixth intake will be evaluated as they are received. Successful project applications from previous intakes will continue to be announced when they are approved.

    Learn More:

    Areas of interest are outlined in the Connecting Communities Application Guide available here::
    https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/british-columbians-our-governments/services-policies-for-government/initiatives-plans-strategies/internet-in-bc/connecting-communities-bc-application-docs/ccbc_application-guide.pdf

    Connecting Communities BC:
    https://www.gov.bc.ca/connectingcommunitiesbc

    Connectivity in B.C.: 
    https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/governments/connectivity-in-bc

    StrongerBC: Good Lives in Strong Communities:
    https://news.gov.bc.ca/files/Good-Lives-Strong-Communities-2023.pdf

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth Pentagon Arrival Remarks

    Source: United States Department of Defense

    SECRETARY OF DEFENSE PETE HEGSETH: Morning, everybody. How we doing? It’s an honor to be here. It’s an honor to serve on behalf of the president and serve on behalf of the country. It’s an amazing job, beyond what anyone can fathom.

    But in talking to the chairman and so many other folks here, we’re in capable hands. The warfighters are ready to go. If you see what the president said last week in his executive orders, he’s hitting the ground running. He’s made it very clear there’s an emergency at the — at the southern border, that the sovereign — the protection of the sovereign territory of the United States is the job of the Defense Department, and the cartels are foreign terrorist organizations.

    As a result, this Pentagon snapped to last week. We helped move forward troops, put in more barriers, and also to ensure mass deportations — support of mass deportations in support of the president’s objective. That is something the Defense Department absolutely will continue to do.

    And today, there are more executive orders coming that we fully support, on removing DEI inside the Pentagon, reinstating troops who were pushed out because of COVID mandates, the Iron Dome for America. This is happening quickly. And as the secretary of defense, it’s an honor to salute smartly, as I did as a junior officer and now as the secretary of defense, to ensure these orders are complied with rapidly and quickly.

    Every moment that I’m here, I’m thinking about the guys and gals in Guam, in Germany, in Fort Benning and Fort Bragg, on missile defense sites and aircraft carriers. Our job is lethality and readiness and warfighting.

    We’re going to hold people accountable. I know the chairman agrees with that. The lawful orders of the president of the United States will be executed inside this Defense Department swiftly and without excuse. We will be no better friend to our allies and no stronger adversary to those who want to test us and try us.

    So, Mr. Chairman, thanks for welcoming me today.

    GENERAL CHARLES Q BROWN: My pleasure.

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: I look forward to serving the troops, the warriors of this department. It’s the honor of a lifetime, and we’re going to get to work. God bless you all.

    Q: [Off mic] wristband? Who’s that?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: This right here is Jorge Oliveira. He was killed in Afghanistan on — he was — asked about what I wear on my wrist every single day. It was a troop I served with, a soldier I served with in Guantanamo Bay when I was a platoon leader. He was killed in Afghanistan, not in my unit but when I was there. It’s these guys that we do this for, those that have given the ultimate sacrifice.

    Q: Secretary, should we expect additional troops to be sent to the border soon?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: Whatever is needed at the border will be provided, whether that is through state active duty, Title 32 or Title 10, because we are — we are reorienting. This is a shift. This is not the way business has been done in the past.

    This is — the Defense Department will support the defense of the territorial integrity of the United States of America at the southern border to include reservists, National Guard, and active duty in compliance with the Constitution, with the laws of our land, and the directives of the commander in chief.

    Q: [Off mic] looking at the possibility of invoking the Insurrection Act, yes?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: Those will be decisions made by the White House. I look forward to conversations about anything we need to do to ensure we’re securing our southern border.

    Q: Mr. Secretary, how are you going to change military training?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: I’m sorry?

    Q: Are you going to change military training?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: Military training will be focused on the readiness of what our troops in the field need to deter our enemies. More rapid fielding, more rapid opportunity to train as we fight will be something we want our units to do across the spectrum.

