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Category: Asia Pacific

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Commonwealth Scholarships celebrate 65 years of inspiring futures

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Themed ‘Celebrating 65 Years of Commonwealth Scholarships – Inspiring Futures, Empowering Communities’, the milestone event recognised the significant impact that Commonwealth Scholarships have had on individuals and communities.

    A group photo with Deputy High Commissioner Emma Davis and Director of SITESA Dr John Iromea.

    The Solomon Islands Commonwealth Scholars and Alumni Association (SICSAA) celebrated 65 years of Commonwealth Scholarships in Solomon Islands over the weekend.

    Themed ‘Celebrating 65 Years of Commonwealth Scholarships – Inspiring Futures, Empowering Communities’, this milestone event recognized the significant impact that Commonwealth Scholarships have had in individuals and communities, fostering education, leadership and development.

    Last Friday’s celebration featured insightful presentations, discussions and networking opportunities with past and current scholars and stakeholders who have contributed to this esteemed program.

    Reflections were also held on the programme’s achievements and to explore future opportunities for furthering educational growth in Solomon Islands.

    Speaking at the official programme British Deputy High Commissioner to Solomon Islands, Emma Davis said:

    As we have seen from the recent Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa, there was a reiteration of abiding belief in the value of the Commonwealth as a trusted forum where diverse voices of our member states, the large and the small, the young and the old, come together as one family.

    At last month’s Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) heads of governments underscored the pivotal role of education in shaping cultural, societal and family values, beliefs and norms in promoting human rights, peace, economic, political and social development and environmental sustainability, and in fostering responsible global citizenship.

    They also encouraged initiatives that provide social and emotional learning, scholarships, opportunities for lifelong learning, quality education and training that bridge digital divides, including the gender digital divide.

    The announcement of The King’s Commonwealth Fellowship Programme, was inspired by His Majesty King Charles III, and his life’s work to create opportunity and to tackle contemporary challenges including climate change and inequality is an example.

    In his keynote address on the significance and impact of the Commonwealth Scholarships, Director of the National Scholarship Division (NSD), Solomon Islands Tertiary Education and Skills Authority (SITESA), Ministry of Education and Human Resources Development, Dr John Iromea said:

    Scholarships are what is beautiful, and what is not attractive is not a scholarship. The beauty in appreciating your parents, the beauty in appreciating your teachers, the beauty in appreciating your fellow students, and the beauty in enjoying the Commonwealth Scholarships from the UK Government defines the ‘True’ and ‘Ideal’ partnership in building a strong foundation of a nation.

    He said:

    The 65th Anniversary celebration was also about a future of hope and destiny for our students, people and Solomon Islands and therefore, it is significant that students’ education and training are part of their life, and they ought to guard it well.

    And it is up to you – the young people – to guide your education well by utilizing scholarships to empower you, your family, your tribe, your people, and your community. But, if you do not appreciate the importance of scholarships, your education and training will suffer and die.

    The celebrations concluded with an afternoon interaction on how to write a scholarship application and preparing for scholarship interviews and the sharing of personal experiences under Commonwealth Scholarships by members of the Scholars and Alumni Association.

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    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Student assessment report released

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Hong Kong Examinations & Assessment Authority has submitted the 2024 Territory-wide System Assessment (TSA) report to the Education Bureau, the Government announced today.

    The report said the performance of participating Primary 3 and Secondary 3 students in the subjects of Chinese, English and mathematics generally remains steady.

    Since the introduction of enhancement measures in 2018, the implementation of the TSA has been satisfactory, the bureau pointed out.

    The bureau added that it will continue to work closely with all stakeholders, render full support to schools, strengthen teachers’ professional capacities and enhance learning and teaching effectiveness.

    It also encourages schools to make good use of the information from the TSA report to analyse students’ strengths and weaknesses in various learning areas, with a view to catering for learner diversity and raising learning and teaching effectiveness. 

    The bureau will hold thematic seminars in November and December to promote and support schools and teachers in making effective use of assessment data and information to enhance learning and teaching.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: TBV and BitcoinOS to Host The Best Event at Devcon BKK: Exclusive Networking and Epic Afterparty

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • On the heels of their Marquee Party during Token2049 Singapore which saw a full house turnout of over 3,000 attendees from an overly-subscribed 8,000 signups, Tobi & Brent are bringing yet another massive bash, this time to Devcon Bangkok.
    • Co-hosted by early-stage Web3 VC fund TBV and revolutionary BTC blockchain network BitcoinOS.
    • Headlined by popular South Korean DJ SODA, who boasts a following of over 25 million fans and will be providing high-energy performances and a distinctive mix of EDM and electro house music.

    BANGKOK, Nov. 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — “The Best Event. Devcon BKK with TBV & BitcoinOS” is set to be the highlight of Devcon Week in Bangkok. The premier event series, hosted by TBV (TB Ventures) and BitcoinOS, offers a unique blend of high-impact networking followed by the signature “Web3 with Tobi & Brent” afterparty experience.

    Taking place at Portal on November 13th, amidst Bangkok’s bustling nightlife, “The Best Event” is definitely not your traditional tech event. Serving up a unique recipe for celebration and connection, the packed mashup of networking, hackathons, music and high-value deal flows is going to make for some very unique and innovative bedfellows.

    Headlining the night is the illustrious South Korean DJ SODA, whose exhilarating performances and distinctive blend of EDM and electro house music have amassed a dedicated following of over 25 million fans. Add in nine more high-energy DJ sets and the mix of entrepreneurs, investors, developers, and key opinion leaders, and this social meets sonic meets tech odyssey is primed to emerge as the centerpiece of Devcon Week.

    Tobias Bauer, General Partner and Co-Founder of TBV shared, “Our Token2049 event was awesome, massive party vibes and an incredible network of industry heavy-weights. The one thing we were missing was a quieter space for ongoing networking across the night so that’s what we’re bringing to Devcon week. A legendary party, a hackathon, party buses, and exclusive networking the whole way through. See you there!”

    Building the Web3 Community: The Tobi & Brent Phenomenon

    Since 2024, the “Web3 with Tobi & Brent” brand has become synonymous in the Web3 space with cultivating thriving communities and fostering genuine connections. The dynamic duo has garnered an overall following on Telegram and social media that numbers over 100,000, demonstrating their ability to organically unite VCs, LPs, projects, and industry enthusiasts.

    During their massively attended MARQUEE event during Token2049 Singapore which was headlined by internationally acclaimed DJ Dillon Francis, Tobi & Brent soft-launched TBV (TB Ventures), a VC fund focused on early-stage web3 startups. Their events arm TBE (TB Events) has now curated “The Best Event. DevCon BKK with TBV & BitcoinOS”, offering yet another distinctive global Web3 rendezvous.

    “It’s a privilege to host these events and to see the quality of attendees that they draw. I’m proud of what we’ve been able to achieve with our event series, and it’s in huge part thanks to our incredible partners and team. If there’s one event to hit during Devcon week, this one is it,” said Brent Fulfer, General Partner and Co-Founder of TBV.

    BitcoinOS: The Smart Contract Operating System for Bitcoin

    The Best Event is also co-hosted by BitcoinOS, an operating system designed to create a unified, interconnected, barrier-free playground for innovation on Bitcoin. Using ZK (zero-knowledge) tech, developers can deploy any VM (virtual machine) to Bitcoin with the scalability of Ethereum, the interoperability of Cosmos, and the speed of Solana.

    Building the key missing tech that will finally allow Bitcoin’s utility to extend beyond a store of value, the BitcoinOS team’s successful verification of the first ZK proof on Bitcoin mainnet has opened the doors for trustless BTC bridging, and eventually an ecosystem of true Bitcoin rollups. This is the holy grail of Bitcoin scalability which will securely open the doors for over a trillion dollars of liquidity to merge with the Web3 ecosystem.

    The Best Networking. The Best Time. THE BEST EVENT.

    Right off DEVCON, the early party vibes will begin aboard the TBV and BOS party buses where buzzing anticipation and free flow drinks, which continue throughout the evening, make for an enjoyable seamless transit to Portal.

    Upon arrival, guests embark on the next exploration with four unique zones of immersive experiences. From networking over drinks and canapes, to a ‘drunken dev’ hackathon, to an upscale bar with skyline views, the diverse atmospheres offer up ample networking opportunities.

    As the clock strikes nine, the Portal gates open to general admission, unleashing the torrents of energetic crowds while an all-star lineup of world class DJs take to the main stage. With DJ SODA at the helm, whose high-octane performances and infectious rhythms have captivated fans worldwide, Portal will be transformed into a pulsating epicenter of entertainment.

    The likes of Jade Rasif, a top Singaporean DJ famed for her high energy EDM sets; established Asian DJ, Nicole Chen, known for her stage presence; Your Crypto DJ, who has played on the same line-up as Don Diablo, Alesso, Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike; DJ Kim Sane, who has performed at the likes of Ultra Europe, and more –– each set, across 2 stages, will provide a unique auditory experience of eclectic styles, ensuring the vibe never drops across the night’s festivities. As the night unfolds, connections with like-minded peers and pioneers from the Web3 community hold the potential to forge relationships that could spark collaborations that extend beyond the event.

    As a prequel to The Best Event, TBV and BitcoinOS are also hosting a “Meet the VC with Tobi & Brent” on November 12th. This exclusive rendezvous is designed to connect attendees with leading VCs and projects, further supporting the Devcon experience.

    Hosted and Supported by the Best in Web3

    Co-hosted by TBV and BitcoinOS, “The Best Event” is proudly supported by leading Web3 companies, including Petastic, Fideum, Zekret, Vurse, FOMO Ventures, Matterblock, Freename, BoomFi, Biptap, Libera Global, Captain & Company, and BeWater.

    “The Best Event” is also supported by prominent players in the Web3 PR, media and influencer spaces, such as yourPRstrategist (YPRS), Crypto Banter, Asia Token Fund, Coinstelegram, European Kid, CoinsCapture, MediaX, Arcadia, Cryptopolitan, Coinfea, Key Difference Wire, The Coin Republic, ZEX PR Wire, Trader Brawl Media, and Tiger Mode Media as well as community partners like Unity Labs, Cryptocurrency PH, Crypto World Community, Unikorn, Founders Hub Network, Association Blockchain Asia, AdLunam, Nadmah, All Confs Bot, Clubout and more, which further amplify its reach. With its extensive network and high-profile partnerships, the event stands out as a key highlight of Devcon, attracting industry insiders and enthusiasts alike.

    Due to the high demand and limited capacity, guests are advised to arrive early, with doors opening at 8:00PM, to ensure entry as this event is first-come, first-served.

    For more information and to register, visit: https://lu.ma/TheBestEvent-DevCon24
    For the latest updates, join the Telegram group: https://t.me/+5KzXYg2cridmOGRl
    For sponsorships, VIP inquiries or table reservations, contact via email or on Telegram.

    About TB Ventures (TBV)
    TBV is a venture capital fund investing in early-stage Web3 companies across Southeast Asia and North America. Supported by TBE (TB Events) and TBA (TB Advisory), TBV offers a comprehensive ecosystem and network of services that are underpinned by a 100k+ social following and 10k+ active TG community.
    X: https://x.com/tbvxyz
    Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/tbv-xyz
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tobiandbrent

    About TB Events (TBE)
    TB Events is a premier event series in the Web3 community, bringing together key industry figures for networking and collaboration. With a focus on fostering connections and sharing insights, these events serve as a hub for innovation and growth in the blockchain space.

    About BitcoinOS
    BitcoinOS is the ultimate upgrade to Bitcoin. Its breakthroughs in the use of ZK proofs allow it to embed any computation directly into Bitcoin transactions. This allows for a shared infrastructure layer of the first true Bitcoin L2s that feature total L1 security, trustless bridging, scalability, natively private transactions, and fully programmable tokens on Bitcoin.