    One more.

    Q: [Off mic] exceptions —

    Q: [Off mic] Joint Chiefs of Staff and other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: I’m standing with them right now. Look forward to working with them. Thank you.

    Q: [Off mic] an exception to the executive order for some transgender troops that?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: There’ll be an executive order on that right now, today.

    Q: [Off mic] for Afghans who served?

    SECRETARY HEGSETH: Hey, we’re gonna — we’re gonna make sure there’s accountability for what happened in Afghanistan and that we stand by our allies. Thank you.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Acting Chairman Pham to Launch Public Roundtables on Innovation and Market Structure

    Source: US Commodity Futures Trading Commission

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Commodity Futures Trading Commission Acting Chairman Caroline D. Pham is launching a series of public roundtables on evolving trends and innovation in market structure, including issues such as affiliated entities and conflicts of interest, prediction markets, and digital assets. Pham renewed calls for open public engagement and increased transparency by the CFTC on its policy approach to changes in derivatives markets last year. 
    “As I have long said, the CFTC must take a forward-looking approach to shifts in market structure to ensure our markets remain vibrant and resilient while protecting all participants,” Pham said. “Innovation and new technology has created a renaissance in markets that presents new opportunities that are accessible to more people, as well as risks. The CFTC will get back to basics by hosting staff roundtables that will develop a robust administrative record with studies, data, expert reports, and public input. A holistic approach to evolving market trends will help to establish clear rules of the road and safeguards that will promote U.S. economic growth and American competitiveness.”
    Over the next several months, the CFTC will engage with industry leaders, market participants, other market structure experts, and public interest groups through open and transparent public roundtables to provide the CFTC with the best information and latest data. Details about the series will be provided as they become available.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: OEM Assists with the Rescue of a 26-year-old Missing Hiker on Mt. Hood

    Source: US State of Oregon

    he Oregon Department of Emergency Management (OEM) played a role in the successful search and rescue mission for Brendan Davis who was found alive and well Friday at about 3:30 p.m. by Clackamas County Search and Rescue.

    OEM’s Statewide Search and Rescue Coordinator, Scott Lucas, coordinated air support and ensured the seamless collaboration between the Hood River County Sheriff’s Office, the Army National Guard, and various search and rescue teams. OEM’s swift response and coordination were essential in locating the missing climber.

    The 26-year-old hiker was reported missing at around 4:00 p.m. on Thursday, January 16, 2025, after becoming separated from his friend in foggy weather conditions while descending Mt. Hood after summiting.

    Immediately following the report, the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue teams were activated to assist with the search. Portland Mountain Rescue teams worked late into the night on Thursday, following leads based on cell phone signals.

    As the search effort expanded, Clackamas Search and Rescue (CSAR) volunteers, Mountain Wave SAR, PNW Search & Rescue, and Hood River Crag Rats joined the mission on Friday morning.

    OEM’s coordination ensured the effective use of air support and resources, helping to bring the search to a successful conclusion when the missing hiker was located at the 3300-foot level by Hidden Lake / Zig Zag Canyon.

    “A team effort is always required to have a successful ending with a search and rescue mission on Mt. Hood,” Lucas said. “OEM’s leadership and coordination helped bring all the partners together to ensure a safe outcome.”

    More information can be found at the Sheriff’s Office searching for missing climber on Mount Hood | Clackamas County or by contacting the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office public information officer sheriffpio@clackamas.us.

    Photo caption: image were taken from an aerial view during the morning search.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust (27 Jan. 2025)

    Source: Republic of France in English
    The Republic of France has issued the following statement:

    On this international day dedicated to the remembrance of genocides and the prevention of crimes against humanity, France commemorates the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau 80 years ago and remembers the victims of the Holocaust. President Macron, accompanied by Minister Delegate for Europe Benjamin Haddad, will take part in the ceremonies.

    On January 27, 1945, the world discovered the horror of the genocide carried out by the Nazis and their allies. To make sure the world never forgets the atrocities and their victims, the UN proclaimed this date to be the International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust. The Nazi regime and its collaborators systematically exterminated the Jewish people and a number of other groups because of their ethnic origins, beliefs, physical features or sexual orientation.

    France defends universal, inalienable, indivisible human rights by combating all forms of discrimination, racism and xenophobia, and all types of hate speech. Holocaust denial and anti-Semitism must be strongly opposed and firmly punished because they undermine the unity of our society as well as the rights, freedoms and dignity of all. Along with promoting our national zero-tolerance policy toward anti-Semitism, our diplomatic corps works each day to defend human rights and fight all forms of anti-Semitism, racism and discrimination.

    Within the European Union, our country remains a leader in this regard, actively supporting the European strategy on combating anti-Semitism and fostering Jewish life.

    To tackle current challenges, we are playing an active role in promoting the European model of digital regulation in order to suppress online hate speech.

    Our diplomatic corps continues to speak out against anti-Semitism in all the regional and international organizations that France belongs to.

    France also works to foster remembrance and the transmission of knowledge, a critical task now that fewer and fewer survivors and witnesses of the Holocaust are still alive, and with disinformation and revisionist history fueling noxious political discourse.

    The Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs recently announced France’s candidacy for the 2027 presidency of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), an international organization that does important work in the areas of Holocaust research, education and remembrance.

    Remembering the victims of the Holocaust is our shared duty. We must remember that intolerance, hate speech and discrimination create a breeding ground for humanity’s darkest acts.

    With the world facing divisions and fractures, and the massive spread of hate speech, the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs will continue to lead the fight against all forms of xenophobia and anti-Semitism.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Wyden Blasts Trump’s Midnight Massacre of Independent Government Watchdogs

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore)
    January 27, 2025
    Washington, D.C. – Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., co-chair of the Senate Whistleblower Protection Caucus, blasted Donald Trump’s firing of 17 federal inspectors general last night. IGs are independent watchdogs that investigate waste and fraud within government agencies, and have been a nonpartisan check on abuse of federal taxpayer resources.
    “Donald Trump is systematically dismantling the protections against abuse, corruption and fraud within the federal government,” Wyden said. “Courts should immediately strike down this blatantly illegal action. Firing IGs without notifying Congress 30 days in advance is clearly illegal. The only reason for Trump to carry out the midnight massacre of more than a dozen inspectors general without notice is to make it easier for him to break the law and help him and his wealthy cronies profit from the government without anyone looking over his shoulder.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Video: UK E-petition debate relating to speech and language therapy – Monday 27 January

    Source: United Kingdom UK Parliament (video statements)

    The Petitions Committee has scheduled a debate relating to speech and language therapy.

    Dave Robertson MP, has been asked by the Committee to open the debate. The Government will send a Minister to respond.

    Read the petition:
    https://petition.parliament.uk/archived/petitions/657935

    Find petitions you agree with, and sign them: https://petition.parliament.uk/

    What are petition debates?

    Petition debates are ‘general’ debates which allow MPs from all parties to discuss the important issues raised by one or more petitions, and put their concerns to Government Ministers.

    Petition debates don’t end with a vote to implement the request of a petition. This means that MPs will not vote on the issues raised in the petition at the end of the debate.

    The Petitions Committee can only schedule debates on petitions to parliament started on petition.parliament.uk

    Find out more about how petition debates work: https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/326/petitions-committee/content/194347/how-petitions-debates-work/

    Stay up-to-date
    Follow the Committee on Twitter for real-time updates on its work: https://www.twitter.com/hocpetitions

    Thumbnail image ©UK Parliament / Jessica Taylor

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQgj8HSw9UQ

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Russia: “You need to have the knowledge, skills and competencies to build a successful business in the Eastern markets”

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    © Mikhail Dmitriev / Higher School of Economics

    HSE Expert Club “Eastern perspective» held its first event — a business session dedicated to launching and developing a successful business in India. The club was created by HSE experts to discuss tools, trends and insights on cooperation between Russia and the countries of Southeast Asia, the Near and Middle East, and North Africa. The participants were addressed by experts with many years of successful experience working in the Indian market in the interests of the world’s largest corporations.