    BOS’s modular infrastructure acts as an operating system that creates seamless interoperability among all L2s within the system. As such, BOS fully maintains Bitcoin’s network effects, and establishes a permissionless, peaceful paradigm for the original chain to evolve in layers without ever needing to fork its code.

    Media Contact
    pr@yourprstrategist.com
    gm@tbv.xyz

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/39d386f8-822a-48fe-939c-b819c41a659b

    The MIL Network –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Economy – Annual publication of updated weights for the Trade Weighted Index – Reserve Bank of NZ

    Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand

    4 November 2024 – The annual publication of updated weights for the Trade Weighted Index will take place on 4 December 2024.

    This will be published on the B10: Trade Weighted Index weights and trade volumes and B13: Trade Weighted Index historical weights tables after 3pm. While the specific time of publication cannot be confirmed, the B10 and B13 tables will be published by close of business on 4 December 2024.

    These weights will take effect from 5 December 2024.
    Trade Weighted Index weights and trade volumes (B10): https://govt.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bd316aa7ee4f5679c56377819&id=d15df74332&e=f3c68946f8
    Trade Weighted Index historical weights (B13): https://govt.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bd316aa7ee4f5679c56377819&id=b27c24801f&e=f3c68946f8

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Jonathan Cook: Israel kills the journalists. Western media kills the truth of genocide in Gaza

    Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. –

    Western publics are being subjected to a campaign of psychological warfare, where genocide is classed as ‘self-defence’ and opposition to it ‘terrorism’. Jonathan Cook reports as the world marked the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists at the weekend.

    ANALYSIS: By Jonathan Cook

    Israel knew that, if it could stop foreign correspondents from reporting directly from Gaza, those journalists would end up covering events in ways far more to its liking.

    They would hedge every report of a new Israeli atrocity – if they covered them at all – with a “Hamas claims” or “Gaza family members allege”. Everything would be presented in terms of conflicting narratives rather than witnessed facts. Audiences would feel uncertain, hesitant, detached.

    Israel could shroud its slaughter in a fog of confusion and disputation. The natural revulsion evoked by a genocide would be tempered and attenuated.

    For a year, the networks’ most experienced war reporters have stayed put in their hotels in Israel, watching Gaza from afar. Their human-interest stories, always at the heart of war reporting, have focused on the far more limited suffering of Israelis than the vast catastrophe unfolding for Palestinians.

    That is why Western audiences have been forced to relive a single day of horror for Israel, on October 7, 2023, as intensely as they have a year of greater horrors in Gaza — in what the World Court has judged to be a “plausible” genocide by Israel.

    That is why the media have immersed their audiences in the agonies of the families of some 250 Israelis — civilians taken hostage and soldiers taken captive — as much as they have the agonies of 2.3 million Palestinians bombed and starved to death week after week, month after month.

    That is why audiences have been subjected to gaslighting narratives that frame Gaza’s destruction as a “humanitarian crisis” rather than the canvas on which Israel is erasing all the known rules of war.

    Western media’s human-interest stories, always at the heart of war reporting, have focused on the far more limited suffering of Israelis than the vast catastrophe unfolding for Palestinians. Image: www.jonathan-cook.net

    While foreign correspondents sit obediently in their hotel rooms, Palestinian journalists have been picked off one by one — in the greatest massacre of journalists in history.

    Israel is now repeating that process in Lebanon. On the night of October 24, it struck a residence in south Lebanon where three journalists were staying. All were killed.

    In an indication of how deliberate and cynical Israel’s actions are, it put its military’s crosshairs on six Al Jazeera reporters last month, smearing them as “terrorists” working for Hamas and Islamic Jihad. They are reportedly the last surviving Palestinian journalists in northern Gaza, which Israel has sealed off while it carries out the so-called “General’s Plan”.

    Israel wants no one reporting its final push to ethnically cleanse northern Gaza by starving out the 400,000 Palestinians still there and executing anyone who remains as a “terrorist”.

    These six join a long list of professionals defamed by Israel in the interests of advancing its genocide — from doctors and aid workers to UN peacekeepers.

    Sympathy for Israel
    Perhaps the nadir of Israel’s domestication of foreign journalists was reached last month in a report by CNN. Back in February whistleblowing staff there revealed that the network’s executives have been actively obscuring Israeli atrocities to portray Israel in a more sympathetic light.

    In a story whose framing should have been unthinkable — but sadly was all too predictable — CNN reported on the psychological trauma some Israeli soldiers are suffering from time spent in Gaza, in some cases leading to suicide.

    Committing a genocide can be bad for your mental health, it seems. Or as CNN explained, its interviews “provide a window into the psychological burden that the war is casting on Israeli society”.

    In its lengthy piece, titled “He got out of Gaza, but Gaza did not get out of him”, the atrocities the soldiers admit committing are little more than the backdrop as CNN finds yet another angle on Israeli suffering. Israeli soldiers are the real victims — even as they perpetrate a genocide on the Palestinian people.

    One bulldozer driver, Guy Zaken, told CNN he could not sleep and had become vegetarian because of the “very, very difficult things” he had seen and had to do in Gaza.

    What things? Zaken had earlier told a hearing of the Israeli Parliament that his unit’s job was to drive over many hundreds of Palestinians, some of them alive.

    CNN reported: “Zaken says he can no longer eat meat, as it reminds him of the gruesome scenes he witnessed from his bulldozer in Gaza.”

    Doubtless some Nazi concentration camp guards committed suicide in the 1940s after witnessing the horrors there — because they were responsible for them. Only in some weird parallel news universe, would their “psychological burden” be the story.

    After a huge online backlash, CNN amended an editor’s note at the start of the article that originally read: “This story includes details about suicide that some readers may find upsetting.”

    Readers, it was assumed, would find the suicide of Israeli soldiers upsetting, but apparently not the revelation that those soldiers were routinely driving over Palestinians so that, as Zaken explained, “everything squirts out”.

    Banned from Gaza
    Finally, a year into Israel’s genocidal war, now rapidly spreading into Lebanon, some voices are being raised very belatedly to demand the entry of foreign journalists into Gaza.

    This week — in a move presumably designed, as November’s elections loom, to ingratiate themselves with voters angry at the party’s complicity in genocide — dozens of Democratic members of the US Congress wrote to President Joe Biden asking him to pressure Israel to give journalists “unimpeded access” to the enclave.

    Don’t hold your breath.

    Western media have done very little themselves to protest their exclusion from Gaza over the past year — for a number of reasons.

    Given the utterly indiscriminate nature of Israel’s bombardment, major outlets have not wanted their journalists getting hit by a 2000lb bomb for being in the wrong place.

    That may in part be out of concern for their welfare. But there are likely to be more cynical concerns.

    Having foreign journalists in Gaza blown up or executed by snipers would drag media organisations into direct confrontation with Israel and its well-oiled lobby machine.

    The response would be entirely predictable, insinuating that the journalists died because they were colluding with “the terrorists” or that they were being used as “human shields” — the excuse Israel has rolled out time and again to justify its targeting of doctors in Gaza and UN peacekeepers in Lebanon.

    But there’s a bigger problem. The establishment media have not wanted to be in a position where their journalists are so close to the “action” that they are in danger of providing a clearer picture of Israel’s war crimes and its genocide.

    The media’s current distance from the crime scene offers them plausible deniability as they both-sides every Israeli atrocity.

    In previous conflicts, western reporters have served as witnesses, assisting in the prosecution of foreign leaders for war crimes. That happened in the wars that attended the break-up of Yugoslavia, and will doubtless happen once again if Russian President Valdimir Putin is ever delivered to The Hague.

    But those journalistic testimonies were harnessed to put the West’s enemies behind bars, not its closest ally.

    The media do not want their reporters to become chief witnesses for the prosecution in the future trials of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Defence Minister, Yoav Gallant, at the International Criminal Court. The ICC’s Prosecutor, Karim Khan, is seeking arrest warrants for them both.

    After all, any such testimony from journalists would not stop at Israel’s door. They would implicate Western capitals too, and put establishment media organisations on a collision course with their own governments.

    The Western media does not see its job as holding power to account when the West is the one committing the crimes.

    Censoring Palestinians
    Journalist whistleblowers have gradually been coming forward to explain how establishment news organisations — including the BBC and the supposedly liberal Guardian — are sidelining Palestinian voices and minimising the genocide.

    An investigation by Novara Media recently revealed mounting unhappiness in parts of The Guardian newsroom at its double standards on Israel and Palestine.

    Its editors recently censored a commentary by preeminent Palestinian author Susan Abulhawa after she insisted on being allowed to refer to the slaughter in Gaza as “the holocaust of our times”.

    Senior Guardian columnists such as Jonathan Freedland made much during Jeremy Corbyn’s tenure as leader of the Labour party that Jews, and Jews alone, had the right to define and name their own oppression.

    That right, however, does not appear to extend to Palestinians.

    As staff who spoke to Novara noted, The Guardian’s Sunday sister paper, The Observer, had no problem opening its pages to British Jewish writer Howard Jacobson to smear as a “blood libel” any reporting of the provable fact that Israel has killed many, many thousands of Palestinian children in Gaza.

    One veteran journalist there said: “Is The Guardian more worried about the reaction to what is said about Israel than Palestine? Absolutely.”

    Another staff member admitted it would be inconceivable for the paper to be seen censoring a Jewish writer. But censoring a Palestinian one is fine, it seems.

    Other journalists report being under “suffocating control” from senior editors, and say this pressure exists “only if you’re publishing something critical of Israel”.

    According to staff there, the word “genocide” is all but banned in the paper except in coverage of the International Court of Justice, whose judges ruled nine months ago that a “plausible” case had been made that Israel was committing genocide. Things have got far worse since.

    Whistleblowing journalists
    Similarly, “Sara”, a whistleblower who recently resigned from the BBC newsroom and spoke of her experiences to Al Jazeera’s Listening Post, said Palestinians and their supporters were routinely kept off air or subjected to humiliating and insensitive lines of questioning.

    Some producers have reportedly grown increasingly reluctant to bring on air vulnerable Palestinians, some of whom have lost family members in Gaza, because of concerns about the effect on their mental health from the aggressive interrogations they were being subjected to from anchors.

    According to Sara, BBC vetting of potential guests overwhelmingly targets Palestinians, as well as those sympathetic to their cause and human rights organisations. Background checks are rarely done of Israelis or Jewish guests.

    She added that a search showing that a guest had used the word “Zionism” — Israel’s state ideology — in a social media post could be enough to get them disqualified from a programme.

    Even officials from one of the biggest rights group in the world, the New York-based Human Rights Watch, became persona non grata at the BBC for their criticisms of Israel, even though the corporation had previously relied on their reports in covering Ukraine and other global conflicts.

    Israeli guests, by contrast, “were given free rein to say whatever they wanted with very little pushback”, including lies about Hamas burning or beheading babies and committing mass rape.

    An email cited by Al Jazeera from more than 20 BBC journalists sent last February to Tim Davie, the BBC’s director-general, warned that the corporation’s coverage risked “aiding and abetting genocide through story suppression”.

    Upside-down values
    These biases have been only too evident in the BBC’s coverage, first of Gaza and now, as media interest wanes in the genocide, of Lebanon.

    Headlines — the mood music of journalism, and the only part of a story many of the audience read — have been uniformly dire.

    For example, Netanyahu’s threats of a Gaza-style genocide against the Lebanese people last month if they did not overthrow their leaders were soft-soaped by the BBC headline: “Netanyahu’s appeal to Lebanese people falls on deaf ears in Beirut.”