    It is no coincidence that the first event of the Eastern Perspective was dedicated to India. Today, this country is the fastest growing economy in the world among the G20 countries with more than 7 percent annual GDP growth, a growing consumer market and high rates of technological progress. This opens up unique opportunities for Russian companies, emphasized the moderator of the event, Deputy Director for Marketing Communications at the National Research University Higher School of Economics Dmitry Chubarov.

    India is one of the most promising countries for entrepreneurs planning to start or grow their business.

    Leading world experts today call this country a “market of billions of chances,” said the associate professor Schools of Oriental Studies Faculty of World Economy and World Politics HSE University Olga Kharina. “Many countries want to have India as a partner, and Western countries are already doing this successfully. Therefore, we also need to use this chance in our own interests – the interests of business and, of course, the state,” she noted.

    Today, the dynamics of the development of Indian industries are as follows: the share of industrial products in the import structure reaches 50%, the annual growth of the beauty industry is 76%, the share of fintech in the volume of attracted financing among startups is 40%, and the share of e-commerce in the volume of attracted financing among startups is 20%. The average age of the population of this country is 28 years, which makes it one of the largest labor markets in the world. About 70% of the population is young people under 35 years old.

    In 2023, India accounted for more than 40% of all smartphone sales in Asia. The number of internet users in India is expected to reach 700 million by 2025. There are already about 450 million, and 1.2 billion mobile users. The Indian smartphone market is the fastest growing in the world. In addition, in 2020, a $ 1.4 trillion transport infrastructure plan was adopted, which includes improving roads, railways and airports. Textile exports are expected to reach $ 100 billion by 2027. India is the second largest producer of crude steel in the world, and the third largest aviation market. The value of the chemical and petrochemical industry reaches $ 1,178 billion, and auto component exports are worth $ 13.3 billion.

    Olga Kharina reviewed several cases related to the development of business of Russian entrepreneurs in India. Their experience showed that obtaining all the necessary permits for work in this country is a more complicated process than expected. It is also important to take into account the specifics of working with local regulatory authorities and carefully study the legislation and tax procedures.

    Olga Kharina also presented a “treasure map” of Indian states, each of which has its own economic characteristics and laws. Thus, the state of Maharashtra (where the financial center of Mumbai is located) is the largest taxpayer and an important center for business. The state of Uttar Pradesh is the most populous (more than 220 million people), but the economy is mainly agricultural. The state of Gujarat is a leader in the production and export of such goods as chemicals, petrochemicals and textiles.

    “India is located in the center of South Asia and has a strategic position as a gateway between East and West Asia. With access to the Indian Ocean, it plays a key role in trade and transport between the countries of Central Asia, the Middle East, Southeast Asia and East Africa. Russia and India maintain close economic ties that are strengthening every year. In recent years, various agreements have been signed on mutual trade, as well as on strategic partnership in the fields of energy, defense and technology,” the speaker emphasized.

    As for the most promising areas for business, India is one of the largest consumers of energy resources, and Russian companies can develop their activities in the field of oil and gas supplies, as well as participate in energy projects. Russia can also offer its developments in the field of IT and innovative technologies, especially in the field of artificial intelligence, machine learning and blockchain. In addition, India is an important importer of agricultural products, and Russian companies can supply there grain, fish, meat, dairy products. At the same time, Indian technologies in agribusiness can be useful for Russian farmers.

    The Indian government actively supports the “Make in India” program, which is aimed at developing manufacturing and stimulating foreign investment in the country.

    “You need to have the knowledge, skills and competencies to build a successful business in new markets, which we now call the Global East – friendly markets that are supported by both Russia and other countries,” emphasized Natalia Guseva, professor at the Faculty of World Economy and World Politics at the HSE and head of the HSE educational programs “Business with the East.”

    She presented the educational programs “Eastern Perspective” for entrepreneurs working with countries of the Near and Middle East, North Africa, and the Indo-Pacific region.

    The university currently offers three such programs. The flagship five-month program isEastern Perspective: Strategy and Tactics for Building a Business” combines the experience and practices of entering new markets in developed countries of the Global East. Intensive three-month program “Eastern Perspective: The Basics of Building a Business” is aimed at obtaining practical knowledge on business development, launching international projects in various sectors of the economy with the countries of the Global East. The three-week program “Eastern Perspective: The Practice of Building a Business in India” focuses on knowledge, strategies and practices for building a successful business in India.

    “You will have a clear understanding of the potential and specifics of Eastern markets depending on what company you work for or what startup you plan to do. When entering new markets, offering your products and services, you must have a clear understanding of the vectors and potentials of development, the features of the financial and tax systems. You also need to understand the main political trends, the features of the local society. You need to clearly assess the export potential, due to which you will compete. Most Russian companies that had experience in international business were mainly focused on the European markets, and that competition strategy was mainly based on low prices, but in the Eastern markets this strategy will be ineffective,” Natalia Guseva emphasized.

    Expert in developing GR tools and strategies for promoting companies on the Indian market, representative of the media conglomerate The Times of India Group in Russia Nair Devadathan spoke about the country’s features that businessmen entering this market should pay attention to. Thus, according to him, caste, religiosity and beliefs are very important in Indian society (for example, entrepreneurs build relationships with partners based on astrological horoscopes). Business connections are also of great importance: to enter the market, it is necessary to find a partner from among local residents – this way the company will be able to receive many preferences and more favorable conditions. “India should be understood as Bollywood,” he said. At the same time, this country loves Russian culture, especially theater and film adaptations.

    According to Nair Devadathan, not only large companies and medium-sized businesses can succeed in this country, but also small production facilities and even individual entrepreneurs – such examples already exist. At the same time, Indian consumers may be interested in absolutely any product, including those subject to sanctions, or services – for example, from the beauty industry or the arts, education or tourism.

    “Promoting Russia is a business in itself. All our young people use social networks, so you need to pay attention to this,” he is convinced.

    In conclusion, Dmitry Chubarov invited the business session participants to take the HSE educational programs dedicated to the East. “The expertise, experience and cases that will be discussed will not be based on abstract textbooks, but on the daily successful practice of both Russian and international companies that are currently operating in the Indian market,” he summed up.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Webster County Man Pleads Guilty to Meth Conspiracy

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Taylor Morrow, 34, from Fort Dodge, Iowa, pled guilty January 24, 2025, in federal court in Sioux City, to conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine.

    At the plea hearing, Morrow admitted that between March and April 2024, he and others distributed more than 1.5 kilograms of methamphetamine in the Fort Dodge, Iowa area.  

    Sentencing before United States District Court Judge Leonard T. Strand will be set after a presentence report is prepared.  Morrow remains in custody of the United States Marshal pending sentencing.  Morrow faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years’ imprisonment and a possible maximum sentence of life imprisonment, a $10,000,000 fine, and at least five years of supervised release following any imprisonment.

    The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Patrick T. Greenwood and was investigated by Iowa Division of Narcotics Enforcement, fort Dodge Police Department, Webster County Sheriff’s Office, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Iowa DCI Laboratory.  

    Court file information at https://ecf.iand.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/login.pl.

    The case file number is 24-3034.  Follow us on X @USAO_NDIA.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Harford County Man Sentenced for Aggravated Identity Theft and Bank Fraud Scheme

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Defendant also participated in scheme to illegally obtain $28,350 in unemployment insurance benefits from the State of California during COVID-19 Pandemic.