    Reasonable readers would have wrongly inferred both that Netanyahu was trying to do the Lebanese people a favour (by preparing to murder them), and that they were being ungrateful in not taking up his offer.

    It has been the same story everywhere in the establishment media. In another extraordinary, revealing moment, Kay Burley of Sky News announced last month the deaths of four Israeli soldiers from a Hezbollah drone strike on a military base inside Israel.

    With a solemnity usually reserved for the passing of a member of the British royal family, she slowly named the four soldiers, with a photo of each shown on screen. She stressed twice that all four were only 19 years old.

    Sky News seemed not to understand that these were not British soldiers, and that there was no reason for a British audience to be especially disturbed by their deaths. Soldiers are killed in wars all the time — it is an occupational hazard.

    And further, if Israel considered them old enough to fight in Gaza and Lebanon, then they were old enough to die too without their age being treated as particularly noteworthy.

    But more significantly still, Israel’s Golani Brigade to which these soldiers belonged has been centrally involved in the slaughter of Palestinians over the past year. Its troops have been responsible for many of the tens of thousands of children killed and maimed in Gaza.

    Each of the four soldiers was far, far less deserving of Burley’s sympathy and concern than the thousands of children who have been slaughtered at the hands of their brigade. Those children are almost never named and their pictures are rarely shown, not least because their injuries are usually too horrifying to be seen.

    It was yet more evidence of the upside-down world the establishment media has been trying to normalise for its audiences.

    It is why statistics from the United States, where the coverage of Gaza and Lebanon may be even more unhinged, show faith in the media is at rock bottom. Fewer than one in three respondents — 31 percent — said they still had a “great deal or fair amount of trust in mass media”.

    Crushing dissent
    Israel is the one dictating the coverage of its genocide. First by murdering the Palestinian journalists reporting it on the ground, and then by making sure house-trained foreign correspondents stay well clear of the slaughter, out of harm’s way in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

    And as ever, Israel has been able to rely on the complicity of its Western patrons in crushing dissent at home.

    Last week, a British investigative journalist, Asa Winstanley, an outspoken critic of Israel and its lobbyists in the UK, had his home in London raided at dawn by counter-terrorism police.

    Though the police have not arrested or charged him — at least not yet — they snatched his electronic devices. He was warned that he is being investigated for “encouragement of terrorism” in his social media posts.

    Police told Middle East Eye that his devices had been seized as part of an investigation into suspected terrorism offences of “support for a proscribed organisation” and “dissemination of terrorist documents”.

    The police can act only because of Britain’s draconian, anti-speech Terrorism Act.

    Section 12, for example, makes the expression of an opinion that could be interpreted as sympathetic to armed Palestinian resistance to Israel’s illegal occupation — a right enshrined in international law but sweepingly dismissed as “terrorism” in the West — itself a terrorism offence.

    Those journalists who haven’t been house-trained in the establishment media, as well as solidarity activists, must now chart a treacherous path across intentionally ill-defined legal terrain when talking about Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

    Winstanley is not the first journalist to be accused of falling foul of the Terrorism Act. In recent weeks, Richard Medhurst, a freelance journalist, was arrested at Heathrow airport on his return from a trip abroad. Another journalist-activist, Sarah Wilkinson, was briefly arrested after her home was ransacked by police.

    Their electronic devices were seized too.

    Meanwhile, Richard Barnard, co-founder of Palestine Action, which seeks to disrupt the UK’s supply of weapons to Israel’s genocide, has been charged over speeches he has made against the genocide.

    It now appears that all these actions are part of a specific police campaign targeting journalists and Palestinian solidarity activists: “Operation Incessantness”.

    The message this clumsy title is presumably supposed to convey is that the British state is coming after anyone who speaks out too loudly against the British government’s continuing arming and complicity in Israel’s genocide.

    Notably, the establishment media have failed to cover this latest assault on journalism and the role of a free press — supposedly the very things they are there to protect.

    The raid on Winstanley’s home and the arrests are intended to intimidate others, including independent journalists, into silence for fear of the consequences of speaking up.

    This has nothing to do with terrorism. Rather, it is terrorism by the British state.

    Once again the world is being turned upside down.

    Echoes from history
    The West is waging a campaign of psychological warfare on its populations: it is gaslighting and disorientating them, classing genocide as “self-defence” and opposition to it a form of “terrorism”.

    This is an expansion of the persecution suffered by Julian Assange, the Wikileaks founder who spent years locked up in London’s Belmarsh high-security prison.

    His unprecedented journalism — revealing the darkest secrets of Western states — was redefined as espionage. His “offence” was revealing that Britain and the US had committed systematic war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Now, on the back of that precedent, the British state is coming after journalists simply for embarrassing it.

    Late last month I attended a meeting in Bristol against the genocide in Gaza at which the main speaker was physically absent after the British state failed to issue him an entry visa.

    The missing guest — he had to join us by zoom — was Mandla Mandela, the grandson of Nelson Mandela, who was locked up for decades as a terrorist before becoming the first leader of post-apartheid South Africa and a feted, international statesman.

    Mandla Mandela was until recently a member of the South African Parliament.

    A Home Office spokesperson told Middle East Eye that the UK only issued visas “to those who we want to welcome to our country”.

    Media reports suggest Britain was determined to exclude Mandela because, like his grandfather, he views the Palestinian struggle against Israeli apartheid as intimately linked to the earlier struggle against South Africa’s apartheid.

    The echoes from history are apparently entirely lost on officials: the UK is once again associating the Mandela family with terrorism. Before it was to protect South Africa’s apartheid regime. Now it is to protect Israel’s even worse apartheid and genocidal regime.

    The world is indeed turned on its head. And the West’s supposedly “free media” is playing a critical role in trying to make our upside-down world seem normal.

    That can only be achieved by failing to report the Gaza genocide as a genocide. Instead, Western journalists are serving as little more than stenographers. Their job: to take dictation from Israel.

    Jonathan Cook is an award-winning British journalist. He was based in Nazareth, Israel, for 20 years and returned to the UK in 2021. He is the author of three books on the Israel-Palestine conflict, including Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair (2008). In 2011, Cook was awarded the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism for his work on Palestine and Israel. This article was first published in Middle East Eye and is republished with the author’s permission.

    This article was first published on Café Pacific.

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Banking: Result of the 3-day Variable Rate Reverse Repo (VRRR) auction held on November 04, 2024

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    Tenor 3-day
    Notified Amount (in ₹ crore) 1,75,000
    Total amount of offers received (in ₹ crore) 74,000
    Amount accepted (in ₹ crore) 74,000
    Cut off Rate (%) 6.49
    Weighted Average Rate (%) 6.49
    Partial Acceptance Percentage of offers received at cut off rate NA

    Ajit Prasad          
    Deputy General Manager
    (Communications)    

    Press Release: 2024-2025/1417

    MIL OSI Global Banks –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Samsung Opens Its Largest Experience Store in Gurugram at DLF CyberHub, Redefining Customer Engagement with Next-Gen Technology

    Source: Samsung

     
    Samsung, India’s leading consumer electronics brand, has announced the launch of its largest Experience Store in Gurugram, located at DLF CyberHub—a centre known for its diverse mix of entertainment, lifestyle, and commerce. This sprawling 3,000 sq. ft. space is where consumers can immerse themselves in Samsung’s most advanced mobile and connected technology offerings.
     
    Located in one of Gurugram’s busiest and most accessible areas, the store is designed to cater to the city’s tech-savvy and innovation-driven community. Visitors can experience hands-on interaction with Samsung’s flagship smartphones, wearables, audio devices, and the SmartThings ecosystem in thoughtfully curated immersive zones.
     
    In addition, the store emphasizes personalized customer engagement, with dedicated experts available to guide visitors through Samsung’s latest products, helping them discover tailored solutions that meet their lifestyle needs.
     
    “Our new Experience Store at DLF CyberHub marks a significant step in Samsung’s journey to bring innovative, seamlessly-integrated technology closer to consumers. This store is more than a retail space, it offers a glimpse into the future of connected living, where our SmartThings ecosystem and mobile experiences converge to improve everyday life. Building on the success of our existing experience stores nationwide, the CyberHub location is set to elevate customer engagement through hands-on demonstrations, personalized consultations, and immersive zones that highlight our latest innovations. We invite consumers to explore and experience the cutting-edge technology that is shaping the future of how we live, work, and connect,” said Sumit Walia, Vice President, D2C Business, Samsung India.
     
    Samsung’s new Experience Store is a careful blend of the physical and digital worlds. With a full omni-channel experience, customers can transition effortlessly between browsing in-store and purchasing online through Samsung’s Store+ platform. Whether in-store or online, consumers have access to over 1,200 Samsung products, ranging across Mobiles, Smart TVs, Refrigerators and beyond, all available for home delivery.
     
    Samsung is also taking customer engagement a step further with its ‘Learn @ Samsung’ initiative, offering workshops designed for AI education. This includes topics that focus on consumer passion points and interests such as doodling, photography, fitness and productivity. The new Samsung Experience store will also be providing after-sales service for smartphones and the convenience of booking home service calls for all consumer electronics needs.
     
    To mark the opening, Samsung is rolling out special offers for early visitors, including the Galaxy Fit3 at INR 1,999 on select Galaxy purchases and double SmartClub points on all transactions. These exclusive deals add even more value to the immersive experience awaiting customers at DLF CyberHub.
     
    Samsung invites all tech enthusiasts, shoppers, and innovators to visit the new Experience Store and explore the best in mobile technology, connected solutions, and personalized services—all designed to deliver a premium, future-forward experience.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Crossbenchers cancel their membership of airlines’ elite lounges

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

    Crossbench independents Allegra Spender, Helen Haines and Kate Chaney have declared they are pulling out of the elite lounges run by Qantas and Virgin, amid the ongoing spotlight on privileges politicians receive from the airlines.

    Allegra Spender, the member for the Sydney seat of Wentworth, also said she’d write to ask Qantas and Virgin not to give free upgrades to parliamentarians. It was “time to end the upgrades”.

    She said all sides of politics enjoyed the perks, and both major parties had blocked greater competition from Qatar Airways.

    Airlines operated under government policy and ministerial decisions, she said. “The public is understandably losing trust in politicians to make those decisions impartially when they’re being given free upgrades from the companies they’re supposed to regulate.”

    Spender urged a review of the ministerial code of conduct. Tighter rules were needed about what politicians could accept. The code should also be extended to shadow ministers. There should as well be much more transparency over the diaries of ministers, she said.

    “This is the only way to deal with the perception – and potential reality – of decisions being influenced by perks.”

    But Labor MP Luke Gosling, from the Darwin seat of Solomon, accused her of grandstanding. “It’s a bit rich from the people with harbour views who either drive or have less than a one-hour flight,” he told the ABC.

    Haines, from the Victorian regional seat of Indi, said she was quitting the lounges because she wanted “to remove any possibility of an actual or perceived conflict of interest” in her work as an MP.

    “The reality that airlines offer these kinds of perks because ultimately they want to get something in return does not sit well with me and I want to continue to contribute to creating a culture of transparency and accountability through my actions as well as my words.”

    Haines said she wanted “to see more rigorous rules around MP disclosures of upgrades and I think a ban on soliciting free flight upgrades is more than reasonable”.

    Chaney, who holds the Western Australian seat of Curtin, said with the media attention on the issue “we need to do everything we can to rebuild trust in politicians making decisions in the public interest”.

    Another crossbencher, Monique Ryan, from the Melbourne seat of Kooyong, who dropped her Qantas chairman’s lounge membership last year on integrity grounds, said she welcomed the discussion about the impact of corporate largesse on MPs’ decision-making.

    “I am deeply concerned about lobbying and its potential to impact government decision making. Free upgrades and airline hospitality are lobbying practices that we have taken for granted for a long time, and it is important that we re-examine them — especially given public concerns about conflicts of interest.”

    Meanwhile there is no indication of when opposition transport spokeswoman Bridget McKenzie, who was leading the charge against the prime minister over his upgrades, will produce a list of her own. She has said she has written to three airlines to check what upgrades she has had.

    Michelle Grattan 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. Crossbenchers cancel their membership of airlines’ elite lounges – https://theconversation.com/crossbenchers-cancel-their-membership-of-airlines-elite-lounges-242782

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: DoJ strongly condemns violent and illegal acts of attempting to attack magistrate

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    DoJ strongly condemns violent and illegal acts of attempting to attack magistrate
    DoJ strongly condemns violent and illegal acts of attempting to attack magistrate
    *********************************************************************************

         The Department of Justice (DoJ) strongly condemned the attempt to attack a magistrate involving the use of a knife, threatening his personal safety, at the Kowloon City Magistrates’ Courts this morning (November 4). The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) Government will not tolerate any illegal or violent acts, and the Police will thoroughly investigate the case, strictly enforce the law and bring any offender to account.     Article 85 of the Basic Law clearly states that the courts of the HKSAR shall exercise judicial power independently, free from any interference. Judges should handle cases in accordance with law and evidence. Intimidation, in particular violence of any form against judges who are performing judicial duties, will never be tolerated. Such illegal acts not only disregard the law but also undermine the rule of law. The Police will follow up on the matter seriously. The DoJ appeals to the public to respect the rule of law and not to break the law.

     
    Ends/Monday, November 4, 2024Issued at HKT 14:56

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Land Registry releases statistics for October

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Land Registry today (November 4) released its statistics for October 2024.
     
    Land registration    
    ——————- 
    *   The number of sale and purchase agreements for all building units received for registration in October was 5 857 (+52.4 per cent compared with September 2024 and +99.4 per cent compared with October 2023)
     
    *   The 12-month moving average for October was 5 173 (4.9 per cent above the 12-month moving average for September 2024 and 7.0 per cent above that for October 2023)
     
    *   The total consideration for sale and purchase agreements of building units in October was $41.7 billion (+50.6 per cent compared with September 2024 and +43.6 per cent compared with October 2023)
     
    *   Among the sale and purchase agreements, 4 697 were for residential units (+64.9 per cent compared with September 2024 and +121.2 per cent compared with October 2023)
     
    *   The total consideration for sale and purchase agreements in respect of residential units was $37.3 billion (+78.9 per cent compared with September 2024 and +52.2 per cent compared with October 2023)
     
         Statistics on sales of residential units do not include sale and purchase agreements relating to sales of units under the Home Ownership Scheme, the Private Sector Participation Scheme, the Tenants Purchase Scheme, etc, unless the premium of the unit concerned has been paid after the sale restriction period.
          
         Figures on sale and purchase agreements received for the past 12 months, the year-on-year rate of change and breakdown figures on residential sales have also been released.
          
         As deeds may not be lodged with the Land Registry until up to 30 days after the transaction, these statistics generally relate to land transactions in the previous month.
     
    Land search    
    ————– 
    *   The number of searches of land registers made by the public in October was 394 484 (+11.1 per cent compared with September 2024 and +7.9 per cent compared with October 2023)
     
         The statistics cover searches made at the counter, through the self-service terminals and via the Integrated Registration Information System Online Services.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: The warmest October

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    The warmest October
    The warmest October
    *******************

         Mainly attributable to the weaker northeast monsoon over southern China, October 2024 was much warmer than usual in Hong Kong. The monthly mean maximum temperature of 30.3 degrees, monthly mean temperature of 27.3 degrees and monthly mean minimum temperature of 25.4 degrees were 2.2 degrees, 1.6 degrees and 1.5 degrees respectively above their corresponding normals and all of them were the highest on record for October. There were three very hot days in the month, one of the highest on record for October. The month was also much drier than usual with a total rainfall of 11.3 millimetres, only about 9 per cent of the normal figure of 120.3 millimetres. The accumulated rainfall this year up to October was 2 115.6 millimetres, about 10 per cent lower than the normal figure of 2 363.1 millimetres for the same period.      Super Typhoon Krathon over the northeastern part of the South China Sea moved slowly towards the southern part of Taiwan on October 1 and 2. It weakened into a typhoon and made landfall over the coast of Gaoxiong on the afternoon of October 3. Krathon rapidly weakened into an area of low pressure over the southern part of Taiwan the next morning. Under the influence of the outer subsiding air of Krathon, it was mainly fine and very hot in Hong Kong on the first day of the month. The temperatures at the Observatory soared to a maximum of 34.2 degrees on that afternoon, the highest of the month and also the third-highest absolute maximum temperature for October. Moreover, the daily mean temperature of 30.9 degrees on the same day was the highest on record for October.      Meanwhile, a strong northeast monsoon gradually affected the coast of Guangdong on October 1, and local winds strengthened from the north in the afternoon. Under the influence of the monsoon, it was slightly cooler in the morning of October 2 and 3, and the weather was mainly fine and dry during the day. The weather remained mainly fine and dry during the day from October 4 to 8. With a band of clouds covering the coastal areas of Guangdong, the weather turned cloudier with a few light rain patches on October 9. While it was dry with sunny periods during the day on October 10, an easterly airstream set in at night and brought rainy weather to Hong Kong that night and the next morning. The rain was heavier on the morning of October 11, and more than 20 millimetres of rainfall were recorded over the eastern part of the territory. The weather turned dry with sunny intervals in the afternoon.      Under the influence of a dry easterly airstream, apart from a few rain patches on the morning of October 12, the weather was mainly fine and dry during the day from October 12 to 15. Affected by upper-air disturbances, the weather turned cloudier with a few showers from October 16 to 18. It was mainly fine with some haze on October 19. With light winds and plenty of sunshine, the maximum temperature recorded at the Observatory in the afternoon was 33.7 degrees, making it the latest very hot day of a year on record. Affected by an easterly airstream, there were a few light rain patches in the morning and sunny intervals during the day on October 20 and 21. With the moderation of the easterly airstream, the weather turned mainly fine and dry on October 22.      Meanwhile, an area of low pressure over the seas east of the Philippines intensified into a tropical depression on October 21 and was later named Trami. It tracked northwestwards towards Luzon and intensified gradually on October 22 and 23. After moving across Luzon, Trami moved generally westwards across the central and northern parts of the South China Sea on October 25 and 26. It made landfall over the central part of Vietnam on the morning of October 27 and progressively weakened into an area of low pressure over the inland areas the next day.       Under the influence of a dry northeast monsoon, it was mainly fine and dry on October 23. With the strengthening of the monsoon, it was slightly cooler the next morning and the temperatures at the Observatory dropped to a minimum of 22.0 degrees, the lowest of the month. The weather was mainly fine and very dry during the day with the relative humidity over most parts of the territory once falling to about 30 per cent. While it was still mainly fine during the day on October 25, the weather turned cloudy at night with the approach of Trami. Under the combined effect of the northeast monsoon and Trami, the weather of Hong Kong was mainly cloudy with a few showers on October 26. Strong winds were also recorded over many places of the territory on that day. With Trami departing from Hong Kong, local winds moderated gradually at night and the next morning. With a band of clouds covering the coast of Guangdong, the weather remained mainly cloudy with a few light rain patches in the morning from October 27 to 29. Affected by a dry northeast monsoon, the weather turned fine and dry on the last two days of the month.      Five tropical cyclones occurred over the South China Sea and the western North Pacific in October 2024.     Details of issuance and cancellation of various warnings/signals in the month are summarised in Table 1. Monthly meteorological figures and departures from normal for October are tabulated in Table 2.

     
    Ends/Monday, November 4, 2024Issued at HKT 15:00

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: President Lai meets Czech national baseball team  

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    President Lai meets Czech national baseball team  
    2024-11-01

    On the afternoon of November 1, President Lai Ching-te met with the national baseball team of the Czech Republic. In remarks, President Lai thanked the Czech Republic for supporting Taiwan, and noted that the Czech national baseball team had come to Taiwan to take part in two exhibition games, not only for the sake of learning from one another, but also to further cultivate friendship between Taiwan and the Czech Republic. He also stated that the Czech Republic is an important democratic ally of Taiwan in Europe. He stated that the opening of the Czech Centre Taipei this past June shows that our two countries continue to enhance our partnership, and expressed confidence that even greater advances will be achieved in culture and many other fields moving forward.
    A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows:
    The World Baseball Softball Confederation Premier12 tournament is scheduled to start on November 10, with Group B opening round games to be played in Taiwan. I would like to thank Chinese Professional Baseball League Commissioner Tsai Chi-chang (蔡其昌) for inviting the Czech national baseball team to play two exhibition games in Taiwan, not only for the sake of learning from one another, but also to further cultivate friendship between Taiwan and the Czech Republic.
    As a long-time baseball fan, I am very pleased to meet with the Czech national baseball team here at the Presidential Office. Many team members are actually part-timers whose principal occupations are in such fields as firefighting, teaching, medicine, financial analysis, and real estate brokerage, to name just a few. Everyone’s passion for the sport has earned the team a ranking of number 15 in the world and placed them among the top three in Europe. Indeed, in last year’s World Baseball Classic (WBC), the team scored a come-from-behind win over China to take the Czech Republic’s first-ever victory in the WBC tournament. It was an admirable win and an exciting game, and Taiwanese fans were thrilled.
    The Czech Republic is an important democratic ally of Taiwan in Europe. Representative of the Czech Economic and Cultural Office David Steinke is here, so I would like to give special thanks to the Czech Republic for supporting Taiwan. Three years ago, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Czech Republic generously donated 30,000 vaccine doses to Taiwan, and when Hualien was hit by a severe earthquake earlier this year, the Czech Republic donated US$150,000 to support reconstruction efforts. On behalf of the people of Taiwan, I want to express our deepest appreciation.
    The opening of the Czech Centre Taipei this past June signifies that our two countries continue to enhance our partnership, and I am confident that even greater advances will be achieved in culture and many other fields moving forward.
    Today is the Czech national baseball team’s second day in Taiwan, so I want to wish everyone a happy and fruitful visit, and I look forward to both teams playing their best in the exhibition games scheduled for tomorrow and the day after.
    Also in attendance was Czech Baseball Association President Petr Ditrich.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Asian Development Blog: Empowering Women with Disabilities: Key Actions for Inclusive Sports in the Pacific

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    Inclusive sports can empower women with disabilities, and foster accessibility, social integration, and gender equality in the Pacific. Recent Paralympic milestones and policy examples illustrate the ongoing need for supportive infrastructures and greater representation to create equitable opportunities in sports.

    The importance of sport for women with disabilities cannot be overstated. It provides a platform for empowerment, fostering physical and mental well-being, and breaking societal barriers related to gender and disability. Participation in sports helps build confidence, resilience, and a sense of community.

    The Paralympic Games have been instrumental in setting standards for inclusion, showcasing the incredible talents and achievements of athletes with disabilities on a global stage. By promoting gender equality and providing equal opportunities, the Paralympics inspire change and highlight the importance of accessibility and inclusivity in sports.

    This year’s Paralympic Games in Paris marked a historic milestone with a record 1,983 women, or 45% of participants, across 549 medal events in 22 sports, making it the most gender-inclusive Paralympics ever. It was also a historic moment for the Pacific region, as it sent its largest contingent of athletes to the Paralympic Games.