    Baltimore, Maryland – U.S. District Judge Julie R. Rubin sentenced Victor Ojo, 30, of Belcamp, Maryland, to 72 months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release.

    Victor Ojo received the sentence for aggravated identity theft and his role in an attempted bank-fraud scheme that had an intended loss amount of $1.5 million. Additionally, Victor Ojo admitted to participating in a fraudulent scheme to obtain $28,350 in unemployment insurance benefits. So, Judge Rubin ordered Victor Ojo to forfeit $20,014.03 and to pay $78,350 in restitution.

    Erek L. Barron, U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland, announced the sentence with Andrew McKay, Special Agent in Charge of the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration’s (TIGTA) Mid-Atlantic Field Division, and Scott Moffit, Special Agent in Charge of TIGTA’s Cybercrime Investigations Division.

    According to his guilty plea, from April 2016 through at least August 2019, Victor Ojo conspired with Damilola Ojo, Jamelia Thompson, Raissa Kaossele, and others, to commit bank fraud using the Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) Modernized Internet Employer Identification Number (MODIEIN) system. The MODIEIN is the IRS system that allows users to register for a unique Employer Identification Number (EIN). It requires users to enter the valid name and Social Security Number of a real living person to obtain an EIN for a business.

    The defendant and his co-conspirators created and used various EINs to carry out the scheme. They obtained many of the EINs from the IRS using stolen Personally Identifiable Information. These EINs, in conjunction with fraudulently obtained state business certificates, allowed the co-conspirators to open bank accounts at various financial institutions to deposit stolen and/or altered checks and to receive fraudulently obtained wire transfers and other funds. Many of the wire transfers were the result of Business Email Compromises. Once obtained, the co-conspirators rapidly withdrew the proceeds, transferring them to other bank accounts.

    Victor Ojo and his co-conspirators victimized individuals through identity theft, businesses through financial account compromise, and banks through misdirecting wire transfers and making fraudulent transactions. After Victor Ojo’s arrest, law enforcement discovered evidence linking him to fraudulent activity. Law enforcement found numerous financial documents; a jacket, shirt, and hat that they saw Victor Ojo wearing in bank-surveillance footage while interacting with the fraudulent accounts; and a $14,000 check with someone else’s name on it. They also found passports in other people’s names and a Colorado ID with authentication features in someone else’s name.

    In the plea agreement, Victor Ojo admitted that he engaged in additional fraudulent activities prior to his arrest for bank-fraud conspiracy. Specifically, Victor Ojo and co-conspirators fraudulently obtained $28,350 in unemployment insurance benefits from the State of California using a victim’s identification.

    Around August 1, 2021, the California Employment Development Department (EDD) issued a Bank of America debit card in that victim’s name to an address in Lanham, Maryland. The card was linked to a Bank of America account that the EDD deposited a total of $28,350 in unemployment insurance benefits into. 
     

    The EDD made the first deposit on August 8, 2021. On August 10, 11, 24, and 25, Victor Ojo used the card to withdraw thousands of dollars from various ATMs in Harford County, Maryland. Victor Ojo was also captured on surveillance cameras making the withdrawals on August 10, 11, and 25.

    U.S. Attorney Barron commended the TIGTA for its work in the investigation.  Mr. Barron also thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Joseph L. Wenner, Paul Riley, and John D’Amico who prosecuted the federal case. He also recognized Joanna B.N. Huber, Maryland COVID-19 Strike Force Paralegal Specialist, for her assistance.

    The District of Maryland Strike Force is one of five strike forces established throughout the United States by the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate and prosecute COVID-19 fraud, including fraud relating to the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.  The CARES Act was designed to provide emergency financial assistance to Americans suffering the economic effects caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.  The strike forces focus on large-scale, multi-state pandemic relief fraud perpetrated by criminal organizations and transnational actors.  The strike forces are interagency law enforcement efforts, using prosecutor-led and data analyst-driven teams designed to identify and bring to justice those who stole pandemic relief funds.