    Thirteen athletes, comprising seven women and six men, represented six countries to compete in para-athletics and para-taekwondo: Fiji, Kiribati, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tonga, and Vanuatu. According to the Oceania Paralympic Committee, the Pacific athletes “not only represent their nations but also the aspirations of the entire Pacific region.”

    Among the remarkable athletes was Tongan discus thrower Meleane Vasitai Leaaepeni Falemaka, known as Vasi, who competed in the Paralympic Games for the first time. She is making her mark on the global stage as Tonga’s sole representative in the Paralympic Games where she competed in the women’s F37 discus throw event. Prior to the Paralympics, Vasi achieved her personal best throw at the World Para Athletics Grand Prix April 2024 held in Marrakech, Morocco.

    Women with disabilities outnumber men with disabilities in most Pacific countries, largely due to longer life expectancy and the increased likelihood of acquiring disabilities in old age. Persons with disabilities are overrepresented among the poorest of the poor across the region and face economic and social exclusion, violence, and accessibility challenges.

    Despite this, women with disabilities often do not get to make decisions that affect them. Evidence from 19 countries shows that only 2.3% of women with disabilities held a position as a legislator, senior official, or manager.  Only four out of 18 countries in the region had a “woman with disability” in parliament.

    Sports provide a powerful platform for empowering women with disabilities, fostering inclusion, and challenging societal barriers.

    The following actions are needed to increase the inclusion of women with disabilities in sports:

    Enhance policy and financing for gender and disability inclusive sport. Governments must enact robust legislation to eliminate accessibility barriers in multiple areas such as transport, housing, services, education, and sport. For example, Brazil passed the “Inclusion of People with Disabilities Act” before the Rio 2016 Paralympics that aimed to enhance the lives of the nearly 50 million people with impairments in Brazil. This Act increased the amount allocated to para-sports from the gross revenues of the federal lotteries, from around $26 million to $49 million per year.

    Promote accessibility and inclusivity of sport. The Paralympics have made strides in accommodating athletes with disabilities through modified rules and regular reassessments by classifiers. Classification varies across sports, for example, swimming has up to 10 eligible impairment types, and classifications depend on how much an impairment affects performance.

    In wheelchair basketball, players are rated from 1.0 to 4.5 based on their disability level with a maximum point total allowed per team to ensure competitive balance. This approach enhances fairness and integrity in competitions, creating a more equitable environment for all Paralympic athletes.

    Include women with disabilities in stakeholder consultations. This can be done through partnerships with local organizations and women’s groups where women with disabilities take on leadership and decision-making roles. Mapping stakeholders supporting people with disabilities is crucial in creating awareness among all stakeholders and policymakers in sport on the needs of women athletes with disabilities.

    Ensuring that sports facilities are accessible and safe for women with disabilities. Sports facilities must be designed within the lens of gender and disability. This not only promotes physical health but also enhances social integration and economic opportunities for people with disabilities.

    Governments and development partners’ financial commitments to accessibility improvements are essential. For instance, prior to the 2008 Paralympic Games in Beijing, the People’s Republic of China invested over $150 million to make 14,000 facilities accessible across the country. Similarly, for the Rio 2016 Games, nearly $1 million was allocated to enhance access to major tourist attractions and sports arenas.

    Promoting media representation to change perceptions. Media coverage can significantly change societal perceptions. For example, UK’s Channel 4 won various awards for its coverage of the London 2012 Paralympics, which included presenters with disabilities.

    The channel spent $1.2 million searching for, recruiting, training and developing the skills of media professionals to ensure that half of the on-screen talent during the Games consisted of persons with disabilities. The channel’s “Meet the Superhumans” commercial combined powerful imagery of athletes with their extraordinary stories creating a compelling narrative that resonated widely and likely changed attitudes towards Paralympic sports.

    Encouraging women with disabilities to take up sports. Sport enables women with disabilities to develop social skills and independence. Families and carers can help foster the love for sport by initiating play and developing interest, which can also serve as a shared activity. Sport can also be a transformative tool for women to demonstrate their abilities, which can help reduce the longstanding negative perceptions and gender stereotypes associated with women with disabilities.

    By addressing these issues, we can create an environment where athletes like Vasi can thrive, inspiring future generations and contributing to a more inclusive and equitable society in the Pacific.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN takes part in Electric Vehicle (EV) Delivery Ceremony and Roundtable on the Development of EV Ecosystem in ASEAN

    Source: ASEAN

    As part of the activities to commemorate the 35th Anniversary of ASEAN-ROK Dialogue Relations this year, Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today visited the Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Indonesia, in Bekasi Regency, West Java, where he participated in the EV delivery ceremony. Hyundai EV was handed over by the Mission of the Republic of Korea (ROK) to ASEAN to the ASEAN Secretariat as part of the EV project funded by the ASEAN-ROK Cooperation Fund (AKCF). Following the handover ceremony, Dr. Kao also participated in the Roundtable on the Development of EV Ecosystem in ASEAN. The event, which highlighted the trends in the EV industries of ASEAN Member States and the ROK was organised by the Mission of ROK to ASEAN and participated by Ambassador of ROK to ASEAN Lee Jang-keun, members of the Committee of Permanent of Representatives to ASEAN, staff of the ASEAN Secretariat and that of the ROK Mission, EV experts, along with other invited guests.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN takes part in Electric Vehicle (EV) Delivery Ceremony and Roundtable on the Development of EV Ecosystem in ASEAN appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Banking: Secretary-General of ASEAN takes part in Electric Vehicle (EV) Delivery Ceremony and Roundtable on the Development of EV Ecosystem in ASEAN

    Source: ASEAN

    As part of the activities to commemorate the 35th Anniversary of ASEAN-ROK Dialogue Relations this year, Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today visited the Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Indonesia, in Bekasi Regency, West Java, where he participated in the EV delivery ceremony. Hyundai EV was handed over by the Mission of the Republic of Korea (ROK) to ASEAN to the ASEAN Secretariat as part of the EV project funded by the ASEAN-ROK Cooperation Fund (AKCF). Following the handover ceremony, Dr. Kao also participated in the Roundtable on the Development of EV Ecosystem in ASEAN. The event, which highlighted the trends in the EV industries of ASEAN Member States and the ROK was organised by the Mission of ROK to ASEAN and participated by Ambassador of ROK to ASEAN Lee Jang-keun, members of the Committee of Permanent of Representatives to ASEAN, staff of the ASEAN Secretariat and that of the ROK Mission, EV experts, along with other invited guests.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN takes part in Electric Vehicle (EV) Delivery Ceremony and Roundtable on the Development of EV Ecosystem in ASEAN appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Global Banks –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: HK a unique gateway: SJ

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for Justice Paul Lam

    The Hong Kong Legal Week is an annual flagship event of the Department of Justice. Since its inception in 2019, the Hong Kong Legal Week has served as a dynamic forum where legal professionals, scholars, judges and experts come together to discuss critical legal issues that resonate not only within Hong Kong but (also) throughout the wider Asia-Pacific region and beyond.

    The theme of this year is “Hong Kong Common Law System: World-Class Springboard to China & Beyond”. It emphasises Hong Kong’s unique role as a gateway between China, the Asia Pacific and the world. Under the “one country, two systems” principle, Hong Kong is the only common law jurisdiction within China. Our strong legal foundation, coupled with our close ties with and support from the Mainland, positions us as a critical hub for legal and economic collaboration across the region and beyond.

    Private law summit

    We begin this week with today’s Asia-Pacific International Private Law Summit 2024. Building on the success of the inaugural summit in 2022, the Department of Justice once again partners with the International Institute for the Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT) to organise this summit under the theme “Springboard to Opportunities: Utilising International Private Law & Technology to Facilitate Access to Credit, Investment, & Sustainable Development in the Asia-Pacific Region”.

    The Asia-Pacific region is home to enormous economic potential and encompasses a diverse array of legal systems. While this diversity enriches our legal and cultural landscape, it also introduces complexities and uncertainties for businesses navigating cross-border transactions. To unlock the region’s full economic potential and ensure long-term sustainable growth, harmonisation and modernisation of private law across the region is essential.

    Recognising this need, today’s summit gathers leading legal minds from across the Asia Pacific, together with experts from UNIDROIT, to explore how the unification and co-ordination of various areas of private law can support economic growth and facilitate smoother cross-border interactions throughout the region. We will be hearing from them on how international private law and emerging technologies can unlock new opportunities for sustainable economic growth across the region, and how Hong Kong may contribute in this regard.

    Collaboration with UNIDROIT

    In the past few years, the Department of Justice has closely collaborated with UNIDROIT to promote the development, implementation, and deeper understanding of private international law and international commercial law across the Asia-Pacific region.

    In addition to these collaborative efforts, we are grateful for UNIDROIT’s strong support to the Department of Justice’s secondment programme, offering Hong Kong’s legal professionals from both the public and private sectors the valuable opportunity to work at the UNIDROIT Secretariat in Rome. This experience not only deepens their expertise in international legal issues, but also bolsters Hong Kong’s capacity in foreign-related legal matters.

    I am very pleased to note that one of our former secondees will be moderating a panel later this morning, which testifies to the success of the secondment programme.

    Capacity building

    The secondment programme is one of the Department of Justice’s many policy initiatives providing professional development opportunities to our legal talents. To further strengthen Hong Kong’s position as a leading international legal and dispute resolution services centre in the Asia-Pacific region, the Department of Justice places great importance on nurturing legal talents with a global perspective and proficiency in foreign-related legal affairs. We are committed to establishing Hong Kong as a leading centre for capacity building in international law.

    As outlined in our Chief Executive’s 2023 and 2024 Policy Address, the Department of Justice is setting up the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Academy. The academy will regularly organise practical training courses, seminars, international exchange programmes and more to promote exchanges among talent in regions along the Belt & Road. It will also provide training for talent in the practice of foreign-related legal affairs for the country, and nurture legal talent conversant with international law, common law, civil law and the country’s legal system.

    A dedicated office and an expert committee have already been set up to facilitate the establishment of the academy. We are grateful to have Prof Tirado (International Institute for the Unification of Private Law Secretary-General) as a member of the expert committee, and I am pleased to see many of our committee members participating in today’s summit.

    To officially mark this new initiative, I am excited to announce that the launch ceremony for the academy will take place on the final day of the Hong Kong Legal Week. I warmly invite all of you to join us for this significant occasion.

    Other events

    I also warmly welcome you to participate in an array of other events this week. Tomorrow, we will have the Second Legal Forum on Interconnectivity & Development co-organised with the Office of the Commissioner of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. At the legal forum, we are very pleased to have the General Counsel of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank deliver a keynote address on promoting good governance and high-quality development under international law. Legal experts will also share their insights on Hong Kong’s role in China’s institutional opening up, and rule of law as a risk management mechanism to safeguard sustainable development.

    On Wednesday, we will host events under the theme “Beyond Litigation: The Vibrant Landscape of Alternative Dispute Resolution of Hong Kong”. The day will explore three topical issues – the role of mediation in promoting a culture of mutual respect, harmony and inclusiveness, use of artificial intelligence in alternative dispute resolution, as well as the resolution of sports disputes. There will also be the 2024 Hong Kong Mediation Lecture in the evening, exploring the unique challenges and opportunities involved in the use of mediation in deals relating to natural resources.

    Thursday’s programme will focus on strengthening the rule of law in the Greater Bay Area. We will hear from experts on the proof of Hong Kong law and foreign law in the Mainland, the arrangement on mutual legal assistance in civil and commercial matters between the Mainland and Hong Kong, as well as legal services and juridical relations to facilitate and protect trade and social interactions between the Mainland and Hong Kong. The day will also feature a mock mediation session led by mediators from Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau, and a discussion on the Greater Bay Area mediation platform.

    On Friday, apart from the launching ceremony of the academy in the afternoon that I have just mentioned, we will explore how the rule of law in Hong Kong, together with different components of Hong Kong’s legal and judicial system, are essential to provide the best business environment from the perspectives of our legal services profession and our enterprises, and how our legal professionals can play an important role along the Belt & Road.

    Alongside this week’s discussions, we are also featuring a special exhibition on the achievements in the construction of the rule of law of the People’s Republic of China in the modern era, co-organised by the Ministry of Justice of China and the Department of Justice, in celebration of the 75th anniversary of the founding of People’s Republic of China. The exhibition highlights key milestones in China’s legal evolution, both domestically and in foreign-related areas, over the past 75 years.

    Conclusion

    Ladies and gentlemen, as we look ahead to the discussions that will follow, I hope today’s summit will inspire all of us to explore new ideas and opportunities. Let’s make the most of this moment to engage in meaningful exchanges and drive forward the future of international law.

    On this note, I wish today’s summit every success and extend my sincere appreciation to all of you for joining us, whether online or in person.

    Secretary for Justice Paul Lam gave these remarks at the Asia-Pacific International Private Law Summit 2024, part of Hong Kong Legal Week 2024, on November 4.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Property sales rise 52.4%

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Land Registry logged 5,857 sale and purchase agreements for all building units received for registration in October, up 52.4% compared with September and up 99.4% year-on-year.

    The total consideration for such agreements in September rose 50.6% from September, to $41.7 billion, representing a 43.6% year-on-year growth.

    Of the agreements, 4,697 were for residential units, amounting to a 64.9% increase from September and a 121.2% surge from a year ago.

    The total consideration for residential units was $37.3 billion, up 78.9% compared with September and up 52.2% year-on-year.

    There were 394,484 land register searches last month.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Sydney Airport Traffic Performance July 2023

    Source: Sydney Airport

    Tuesday 4 November 2024

    In an Australian first, Sydney Airport and Melbourne Airport have joined forces to launch a public awareness campaign to fight human trafficking.  

    The country’s two largest international airports have partnered with anti-human trafficking organisation, A21, to run the “Can You See Me?” campaign, with guidance and input from the Australian Federal Police (AFP).  

    This initiative will educate people on how to recognise and report the signs of human trafficking.   

    From today, digital screens and billboards at both airports will display images and messages, stating that slavery still exists and urging people: “If you suspect it, report it.” QR codes also link to videos and information on how to identify and stop these crimes. Digital screens in key areas will display these messages, including check-in counters, gates and baggage carousels.  

    Combined, Sydney and Melbourne airports cater for 68% of Australia’s total international passenger traffic. While the “Can You See Me?” campaign runs over the next month, close to 7 million passengers are expected to pass through both the domestic and international terminals at the two airports.  

    A21 has rolled out this program in high-profile spaces worldwide—from Times Square billboards, screens at Heathrow Airport, train stations in Thailand to inflatable screens in vulnerable Cambodian communities—reaching an impressive 3.4 billion people globally.  

    Modern slavery is a growing issue in Australia, with the AFP receiving 382 reports in 2023/2024 financial year, a 12 per cent increase on the previous year. Cases include trafficking, forced marriage, sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, debt bondage, forced labour, deceptive recruitment and organ trafficking. The Global Slavery Index estimates 41,000 people in Australia live under conditions of modern slavery.  

    A united response to human trafficking  

    Scott Charlton, Sydney Airport CEO said: “Every person who steps through our airport deserves to travel safely, without fear of exploitation.”   

    “We deeply value the AFP’s dedication to catching and prosecuting traffickers and the A21 ‘Can You See Me?’ campaign will amplify their efforts by raising critical public awareness and support.  

    “Sydney Airport is proud to join forces with Melbourne Airport, united in our mission to tackle the scourge of modern slavery.”  

    Lorie Argus, Melbourne Airport CEO said: “This partnership goes beyond just airports—it’s about people’s lives.”  

    “By joining forces with Sydney Airport, the AFP, and A21, we’re taking a stand against modern slavery, a hidden crime that destroys people’s futures.  

    “Knowing that human trafficking is a real and daily threat, we feel a deep responsibility to protect our passengers.”  

    Acting Commander Human Exploitation Frank Rayner from the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said: “The increase in reported cases of human trafficking and slavery in Australia highlights the urgent need for action.”

    “Airports are key environments where traffickers seek to move victims across borders. It is important to remember that traffickers have many ways of controlling a person and a person can be exploited without physical restraint or abuse.

    “Engaging travellers and frontline airport staff to recognise the signs and report suspected cases will help disrupt these crimes and protect vulnerable people.”

    Nick Caine, A21 CEO, said: “Everyone has a role to play in the fight against human trafficking. Awareness is the first step, and we believe that through this campaign, more victims will be recognised and rescued.  

    “The ‘Can You See Me?’ campaign has already changed lives across the world, and we are grateful to Sydney and Melbourne airports for bringing this powerful message to Australia.”  

    Christian Elliott, Director of “Can You See Me?” said:  “As the director of the Can You See Me? campaign, I have witnessed firsthand the transformative power of awareness.”  

    “This initiative goes beyond just sharing information—it equips every individual who passes through Sydney and Melbourne airports to become a part of the solution.  

    “Human trafficking hides in plain sight, but through this campaign, we are making the invisible visible, empowering travellers, staff, and the public to take action. With just one report, one moment of recognition, a life can be saved. Together, we can stop the traffickers and protect the most vulnerable among us.”  

    The Rotary Clubs of Botany Randwick and Marrickville have announced that all cash collected from 11 donation boxes across Sydney Airport over the next month will be donated to A21 to support survivors of human trafficking.  

    Airport-specific signs & indicators of human trafficking  

    • Avoids eye contact and social interaction 
    • Is not in control of own passport/documentation 
    • Language barrier with their travelling companions 
    • Unusually submissive
    • Unaware of their destination  
    • Clothing is not appropriate/does not fit the route of travel  

    More details: Human trafficking and exploitation – AFP  

    How to make a report

    If you, or someone you know, are in immediate danger, call 000 for help.    

    The Australian Federal Police (AFP) protect people who are victims of modern slavery and can help keep you safe. If you suspect someone is at risk, you can:  

    • Make an anonymous report through Crime Stoppers 1800 333 000  
    • Call 131 AFP  
    • Report online  

    MIL OSI News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: 18th Global Citizenship Conference to be held in Singapore

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LONDON, Nov. 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — More than 400 delegates from over 50 countries are expected to attend the 18th annual Global Citizenship Conference, which takes place 27–29 November in Singapore.

    Hosted by world-leading international citizenship and residence advisory firm Henley & Partners, this annual event has become the world’s largest and most significant conference on investment migration, bringing together presidents and prime ministers, other senior government ministers and officials, and leading academics, as well as top-tier private client advisors and wealth management professionals, and financial and business media.

    The 2024 conference program features sophisticated content on the dynamics shaping the mobility options of wealthy families today. The conference will explore legal and economic developments and their implications, societal impacts relevant to global citizens, and trends in investment and wealth migration, along with regulatory and tax changes and the evolving concept of citizenship. Delegates will have the opportunity to engage with some of the world’s finest minds and latest ideas around global citizenship and interconnectivity and discover how to harness the power of global mobility.

    Dr. Christian H. Kalin, Group Chairman of Henley & Partners, emphasizes the timely relevance of connecting across borders as global citizens. “The Great Wealth Migration, as we call it, reflects a global trend fueled by geopolitical instability, economic uncertainty, the climate crisis, and technological disruption. Wealthy individuals are increasingly recognizing that, in an interconnected world, relying solely on any one nation as a place of residence or citizenship — even a prosperous, democratic one — can be a risk they are no longer willing to take. As they consider their options, however, there is a crucial opportunity to reflect on the broader implications of their decisions. How can wealth be used not only for personal advantage but also to create positive social impact? Global citizenship, at its core, is the belief that we have responsibilities that extend beyond our own borders — to our communities and to the world as a whole. This conference seeks to broaden our perspectives through shared global learning, empowering us to drive meaningful change on both a local and a global scale.”

    Notable key speakers at the conference include the Hon. Dickon Mitchell, Prime Minister of Grenada, and the Hon. Dr. Terrance Drew, Prime Minister of St. Kitts and Nevis. The Hon. Mohamed Nasheed, former President of the Maldives and current Secretary-General of the Climate Vulnerable Forum, will also share his insights along with senior government officials from Indonesia, Montenegro, and the South Pacific.

    Legendary global investor and best-selling author, Jim Rogers, will offer his perspective on global financial trends. Other distinguished speakers include Dr. Parag Khanna, Founder and CEO of Climate Alpha, Prof. Mehari Taddele Maru of the European University Institute and John Hopkins University, Irene Mia, Senior Fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and Balaji Srinivasan, American tech entrepreneur, investor, and author of The Network State.

    A conference highlight will be the 2024 Global Citizen Award Dinner on 28 November, where a remarkable individual working to advance one of the global challenges affecting humanity today, will be honored. This year’s laureate will be announced at the gala event hosted in collaboration with the Swiss non-profit humanitarian organization Andan Foundation, which focuses on promoting the self-reliance of refugees through education, entrepreneurship, and employment, and to which the net proceeds of the evening will be donated.

    For further information and media accreditation to attend the 18th annual Global Residence and Citizenship Conference, please contact:

    Sarah Nicklin
    Group Head of Public Relations
    sarah.nicklin@henleyglobal.com

    The MIL Network –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: 4BIO Capital Strengthens Investment Team

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Press Release

    LONDON, 4 November 2024 – 4BIO Capital (“4BIO” or “the Group”), an international venture capital firm focused solely on the advanced and emerging therapies sector, announces today the appointments of Dr. Therese (Thera) Liechtenstein as an Investment Director based in Munich and Tay Salimullah as a Venture Partner based in Chicago.

    Dmitry Kuzmin, Managing Partner at 4BIO Capital, said: “Thera and Tay’s extensive experience and innovative perspectives will be invaluable to 4BIO as we continue to drive forward our mission of investing in transformative therapies. We are always keen on the diversity of thought and expertise that strengthens 4BIO’s unique edge as the leading advanced and emerging therapies investor. We are very excited to see where their thesis and experience take them and look forward to their contribution to our portfolio and investments.

    Thera Liechtenstein, newly appointed Investment Director commented: “I am thrilled to join 4BIO Capital and contribute to the firm’s mission of fostering advanced and emerging therapies. I look forward to playing a role in bringing transformative treatments to patients with significant unmet needs.”

    Tay Salimullah, newly appointed Venture Partner added: “This is a remarkable opportunity to work with a team dedicated to advancing transformative therapies. I look forward to leveraging my experience to support innovative companies that are poised to make a significant impact on healthcare and patient outcomes.”

    Thera Liechtenstein joins 4BIO Capital from M Ventures, the corporate venture arm of Merck KGaA, where she was a Senior Investment Director in the Biotechnology team. At M Ventures, Thera led company creations, new investments in Seed and Series A rounds, as well as follow-on investments in companies across Europe and North America, and supported these companies as a member of the board of directors. Previously Thera managed strategic projects for the Healthcare business of Merck. Prior to Merck, Thera was a client relationship manager in the field of wealth preservation, at Industrie- & Finanzkontor Ets. She has a strong academic background having received her PhD in Immuno-Oncology from University College London, an MSc in Biomedical Sciences from the University of Amsterdam, and a BA in Biology and Business studies from New York University.

    Tay Salimullah has over 20 years of leadership experience in the rare disease and MedTech sectors, with a proven track record in incubating and scaling innovative, high-value technologies, including cell and gene therapies. He spent over a decade at Novartis in a series of leadership roles. As an Executive Committee member at Novartis Gene Therapies, Tay executed a new commercial model for Zolgensma® and Kymriah®, securing approvals in more than 55 countries, helping to treat over 4,000 patients, and generating more than $5 billion in revenue. Prior to his roles at Novartis, Tay spent over ten years working in a variety of investment and healthcare roles, including a decade at Pfizer where he held several strategic and commercial roles. His expertise spans drug development, pricing science, market access, and operational excellence in high-value healthcare solutions. Tay holds a BSc in Management Sciences from the University of Brunel, London. 

    – Ends –

    Contacts

                                                    

    About 4BIO Capital

    4BIO Capital (‘4BIO’) is an international venture capital firm headquartered in London, focused solely on the advanced and emerging therapies sector. The 4BIO team, which has an unrivalled network within the advanced therapy sector, comprises leading advanced therapy scientists and experienced life science investors.

    The firm maintains a global footprint across the US, Europe and Asia with an objective to create, invest in, support, and grow early-stage companies. Its ultimate goal is ensuring access to potentially curative therapies for all patients, with a specific focus on viable, high-quality opportunities in cell and gene therapy, RNA-based therapy, targeted therapies, and the microbiome.

    4BIO is currently investing out of its Fund III, having secured support from prominent global institutional investors, including the Children’s Minnesota, UPMC, Development Bank of Japan, Kyowa Kirin, Exor, and many other endowments and foundations. For more information, connect with us on LinkedIn and X (@4biocapital) and visit www.4biocapital.com.

    The MIL Network –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Asian Impact Webinar: Asian Development Outlook September 2024 Launch

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    Video | 04 November 2024

    SHARE THIS PAGE

    Developing Asia’s outlook remains solid, driven by strong domestic demand and continued recovery in exports. But risks remain, including a possible rise in protectionism that could occur depending on the outcome of the United States presidential election, worsening geopolitical tensions, a fragile PRC property market, and adverse weather conditions. Asian Development Outlook September 2024 sheds light on these.

    SHARE THIS PAGE
    Series
    Subjects

    Developing Asia’s outlook remains solid, driven by strong domestic demand and continued recovery in exports. But risks remain, including a possible rise in protectionism that could occur depending on the outcome of the United States presidential election, worsening geopolitical tensions, a fragile PRC property market, and adverse weather conditions. Asian Development Outlook September 2024 sheds light on these.

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    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Provisional statistics of restaurant receipts and purchases for third quarter of 2024

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Census and Statistics Department (C&SD) released the latest provisional figures on restaurant receipts and purchases today (November 4).
     
         The value of total receipts of the restaurants sector in the third quarter of 2024, provisionally estimated at $26.7 billion, decreased by 1.3% over a year earlier. Over the same period, the provisional estimate of the value of total purchases by restaurants decreased by 0.1% to $8.8 billion.
     
         After netting out the effect of price changes over the same period, the provisional estimate of the volume of total restaurant receipts decreased by 3.3% in the third quarter of 2024 compared with a year earlier.
     
         Analysed by type of restaurant and comparing the third quarter of 2024 with the third quarter of 2023, total receipts of Chinese restaurants decreased by 7.7% in value and 9.8% in volume. Total receipts of non-Chinese restaurants decreased by 0.6% in value and 1.5% in volume. Total receipts of fast food shops increased by 8.5% in value and 5.7% in volume. Total receipts of bars decreased by 6.3% in value and 10.1% in volume. As for miscellaneous eating and drinking places, total receipts increased by 0.3% in value, but decreased by 2.8% in volume.
     
         Based on the seasonally adjusted series, the provisional estimate of total restaurant receipts increased by 2.0% in value, but decreased by 3.3% in volume in the third quarter of 2024 compared with the preceding quarter.
     
         Comparing the first three quarters of 2024 with the same period in 2023, total restaurant receipts decreased by 0.3% in value and 2.9% in volume.
     
         To facilitate further understanding of the short-term business performance of the restaurants sector, statistics in respect of the restaurant receipts and purchases in individual months of the reference quarter are also compiled.
     
         Analysed by month, it was provisionally estimated that the value of total receipts of the restaurants sector decreased by 4.2%, decreased by 2.3% and increased by 2.8% respectively in July, August and September 2024, compared with the corresponding months in 2023.
     
         After discounting the effect of price changes, it was provisionally estimated that the volume of total restaurant receipts decreased by 6.4%, decreased by 4.3% and increased by 1.1% respectively in July, August and September 2024, compared with the corresponding months in 2023.
     
    Commentary
     
         A Government spokesman said that the value of total restaurant receipts recorded a narrowed year-on-year decline of 1.3% in the third quarter of 2024. The business performance of restaurants improved through the quarter, with their total receipts resuming a year-on-year increase of 2.8% in September. Compared with the preceding quarter, the value of total restaurant receipts increased by 2.0% in the third quarter after adjusting for seasonal factors.
     
         Looking ahead, the changing consumption patterns of visitors and residents will continue to affect the business performance of restaurants. Nevertheless, an improved outlook for the Mainland economy following the recent introduction of a wide range of stimulus measures, and the commencement of the US interest rate cut, would render support to catering spending. The SAR Government’s various initiatives to boost market sentiment and increasing employment earnings would also benefit the sector.
     
    Further information
     
         Table 1 presents the revised figures of restaurant receipts by type of restaurant and total purchases by the restaurants sector for the second quarter of 2024 as well as the provisional figures for the third quarter of 2024.
     
         Table 2 and Table 3 present the revised value and volume indices respectively of restaurant receipts by type of restaurant for the second quarter of 2024 and the provisional indices for the third quarter of 2024.
     
         Table 4 presents the year-on-year rate of change in total restaurant receipts in value and volume terms based on the original quarterly series, as well as the quarter-to-quarter rate of change based on the seasonally adjusted series.
     
         The revised figures on restaurant receipts and purchases for the third quarter of 2024 (with breakdown by month) will be released through the website of C&SD (www.censtatd.gov.hk/en/scode540.html) and relevant publications of the Department from December 20, 2024.
     
         The classification of restaurants follows the Hong Kong Standard Industrial Classification (HSIC) Version 2.0, which is used in various economic surveys for classifying economic units into different industry classes.
     
         More detailed statistics are given in the “Report on Quarterly Survey of Restaurant Receipts and Purchases”. Users can browse and download the publication at the website of the C&SD (www.censtatd.gov.hk/en/EIndexbySubject.html?pcode=B1080002&scode=540).
     
         Users who have enquiries about the survey results may contact the Distribution Services Statistics Section of C&SD (Tel: 3903 7401; e-mail: qsr@censtatd.gov.hk).

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Survey on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises’ Credit Conditions for Third Quarter 2024

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority:

         The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) published today (November 4) the results of Survey on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs)’ Credit Conditions for the third quarter of 2024. According to the survey, SMEs’ credit conditions improved slightly.
          
         Regarding SMEs’ perception of banks’ credit approval stance relative to 6 months ago, excluding respondents who answered “no idea/don’t know”, 76 per cent perceived a “similar” or “easier” credit approval stance in the third quarter of 2024, up from 73 per cent in the previous quarter (Chart 1 in the Annex). 24 per cent perceived a “more difficult” credit approval stance, down from 27 per cent in the previous quarter. The perception of a more difficult credit approval stance may not necessarily reflect actual difficulties faced by SMEs in obtaining bank credit as the perception could be affected by a number of factors, such as media/news reports, business conditions and opinions of relatives and friends.
          
         Among respondents with existing credit lines, only 1 per cent reported a “tighter” banks’ stance, further down from 2 per cent in the previous quarter (Chart 2 in the Annex). In this survey, a tighter stance on existing credit lines denotes a range of possible measures or arrangements, such as reducing unused and used credit lines, raising the interest rate, imposing additional collateral requirements, or shortening loan tenor. Therefore, respondents’ indication of banks’ stance on existing credit lines may not directly reflect banks’ supply of credit to SMEs. 
          
         The survey also gauged the results of new credit applications from SMEs. 3 per cent of the respondents reported that they had applied for new bank credit during the third quarter of 2024. Among the respondents who had already known their application outcomes, 79 per cent reported fully or partially successful applications, up from 70 per cent in the previous quarter (Chart 3 in the Annex).
          
         Owing to small sample sizes of SMEs with existing credit lines (13 per cent of surveyed SMEs) and with new credit applications (3 per cent of surveyed SMEs) during the quarter, the results could be prone to large fluctuations, and hence should be interpreted with care.

    About Survey on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs)’ Credit Conditions
          
         In light of the importance of SMEs to the Hong Kong economy and concerns about potential funding difficulties facing SMEs over the past few years, the HKMA has appointed the Hong Kong Productivity Council (HKPC) to carry out this survey, starting from the third quarter of 2016. This survey is conducted on a quarterly basis, covering about 2 500 SMEs from different economic sectors each time. The results of this survey can help monitor the development of SMEs’ access to bank credit from a demand-side perspective.
          
         The results of this survey should be interpreted with caution. Similar to other opinion surveys, views collected in this survey may be affected by changes in sentiment due to idiosyncratic events that occurred over the survey period, which can make the results prone to fluctuations. Readers are advised to interpret the results together with other economic and financial information. In addition, views collected are limited to the expected direction of inter-quarter changes (e.g. “tighter”, “no change” or “easier”) without providing information about the magnitude of these changes.
          
         Detailed tables and technical information of this survey are published on the website of the HKPC (smecc.hkpc.org).

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Interest rate of fifth interest payment for series of retail green bonds due 2025

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority:

         The Hong Kong Monetary Authority, as representative of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government, announced today (November 4) the relevant per annum interest rate for the fifth interest payment of the series of retail green bonds due 2025 (Issue Number: 03GR2505R; Stock Code: 4252) (the Retail Green Bonds) issued under the Government Sustainable Bond Programme (previously known as the Government Green Bond Programme).
          
         According to the Issue Circular dated April 26, 2022 for the Retail Green Bonds, the fifth interest payment of the Retail Green Bonds is scheduled to be made on November 18, 2024, and the relevant interest rate is scheduled to be determined and announced on November 4, 2024 as the higher of the prevailing Floating Rate and Fixed Rate. 
          
         On November 4, 2024, the Floating Rate and Fixed Rate are as follows:
     
    Floating Rate: +1.83 per cent (Annex)
    Fixed Rate: +2.50 per cent
     
         Based on the Floating Rate and Fixed Rate set out above, the relevant interest rate for the fifth interest payment is determined and announced as 2.50 per cent per annum.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Parliament moves one step closer to deliver pay rise for early educators

    Source: Australian Ministers for Education

    Every day, parents trust early educators with the most important people in their world, and every day Australia asks early educators to do one of the most important jobs imaginable.

    Today the Albanese Government has passed legislation through the House of Representatives to make sure those educators are fairly paid.

    Once it passes through Parliament, the Wage Justice for Early Childhood Education and Care Workers (Special Account) Bill 2024 will deliver a 15 per cent wage increase for Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) workers.
    This wage increase will be tied to a commitment from Child Care Centres to limit fee increases. We want to make sure workers can be fairly paid without the costs being passed on to families.

    Since coming to Government, the number of ECEC workers has grown by more than 30,000, but we need more.

    This $3.6 billion investment will help retain our existing early childhood educators, who are predominately women, and attract new employees.
    By improving access to quality early childhood education and care we can also boost productivity and workforce participation in the short and long-term. Significantly, the wage increase also applies to workers in outside school hours care services – creating benefits for the parents of school aged children too.
    This wage increase is an important next step in the Government’s reforms to the sector, building on the successful Cheaper Child Care changes.  

    The wage increase will be phased in over two years, and include a 10 per cent increase from December 2024, and a further 5 per cent increase from December 2025.
    This means a typical ECEC educator who is paid at the award rate will receive a pay rise of at least $103 per week, increasing to at least $155 per week from December 2025.

    For a typical early childhood teacher, they’ll receive an additional $166 a week from December this year, increasing to $249 from December of next year.
    To be eligible to receive funding for the wage increase, ECEC services won’t be able to increase their fees by more than 4.4 per cent over the next 12 months from August 2024.

    There will also be a limit on fee growth in the second year of the wage subsidy. The percentage limit on fee growth that will apply from August 2025 will be determined by a new ECEC cost index being developed by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

    Early learning providers can now apply for Commonwealth Government funding to deliver the pay rise.

    This is a win for workers, a win for families and will help ease cost of living pressures.
    Combined with the Government’s Cheaper Child Care initiative, this wage increase will help support the availability of early education and care for families and is a crucial step in charting the course to a truly universal early education system.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Education, Jason Clare:
    “The child care debate is over. It’s not babysitting. It’s early education and it’s critical to preparing children for school.
    “They lift our kids up and now we are lifting their pay.
    “This means wages up for workers and keeping prices down for families.
    “A pay rise for every early childhood educator is good for our workforce, good for families and good our economy.”

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Early Childhood Education, Dr Anne Aly:
    “This is a wonderful outcome for a highly feminised workforce that has for far too long been neglected and taken for granted.
    “We’re boosting the wages of early childhood education workers, while relieving cost of living pressures on Australian families.
    “Properly valuing the early childhood education and care workforce is crucial to attracting and retaining workers and vital to achieving the quality universal early learning sector Australian families deserve.
    “A quality early childhood education sector is necessary to support children’s learning and development as well as workforce participation in the broader economy.”

    MIL OSI News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Violent, illegal acts condemned

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Department of Justice (DoJ) today strongly condemned an attempted knife attack on a magistrate, stressing that it will not tolerate any illegal or violent acts.

    In a press release, the DoJ explained that the incident took place at the Kowloon City Magistrates’ Courts this morning and emphasised that the attempted knife attack threatened the magistrate’s personal safety.

    It also made it clear that the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government will not tolerate any illegal or violent acts, and Police will thoroughly investigate the case, strictly enforce the law and bring any offender to account.

    Article 85 of the Basic Law clearly states that the courts of the Hong Kong SAR shall exercise judicial power independently, free from any interference. Judges should handle cases in accordance with law and evidence. Intimidation, in particular violence of any form against judges who are performing judicial duties, will never be tolerated. Such illegal acts not only disregard the law but also undermine the rule of law.

    Apart from saying that Police will follow up on the matter seriously, the DoJ appealed to the public to respect the rule of law and not to break the law.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: New Measures To Deter High Bids For Hawker Stalls

    Source: Asia Pacific Region 2 – Singapore

    Singapore, 4 November 2024 – Senior Minister of State for Sustainability and the Environment, Dr Koh Poh Koon, announced at the Singapore Hawkers’ Seminar and Awards 2024 today that the National Environment Agency (NEA) will be revising the rental renewal policy for successful tenderers from the November 2024 hawker stall tender exercise onwards. 

    2          To deter overly high tender bids, NEA will be staggering the downward adjustment of tendered stall rentals over a longer period. Instead of an immediate full downward adjustment to the assessed market rent (AMR) at the point of first tenancy renewal, the rental for such hawker stalls will be adjusted downwards by 50% of the difference between their tendered rent and AMR for the second tenancy term. This will take effect from the next stall tender exercise in November 2024. This new measure seeks to encourage more prudent bidding behaviour.

    3          To help prospective bidders make more informed tender bid price decisions, NEA will also provide more information and online business cost estimation tools to help prospective bidders make better cost and revenue estimates. These will be made available progressively from 2025.

    Current Stall Tender Scheme and rental model

    4          Vacant cooked food and market stalls are put up for tender monthly under NEA’s Stall Tender Scheme [1]. This open tender system ensures stalls are allocated in a fair and transparent manner. When stallholders obtain vacant stalls via the monthly stall tender exercises, their stall rental for the first tenancy term of three years is their tendered bid price. At the end of the 3-year tenancy term, stall rental is adjusted towards AMR, as determined by an independent professional valuation. The valuation considers factors such as footfall, stall sizes and tendered stall rentals at the hawker centre.

    5          Currently, stallholders whose tendered rent is higher than the AMR at the point of tenancy renewal will see a full downward adjustment of their stall rental to the prevailing AMR. Stallholders whose tendered rent is lower than the AMR at the point of tenancy renewal will similarly see an upward adjustment of stall rental toward the AMR. This upward adjustment of stall rental towards AMR is moderated by NEA and has not exceeded $300 per tenancy term in recent years.

    6          Popular hawker centres with high footfall and low vacancy have started to attract higher tender bids in recent years. Some bidders may have tendered high bids to secure choice stalls at their preferred locations. However, this is not the norm.

    7          The median stall rental for non-subsidised cooked food stalls has remained relatively constant for the last 10 years at about $1,250 per month. Occupancy rates for cooked food stalls have remained high, averaging at around 97%. Most of the vacant stalls that are put up for tender will be occupied within three to six months.

    8          While NEA does not regulate cooked food prices, we remain committed to provide a conducive environment for stallholders to operate, so that they can price their food affordably for the public and sustain their own livelihoods. Together with the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment, we will continue to track stall rentals closely and adjust policies as necessary.


    [1] Please refer to the ANNEX for an illustrated example of the Stall Tender Scheme.

     

    ~~ End ~~

    For more information, please submit your enquiries electronically via the Online Feedback Form or myENV mobile application.

     

    ANNEX

     

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Australia’s largest airports join forces in the fight against human trafficking

    Source: Sydney Airport

    Australia’s largest airports join forces in the fight against human trafficking

    Monday 4 November 2024

    In an Australian first, Sydney Airport and Melbourne Airport have joined forces to launch a public awareness campaign to fight human trafficking.  

    The country’s two largest international airports have partnered with anti-human trafficking organisation, A21, to run the “Can You See Me?” campaign, with guidance and input from the Australian Federal Police (AFP).  

    This initiative will educate people on how to recognise and report the signs of human trafficking.   

    From today, digital screens and billboards at both airports will display images and messages, stating that slavery still exists and urging people: “If you suspect it, report it.” QR codes also link to videos and information on how to identify and stop these crimes. Digital screens in key areas will display these messages, including check-in counters, gates and baggage carousels.  

    Combined, Sydney and Melbourne airports cater for 68% of Australia’s total international passenger traffic. While the “Can You See Me?” campaign runs over the next month, close to 7 million passengers are expected to pass through both the domestic and international terminals at the two airports.  

    A21 has rolled out this program in high-profile spaces worldwide—from Times Square billboards, screens at Heathrow Airport, train stations in Thailand to inflatable screens in vulnerable Cambodian communities—reaching an impressive 3.4 billion people globally.  

    Modern slavery is a growing issue in Australia, with the AFP receiving 382 reports in 2023/2024 financial year, a 12 per cent increase on the previous year. Cases include trafficking, forced marriage, sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, debt bondage, forced labour, deceptive recruitment and organ trafficking. The Global Slavery Index estimates 41,000 people in Australia live under conditions of modern slavery.  

    A united response to human trafficking  

    Scott Charlton, Sydney Airport CEO said: “Every person who steps through our airport deserves to travel safely, without fear of exploitation.”   

    “We deeply value the AFP’s dedication to catching and prosecuting traffickers and the A21 ‘Can You See Me?’ campaign will amplify their efforts by raising critical public awareness and support.  

    “Sydney Airport is proud to join forces with Melbourne Airport, united in our mission to tackle the scourge of modern slavery.”  

    Lorie Argus, Melbourne Airport CEO said: “This partnership goes beyond just airports—it’s about people’s lives.”  

    “By joining forces with Sydney Airport, the AFP, and A21, we’re taking a stand against modern slavery, a hidden crime that destroys people’s futures.  

    “Knowing that human trafficking is a real and daily threat, we feel a deep responsibility to protect our passengers.”  

    Acting Commander Human Exploitation Frank Rayner from the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said: “The increase in reported cases of human trafficking and slavery in Australia highlights the urgent need for action.”

    “Airports are key environments where traffickers seek to move victims across borders. It is important to remember that traffickers have many ways of controlling a person and a person can be exploited without physical restraint or abuse.

    “Engaging travellers and frontline airport staff to recognise the signs and report suspected cases will help disrupt these crimes and protect vulnerable people.”

    Nick Caine, A21 CEO, said: “Everyone has a role to play in the fight against human trafficking. Awareness is the first step, and we believe that through this campaign, more victims will be recognised and rescued.  

    “The ‘Can You See Me?’ campaign has already changed lives across the world, and we are grateful to Sydney and Melbourne airports for bringing this powerful message to Australia.”  

    Christian Elliott, Director of “Can You See Me?” said:  “As the director of the Can You See Me? campaign, I have witnessed firsthand the transformative power of awareness.”  

    “This initiative goes beyond just sharing information—it equips every individual who passes through Sydney and Melbourne airports to become a part of the solution.  

    “Human trafficking hides in plain sight, but through this campaign, we are making the invisible visible, empowering travellers, staff, and the public to take action. With just one report, one moment of recognition, a life can be saved. Together, we can stop the traffickers and protect the most vulnerable among us.”  

    The Rotary Clubs of Botany Randwick and Marrickville have announced that all cash collected from 11 donation boxes across Sydney Airport over the next month will be donated to A21 to support survivors of human trafficking.  

    Airport-specific signs & indicators of human trafficking  

    • Avoids eye contact and social interaction 
    • Is not in control of own passport/documentation 
    • Language barrier with their travelling companions 
    • Unusually submissive
    • Unaware of their destination  
    • Clothing is not appropriate/does not fit the route of travel  

    More details: Human trafficking and exploitation – AFP  

    How to make a report

    If you, or someone you know, are in immediate danger, call 000 for help.    

    The Australian Federal Police (AFP) protect people who are victims of modern slavery and can help keep you safe. If you suspect someone is at risk, you can:  

    • Make an anonymous report through Crime Stoppers 1800 333 000  
    • Call 131 AFP  
    • Report online  

    MIL OSI News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese premier to attend 8th Greater Mekong Subregion Summit

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

    BEIJING, Nov. 4 — The eighth Greater Mekong Subregion Summit will be held in Kunming, Yunnan from Nov. 6 to 7. Premier of the State Council Li Qiang will chair the summit, foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning announced on Monday.

    Leaders of the five Mekong countries of Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, and President of the Asian Development Bank will attend the summit upon invitation, Mao added.

    MIL OSI China News –

    January 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Oct much warmer than usual

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Mainly due to a weaker northeast monsoon over southern China, October was much warmer than usual, the Hong Kong Observatory (HKO) said today.

    The monthly mean temperature of 27.3 degrees Celsius, mean maximum temperature of 30.3 degrees Celsius, and mean minimum temperature of 25.4 degrees Celsius, were all the highest on record for October.

    There were three very hot days in the month, one of the highest on record for October.

    On October 19, with light winds and plenty of sunshine, the maximum temperature recorded in the afternoon was 33.7 degrees, making it the latest very hot day of a year on record.

    The month was also much drier than usual with a total rainfall of 11.3mm, only about 9% of the norm. The accumulated rainfall this year up to October was 2,115.6mm, about 10% lower than the norm for the same period.

    Five tropical cyclones occurred over the South China Sea and the western North Pacific in October, the HKO added.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 26, 2025
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