    For more information on the Department’s response to the pandemic, please visit https://www.justice.gov/coronavirus. Anyone with information about allegations of attempted fraud involving COVID-19 can report it by calling the Department of Justice’s National Center for Disaster Fraud (NCDF) Hotline at 866-720-5721 or via the NCDF Web Complaint Form at: https://www.justice.gov/disaster-fraud/ncdf-disaster-complaint-form.

    For more information about the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office, its priorities, and resources available to help the community, please visit www.justice.gov/usao-md and https://www.justice.gov/usao-md/community-outreach.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cornyn Votes to Confirm Pete Hegseth for Secretary of Defense

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Texas John Cornyn
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) released the following statement after Pete Hegseth was confirmed as U.S. Secretary of Defense:
    “President Trump has promised to restore American dominance on the world stage and enact his peace-through-strength agenda following years of weakness under Joe Biden. I am confident my friend Pete Hegseth will play an invaluable role in carrying out that mission at a time when our nation and our world need it most. With Pete at the helm, the status quo will be shaken up and the warrior spirit will finally be restored at the Pentagon.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cornyn Votes to Confirm Kristi Noem for DHS Secretary

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Texas John Cornyn
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) released the following statement after South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem was confirmed as Secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS):
    “Texas is on the front lines of the border crisis, but Governor Noem knows all too well that every state became a border state under the failed Biden-Harris-Mayorkas administration. She was one of the first governors to send reinforcements to support Texas’ efforts to secure the border when President Biden refused to do so, and she’s solidified herself as a strong defender of President Trump’s border agenda ever since.”
    “I look forward to working with Governor Noem in her new capacity to finally secure our southern border and put an end to this crisis that has wreaked havoc on the Lone Star State.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New £2m project to save UK from food shortages

    Source: Anglia Ruskin University

    Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) is leading a new £2 million initiative to help prevent food shortages that could potentially trigger civil unrest in the UK.

    The project, called Backcasting to Increase Food System Resilience in the UK, is being led by experts from Anglia Ruskin’s Global Sustainability Institute and has received £2,048,461 in funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI).

    Building on recent research that found that over 40% of food experts believe widespread civil unrest linked to food shortages, such as demonstrations and violent looting, is possible or likely in the UK within the next 10 years, the new project aims to urgently address vulnerabilities in the nation’s food supply.

    The UK’s food system is currently optimised for efficiency rather than resilience, relying heavily on imports, seasonal labour, and just-in-time supply chains.

    This makes it particularly susceptible to disruptions that could lead to a collapse, defined as a situation where the public lack access to affordable food, resulting in economic productivity losses, disease outbreaks, extreme hunger, malnutrition, or civil unrest.

    Potential causes of such a collapse include geopolitical instability and conflict around the world, pandemics, extreme weather events exacerbated by climate change, and trade tariffs.

    The project aims to identify and find ways of mitigating the potential tipping points that could lead to a collapse and prioritise the areas within the UK food system that urgently need to strengthen their resilience to likely risks and shocks.

    To achieve these goals, the researchers will work closely with key stakeholders including food producers, importers, distributers and retailers.

    A “backcasting” mapping exercise will be carried out to identify the most likely pathways leading to civil unrest with a focus on addressing problems at the early stages of these pathways, well before any unrest arises.

    Anglia Ruskin University is leading the project in partnership with experts from the University of York, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the University of the West of England and the Royal Agricultural University.

    Other partners include WTW, the Food Farming & Countryside Commission, the Food Ethics Council, WRAP, DEFRA, Trussell, Sustain, Better Food Traders, Samworth Brothers, the Food Standards Agency, the Institute of Grocery Distributors and WWF.

    “The Backcasting to Increase Food System Resilience in the UK project is a major investment into understanding how future shocks could significantly impact the UK food system and how we can build resilience to these.

    “The food system is exposed to various risks from climate change and biodiversity loss to geopolitical events, such as wars or cyberterrorism. Supporting the UK’s food system stakeholders from farmers through to retail, by working with them to build on their knowledge to deliver a transformation towards resilience, is vital.

    “The project will also involve placements inside organisations focusing on food system challenges, to better understand the interventions that may be possible, and allow wider lessons to be captured and shared. These placements will be open to PhDs from across the UK and will be announced in 2026.”

    Professor Aled Jones, Director of the Global Sustainability Institute at Anglia Ruskin University (ARU)

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Assistant Chief Minister gives update on the International Cultural Centre27 January 2025 ​Deputy Carina Alves has given an update on the International Cultural Centre: “As Assistant Chief Minster with responsibility for Diversity, Equality and Inclusion, I am pleased to provide an update… Read more

    Source: Channel Islands – Jersey

    27 January 2025

    Deputy Carina Alves has given an update on the International Cultural Centre: 

    “As Assistant Chief Minster with responsibility for Diversity, Equality and Inclusion, I am pleased to provide an update on the future and the direction of the International Cultural Centre. 

    Earlier this week, I met with members of the International Cultural Centre Steering Group to outline my future plans for the service. Although more detailed plans are now under development, which I’ll be able to share at a later date, the International Cultural Centre will be re-focussed on the support of most vulnerable in Jersey’s communities. 

    Services provided by the ICC will maintain independence as far as possible, working in partnership with Government where necessary to ensure appropriate support is provided to those seeking it.

    I know that there can be many challenges for vulnerable people in Jersey, and so have dedicated my time over the past 12 months to ensuring that the International Cultural Centre will support those most in need and provide a much-needed safe space for them to seek independent, but well linked support. 

    We want the ICC to have the greatest impact possible with the resources available. I believe that focussing the ICC’s efforts on the people most in need, who might normally be reluctant to approach Government services, is the best way to build trust, and foster belonging amongst our community. To do so, we must show that we can offer real help to everyone, regardless of their work or residential status, and that the ICC will provide that opportunity. 

    I look forward to sharing more in the near future when the service becomes fully operational, and in the meantime would encourage interested individuals or groups within our community to reach out to me directly.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Celebrate 50 Years of The Eagles and Fleetwood Mac at the Alley Theatre

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Celebrate 50 Years of The Eagles and Fleetwood Mac at the Alley Theatre

    27 January 2025

    Get ready to celebrate the iconic music of The Eagles and Fleetwood Mac at a special night in the Alley Theatre on Saturday, 8th February.

    Taking to the stage will be The Illegals, led by Niamh Kavanagh, in a night to mark the 50th anniversary of two of the most celebrated albums of all time – ‘One of Those Nights’ by The Eagles, and ‘Fleetwood Mac’ which marked the debut of Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham.

    Created especially for 2025 The Illegals have compiled this fantastic new show to celebrate these two groundbreaking albums.

    Led by Niamh Kavanagh, she of the mesmerizing voice and mischievous spirit, The Illegals will take you on an unforgettable journey for three hours of soulful harmonies, exciting riffs, blistering guitars and memorable songs.

    The best of two legendary bands in one night? It’s almost too good to be true.

    On the set list for the night will be songs like, ‘One of These Nights’, ‘Rhiannon’, ‘Lyin’ Eyes’, ‘Say That You Love Me’, ‘Take it to The Limit’, ‘Landslide’ – all in celebration of two of the greatest rock bands of all time.

    Aside from the headline albums the show also consists of many other hits from The Eagles and Fleetwood Mac, as well as some of the solo work from individual members and other artists.

    The Illegals are a band of experienced musicians performing mostly in theatres and rock venues throughout the country, they put on a formidable show and will give fans an experience they won’t forget.

    Tickets are £22.50 available from the Alley Theatre website www.alley-theatre or call the Alley Theatre Box Office on 028 71 384444

    Check out the full Alley Theatre Spring Programme on www.alley-theatre.com.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom