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Category: Asia Pacific

  • MIL-OSI: TMD Energy Limited Enters into Strategic Memorandum of Agreement to Advance Green Bioenergy Collaboration

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA, June 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — TMD Energy Limited (the “Company” or “TMDEL”) (NYSE American: TMDE), together with its subsidiaries is a Malaysia and Singapore based services provider engaged in integrated bunkering services which involves ship-to-ship transfer of marine fuels, ship management services and vessel chartering services, today announced the Company has entered into a Memorandum of Agreement (“MOA”) with bioenergy firm Double Corporate Sdn Bhd (“Double Corporate”) to explore a strategic collaboration for the EU and Asia market.

    This collaboration marks a new milestone towards TMDEL’s strategy to expand into sustainable and alternative fuel energy sectors. The MOA initiates exclusive good-faith negotiations to formalize partnerships in bioenergy sustainable fuel solutions and operational integration.

    Double Corporate is a ISCC-EU certified Malaysian-based bioenergy company specializing in waste-based bioenergy and it involves converting waste into high-yield sustainable fuels and lubricants using proprietary, ISCC-EU-approved technology. Double Corporate brings to the table a decade-long expertise in producing high-yield, low-emission biofuels suitable for applications in the sustainable aviation fuel (“SAF”) and sustainable marine fuel (“SMF”) markets, particularly in Europe and Asia.

    Dato’ Sri Kam Choy Ho, Chairman and CEO of the Company, stated that: “This partnership aligns with our vision to expand regionally and globally to advance long term sustainable, green business and fuel innovation. Double Corporate’s circular-economy focus complements our commitment to environmentally responsible energy solutions.”

    Key Agreement Terms

    The MOA establishes the parties’ intention to enter into mutual discussions to collaborate and participate in the business in Malaysia and globally with a one-year exclusivity period for negotiations, extendable by mutual consent. Both parties will prioritize finalizing definitive agreements within the exclusivity window.

    About Double Corporate

    Double Corporate is a certified Malaysian bioenergy leader converting waste into sustainable fuels and lubricants through proprietary ISCC-EU-approved technology. Double Corporate is in the development and commercialization of waste-based bioenergy, with a focus on refining palm oil mill effluent, Empty Fruit Bunches, used cooking oil, and other industrial waste oils into certified biofuels. Its high-yield (1:1 conversion) refining process minimizes waste and energy consumption while producing critical feedstocks for SAF and SMF — supported by global certifications American Petroleum Institute, ISCC and automated in-house systems. For more information, please visit Double Corporate website at: www.doublecorporate.com.

    About TMD Energy Limited

    TMD Energy Limited and its subsidiaries (“TMDEL Group”) are principally involved in marine fuel bunkering services specializing in the supply and marketing of marine gas oil and marine fuel oil of which include high sulfur fuel oil, low sulfur fuel oil and very low sulfur fuel oil, to ships and vessels at sea. TMDEL Group is also involved in the provision of ship management services for in-house and external vessels, as well as vessel chartering. As of today, TMDEL Group operates in 19 ports across Malaysia with a fleet of 15 bunkering vessels. For more information, please visit the Company’s website at: www.tmdel.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Certain statements in this announcement are forward-looking statements, including but not limited to, the Company’s Offering. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and are based on the Company’s current expectations and projections about future events that the Company believes may affect its financial condition, results of operations, business strategy and financial needs. Investors can identify these forward-looking statements by words or phrases such as “may”, “could”, “will”, “should”, “would”, “expect”, “plan”, “intend”, “anticipate”, “believe”, “estimate”, “predict”, “potential”, “project” or “continue” or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent occurring events or circumstances, or changes in its expectations, except as may be required by law. Although the Company believes that the expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it cannot assure you that such expectations will turn out to be correct, and the Company cautions investors that actual results may differ materially from the anticipated results and encourages investors to review other factors that may affect its future results in the Company’s financial results filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    For investor and media inquiries, please contact:
    TMD ENERGY LIMITED
    e-Mail: corporate@tmdel.com

    WFS INVESTOR RELATIONS
    e-Mail: services@wealthfsllc.com

    The MIL Network –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: TMD Energy Limited Enters into Strategic Memorandum of Agreement to Advance Green Bioenergy Collaboration

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA, June 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — TMD Energy Limited (the “Company” or “TMDEL”) (NYSE American: TMDE), together with its subsidiaries is a Malaysia and Singapore based services provider engaged in integrated bunkering services which involves ship-to-ship transfer of marine fuels, ship management services and vessel chartering services, today announced the Company has entered into a Memorandum of Agreement (“MOA”) with bioenergy firm Double Corporate Sdn Bhd (“Double Corporate”) to explore a strategic collaboration for the EU and Asia market.

    This collaboration marks a new milestone towards TMDEL’s strategy to expand into sustainable and alternative fuel energy sectors. The MOA initiates exclusive good-faith negotiations to formalize partnerships in bioenergy sustainable fuel solutions and operational integration.

    Double Corporate is a ISCC-EU certified Malaysian-based bioenergy company specializing in waste-based bioenergy and it involves converting waste into high-yield sustainable fuels and lubricants using proprietary, ISCC-EU-approved technology. Double Corporate brings to the table a decade-long expertise in producing high-yield, low-emission biofuels suitable for applications in the sustainable aviation fuel (“SAF”) and sustainable marine fuel (“SMF”) markets, particularly in Europe and Asia.

    Dato’ Sri Kam Choy Ho, Chairman and CEO of the Company, stated that: “This partnership aligns with our vision to expand regionally and globally to advance long term sustainable, green business and fuel innovation. Double Corporate’s circular-economy focus complements our commitment to environmentally responsible energy solutions.”

    Key Agreement Terms

    The MOA establishes the parties’ intention to enter into mutual discussions to collaborate and participate in the business in Malaysia and globally with a one-year exclusivity period for negotiations, extendable by mutual consent. Both parties will prioritize finalizing definitive agreements within the exclusivity window.

    About Double Corporate

    Double Corporate is a certified Malaysian bioenergy leader converting waste into sustainable fuels and lubricants through proprietary ISCC-EU-approved technology. Double Corporate is in the development and commercialization of waste-based bioenergy, with a focus on refining palm oil mill effluent, Empty Fruit Bunches, used cooking oil, and other industrial waste oils into certified biofuels. Its high-yield (1:1 conversion) refining process minimizes waste and energy consumption while producing critical feedstocks for SAF and SMF — supported by global certifications American Petroleum Institute, ISCC and automated in-house systems. For more information, please visit Double Corporate website at: www.doublecorporate.com.

    About TMD Energy Limited

    TMD Energy Limited and its subsidiaries (“TMDEL Group”) are principally involved in marine fuel bunkering services specializing in the supply and marketing of marine gas oil and marine fuel oil of which include high sulfur fuel oil, low sulfur fuel oil and very low sulfur fuel oil, to ships and vessels at sea. TMDEL Group is also involved in the provision of ship management services for in-house and external vessels, as well as vessel chartering. As of today, TMDEL Group operates in 19 ports across Malaysia with a fleet of 15 bunkering vessels. For more information, please visit the Company’s website at: www.tmdel.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Certain statements in this announcement are forward-looking statements, including but not limited to, the Company’s Offering. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and are based on the Company’s current expectations and projections about future events that the Company believes may affect its financial condition, results of operations, business strategy and financial needs. Investors can identify these forward-looking statements by words or phrases such as “may”, “could”, “will”, “should”, “would”, “expect”, “plan”, “intend”, “anticipate”, “believe”, “estimate”, “predict”, “potential”, “project” or “continue” or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent occurring events or circumstances, or changes in its expectations, except as may be required by law. Although the Company believes that the expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it cannot assure you that such expectations will turn out to be correct, and the Company cautions investors that actual results may differ materially from the anticipated results and encourages investors to review other factors that may affect its future results in the Company’s financial results filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    For investor and media inquiries, please contact:
    TMD ENERGY LIMITED
    e-Mail: corporate@tmdel.com

    WFS INVESTOR RELATIONS
    e-Mail: services@wealthfsllc.com

    The MIL Network –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Biggest-ever aid cut by G7 members a death sentence for millions of people, says Oxfam

    Source: Oxfam –

    • Aid cuts could cost millions of lives and leave girls, boys, women and men without access to enough food, water, education, health treatment
    • G7 countries are making deliberate and deadly choices by cutting life-saving aid, enabling atrocities, and reneging on their international commitments
    • Low and middle-income countries face reduced aid, rising debt, and trade barriers — a perfect storm that threatens development and recovery.

    The Group of Seven (G7) countries, which together account for around three-quarters of all official development assistance (ODA), are set to slash their aid spending by 28 percent for 2026 compared to 2024 levels.  

    It would be the biggest cut in aid since the G7 was established in 1975, and indeed in aid records going back to 1960, reveals a new analysis by Oxfam ahead of the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Canada.

    “The G7’s retreat from the world is unprecedented and couldn’t come at a worse time, with hunger, poverty, and climate harm intensifying. The G7 cannot claim to build bridges on one hand while tearing them down with the other. It sends a shameful message to the Global South, that G7 ideals of collaboration mean nothing,” said Oxfam International Executive Director Amitabh Behar.

    2026 will mark the third consecutive year of decline in G7 aid spending – a trend not seen since the 1990s. If these cuts go ahead, G7 aid levels in 2026 will crash by $44 billion to just $112 billion. The cuts are being driven primarily by the US (down $33 billion), Germany (down $3.5 billion), the UK (down $5 billion) and France (down $3 billion).

    “Rather than breaking from the Trump administration’s cruel dismantling of USAID and other US foreign assistance, G7 countries like the UK, Germany, and France are instead following the same path, slashing aid with brutal measures that will cost millions of lives,” said Behar.

    “These cuts will starve the hungry, deny medicine to the sick, and block education for a generation of girls and boys. This is a catastrophic betrayal of the world’s most vulnerable and crippling to the G7’s credibility,” said Behar.

    Economic projections show that aid cuts will mean 5.7 million more people across Africa will fall below extreme poverty levels in the coming year, a number expected to rocket to 19 million by 2030.  

    Cuts to aid are putting vital public services at risk in some of the world’s poorest countries. In countries like Liberia, Haiti, Malawi, and South Sudan, US aid had made up over 40 percent of health and education budgets, leaving them especially exposed. Combined with a growing debt crisis, this is undermining governments’ ability to care for their people.

    Global aid for nutrition will fall by 44 percent in 2025 compared to 2022:

    • The end of just $128 million worth of US-funded child nutrition programs for a million children will result in an extra 163,500 child deaths a year.  
    • At the same time, 2.3 million children suffering from severe acute malnutrition – the most lethal form of undernutrition – are now at risk of losing their life-saving treatments.
       

    One in five dollars of aid to poor countries’ health budgets are cut or under threat:  

    • WHO reports that in almost three-quarters of its country offices are seeing serious disruptions to health services, and in about a quarter of the countries where it operates some health facilities have already been forced to shut down completely.
    • US aid cuts could lead to up to 3 million preventable deaths every year, with 95 million people losing access to healthcare. This includes children dying from vaccine-preventable diseases, pregnant women losing access to care, and rising deaths from malaria, TB, and HIV.

    G7 countries are not just reneging on commitments to global aid and solidarity, they are fuelling conflicts by allowing grave violations of international law, like in Gaza where people are facing starvation. Whether in Ukraine, the occupied Palestinian territory, the Democratic Republic of the Congo or elsewhere, civilians must always be protected, and aid is often the first line of protection they get. G7 countries are illuminating a double standard that risks more global instability, conflict and atrocities.  

    While G7 countries cut aid, their citizen billionaires continue to see their wealth surge. Since the beginning of 2025, the G7 ultra-rich have made $126 billion, almost the same amount as the group’s 2025 aid commitment of $132 billion.  

    At this pace, it would take the world’s billionaires less than a month to generate the equivalent of the G7’s 2025 aid budget.

    By taxing the super-rich, the G7 could easily meet their financial commitments to end poverty and climate breakdown, whilst also having billions in new revenue to fight inequality in their own countries.  

    “The world is not short of money. The problem is that it is in the hands of the super-rich instead of the public. Rather than fairly taxing billionaires to feed the hungry, we see billionaires joining government to slash aid to the poorest in order to fund tax cuts for themselves,” said Behar.

    Oxfam is calling on the G7 to urgently reverse aid cuts and restore funding to address today’s global challenges. More than 50 years after the United Nations set the target of 0.7 percent for aid spending, most G7 countries remain well below this.  

    Oxfam is also urging the G7 to support global efforts led by Brazil and Spain to raise taxes on the super-rich, and to back the call from the African Union and The Vatican for a new UN body to help manage countries’ debt problems.
     

    According to OECD Data Explorer, the combined annual aid expenditure of the G7 in 2024 was $156.694 billion. Canada spent $7.323 billion, the United States $61.821 billion, Japan $17.583 billion, France $15.047 billion, Germany $31.382 billion, Italy $6.534 billion, and the United Kingdom $17.005 billion.

    Donor Tracker estimates that the decline in combined annual aid spending of the G7 countries for the period 2024 to 2026 will be -$44,488 billion.

    In 2024, aid from G7 countries declined by 8 percent, and projections for 2025 point to a sharper drop of 19 percent.

    Modelling using finds that 5.7 million more Africans would fall below the US$2.15 extreme poverty income level in the next year if Trump’s administration succeeds in its aid-reduction ambition. This assumes a 20 percent reduction of aid to Africa, considering that some US aid would be maintained as the US alone accounted for 26 percent of aid to Africa before the cuts.

    The dismantling of USAID and major aid reductions announced by Western donors threaten to undo decades of progress on malnutrition. A 44 percent drop in funding from 2022 levels could lead to widespread hardship and death.

    Up to 2.3 million children with severe acute malnutrition risk losing life-saving treatment, warns the Standing Together for Nutrition Consortium.

    There are 2,968 billionaires in the world, and 1,346 live in G7 countries (45 percent). 
     

    MIL OSI NGO –

    June 18, 2025
  • The Strait of Hormuz: The Oil Artery at the Heart of the Iran-Israel Conflict

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    One of the world’s most critical oil chokepoints, the Strait of Hormuz is central to discussions and analyses focused on the ongoing Iran-Israel conflict. Located between Oman and Iran, the strait connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. It is deep and wide enough to accommodate the world’s largest crude oil tankers, making it a vital artery at risk of disruption as tensions between Iran and Israel escalate. Although Iran has threatened to close the strait in the past, it has never followed through. The heightened conflict has reignited fears of such a closure. The strait is just 20 nautical miles wide at its narrowest point, with a significant portion falling within Iran’s territorial waters.

    Details of the strait

    The Strait of Hormuz derives its name from the ancient Persian city of Hormuz, located on an island in the strait. The island was a major trading hub for centuries, controlling maritime routes in the Persian Gulf. Historically, the strait was a key part of the Silk Road’s maritime extensions, facilitating trade between Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. The U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, based in Bahrain, regularly patrols the Strait of Hormuz to ensure safe passage of commercial vessels. Also, Iran maintains a network of small, fast-attack boats and anti-ship missiles along its coastline, designed to disrupt strait traffic in a potential conflict. The strait has been associated with various conflicts in past, For example, during the Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988), the so-called “Tanker War” saw both sides attacking oil tankers in the strait, leading to U.S. naval intervention to protect Kuwaiti vessels.

    Why Is the World Concerned About its closure?

    The Strait of Hormuz is a critical oil chokepoint. These narrow channels along widely used global sea routes are essential to global energy security. Any disruption to oil transit through a major chokepoint, even temporarily, can cause significant supply delays and raise shipping costs, potentially driving up global energy prices. While some chokepoints have alternative routes, these often add significant transit time. For the Strait of Hormuz, pipeline alternatives exist but are comparatively inefficient. Approximately one-fifth of the world’s total oil consumption passes through this strait. In 2024, oil flow through the strait averaged 20 million barrels per day (b/d), equivalent to about 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption. OPEC members Saudi Arabia, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Iraq export most of their crude via the strait, primarily to Asia. Qatar, one of the largest exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG), sends nearly all its LNG through the strait. In 2024, 84% of the crude oil and condensate and 83% of the LNG that moved through the Strait of Hormuz went to Asian markets. The International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned, “Iran has repeatedly threatened to close the key Strait of Hormuz if attacked. Closure of the strait, even for a limited period, would have a major impact on global oil and gas markets.”

    What Happens if Iran Closes the Strait of Hormuz?

    Iran views the Strait of Hormuz as a strategic pressure point in conflicts. However, Iran does not exclusively control the strait. While it borders the northern side and controls some islands within it, the strait is also bordered by Oman and the United Arab Emirates. Since a significant portion of the strait falls within Iran’s territorial waters, its actions could disrupt oil markets. Over 3,000 commercial ships use the strait monthly to transport oil, natural gas, and goods from Gulf countries to global markets. Oil prices surged on Tuesday as the conflict intensified and U.S. President Donald Trump reiterated his support for Israel. A blockade could trigger energy disruptions, inflation, and trade delays, potentially sending stock markets into a tailspin, especially in oil-sensitive sectors. Ironically, Israel would face no direct consequences from a Strait of Hormuz blockade. Its estimated consumption of 220,000 barrels of crude per day comes via the Mediterranean from countries like Azerbaijan (via the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline through Türkiye), the U.S., Brazil, Gabon, and Nigeria.

    As the Iran-Israel conflict simmers, the Strait of Hormuz could become a flashpoint reshaping global energy dynamics. If Iran escalates by disrupting the strait’s 20 million barrels daily flow, oil prices might soar, potentially triggering a recession in some key economies. Asian markets, heavily reliant on Gulf exports, could pivot to costlier alternatives, while Europe’s LNG supply faces strain. Israel’s Mediterranean oil routes insulate it, but global inflation could still sting. Diplomacy remains critical to prevent this narrow waterway from dictating the world’s economic future.

    (Pooja Mishra is a Content Researcher at DD India)

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: LCQ8: Non-elderly one-person applicants waiting for public rental housing

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    LCQ8: Non-elderly one-person applicants waiting for public rental housing 
    Question:
     
         I have contacted a group of grass-roots households in recent months, several of whom are young people who have been waiting for public rental housing (PRH) under the Harmonious Families Priority Scheme for years. Unfortunately, their family members passed away before they were allocated PRH, leaving them to continue waiting for PRH as “non-elderly one-person applicants”. In this connection, will the Government inform this Council:
     
    (1) of, in each year between 2022 and 2024, (i) the number of score points that non-elderly one-person applicants needed to obtain to be arranged for detailed vetting (commonly known as “being interviewed by an officer”), (ii) the respective ages of the oldest and the youngest non-elderly one-person applicants at the time when they were allocated PRH, and (iii) the quota of PRH units for allocation to non-elderly one-person applicants and its share in the total number of PRH units supplied for that year;
     
    (2) as the 2024 Policy Address has proposed that the total public housing supply from 2025-2026 to 2029-2030 will reach 189 000 units, which is about 80 per cent higher than that of the first five-year period since the current-term Government took office (i.e. 2022-2023 to 2026-2027), and in the past two years, the average waiting time for PRH dropped from the peak of 6.1 years to the current 5.5 years, whether the Government has plans to increase the quota of PRH units reserved for non-elderly one-person applicants; if so, of the details; if not, the reasons for that; and
     
    (3) to enable non-elderly one-person applicants to consider whether they should continue waiting for PRH, whether the Government can provide them with more information on the Points System in a timely manner, such as by dividing the non-elderly one-person applicants into 10 groups evenly according to their score points and publishing the highest and lowest score points of applicants in each group, so that the applicants will know which group they are in and their waiting status, thereby helping them to assess their waiting time?
     
    Reply:
     
    President,
     
         The objective of the Hong Kong Housing Authority (HA) is to provide public rental housing (PRH) to people who cannot afford private rental accommodation. It is the policy of the HA to accord priority to general applicants (i.e. family applicants and elderly-one person applicants) over non-elderly one-person applicants in the allocation of PRH flats. The reply to the Hon Kwok Wai-keung’s question is as follows:
     
    (1) From 2022/23 to 2024/25, the points for non-elderly one person applicants arranged for detailed vetting, the highest and lowest ages of non-elderly one-person applicants that were housed to PRH flats and the ratio of actual allocation for non-elderly one-person applicants to the actual annual allocation are set out in Tables 1 to 3 of the Annex respectively.
     
    (2) In order to rationalise and prioritise the allocation of PRH to non-elderly one-person applicants, the HA implemented the Quota and Points System (QPS) since September 2005. Unlike general applicants, the priority of flat allocation to non-elderly one-person applicants is not determined by the time when the individual applicant joined the queue, but the total points accumulated by an individual applicant under QPS. The points are calculated based on the applicants’ age, their waiting time and whether they are already residing in PRH.
     
         The HA endorsed refining QPS in October 2014. Such refinements included increasing the scale of age points from three to nine points per year of age increase at the time of application to reduce the incentive for early registration; and awarding a one-off bonus of 60 points to non-elderly one-person applicants aged 45 or above so as to accord them with higher priority over other younger applicants. In addition, starting from 2015/16, the HA has also increased the annual allocation quota for non-elderly one-person applicants under QPS from 8 per cent to 10 per cent of the total number of units to be allocated to PRH applicants, subject to a cap which was increased from 2 000 to 2 200 units. Generally speaking, elder applicants will be allocated flats faster under the refined QPS. The above arrangement of increasing the cap of allocation quota has struck an appropriate balance between the needs of non-elderly one-person applicants and that of general applicants. Considering that the demand for PRH in the society remains strong currently, we have no plan to further increase the annual allocation quota for QPS at this stage.
     
         We do not encourage young people to apply for PRH early. Young people should seize their time and work hard to move up the housing ladder in accordance with their abilities. In fact, the number of non-elderly one-person applicants reduced significantly by about 40 per cent from the highest level of 143 700 as at end-December 2015 to 86 300 as at end-March 2025. During the same period, the number of non-elderly one-person applicants aged below 30 recorded a sharper decline of 57 per cent, from 74 500 to 31 700.
     
         The Government has been encouraging young people to buy their own homes through the provision of various types of subsidised sale flats (SSF). In fact, young people aged below 40 have always accounted for a large proportion of buyers of different types of SSF. For example, nearly half of the successful applicants for first-hand Home Ownership Scheme (HOS) flats are young people under the age of 40; meanwhile, around 80 per cent of the buyers of White Form Secondary Market Scheme (WSM) are under the age of 40.
     
         In the next five years (i.e. from 2025/26 to 2029/30), apart from PRH/ Green Form Subsidised Home Ownership Scheme flats, the HA and the Hong Kong Housing Society will have a supply of about 56 500 SSF. To increase the chances of young people in purchasing SSF successfully, the HA will allocate an extra ballot number to young family applicants and one-person applicants aged below 40 with white form status for the purchase of HOS flats starting from the next HOS sale exercise onwards; for the secondary market, starting from WSM 2024, the HA has also increased the quota by 1 500 to 6 000, all of which will be allocated to young family applicants and one-person applicants aged below 40.
     
    (3) The priority under QPS is determined by the total points accumulated by an non-elderly one-person applicant. To enhance the transparency of information, the Housing Department (HD) publishes the latest PRH allocation status in different districts in newspapers on a monthly basis, including the lowest point for non-elderly one person applicants being arranged for detailed vetting and the lowest point for non-elderly one person applicants having accepted public housing offers in individual application district. Such information is also uploaded to the HA/HD website (www.housingauthority.gov.hk/en/flat-application/allocation-status/index.html 
         In addition, “e-Services for PRH Application” (
    eservices.housingauthority.gov.hk/eprhasIssued at HKT 12:47

    NNNN

    CategoriesMIL-OSI

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Govt welcomes job bill’s passage

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Government has welcomed the Legislative Council’s passage today of the Employment (Amendment) Bill 2025, which revises the continuous contract requirement under the Employment Ordinance, making it easier for employees to enjoy comprehensive employment rights.

    Under the revised requirement, the weekly working hours threshold will be lowered from 18 hours to 17 hours. Moreover, a week involving less than 17 working hours will still be regarded as a continuous employment period if the sum of the working hours of that week and those of the three weeks immediately preceding it reaches 68.

    The Government outlined that the amendment introduces flexibility in the calculation of working hours, reducing the likelihood of the continuity of workers’ employment being disrupted due to working hours occasionally fall below the threshold.

    Other provisions of the ordinance will continue to operate as they have been, and existing eligibility criteria for employees to enjoy various statutory benefits will remain unchanged.

    The Employment (Amendment) Ordinance 2025 will be published in the Government Gazette next Friday. The revised continuous contract requirement will be effective from January 18, 2026.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: National Press Club address, Q&A

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Tom Connell:

    Thank you, Treasurer. I’m going to keep this broad, lest I be accused of ruling in, ruling out. So, if you think of how bold you’re willing to be. When we think of economic reform, the truly transformative reform is always, at the time at least, somewhat controversial. If you think of floating the dollar and the accord, if you think of the GST. Are you thinking of that level of boldness when you’re talking about the reform the economy needs around, whether it be productivity or tax or whatever it might be?

    Jim Chalmers:

    There’s an appetite to be bold and ambitious. What I tried to do in my contribution before is to run through all of the ways that we feel there is already an ambitious productivity agenda underway. We’ve already made a lot of progress on the budget. We’ve made progress in making our economy more resilient. But this is all about testing the country’s reform appetite.

    And I don’t see it in personal terms, but I am personally willing to grasp the nettle to use an old saying. I am prepared to do my bit. The government is prepared to do its bit. And what we’ll find out in the course of the next few months is whether everyone is prepared to do their bit as well.

    Connell:

    I’ve started efficiently. One question and done. We’ll see if my colleagues can follow. We’ve got a long batting order. Tom Crowley from the ABC is first.

    Tom Crowley:

    Thanks, Treasurer, Tom Crowley from the ABC. Thank you for your speech. And I’ll also ask about tax reform and try to avoid the rule in rule out game.

    Chalmers:

    I appreciate it, Tom. Thank you.

    Crowley:

    There is a tension there between ambition and consensus. It goes to the question that Tom’s asking. And consensus is a comforting word for politicians, but maybe one that makes economists a bit wary, because the truth is, as well as constituencies for change in the media and among experts, it’s just a reality that if you want to reduce the reliance on income tax and at the same time you want to be budget neutral or positive, you’re going to have to increase the reliance on some other type of tax and you create losers in the tax system, losers in the electorate.

    Do you see that this election gives you the political space to create losers and make an argument to them, even if perhaps you lose their votes, about why they should pay more to repair the budget?

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Tom. A couple of, I think, important things about that.

    First of all, I think in the aftermath of the election, and not because of the width of the margin, the magnitude of the majority that Anthony and the team won on election day, I think there has been a welcome and encouraging discussion about the level of ambition that Australia has – I’ll come to the Australian Government in a moment – that Australia has to recognise that this is genuinely a defining decade.

    The decisions we make in the 2020s will determine the sort of living standards and intergenerational justice that we have in the decades to come. I think there is a broad recognition of that. That doesn’t always exist, but I think right now I feel encouraged and confident that there is an element of that in the broader community, and including in some of the commentary that people in the room here write.

    So that’s welcome. That’s necessary, it’s welcome. I think there is some appetite there. The rest of your question, I think, goes also to an important point and it’s about trade‑offs. I think if you take a big step back and think about, take all of the political labels and all of the day‑to‑day commentary out for a moment, and if you tried to work out why a country like ours might spin its wheels on reform, I think one of the reasons for that is because governments have to consider trade‑offs and other participants in the national reform consideration might not need to. That’s why I’ve been very, very specific with the conditions that we put on people’s involvement, because there are trade‑offs, and often difficult trade‑offs.

    If you think about in tax, you think about broadening the base and lowering the rate and some of these sorts of areas, which is an important element of tax reform theory, as Ken and others will tell you. There are always difficult trade‑offs associated with that. So what we’re trying to do with this roundtable, but more broadly as well, even absent the roundtable, is to be upfront with all of you and the country beyond, about the trade‑offs. To recognise that the easiest thing in the world is for people to come to us and say, we want you to dramatically cut the taxes in our part of the economy and spend dramatically more on our industry without recognising that there are necessary trade‑offs associated with that.

    So let’s see how far we can go together, recognising those trade‑offs, having an appropriate high level of ambition, being upfront with people along the way, and explaining why those trade‑offs are important and why they might be necessary.

    Connell:

    Peter Hobson from Reuters.

    Peter Hobson:

    Thanks, Treasurer, I’ve got a question on housing. So Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s book ‘Abundance’ has been doing the rounds, and it argues that regulatory barriers –

    Chalmers:

    We should be on a commission with these guys.

    Hobson:

    Regulatory barriers and bureaucratic inertia are stifling the construction of new housing, and you want to build 1.2 million new homes by 2029. So how many have you built so far? And to achieve the goal, don’t you have to be more radical? Are you considering bigger changes to regulation, perhaps stripping more power from local authorities and, or, bigger incentives from federal government.

    Chalmers:

    Even if Clare O’Neil wasn’t in the room, I’d be careful not to front run the sorts of things that she would be considering. But I know that Clare won’t mind me saying that probably the most numerous conversations I’ve had in the last 6 weeks have been with Clare about housing, because we recognise that we need to build more homes sooner.

    We’ve got tens of billions of dollars of Commonwealth investment. The states and local governments are very focused on the challenge. Institutional and other investors are working out what meaningful role that they can play. And so all of the ingredients are more or less there, but we need to do better and sooner in order to build those homes.

    We have always acknowledged, Clare, her predecessor, certainly from my point of view, that the 1.2 million homes is a very ambitious target, deliberately so. And it will be hard to get there, but it’s not impossible to get there but everyone needs to do their bit. And I know that Clare is thinking about what else might be necessary in order for us to build the homes that our country desperately needs.

    Connell:

    Matthew Cranston from The Australian.

    Chalmers:

    I didn’t get a little nod from Clare at the end there so I’m worried that I didn’t nail it. Clare will be available for a press conference immediately following the –

    Connell:

    We can give her a question if you want?

    Matthew Cranston:

    Treasurer in your first term you had a desire for low, low inflation. And you pretty much got that. Productivity is a lot harder, and you’ve outlined very clearly, very transparently, that tax reform will be a big part of productivity. I wonder, does that mean, and you’ve said also today you welcome it and expect it. Does that mean you’re pressing the pause button at the moment on tax reform ideas such as unrealised capital gains tax. And do you think that this could open up a bigger conversation on tax reform that will help repair the relationship between tax, productivity and what you say, unsustainable budget deficit?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, we’re not changing the policies we took to the election. We’ve got a mandate for that change that you mentioned and that you write about most days. What we’re looking for here is an opportunity to build on the progress that we’ve made, including in the economy as you point out. We’re looking for, not opportunities to go back on the things that we have got a mandate for, we’re looking for new ideas.

    Now when it comes to the role of tax reform in productivity, I very deliberately said that productivity is our primary focus but not our sole focus, budget sustainability, resilience in the face of global volatility, these are 3 very tightly related concerns, and tax reform is important to budget sustainability, but also to productivity. And so we do see those things as related. We’re delighted with the progress that we’ve made collectively on inflation, we do agree and accept your analysis that says productivity can be harder and less instant in the progress that we make, and tax has got a role to play there.

    I think it would be unusual if I said to the country, we’re going to have this big national reform conversation about productivity, sustainability and resilience, but nobody’s allowed to talk about tax. That would be strange, and it wouldn’t be especially helpful to us. And so I anticipate, I welcome the fact that people will come to the roundtable, outside the roundtable, people will pitch up ideas about tax. We don’t see that as an opportunity to walk back on some of the things that we’re already committed to, in this case, some years ago. We see it as an opportunity to work out what the next steps might be.

    Connell:

    Millie Muroi from the SMH and The Age.

    Millie Muroi:

    Hi Treasurer, Millie Muroi from the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.

    Chalmers:

    Hi, Millie.

    Muroi:

    Obviously you said ruling in and out is not very productive –

    Chalmers:

    But –

    Muroi:

    But you’ve set some ground rules. You’ve set some ground rules for this upcoming roundtable, including that ideas, or packages of ideas, should be budget neutral at minimum, but preferably budget positive. Would you be open to ideas that cost the budget in the short term, especially if they’re expected to improve growth and revenue in the medium or longer term.

    Chalmers:

    Look, if we’re sure about. We make investments all the time in our budget that have longer term payoffs and longer term dividends, but we don’t want to see that used as an excuse to pitch up a whole bunch of spending that nobody ever pays for. The thing that invites your good question Millie, with Tom’s at the start – and there’ll be people in this room who will be at the round table, there’ll be people in this room who will pitch up ideas before, during and after the round table.

    Really, we’re just trying to respectfully encourage people to try and engage in the kind of work that we engage in around the Cabinet table. At the Expenditure Review Committee and the broader Cabinet as well, which is to understand that there are a lot of great ideas, often expensive ideas, and we have to make it all add up. And so the only way this is going to work is if everybody understands that. Not if it’s just left to Katy and I or the ERC or the Cabinet to engage in all of those trade‑offs. I want everyone engaged in that.

    And inevitably, there will be a case made in some instances, and sometimes it will be a compelling case that investment up front will deliver a longer term dividend. But that doesn’t excuse us or extract us from some of these longer term structural budget pressures that we’re trying to deal with.

    Connell:

    The small room you alluded to, does that mean no room for the opposition?

    Chalmers:

    We’re finalising the invitation list. I say that very genuinely. We’ve done a bit of work on that, but we haven’t finished the work on that. I’ve been a little surprised, to be honest to hear that there’s been some interest from the Opposition, in some quarters. Sometimes you catch a part of an interview where people are running down the idea of a roundtable, other times you hear people saying that they’d like to be constructive. I hope it’s the latter. There will be opportunities for the Opposition to be constructive, whether they’re inside the room or not inside the room.

    I think regardless of the final invitation list, it would be a very good thing for Australia if we all did take a constructive approach to it. What I’m going to try and do is where I think the Opposition or the crossbench or the other colleagues in the Senate are being genuinely constructive, I’m going to try and respond in kind, I mean that.

    So let’s see how they go. Whether inside the room or outside the room, I think there’s an important role for the Opposition. And not just in the Senate, but in terms of the direction of the country.

    We don’t pretend that we’ll be in government forever. Some of these issues will be long standing issues. I don’t even accept the argument that says another term of this government is assured. I think few things in politics are assured. So the more buy in that we can get across the parliament, the better. And so if they are genuine about being constructive, I will be too.

    Connell:

    John Kehoe from the AFR.

    John Kehoe:

    Thanks Treasurer for your speech. Spending as a share of the economy, according to Treasury’s own budget forecast for the next financial year is going to be the highest since 1986. Is it inevitable that the tax to GDP level needs to rise, as you’ve alluded to with by saying any tax changes need to be preferably budget positive. And within that, is it possible? Do you envisage that actually you could have a package of tax changes where some taxes go up, some taxes go down? And are you a believer of a package like that could actually deliver higher growth and prosperity for the Australian people?

    Chalmers:

    If I could just kind of respectfully make 2 points at the start, John. It’s not the highest spending since the 80s. I know that you mean absent COVID, but I think it’s unusual that we absent COVID.

    Kehoe:

    Excluding the pandemic. Yes, that’s true.

    Chalmers:

    So I don’t mean to have a shot at you, John, I say that very respectfully. But quite frequently I’ll hear we’ve got the weakest growth in 40 years, or we’ve got the highest spending. That’s not true. And I know that there are reasons why you want to extract that from your analysis, I get that. But let’s not forget that we had spending as a share of the economy almost a third. And some of those things that we didn’t extend when we came to office, they were difficult at the time, some of that spending. We had a lot of people calling for us to extend the fuel excise change, the LMITO was extended by our predecessors but we got called on to extend it. And so that spending that was almost a third of the economy during COVID, we got it down to less than a quarter of the economy in 2022–23

    So, I’ll engage with the substance of your question but let’s not lightly dismiss that.

    Secondly, when it comes to people coming with packages of ideas which are budget neutral, I hope that people come to this discussion and I know Katy hopes that people come to this discussion, not just with ideas about improving the revenue base, but also about where government spending is not giving us the dividends or the returns that we need.

    And so it’s possible that people will come to the discussion with an idea to invest more over here, or to provide tax relief over here, which is not necessarily paid for by higher taxes, but might be paid for by less spending.

    So we’ve got an open mind to that. All of those combinations, I think are reasonable. And I hope that people consider all of those different kinds of trade‑offs when they come into discussion.

    Connell:

    Next question, Trudy McIntosh from Sky News.

    Trudy Mcintosh:

    Treasurer, on tax reform, any proposal that comes out of this roundtable, will you look to legislate that as soon as possible? Or do you need to secure a mandate?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, it’s difficult to pre‑empt the steps that go beyond the ideas that people bring to the round table. I think the timing of any changes that we’re able to afford and pick up and run with, I think that’s to be determined.

    It depends on the nature of the ideas. Some things where there might be broad consensus at the roundtable, it might not be feasible or wise to wait another 2 or 3 years to pick up and run with them. So let’s see what people propose. Let’s see what the nature of the changes are before we make some of those decisions around timing.

    Andrew Probyn:

    Treasurer, on the revenue side, what attitude would you bring to this roundtable when it comes to extending the breadth of the GST and the rate of the GST?

    Chalmers:

    Andrew, I’m not sure if you have, but others over the years have asked me, from that microphone, with me at this lectern, about that. And you know that historically I’ve had a view about the GST. I think it’s hard to adequately compensate people. I think often an increase in the GST is spent 3 or 4 times over by the time people are finished with all of the things that they want to do with it. But what I’m going to try to do, because I know the states will have a view on it, I’m going to try not to dismiss every idea that I know that people will bring to the roundtable.

    I suspect the states will have a view about the GST. It’s not a view that I’ve been attracted to historically. But I’m going to try not to get in the process of shooting ideas between now and the Roundtable.

    Probyn:

    But when you consider that some of the carve outs were from 25 years ago, and a political deal between John Howard’s government and the Democrats, isn’t that something to at least consider?

    Chalmers:

    I think I’ve answered that, Andrew.

    Probyn:

    I don’t think you have.

    Chalmers:

    My view hasn’t changed on all of the other times that I’ve been asked it, but I think one of the ways I’m going to be inclusive and respectful in the lead up to this roundtable is I suspect people will raise that question.

    Probyn:

    So you’re not ruling it out?

    Chalmers:

    I haven’t changed my view on it, and again, it’s a nice little cheeky attempt to get a rule in, rule out in.

    Probyn:

    It sounded to me like you were ruling it out.

    Chalmers:

    I’m just reminding you of all of the other times you’ve asked me this question and what I’ve said, I’m not walking away from those views.

    I think the best way to think about this roundtable is that we’re not using it because we’ve got a predetermined view that we want to change. We genuinely want to hear people’s ideas. I suspect people, particularly people who represent the interests of the states, might raise this with us. I want to be respectful about that, but my view personally hasn’t changed.

    Connell:

    Next question, Patrick Commins from Guardian Australia.

    Patrick Commins:

    Treasurer, you talked about the changing tax base, the structural changes in the tax base. And you also said that the net zero transition will reshape our revenue from resources. Is part of that a recognition that the next time we have the next resource export boom, maybe critical minerals, that we need to do better to capture more of the value of our natural minerals when we design a tax policy?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, I think it’s self evident that as the world’s appetite for different kinds of resources changes over the decades that our offering of the world will change as well. I know that the resources sector sees things in similar ways, and I don’t think that’s especially controversial.

    What we’re focused on, as you know, when it comes to resources, the changes that we brokered on the PRRT so that there’s billions of dollars paid sooner to help fund our other priorities. It may be that people bring those sorts of ideas to the round table, a bit like the question that Andrew asked before you. I don’t really want to get into indicating or announcing government policy or rejecting ideas that people might put forward to us. That’s a pretty common view put by people that we can change the way that we tax our resources. It’s not something that we’ve been contemplating or considering or putting work into, apart from the PRRT change, but I suspect people will have views about that in the coming months and years.

    Connell:

    Nicola Smith from the Nightly.

    Nicola Smith:

    Thanks for your address, Treasurer, my question is on economic resilience and security. The independent Intelligence Review earlier this year recommended that the Treasury lead its own review of the structure and effectiveness of economic security functions across government, and for a distinct economic security unit to be set up in Treasury, including secondees from national intelligence agencies. What are your plans for these recommendations in the second term? And related to that, given the level of concern about economic fallout from the Middle East crisis, is the Treasury modeling the possible economic impact of conflict or blockades closer to home, including in the Taiwan Strait or South China Sea, and what you’re doing now to build resilience in supply chains?

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Nicola. There’s a lot of your question. I’ll try and be efficient with it. First of all, on the structural changes proposed in the Intelligence Review.

    I thank Richard and Heather for the characteristically insightful work that they put into that.

    We’ve been discussing it over recent months to work out the best institutional arrangements which recognise that the national security interests and our economic security interests, which have always been linked, they’re now more closely intertwined than ever, and we want our systems of advice, we want our institutional arrangements to reflect that.

    I’m not here to say that we finalised the work that we might have to do in Treasury under Jenny’s new leadership, new management, to give effect to some of those recommendations. But it is an ongoing conversation. We are taking the recommendations seriously, and we have a very, very high regard for our agencies and our other institutions involved in national security and because of the quality of their work, quality of the Treasury’s work, I’m briefed fairly regularly, or at the moment, daily, on the economic implications of what we’re seeing in the Middle East, and obviously sea lanes are very important to those considerations, the oil price very important to those considerations. I’m briefed daily on that. Some of the broader strategic considerations, the risk of conflict in our own region and closer to home, that’s really a central feature of so much of the advice that I get, so much of the thinking that we do when it comes to our resilience agenda.

    I think there are good reasons not to go into a lot of detail about that advice that I receive and the thinking that we do, but to assure you that it’s substantial, it’s high quality, it’s across government, and it recognises that a big part of our economic challenges right now are security related.

    Connell:

    You want to make the budget sustainable enough, is that possible to do whilst increasing defence spending 3.5 per cent

    Chalmers:

    What I tried to say with those 6 major structural budget pressures is that there are good reasons in health and hospitals, for example, defence, for example, early childhood education and care, where we are increasing our spending in those areas for good reasons. They are very, very worthy investments that we’re making, and it forces us, encourages us to make room elsewhere in the budget.

    So I’m an enthusiastic supporter of more defence spending. I don’t want to speak for all of the other colleagues, but the government is as one when it comes to increasing defence spending, an extra almost $11 billion over forward estimates, almost $58 billion extra over the 10 year, medium term projections.

    So we’re making new, substantial and much bigger investments in defence, and that’s a good thing. It does put structural pressure on the budget. It does mean that we have to find room in other areas. But it’s not unique. We have to find room for early childhood. We have to find room for defence. We have to find room for health and hospitals. We’ve made good progress on interest costs, aged care and the NDIS, but Katy and I have never seen this work that we do with other ministers on structural pressures as a kind of a one and done, it’s ongoing.

    Probably wouldn’t be a day, Katy and I don’t have a discussion with one or another colleague, out of those 6 main areas where the structural pressures are most acute, where we’re trying to work out, how can we get maximum value for money and make sure that we are satisfying our strategic purposes and our purposes elsewhere in our economy and in our society in a way that we can afford.

    Connell:

    Tim Lester from the Seven Network.

    Tim Lester:

    Treasurer, just to pick up on your comments there, you’re quite blunt about strategic threats, acknowledging a more dangerous world and more perilous times for the global economy arising out of the Middle East. Though, on saying that your government is increasing the budget for defence, do you believe that the track to roughly 2.3 per cent of GDP by the early, mid 2030s is still fit for purpose in the current environment. And if you do believe that, what are you saying about the United States’ demand for 3.5 per cent, surely that is stupid if you hold to the current Budget.

    Chalmers:

    I’d say, Tim, that to go from 2 per cent of the economy to 2.3 per cent of the economy by the early 2030s represents a very substantial increase in our budget for defence spending.

    I try to read as much as I can of all of the commentary about national security and defence funding, and I think that’s one of the things that’s often missed, is that we are already making what would be seen in any other time a really substantial increase in investment in defence. Personally, I do that enthusiastically. I understand the risks and the threats.

    It’s a really important, warranted thing that we are doing as a government, and it’s substantial. Now, of course, our partners would like us to spend more on defence. It’s not unusual, even people I have a lot of time for, the whole time I’ve known Kim Beazley, decades now, he’s said that we should spend more on defence. And so it’s not uncommon or unusual for there to be a constituency for more defence spending. It’s not unusual for there to be a constituency for less defence spending at the same time.

    When it comes to our American partners, again, that’s the message they’re taking to all of their friends in the world, not just us. They’re saying that in Europe. They’re saying that in our own region, they’re saying that in our instance as well. Over the life of the next 10 years, it may be that governments are not necessarily just about political persuasion. It may be the governments make different decisions about defence spending, but let’s not dismiss the very substantial increase that we’re already making.

    Connell:

    Katina Curtis from the West Australian.

    Curtis:

    Thanks, Treasurer, just picking up on that defence theme, what you said just before about getting maximum value for money, and at the start of your speech, about your obsession with delivery. If there’s a submission comes to the NSC later this year that says, for example, we want to buy these frigates, we can get them for cheaper and faster if we buy one off the shelf being made overseas, or we can get them a bit more expensive, take a bit longer if we built them in Australia. What is your thinking in approaching those kind of trade‑offs as you talked about, and how much perhaps, has this been shaped by discussions, previous discussions with Steven Kennedy?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, I try and avoid hypotheticals at the best of times, but I think especially when it’s about defence spending and national security and issues which are obviously very sensitive. I think more broadly, what the government has shown a willingness to do and an ability to do is to engage in some of those difficult decisions about sequencing. I pay tribute to Richard Marles for the way that he’s come to us collectively, and Pat Conroy as well, to make sure that we can sequence this defence spending in a way where we do get maximum value. Richard does way more work at that than I think he is acknowledged for. I acknowledge him for that. Katy and I have worked with him very closely on that, and Pat Conroy as well. And I forget the last part of the question.

    Curtis:

    Just, how is your thinking being shaped?

    Chalmers:

    Well, Steven is an influential fellow, and I loved working with him, and I’m excited about working with Jenny, and we get the best of both worlds because Steven and Jenny, their colleagues, they think deeply about the economy, but also about the national security environment. It’s no coincidence that I’ve tried to tell you that the next 3 years of my life are going to be about 3 things – productivity, budget, sustainability and resilience.

    In the face of global uncertainty, not every Treasurer over the last recent decades would have brought something which has a national security element to it on their list of 3 highest priorities, I think that reflects the world that we’re in. I hope Ken doesn’t mind me saying that when we were talking about a draft of the speech earlier in the week, we were really talking about this kind of permanent state of churn and change in the world. The fact that it would be a heroic assumption to pretend that 4 big economic shocks in less than 2 decades with national security elements to them that this is just some kind of bizarre period that we’re living in, and that we’re going to go back to this period where we have decade long periods of calm like we had after the end of the Cold War, and that would be a heroic assumption to make, almost certainly wrong and not especially wise when it comes to thinking through our options.

    And so you asked me about Steven and Jenny and the advice that we get, really the whole government, I think, thinks very deeply about the fact that we’re in this period of extraordinary churn and change. From my point of view, my reason for being is to make sure that our country is a beneficiary of that churn and change, not a victim of that churn and change. We were huge beneficiaries of that great moderation that followed the end of the Cold War between then and whether you mark the end of it as the beginning of the war on terror or the GFC, Australia did so well out of that period of moderation and calm. And now we need to work out a way to do really well out of this world of permanent churn and change. And the advice that we get from very smart people who we respect greatly in a public service which is very well led, reflects, I think, the nature and the magnitude of that challenge.

    Connell:

    It’s only a month and a half after the election. You’re talking big changes in reform. Would talking about that during the election scare voters off.

    Chalmers:

    Well, I think we took a substantial agenda to the election.

    Connell:

    We’re talking new changes today.

    Chalmers:

    Well, what I tried to say today is that, from the Prime Minister down and again, talking out of school a bit, but all of the kind of collective conversations that we have as a government led by Anthony are about making sure that we deliver the things that we took to the election. And most of my time has been spent working with Clare and her staff, Chris Bowen’s got a big challenge to roll out the things we took to the election, Mark Butler’s got a huge portfolio and a huge opportunity, and so our obsession is with delivery, but we’ve also got, in addition to that responsibility to deliver, we’ve got an obligation to include people in a proper national conversation about what comes after that, and I think that’s consistent with the way that we talked to during the first term of our government.

    One of the things that has kind of surprised me on the upside is that, when I rolled in bleary eyed to the Insiders studio the day after the election and David Speers said to me, what’s the priority? And I said, well, we spent a big chunk of the first 3 years trying to beat inflation, and now we’ve got to spend the next 3 years trying to get on top of this productivity challenge, I’m absolutely delighted with the way that the place responded to that, and that, I think reflects, again, going back to Tom’s I think first question, other Tom’s first question, it goes to the level of ambition that people have. It’s consistent with the way that we govern, which is to say, here is how the world is changing, these are the things that we need to do to be beneficiaries, not victims, of all of that change. We’ve got an agenda that we took to the people, we will deliver that agenda in the most efficient way that we can. We’re obsessed about delivering that, but we also need to work out what’s next, that’s what my speech was about, that’s what the roundtable is about, and it’s what the second term will be about.

    Connell:

    Just about time, are you happy for a couple more?

    Chalmers:

    Yes.

    Connell:

    All right, Michael de Percy from the Spectator Australia.

    Michael De Percy:

    Michael de Percy, Spectator Australia. Treasurer, the UK was decisive in increasing the defence budget. They did this in a budget neutral way by reducing or cutting the foreign aid expenditure. So it’s pretty obvious on what’s happened in Canada in the last few days, if Australia wants a seat at the table, we’re going to have to ramp up our defence spending. If we don’t, we won’t have access to the US. If we don’t, we’ll need to ramp up our expenditure. So if that’s the case, will you cut spending, increase taxes, accumulate more debt, or are you going to leave defence spending as it is right now?

    Chalmers:

    Thanks Michael. I think my answer to your question is a bit like the answers to some of the other defence‑related questions. I think Nicola and Katina and others. We are already substantially increasing our defence investment, and we’re talking about tens of billions of dollars in extra investment in the coming years because we recognise how important it is, we work with our partners to invest in our own security, and so those extra billions of dollars reflect that we’ve made room in the budget for that.

    When it comes to foreign aid, I know that this is sometimes a contentious issue, but we don’t see it that way. The way that we invest in our region in particular is an important investment in our national security and I think in some ways it would be to cut off our nose to spite our face if we were to go after aid funding in the interest of making ourselves more secure, I think the outcome of that we would be less secure, and so I have always been within reason – my colleagues have backed me up – an enthusiastic supporter of investment in our region, particularly our Pacific neighbourhood, because if you genuinely understand the risks in the 2020s and the 2030s, a lot of those risks can be best addressed by genuine engagement and the aid budget’s part of it.

    Connell:

    Final question, Jacob Shteyman from AAP.

    Jacob Shteyman:

    My question is about the carbon tax, but not whether you’re going to rule it in or out. You had a front row seat the last time Labor tried to implement it and my question is, what have you learned from that experience about how to implement contentious tax reform and to make it stick?

    Chalmers:

    I think whether it’s that episode or – I have been around for a little while, not very long as Treasurer, but I’ve been knocking around with a lot of you for a very long time. So Misha Schubert, , now I’ve known Misha for probably 20, 25 years and so have been associated with a lot of the policy deliberations that we’ve gone through. I think, like anyone you learn from all of them, not just that one. I’m sort of reluctant to pull out a specific lesson from that period, but I think whether it’s in climate, whether it’s in tax, some of the other areas that we’ve grappled with as a country, not just as governments, I think inevitably, you learn from all of that.

    What we’re trying to do here is we’re trying to say we have a big, ambitious agenda. We’re going to roll that out as we said we would, but we’re going to test the country’s appetite for more than that. And reform succeeds when you can bring people with you. It requires courage, but it requires consensus as well. And if you go through the reform experience of this country over a long period of time, you can isolate the lessons, but I think that’s one of them. Having a government prepared to make the necessary trade‑offs is really important. We will provide the leadership, Anthony will provide the leadership, and we will provide the opportunity and we need everyone to play their part.

    And there will be some things that people can’t agree on. Of course, it would be a strange country if there was unanimity about some of these big challenges or what we need to do to address them, that would be a strange place but what we’re trying to do here is to learn from Australia’s reform experience, overwhelmingly, a proud experience of change and reform that delivers dividends, often decades down the track. And so let’s see what we can achieve together if we genuinely listen to each other, we genuinely try and find the common ground, we genuinely try and engage in some of these difficult trade‑offs. I’m realistic about that, but I’m optimistic about it too. I think there is the right amount of appetite. I think the problems are well understood and identified, and I feel confident, cautiously confident, that we can make some progress together.

    Connell:

    Treasurer, you’ve been generous with your time today.

    MIL OSI News –

    June 18, 2025
  • Yoga: India’s timeless gift of peace and holistic well-being to a badly divided world

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    ‘Yoga’ is now widely considered as one of India’s most profound gifts to the world. This enlightening practice embodies a timeless Indian tradition of physical, psychological and spiritual well-being. Embedded in ancient Indian philosophy, now majority of the people globally accept that it is much more than just physical postures- termed as ‘asanas’ in great Hindu religious traditions and scriptures.

    This holistic practice integrates breath control, meditation and a moral principle for a harmonious life, which is the ultimate goal of the ‘Hindu Sanatam Tradition’, which is the world’s oldest living spiritual and philosophical way of life. It is worth-mentioning here that unlike other religions of the world, Hinduism or Sanatam Dharma is not based on a single founder or scripture, rather it’s a cosmic and ever-evolving way of life rooted in the eternal truths of life.

    Yoga’s immense value to life, can be traced back in great Hindu scriptures like the Bhagavad Gita, which is revered as one of the most influential spiritual books globally. Gita says- ‘Yoga is the journey of the self, through the self, to the self,’ which explains how holistic it is for our life irrespective of one’s roots, ideological affiliations or leanings.

    The Vedas- the oldest and most sacred scriptures of Hinduism, composed between 1500–500 BCE, contain the earliest references to Yoga, though not in the systematized form seen in later great texts like the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. Vedic Yoga is more about mental discipline, meditation and the union of the individual soul with the cosmic reality. It is worth-mentioning that Vedas also form the foundation of Hindu philosophy, rituals and spirituality.

    Earlier, scholars dated the origins of Yoga to around 500 BCE, coinciding with the rise of Buddhism. However, archaeological discoveries from the Indus-Saraswati Valley Civilization suggest that yogic practices existed much earlier. Excavations have revealed seals depicting figures seated in meditative postures, strongly resembling yogic asanas. Additionally, artifacts such as the Mother Goddess idols indicate ritualistic and spiritual traditions that may have been precursors to Yoga. These findings push back the timeline of Yoga’s origins, linking it to one of the world’s oldest urban cultures.

    However, Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras, which is a foundational text of classical yoga and composed around 400 BCE, gave Yoga a greater meaning and wider relevance, re-establishing that Yoga is not just about physical postures but a complete science of mind control and self-realization. Yoga Sutras also systematically outlines the philosophy and practice of Rajya Yoga. It moves from ethical discipline to meditation and finally liberation, emphasizing direct experience over theoretical knowledge.

    The practice of Yoga also finds expression across a diverse range of ancient Indian texts and traditions including the Upanishads, Smritis, Puranas, Buddhist and Jain scriptures and the epics Mahabharata and Ramayana. Theistic traditions such as Shaivism, Vaishnavism and Tantra further preserved and refined yogic wisdom, emphasizing mystical experiences and meditative disciplines. This widespread presence suggests the existence of a pure form of Yoga that deeply influenced the spiritual landscape of South Asia long before its formal systematization.

    The modern evolution and global dissemination of Yoga owe much to the profound contributions of revered spiritual masters like Ramana Maharshi, Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Paramahansa Yogananda, Swami Vivekananda and a few others. Among these spiritual Gurus, Swami Vivekananda played a pivotal role by introducing Yoga and Vedanta philosophy to international audiences through his historic address at the 1893 Parliament of Religions in Chicago. His groundbreaking efforts not only revived ancient yogic wisdom but also established Indian spiritual traditions as a significant force in the global discourse on consciousness and self-realization.

    These visionary saints collectively bridged the gap between traditional yogic practices and contemporary spiritual seeking, ensuring Yoga’s enduring relevance across cultures and geographical boundaries. In last few decades, Yoga gained further momentum through the contributions of Swami Sivananda, T. Krishnamacharya, Swami Kuvalayananda, Sri Aurobindo, B.K.S. Iyengar and Pattabhi Jois, who explored Yoga’s healing, psychological and spiritual dimensions.

    There came a marked change when on 27th September 2014, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s UNGA address highlighted Yoga’s holistic benefits, leading to the UN’s unanimous declaration of 21st June as International Yoga Day. This Indian spiritual practice now draws participation from world leaders and celebrities in its annual global celebrations.

    Now, when world is facing a number of wars, conflicts and confrontations, Yoga being more than just physical exercises, acquires greater relevance as it offers people timeless values of harmony and well-being, transcending all boundaries and offering everyone a path to balanced living and inner peace, which is fast depleting.

    On the one hand, the asanas enhance flexibility and strength, while pranayama regulates vital energy and calms the nervous system. Meditation cultivates mental clarity and emotional balance, creating inner stillness amidst life’s challenges. Together, these elements form an integrated approach to health that addresses modern lifestyle diseases also at their core. In today’s fast-paced world, yoga provides an antidote to fragmented and conflict-ridden living.

    The practice of Yoga teaches balance between activity and rest, effort and surrender, individuality and interconnectedness. By integrating yoga into daily life, practitioners develop resilience, compassion and a deeper understanding of life’s unity. This complete system of self-care continues to gain global recognition as an essential tool for comprehensive wellness in our modern era.

    This global phenomenon is now practiced in nearly every country worldwide. The United States leads with over 36 million practitioners, followed by European nations like Germany, France and the UK, where yoga studios flourish. Australia and Canada have embraced yoga as part of mainstream wellness culture. In Asia, China, Japan and Singapore have seen exponential growth in yoga adoption, while traditional practices continue in Nepal and Sri Lanka. Middle Eastern countries like UAE and Israel host thriving yoga communities. Even conflict zones like Syria and Ukraine use yoga for trauma relief. African countries like South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria show growing interest.

    From megacities to remote villages, yoga’s universal appeal transcends borders, cultures and religions, making it truly global while maintaining its Indian spiritual roots. The UN’s recognition through International Yoga Day, has further cemented its worldwide acceptance as a great tool for holistic health.

    June 18, 2025
  • Liverpool begin Premier League title defence against Bournemouth, Arsenal visit Man Utd

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Liverpool will begin their Premier League title defence when they host Bournemouth at Anfield on August 15 while last season’s runners-up Arsenal visit Manchester United two days later, England’s top flight said on Wednesday.

    Manchester City, who are eyeing a seventh Premier League title under Pep Guardiola after finishing third in the last campaign, take a trip to Wolverhampton Wanderers for their season opener on August 16.

    Chelsea welcome FA Cup winners Crystal Palace to Stamford Bridge on August 17, a day after Thomas Frank has his first Premier League game in charge of Tottenham Hotspur when they host promoted Burnley.

    Spurs sacked Ange Postecoglou after they finished one place above the relegation zone, despite the Australian leading them to the Europa League title for their first major trophy in 17 years.

    Last season’s surprise package Nottingham Forest will host Brentford and League Cup champions Newcastle United take a trip to Aston Villa on August 16.

    Another promoted side Sunderland welcome West Ham United the same day, and Leeds United host Everton two days later.

    The new season begins with the one fixture on August 15 and concludes on May 24, 2026.

    (Reuters)

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: How pterosaurs learned to fly: scientists have been looking in the wrong place to solve this mystery

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Davide Foffa, Research Fellow in Palaeobiology, University of Birmingham

    Ever since the first fragments of pterosaur bone surfaced nearly 250 years ago, palaeontologists have puzzled over one question: how did these close cousins of land-bound dinosaurs take to the air and evolve powered flight? The first flying vertebrates seemed to appear on the geological stage fully formed, leaving almost no trace of their first tentative steps into the air.

    Taken at face value, the fossil record implies that pterosaurs suddenly originated in the later part of the Triassic period (around 215 million years ago), close to the equator on the northern super-continent Pangaea. They then spread quickly between the Triassic and the Jurassic periods, about 10 million years later, in the wake of a mass extinction that was most likely caused by massive volcanic activity.

    Most of the handful of Triassic specimens come from narrow seams of dark shale in Italy and Austria, with other fragments discovered in Greenland, Argentina and the southwestern US. These skeletons appear fully adapted for flight, with a hyper-elongated fourth finger supporting membrane-wings. Yet older rocks show no trace of intermediate gliders or other transitional forms that you might expect as evidence of pterosaurs’ evolution over time.

    There are two classic competing explanations for this. The literal reading says pterosaurs evolved elsewhere and did not reach those regions where most have been discovered until very late in the Triassic period, by which time they were already adept flyers. The sceptical reading notes that pterosaurs’ wafer-thin, hollow bones could easily vanish from the fossil record, dissolve, get crushed or simply be overlooked, creating this false gap.

    Eudimorphodon ranzii fossil from Bergamo in 1973 is one of many pterosaur discoveries from southern Europe.
    Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

    For decades, the debate stalled as a result of too few fossils or too many missing rocks. This impasse began to change in 2020, when scientists identified the closest relatives of pterosaurs in a group of smallish upright reptiles called lagerpetids.

    From comparing many anatomical traits across different species, the researchers established that pterosaurs and lagerpetids shared many similarities including their skulls, skeletons and inner ears. While this discovery did not bring any “missing link” to the table, it showed what the ancestor of pterosaurs would have looked like: a rat-to-dog-sized creature that lived on land and in trees.

    This brought new evidence about when pterosaurs may have originated. Pterosaurs and lagerpetids like Scleromochlus, a small land-dwelling reptile, diverged at some point after the end-Permian mass extinction. It occurred some 250 million years ago, 35 million years before the first pterosaur appearance in the fossil record.

    Scleromochlus is one of the lagerpetids, the closest known relatives to the pterosaurs.
    Gabriel Ugueto

    Pterosaurs and their closest kin did not share the same habitats, however. Our new study, featuring new fossil maps, shows that soon after lagerpetids appeared (in southern Pangaea), they spread across wide areas, including harsh deserts, that many other groups were unable to get past. Lagerpetids lived both in these deserts and in humid floodplains.

    They tolerated hotter, drier settings better than any early pterosaur, implying that they had evolved to cope with extreme temperatures. Pterosaurs, by contrast, were more restricted. Their earliest fossils cluster in the river and lake beds of the Chinle and Dockum basins (southwest US) and in moist coastal belts fringing the northern arm of the Tethys Sea, a huge area that occupied today’s Alps.

    Scientists have inferred from analysing a combination of fossil distributions, rock features and climate simulations that pterosaurs lived in areas that were warm but not scorching. The rainfall would have been comparable to today’s tropical forests rather than inland deserts.

    This suggests that the earliest flying dinosaurs may have lived in tree canopies, using foliage both for take-off and to protect themselves from predators and heat. As a result of this confined habitat, the distances that they flew may have been quite limited.

    Changing climates

    We were then able to add a fresh dimension to the story using a method called ecological niche modelling. This is routinely used in modern conservation to project where endangered animals and plants might live as the climate gets hotter. By applying this approach to later Triassic temperatures, rainfall and coastlines, we asked where early pterosaurs lived, regardless of whether they’ve shown up there in the fossil record.

    Many celebrated fossil sites in Europe emerge as poor pterosaur habitat until very late in the Triassic period: they were simply too hot, too dry or otherwise inhospitable before the Carnian age, around 235 million years ago. The fact that no specimens have been discovered there that are more than about 215 million years old may be because the climate conditions were still unsuitable or simply because we don’t have the right type of rocks preserved of that age.

    In contrast, parts of the south-western US, Morocco, India, Brazil, Tanzania and southern China seem to have offered welcoming environments several million years earlier than the age of our oldest discoveries. This rewrites the search map. If pterosaurs could have thrived in those regions much more than 215 million years ago, but we have not found them there, the problem may again lie not with biology but with geology: the right rocks have not been explored, or they preserve fragile fossils only under exceptional conditions.

    Our study flags a dozen geological formations, from rivers with fine sediment deposits to lake beds, as potential prime targets for the next breakthrough discovery. They include the Timezgadiouine beds of Morocco, the Guanling Formation of south-west China and, in South America, several layers of rock from the Carnian age, such as the Santa Maria Formation, Chañares Formation and Ischigualasto Formation.

    Pterosaurs were initially confined to tropical treetops near the equator. When global climates shifted and forested corridors opened, pterosaurs’ wings catapulted them into every corner of the planet and ultimately carried them through one of Earth’s greatest extinctions. What began as a tale of missing fossils has become a textbook example of how climate, ecology and evolutionary science have come together to illuminate a fragmentary history that has intrigued paleontologists for over two centuries.

    Davide Foffa is funded by Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions: Individual (Global) Fellowship (H2020-MSCA-IF-2020; No.101022550), and by the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851–Science Fellowship

    Alfio Alessandro Chiarenza receives funding from The Royal Society (Newton International Fellowship NIFR1231802)

    Emma Dunne 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. How pterosaurs learned to fly: scientists have been looking in the wrong place to solve this mystery – https://theconversation.com/how-pterosaurs-learned-to-fly-scientists-have-been-looking-in-the-wrong-place-to-solve-this-mystery-259063

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    June 18, 2025
  • US added over 1,000 new millionaires a day last year, UBS report says

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Wealth grew disproportionately quickly last year in the United States, where over 379,000 people became new U.S. dollar millionaires, more than a 1,000 a day, a report published on Wednesday showed.

    Private individuals’ net worth rose 4.6% worldwide, and by over 11% in the Americas, driven by a stable U.S. dollar and upbeat financial markets, the 2025 Global Wealth Report by UBS UBSG.S found. The United States accounted for almost 40% of global millionaires in 2024.

    In 2023, Europe, the Middle East and Africa had led a rebound in global wealth after a decline in 2022.

    Greater China – which the report defined as mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan – led last year for individuals with a net worth of $100,000 to $1 million, accounting for 28.2%, followed by Western Europe with 25.4% and North America with 20.9%.

    The majority of people worldwide were below that threshold, however, with over 80% of adults in the UBS sample having a net worth of under $100,000. Overall, about 1.6% registered a net worth of $1 million or more, the report said.

    Over the next five years, the Swiss bank projects average wealth per adult to grow further, led by the United States, and, to a lesser extent, Greater China.

    (Reuters)

    June 18, 2025
  • US added over 1,000 new millionaires a day last year, UBS report says

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Wealth grew disproportionately quickly last year in the United States, where over 379,000 people became new U.S. dollar millionaires, more than a 1,000 a day, a report published on Wednesday showed.

    Private individuals’ net worth rose 4.6% worldwide, and by over 11% in the Americas, driven by a stable U.S. dollar and upbeat financial markets, the 2025 Global Wealth Report by UBS UBSG.S found. The United States accounted for almost 40% of global millionaires in 2024.

    In 2023, Europe, the Middle East and Africa had led a rebound in global wealth after a decline in 2022.

    Greater China – which the report defined as mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan – led last year for individuals with a net worth of $100,000 to $1 million, accounting for 28.2%, followed by Western Europe with 25.4% and North America with 20.9%.

    The majority of people worldwide were below that threshold, however, with over 80% of adults in the UBS sample having a net worth of under $100,000. Overall, about 1.6% registered a net worth of $1 million or more, the report said.

    Over the next five years, the Swiss bank projects average wealth per adult to grow further, led by the United States, and, to a lesser extent, Greater China.

    (Reuters)

    June 18, 2025
  • Iran will respond firmly if US becomes directly involved in Israeli strikes, says UN ambassador

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Iran has conveyed to Washington that it will respond firmly to the United States if it becomes directly involved in Israel’s military campaign, the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva said on Wednesday.

    Ali Bahreini told reporters that he saw the U.S. as “complicit in what Israel is doing”. Iran would set a red line, and respond if the United States crosses it, he said, without specifying what actions would provoke a response.

    Israel launched an air war on Friday after saying it had concluded Iran was on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon. Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons. U.S. President Donald Trump called on Tuesday for Iran’s “unconditional surrender”.

    Bahreini called Trump’s remarks “completely unwarranted and very hostile. We cannot ignore them. We are vigilant about what Trump is saying. We will put it in our calculations and assessments.”

    The U.S. has so far taken only indirect actions, including helping to shoot down missiles fired toward Israel. It is deploying more fighter aircraft to the Middle East and extending the deployment of other warplanes, three U.S. officials said.

    “I am confident that (Iran’s military) will react strongly, proportionally and appropriately. We are closely following the level of involvement in the U.S … We will react whenever it is needed,” he said.

    Thousands of people were fleeing Tehran and other major cities on Wednesday, Iranian media reported, as Iran and Israel launched new missile strikes at each other.

    (Reuters)

    June 18, 2025
  • Yoga Sangam registrations cross four lakh ahead of International Day of Yoga

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Registrations for Yoga Sangam, the signature event marking the 11th International Day of Yoga (IDY) 2025, have crossed four lakh, setting a new benchmark for mass participation in a nationwide wellness initiative. The synchronised yoga demonstrations are set to take place at lakhs of locations across the country on June 21.

    According to the Ministry of Ayush, the main event will be held in Visakhapatnam, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, and Union Minister of State for Ayush and Health, Prataprao Jadhav, will lead over five lakh participants in performing the Common Yoga Protocol. The session is scheduled from 6:30 am to 7:45 am.

    Rajasthan has registered the highest number of yoga locations, with 1,38,033 organisations taking part. Andhra Pradesh has matched that figure, followed by Uttar Pradesh with 1,01,767 locations. Other states with significant participation include Madhya Pradesh (26,159), Gujarat (19,951), and Himachal Pradesh (12,000), the ministry said.

    This year’s theme, ‘Yoga for One Earth, One Health,’ focuses on the relationship between human well-being and planetary health. Officials said the growing response reflects the increasing popularity of yoga as a holistic health practice and its relevance in addressing modern lifestyle challenges.

    Participation spans academic institutions, public sector organisations, private companies, and community-based groups. The event has drawn support from IITs, IIMs, NGOs, schools, and corporate offices alike. The Yoga Sangam portal has been used for coordination and registrations nationwide.

    The Ministry described the scale of the campaign as unprecedented, adding that no previous event in India had received such a level of assured participation for a single-day, synchronised programme.

    Those interested in joining the event can register through the official portal: [https://yoga.ayush.gov.in/yoga-sangam](https://yoga.ayush.gov.in/yoga-sangam).

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Banking: Secretary-General of ASEAN receives the SEAMEO TED Director

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today received the Director of the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization Regional Centre for Technical Education Development (SEAMEO TED), Dr. Songheang Ai, at the ASEAN Headquarters/ASEAN Secretariat, where they discussed the Centre’s key achievements and planned activities for 2025 and beyond. The meeting also served as a platform to explore potential areas of collaboration between SEAMEO TED and the ASEAN Secretariat.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN receives the SEAMEO TED Director appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Global Banks –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Central Asian countries are becoming important trading partners of China’s Sichuan province

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    CHENGDU, June 18 (Xinhua) — Trade volume between southwest China’s Sichuan Province and five Central Asian countries increased 57.3 percent year on year to 2.78 billion yuan (about 386.8 million U.S. dollars) in January-April 2025, data from Chengdu Customs showed.

    In recent years, Central Asian countries have become important partners for Sichuan Province, which is seeking to build a highly open economy. Data show that in the first four months, the province’s exports to countries in the region totaled 2.61 billion yuan, up 57.9 percent year-on-year, while imports rose 48.5 percent to 170 million yuan.

    Automobiles, semiconductors, batteries and other products account for a large share of the goods exported from Sichuan to Central Asia, while rapeseed oil, ferroalloys and food are mainly imported from Central Asia.

    Sichuan Province and the Central Asian countries have great complementarity and enormous potential for cooperation in the fields of industry, economy, trade, culture, tourism, science and education. In terms of trade with Sichuan Province, Uzbekistan ranks first among the five Central Asian countries, being an important investment destination for the province in the Central Asian region. Thanks to this province, chemical products, porcelain and barley from Uzbekistan enter the Chinese market.

    The cooperation models between Sichuan and Central Asian countries also continue to be updated. For example, a service center of Sichuan Port and Shipping Investment Group Co., Ltd., responsible for international sales, was commissioned in Tashkent, as well as a bonded automobile demonstration center, where over 100 types of products from more than 40 Sichuan enterprises are presented. In addition, China-Central Asia freight trains annually deliver about 5,000 tons of tea from Chengdu to Tashkent. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Conclusion of the second China-Central Asia summit

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    The second Central Asia-China summit concluded in Astana on June 17, 2025. This event became an important milestone in strengthening friendship and strategic partnership between the countries of the region. The leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and China discussed key issues of economic development, security and cultural exchange.

    A joint statement was adopted, which set out the main areas of further cooperation. The leaders expressed confidence that their combined efforts would guarantee prosperity and stability in the region.

    The second China-Central Asia Summit in Astana was a turning point, marked by summing up the results and setting ambitious plans for the future based on the aspiration for friendship and common prosperity. The importance of the “China-Central Asia spirit” based on mutual respect, trust, benefit and support was emphasized.

    Xi Jinping noted the historical roots of cooperation between China and Central Asia, based on the principles of equality and mutual benefit. He stressed the importance of strengthening mutual trust and upholding sovereignty and national interests. China reaffirmed its intention to develop cooperation within the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative, focusing on trade, investment, transport, environmentally responsible mining and agriculture.

    The leaders of the Central Asian countries highly appreciated China’s contribution to the development of the region and expressed their readiness to further deepen cooperation. They noted that the China-Central Asia format has become an important platform for dialogue and cooperation, promoting socio-economic development. The Astana summit reaffirmed the desire to build a strong and mutually beneficial partnership based on the principles of friendship, trust and mutual support.

    Central Asia plays a key role in the Belt and Road Initiative, serving as a strategic gateway to Europe.

    The Belt and Road Initiative took centre stage at the summit, with an emphasis on cooperation in energy and sustainable development.

    The meeting of leaders of China and Central Asian countries marked an important step in deepening regional cooperation and building a closer community with a shared future. The summit demonstrated the commitment to joint development, prosperity, and maintaining peace and stability in the region.

    Particular attention was paid to China’s constructive role in international and regional affairs. The heads of state of Central Asia expressed support for the concept of building a community of shared destiny for mankind, as well as the global initiatives proposed by Xi Jinping.

    The summit participants stressed their readiness to work with China to protect free trade and the multilateral trading system, as well as to uphold the principles of international equality and justice.

    The parties agreed to hold the third China-Central Asia summit in 2027 in China, which demonstrates a long-term commitment to developing partnership relations.

    The China-Central Asia Summit was an important step towards strengthening regional cooperation, joint development and building a common future. The signed agreements and new initiatives create a basis for further deepening partnerships and achieving common goals.

    China’s cooperation with Central Asian countries within the framework of the “One Belt, One Road” initiative is steadily increasing, trade turnover has increased by 35%, cooperation in the field of industry and investment, environmentally responsible subsoil use and scientific and technological innovations is gaining momentum. The parties are implementing a number of projects. Chinese electric vehicles and photovoltaic products are appearing in Central Asia, from where honey, fruits, wheat and poultry end up on the Chinese table.

    Trade between China and Central Asian countries reached a record high of 674.15 billion yuan in 2024, an increase of 116 percent compared with 2013. All parties have found a new model of win-win cooperation through the China-Kazakhstan oil pipeline project and the China-Central Asia gas pipeline project. The China-Tajikistan Highway, China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan Highway and China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan Railway have brought regional connectivity to a new level, and practical cooperation has expanded to the digital economy and green transition. Container trains are connecting more Chinese cities with Central Asian countries. The quality and capacity of the Trans-Caspian International Transport Corridor are improving. Green industry, digital economy, artificial intelligence, aerospace and aviation industries are becoming new growth points for cooperation. Cooperation in new areas such as cross-border e-commerce and online education brings benefits to the people of our six countries.

    Xi Jinping stressed that the cooperation between China and Central Asian countries has its roots in more than two thousand years of friendly relations, has been cemented by solidarity and mutual trust since the establishment of diplomatic relations, and has made great progress through mutually beneficial cooperation in the new era. Many years of experience and practice have helped to formulate and shape the “China-Central Asia spirit” characterized by mutual respect, mutual trust, mutual benefit, mutual assistance, and promoting joint modernization through high-quality development.

    Xi Jinping noted that no matter how the international situation changes, China has been and remains committed to the policy of external openness, is ready to jointly carry out higher-quality cooperation with its Central Asian partners, deepen the integration of interests for the sake of common development, and achieve greater success in developing cooperation between China and Central Asia.

    The leaders of the Central Asian countries unanimously noted the successes in China’s development under the leadership of Xi Jinping, expressed gratitude to China for its comprehensive cooperation with the Central Asian countries, which provides them with opportunities for national development. The China-Central Asia format has already established itself as a platform for promoting dialogue and cooperation between the parties, as well as the socio-economic development of the Central Asian countries. In a turbulent world, the China-Central Asia format is acquiring strategic importance. China’s prosperity brings benefits to neighboring states. China is a trusting strategic partner and friend for the Central Asian countries, which attach importance to the model of cooperation with China based on the principles of mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit, and expect to intensify cooperation with China in all areas, including expanding the scale of trade and investment.

    An important outcome of the summit was the signing of the Astana Declaration of the Second China-Central Asia Summit and the Treaty of Eternal Good-Neighborliness, Friendship and Cooperation. In addition, 12 cooperation agreements were concluded within the framework of the “One Belt, One Road” initiative, covering a wide range of areas, including personnel exchange, environmentally responsible subsoil use, trade, transport connectivity, industry and customs.

    Author: Tolon Turganbaev

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Youth scheme invites applications

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The 2025-26 HYAB Funding Scheme for Youth Exchange in the Mainland is open for the second round of applications until July 10, the Home & Youth Affairs Bureau announced today.

    Eligible non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are invited to submit applications.

    Through the funding scheme, the bureau and the Youth Development Commission provide funding for NGOs to organise exchange projects on the Mainland for Hong Kong young people to learn and understand the country’s development, foster exchanges with Mainland people and strengthen their sense of national identity.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: View from The Hill: Jim Chalmers wants to get on with economic reform and tax is in his sights

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

    Jim Chalmers speaking to the National Press Club June 18, 2025. Screenshot from the ABC Broadcast, CC BY-NC

    Jim Chalmers cast his Wednesday National Press Club speech as a second instalment in a two-part presentation that was kicked off by the prime minister in an address there last week.

    But it didn’t sound like that at all. In fact, the two performances were chalk and cheese. Albanese’s contribution was cautious, showing no inclination to splash too much of the political capital amassed from a huge election win. The prime minister looks to a legacy of Labor’s longevity in government, and extols a measured and steady style.

    In contrast, Chalmers on Wednesday came across as a man on a mission, anxious to seize this term to do bigger things, because no matter how large the majority, you never know what the future holds. And that’s apart from his ambition to ascend to the top rung of the political ladder.

    Albanese announced a roundtable in August to discuss productivity; in elaborating on it, Chalmers put the hot button issue of tax reform prominently on the table.

    The treasurer believes the community is up for significant economic reforms, if the changes are crafted and sold the right way and if sufficient of that elusive political grape, “consensus”, can be harvested and bottled. He’s also willing to stretch or exceed the electoral mandate Labor won on May 3. Remember, it was Chalmers who wanted to break the Stage 3 tax cut promise long before Albanese did so.

    He said on Wednesday: “This is all about testing the country’s reform appetite. […] I am personally willing to grasp the nettle, to use an old saying. I am prepared to do my bit. The government is prepared to do its bit. And what we’ll find out in the course of the next few months is whether everyone is prepared to do their bit as well.” He was heartened, post election, by a “welcome and encouraging discussion about the level of ambition that Australia has”.

    Albanese was involved in Chalmers’ Press Club speech, even interacting on its points from Canada, where he was attending the G7. Either the prime minister is deliberately letting his treasurer “front run” a more ambitious agenda for the government, or he doesn’t choose to get in his way.

    Albanese announced the roundtable, but Chalmers is in charge of it. Held in the cabinet room on August 19-21, it will be small and, Chalmers hopes, non-performative. Details are still being finalised, but Chalmers doesn’t anticipate “permanent cameras” in the cabinet room, which has just 25 seats around the table.

    “We want participants to make contributions that meet three important preconditions,” he said.

    “First, ideas should be put forward in the national interest, not through the prism of sectoral, state or vested interests.

    “Second, ideas or packages of ideas should be budget neutral at a minimum but preferably budget positive overall, taking into account the necessary trade-offs.

    “And third, ideas should be specific and practical not abstract or unrealistic.

    “In return I give everyone this commitment: we won’t come at this from an ideological point of view but from the practical, pragmatic and problem-solving middle ground we’re most comfortable on.”

    Chalmers argues that last term, the government did a range of things on tax. But most would describe them as modest, and he would not then contemplate a major overhaul, such as a shift from direct to indirect tax.

    He was seared, on his own admission, from his days as then treasurer Wayne Swan’s staffer, by the memory of the Henry tax review, the last major look at Australia’s tax system. That triggered Labor’s mining tax debacle which helped end the prime ministership of Kevin Rudd. Most of that valuable review was totally wasted.

    Now Ken Henry, former head of treasury, has had input into Chalmers’ Press Club speech; he was in the audience to hear it.

    “Australia has to recognise that this is genuinely a defining decade. The decisions we make in the 2020s will determine the sort of living standards and intergenerational justice that will have in the decades to come,” Chalmers said. Intergenerational justice is a major preoccupation of Henry’s.

    If Henry is in Chalmers’ ear, another proponent of tax reform, Steven Kennedy, who has just left the post of secretary of the treasury, is well-placed to be in the prime minister’s ear. Kennedy has just become head of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.

    While the roundtable is focused on “productivity” Chalmers emphasised he is also focused on budget sustainability.

    “Tax reform is important to budget sustainability , but also to productivity.

    “I think it would be unusual if I said to the country, we’re going to have this big national reform conversation about productivity, sustainability and resilience, but nobody’s allowed to talk about tax

    “And so I anticipate, I welcome the fact that people will come to the roundtable, outside the roundtable, people will pitch up ideas about tax.

    “We don’t see that as an opportunity to walk back on some of the things that we’re already committed to, in this case, some years ago. We see it as an opportunity to work out what the next steps might be.”

    Chalmers is the latest treasurer to walk down the tax reform road. The stakes are high. It will be easy to slip, or be forced to lose ambition. On the other hand, if he can navigate the rocks it will make his reputation.

    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. View from The Hill: Jim Chalmers wants to get on with economic reform and tax is in his sights – https://theconversation.com/view-from-the-hill-jim-chalmers-wants-to-get-on-with-economic-reform-and-tax-is-in-his-sights-258973

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    June 18, 2025
  • Heavy rainfall to continue in Northeast; rain and thunderstorms predicted in Delhi: IMD

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The India Meteorological Department (IMD) on Wednesday predicted heavy to very heavy rainfall over Northeast India for the next five days, with extremely heavy showers expected in Meghalaya on June 18. The department also confirmed the further advancement of the Southwest Monsoon over parts of the North Arabian Sea, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, East Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Bihar.

    On June 18, very heavy to extremely heavy rainfall is likely over isolated areas in Gujarat, north Konkan, and Madhya Maharashtra. Similar weather patterns are expected to affect Gangetic West Bengal, Jharkhand, and Odisha on June 18 and 19.

    The Delhi-NCR region is expected to experience active monsoon weather through June 21, with intermittent rain, thunderstorms, and gusty winds.

    On Wednesday, Delhi will see generally cloudy skies, light to moderate rain, and strong winds up to 60 kmph, with daytime temperatures 3 to 5°C below normal. On Thursday, partly cloudy skies and similar weather conditions will persist, with maximum temperatures slightly below normal and minimums near normal.

    Friday will bring light rain under partly cloudy skies, with temperatures marginally cooler than average. By Saturday, the city is likely to witness more rain and thunderstorms, with gusty winds and temperatures remaining slightly below seasonal norms.

    The IMD has advised residents in affected regions to remain cautious and stay updated on weather developments as monsoon activity continues to intensify.

    June 18, 2025
  • Heavy rainfall to continue in Northeast; rain and thunderstorms predicted in Delhi: IMD

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The India Meteorological Department (IMD) on Wednesday predicted heavy to very heavy rainfall over Northeast India for the next five days, with extremely heavy showers expected in Meghalaya on June 18. The department also confirmed the further advancement of the Southwest Monsoon over parts of the North Arabian Sea, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, East Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Bihar.

    On June 18, very heavy to extremely heavy rainfall is likely over isolated areas in Gujarat, north Konkan, and Madhya Maharashtra. Similar weather patterns are expected to affect Gangetic West Bengal, Jharkhand, and Odisha on June 18 and 19.

    The Delhi-NCR region is expected to experience active monsoon weather through June 21, with intermittent rain, thunderstorms, and gusty winds.

    On Wednesday, Delhi will see generally cloudy skies, light to moderate rain, and strong winds up to 60 kmph, with daytime temperatures 3 to 5°C below normal. On Thursday, partly cloudy skies and similar weather conditions will persist, with maximum temperatures slightly below normal and minimums near normal.

    Friday will bring light rain under partly cloudy skies, with temperatures marginally cooler than average. By Saturday, the city is likely to witness more rain and thunderstorms, with gusty winds and temperatures remaining slightly below seasonal norms.

    The IMD has advised residents in affected regions to remain cautious and stay updated on weather developments as monsoon activity continues to intensify.

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Croatia

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Croatia

    Mr Javed Patel has been appointed His Majesty’s Ambassador to the Republic of Croatia in succession to Mr Simon Thomas OBE. Mr Patel will take up his appointment during August 2025.

    Mr Javed Patel

    Curriculum vitae           

    Full name: Javed Patel

    Date Role
    2024 to 2025 Full time Croatian language training
    2024 Head of Gaza Consular Cell
    2023 FCDO, Deputy Director, North East Asia Department and SRO for Republic of Korea State Visit
    2020 to 2023 Dhaka, Deputy High Commissioner
    2019 FCO, Deputy Director, National Security Directorate
    2018 to 2019 Brussels, Head of Counter Terrorism and Extremism Network for Europe
    2015 to 2018 FCO, Deputy Head Consular Assistance Department
    2012 to 2014 Baghdad, Political Counsellor
    2010 to 2012 FCO, Head of Iraq Policy Team
    2010 FCO/DFID/MoD, Stabilisation Unit
    2007 to 2010 FCO, Head of Counter Terrorism and Radicalisation Programme, Counter Terrorism Department
    2005 to 2007 Home Office, Office for Security and Counter Terrorism
    2003 to 2005 Government Office for London
    2000 to 2003 Home Office, UK Borders and Immigration Service

    Media enquiries

    Email newsdesk@fcdo.gov.uk

    Telephone 020 7008 3100

    Email the FCDO Newsdesk (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

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    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Africa: Steering SA’s environmental legislation to better prospects  

    Source: South Africa News Agency

    Steering SA’s environmental legislation to better prospects  

    With the climate change challenge gaining momentum around the world, South Africa, like other countries is taking steps to mitigate the effects of climate change and pollution.

    This as President Cyril Ramaphosa signed the Marine Pollution (Prevention of Pollution from Ships) Amendment Bill into law in January. The bill ushers in stronger measures to better protect South Africa’s oceans from ship-related pollution.

    “The signing of the Marine Pollution (Prevention of Pollution from Ships) Amendment Bill is a significant step for South Africa in addressing the effects of marine pollution, aligned to the Sustainable Seas Trust’s [SST] mission and vision. This bill presents a positive shift in enhancing the country’s capacity to address marine pollution while aligning with international standards under MARPOL,” SST Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Janine Osborne told SAnews.

    According to the International Marine Organization (IMO), the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL) is the main international convention covering the prevention of pollution of the marine environment by ships from operational or accidental causes.

    The MARPOL convention was adopted in November 1973 at the IMO, which is the United Nations specialised agency tasked with the responsibility “for the safety and security of shipping and the prevention of marine and atmospheric pollution by ships.”

    The signing of the amendment bill is vital to safeguarding the country’s environmental and economic security, given that South Africa is endowed with a coastline stretching over 3 000 kilometres from Namibia on the Atlantic Ocean to Mozambique on the Indian Ocean. 

    The Presidency said the legislation is also a contribution to global efforts to protect the marine environment and sustainable economic exploitation. 

    The law amends the Marine Pollution Act to incorporate Annex IV and Annex VI of the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships. 

    Annex IV regulates the activities for treatment and safe disposal of sewage from ships while Annex VI is the main global instrument that addresses ship energy-efficiency management and greenhouse gas emissions.

    “By including Annex IV (sewage management) and Annex VI (air pollution and energy efficiency), the bill strengthens environmental protection and supports the sustainability of South Africa’s marine economy, which is vital for both biodiversity and job creation,” Osborne said in the interview with SAnews.

    The amended legislation further broadens the powers of the Minister of Transport to make regulations relating to, among others, the prevention of air pollution from ships and the prevention of pollution by sewage from ships.

    It also increases fines for any person convicted of serious offences under the Marine Pollution (Prevention of Pollution from Ships) Act or the international Convention which forms part of South African law. The legislation also improves prison sentences from five to ten years.

    The legislation is also born out of the recognition that ships can pollute the oceans in various ways, from oil spills to harmful chemical sewage and garbage.

    Osborne welcomed the increase in fines for violations and expanded regulatory powers saying it reflects “the government’s commitment to safeguarding marine resources”.

    “Raising fines from R500 000 to R10 million and imprisonment from five to ten years, are a significant step towards deterring marine pollution. These penalties are financially and legally substantial enough to make non-compliance a serious risk for offenders, potentially changing behaviour in the sector. 

    “However, SST believes that their effectiveness will depend on consistent enforcement, monitoring, and judicial follow-through. Without these mechanisms, there is a risk that the penalties may not achieve the desired deterrent effect,” she said.
    Osborne added that while stricter penalties are essential, they cannot fully compensate for irreversible environmental damage caused by pollution.

    “That is why SST encourages immediate action to combat waste pollution both on land and at sea.”

    As a non-profit organisation (NPO) working to protect Africa’s seas and communities, the SST was one of the organisations that submitted comments into the bill.

    South Africa has a large exclusive economic zone at sea and a marine economy which, in 2022, supported about 400 000 jobs in areas across the existing marine economic sectors of shipping, associated construction, tourism and fisheries.

    Bordered by three oceans (South Atlantic Ocean, the Indian Ocean and the Southern Ocean), South Africa faces significant marine pollution challenges due to plastic waste and inadequate waste management among others, which impact marine ecosystems and coastal communities.

    “Accurately assessing the full extent of this issue is challenging due to limited data. Recent estimates suggest that 15,000 to 40,000 tonnes of plastic waste enter South Africa’s oceans annually, a notable decrease from earlier projections of 90,000 to 250,000 tonnes, highlighting the need for improved research and monitoring,” said Osborne in response to how much of the country’s oceanic territory is affected by pollution.

    The organisation also added that education on various levels is crucial in addressing marine pollution. 

    This as the SST has several educational activities such as its Munch programme which encourages and enables the integration of environmental education into the school curricula and the African Waste Academy where free courses are available to the public to share critical information about pollution and proper waste management.

    Environment Month

    In June of every year, the country commemorates Environment Month where government and captains of industry place the awareness of environmental issues under the spotlight while also challenging all to become agents for change.
    Recently, government launched the National Clean Cities and Towns Campaign in Kliptown, Soweto.

    Launched by Deputy President Paul Mashatile, the campaign is a nationwide initiative aimed at fostering cleaner, greener, and more inclusive urban spaces, while advancing sustainability, equality, and solidarity among citizens. 

    The Deputy President who also engaged in clean-up activities at the launch, said the campaign goes beyond mere cleaning but addresses broader service delivery issues and creates opportunities for community employment. 

    “However, the idea is not really to employ people. It is a voluntary programme. People must clean where they live. There may be instances where the city may employ people here and there, but we want to create a culture of cleaning where people don’t have to be paid to clean where they live,” the Deputy President said at the launch in Soweto.

    Also recently, the country joined other countries in marking World Environment Day and World Oceans Day on 5 and 8 June 2025 respectively.

    Asked about the general status of the country’s marine sector and whether the Act will have a positive impact on the economy, Osborne said the country’s marine sector has “tremendous” potential while also facing challenges.

    “Despite its 3,000 km coastline and vast exclusive economic zone, the sector remains underutilised, with limited ship repair facilities, oil rig servicing, and no registered merchant fleet. Challenges such as skills shortages, port inefficiencies, and underinvestment in infrastructure hinder growth. 

    “However, initiatives like Operation Phakisa aim to unlock the oceans economy’s potential, targeting contributions of R177 billion to GDP [Gross Domestic Product] and up to one million jobs by 2033.”

    Earlier this month, the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) launched the Climate Change Coastal Adaptation Response Plan which aims to effectively manage South Africa’s coastal assets. DFFE Minister, Dr Dion George, said having the plan is essential to supporting Operation Phakisa efforts to achieve a sustainable oceans economy.

    Operation Phakisa aims to unlock the full potential of South Africa’s ocean economy -spanning sectors such as marine transport, aquaculture, tourism, and offshore resources.

    “SST believes that the Marine Pollution Amendment Act can positively impact South Africa’s economy by promoting sustainable marine resource management. By safeguarding vital industries such as fisheries and tourism and aligning with international environmental standards, the Act supports economic growth while protecting marine biodiversity,” she explained.

    Collaboration 

    Additionally, the SST said it recognises that policies and legislation alone are not enough to drive meaningful change and that collaboration across all sectors of society is essential.

    “Every stakeholder has a role to play in the waste management value chain. By understanding and embracing these roles, each step of the chain can contribute positively to sustainable development.”

    Implementation 

    Osborne said the key to the success of the Act is implementation.

    “However, SST believes the key to the success of the bill lies in effective implementation and enforcement. To achieve its objectives, robust monitoring systems, sufficient resources, and transparent enforcement processes are essential. It will also be important to address any potential loopholes or exemptions in emissions regulations to ensure meaningful environmental outcomes.”
    Osborne cautioned that without strong enforcement mechanisms, the bill’s impact may not fully meet its intended goals.
    “We remain committed to working with stakeholders to support effective implementation and protect South Africa’s marine environment.”

    Protecting the environment

    On whether government is doing enough to protect the environment, Osborne is of the view that progress has been made.
    “The South African government has made valuable strides in environmental protection through initiatives such as advancing renewable energy projects, enacting the Climate Change Act, and promoting a circular economy. These actions reflect a commitment to sustainability and economic growth,” she said.

    The Climate Change Act is intended to enable the development of an effective climate change response and a long-term, just transition to a low-carbon and climate-resilient economy and society in the context of sustainable development; and to provide for matters connected therewith.

    However, she added that significant challenges remain, including continued reliance on coal, slow renewable energy deployment, and enforcement gaps at local levels. 

    “To strengthen environmental protection, we believe there is a need to accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels, improve coordination among government entities, and invest in infrastructure for waste management and renewable energy. 
    “SST believes that increased public participation and transparency in environmental decision-making can strengthen efforts to achieve long-term sustainability.”

    She added that her organisation is committed to supporting these efforts through awareness campaigns and education, as well as “collaborative initiatives that protect the environment and marine heritage for future generations.”

    While government is not missing the boat in putting in place legislation to protect the environment, responsible human behaviour is also needed if future generations are to enjoy South Africa’s scenic natural endowments. –SAnews.gov.za

    Neo
    Wed, 06/18/2025 – 11:10

    MIL OSI Africa –

    June 18, 2025
  • Bumrah told BCCI he did not want test captaincy due to workload concerns

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah said he told India’s cricket board (BCCI) that he did not want to be considered for the test captaincy as his workload has to be carefully managed due to his back problems.

    The BCCI picked top-order batter Shubman Gill as captain following Rohit Sharma’s decision to quit the test format last month, with chief selector Ajit Agarkar saying they could not risk burdening Bumrah with a leadership role.

    Gill will lead the side in a five-test series against England starting in Leeds on Friday.

    “I have discussed about my workloads going forward in a five-test match series, I’ve spoken to the people who have managed my back, I’ve spoken to the surgeon as well,” Bumrah told Sky Sports on Tuesday.

    “I came to the conclusion that I have to be a little more smart, so I called the BCCI and said I don’t want to be looked at in a leadership role.”

    Bumrah had captained the side in Rohit’s absence in the first two matches of a five-test series in Australia at the end of last year.

    But the 31-year-old was then sidelined for three months after sustaining a stress-related back injury during the series finale in Sydney in January.

    Bumrah, who was named the ICC men’s cricketer of the year in 2024, has suffered multiple back injuries throughout his career, including one that forced him to have surgery in 2023.

    He said the captaincy should not fall to someone who has to manage their workload in a five-test series.

    “I had to say no as it’s not fair for the team as well,” he added. “It’s not fair to the team if in a five-test series, three matches somebody else is leading and two matches somebody else is leading.

    “I always wanted to put the team first.”

    (Reuters)

     

    June 18, 2025
  • Sri Lanka debutant Rathnayake changes bowling arm to target batter’s weakness

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Ambidextrous Sri Lanka spinner Tharindu Rathnayake said he switched his bowling arm according to the weakness of the batter on strike as he took two wickets on the first day of his debut test match against Bangladesh on Tuesday.

    Both of Rathnayake’s wickets came from right-arm deliveries in the first session, but the 29-year-old also bowled with his left arm as visitors Bangladesh posted 292-3 at stumps in Galle.

    “We talked about what each batsman is better at facing, and which sides they hit to. So I try to create plans around their weaknesses, and change which arm I’m bowling with according to that,” Rathnayake was quoted by ESPN Cricinfo as saying.

    Rathnayake is not the only ambidextrous spinner in the Sri Lanka team, with Kamindu Mendis also known to bowl with both arms. But all-rounder Mendis has taken only 31 first-class wickets in 56 matches while Rathnayake, primarily a bowler, has 337 in 73 appearances.

    “I don’t know which arm I’ve taken more wickets with. I’ve never looked at it properly. I’ve bowled a lot with both my arms,” Rathnayake said.

    “When I started first-class cricket, I bowled a lot with my left arm. But later, after a couple of years, it became about 60% right arm and 40% left arm.”

    Sri Lanka will play two tests against Bangladesh this month, followed by three One-Day Internationals and three T20 Internationals in July.

    (Reuters)

     

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: FS attends 2025 Lujiazui Forum (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, attended the 2025 Lujiazui Forum in Shanghai today (June 18) and witnessed the signing of the Action Plan for Collaborative Development of Shanghai and Hong Kong International Financial Centres.
     
         The Lujiazui Forum is an international high-level dialogue platform that discusses major issues in the financial sector. This year, the forum was jointly organised by the Shanghai Municipal Government, the People’s Bank of China, the National Financial Regulatory Administration, and the China Securities Regulatory Commission. Themed “Financial Opening-Up and Cooperation for High-Quality Development in a Changing Global Economy”, the forum has brought together government officials, financial regulators, industry leaders, renowned think tanks and scholars from multiple countries to discuss topics such as global monetary policy, capital market development, financial technology and innovation, and inclusive finance. The plenary session this afternoon will include a session on deepening the co-operation and development of Shanghai and Hong Kong as international financial centres. 
     
         Mr Chan, as one of the key guests, attended the forum’s opening ceremony and morning plenary session. 
     
         Before the opening ceremony, Mr Chan and the Executive Vice Mayor of the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government, Mr Wu Wei, jointly witnessed the signing of the Action Plan for Collaborative Development of Shanghai and Hong Kong International Financial Centres, by the Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury, Mr Christopher Hui, and the Director-General of the Shanghai Office for Advancing International Financial Center Development and Director of the Shanghai Municipal Financial Regulatory Bureau, Mr Zhou Xiaoquan.
     
         The Action Plan covers six areas with a total of 38 measures, including deepening the interconnectivity between Mainland and Hong Kong financial markets, enhancing the linkage and co-operation of the two places’ capital markets, supporting eligible Shanghai enterprises to list and raise funds in Hong Kong, and strengthening collaboration in areas such as commodity trading, reinsurance, green finance and fintech. The aim is to further leverage the financial opening up, development and risk management advantages of the two cities, enhance cross-boundary and offshore financial co-operation, and promote the co-ordinated development of the two international financial centres. 
     
         In his speech at the ceremony, Mr Chan said that the Action Plan further specifies the directions of co-operation between Hong Kong and Shanghai, thereby injecting new and richer content into multi-level and multi-field financial collaboration. It includes, first, new measures to deepen financial interconnectivity; second, highlighting support for Mainland enterprises to go global; and third, promoting standard alignment and financial innovation. With strong support from the country, Hong Kong and Shanghai, as two international financial centres, will join forces to create greater synergy and collaborative benefits, thus making greater contributions to the country’s development as a financial powerhouse while also injecting Chinese wisdom and strength into the development of the global financial market. 
     
         Yesterday (June 17), upon arriving in Shanghai, Mr Chan attended an international exchange dinner hosted by the China Finance 40 Forum. Attendees included leaders from domestic and international financial institutions, regulatory bodies, think tanks and academia. At the dinner, Mr Chan shared how Hong Kong is striving to promote high-quality financial development amid global political and economic changes. This includes advancing financial market reforms to better attract global capital to support the development of the real economy, supporting the prudent advancement of Renminbi internationalisation, embracing financial innovation including digital assets, and providing comprehensive, high value-added services for Mainland enterprises’ international development. The goal is to better contribute to the country’s financial reform and high-level opening up while creating opportunities for global investors and businesses. 
     
         Mr Chan departed for Hong Kong around noon today.

                  

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Making it easier for Chinese travellers to transit via New Zealand

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government is boosting tourism and trade by making it simpler, faster and cheaper for Chinese nationals to transit via New Zealand.
    From November, Chinese passport holders will no longer need to obtain a Transit Visa before transiting through New Zealand airports. Instead, they will be able to get a New Zealand electronic Travel Authority (NZeTA).
    “International connections are a crucial part of our plan to drive economic growth. We rely on robust and affordable air connectivity to bring people to our beautiful country, and to get our high-quality products out to the world. Alongside the announcement of a new route from China to South America via Auckland, we expect this will significantly boost the number of passengers that choose to transit through New Zealand.
    “Instead of spending $235 and waiting four days, individuals can pay as little as $17 and can be processed in 24 hours,” Immigration Minister Erica Stanford says.
    An NZeTA is also valid for up to 2 years, meaning that someone can travel multiple times without needing to apply again.
    “Our Government has taken action to enable another route to be opened from China via New Zealand. This will allow Auckland Airport to be a hub for further airline connections. Removing the cost and time barriers of a transit visa makes this route a more attractive option for both tourists and airlines,” Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston says.
    “Every additional passenger transiting New Zealand on their way to South America or back to China will help to lower the cost of a plane ticket, which makes it cheaper for other waves of tourists to come and see what our country has to offer.
    “More capacity from airlines will make it easier to visit New Zealand and adds cargo capacity, driving economic growth and supporting the Government’s goal to double the value of tourism exports by 2034.”
    “This Government is focused on delivering smart, flexible responsive nuanced immigration solutions such as this to support New Zealand’s growing economy,” Ms Stanford says.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Xi Jinping leaves Astana after attending the second China-Central Asia summit

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    ASTANA, June 18 (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday headed back to Beijing after attending the second China-Central Asia Summit in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan.

    Xi Jinping was seen off at the airport by Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev and other senior officials.

    Kazakh Air Force fighter jets escorted Xi Jinping’s special flight after its takeoff.

    On the way to the airport, representatives of Chinese enterprises and Chinese students lined the streets waving the national flags of China and Kazakhstan to warmly congratulate Xi Jinping on his successful participation in the summit. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Cultural and Creative Industries Development Agency and Hong Kong Film Development Council lead industry delegation to participate in Shanghai International Film Festival (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Cultural and Creative Industries Development Agency and Hong Kong Film Development Council lead industry delegation to participate in Shanghai International Film Festival  
    In his speech at the Hong Kong New Power Project Showcase Project Pitching Session of the SIFFORUM today (June 18), Mr Mak said that the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government (HKSARG) has always been committed to fostering development of Hong Kong’s film industry by supporting film productions and nurturing talent through various funding schemes, encouraging new filmmakers to create high-quality works and explore further and broader markets. In organising this project pitching session, the HKSARG hopes to enhance the visibility of Hong Kong’s emerging filmmakers and foster investment partnerships, joining forces on all fronts to drive the high-quality development of Hong Kong and Mainland film industries.
     
    To provide a platform to showcase upcoming Hong Kong film projects in development or production, and facilitate co-operation and investment, five new film projects were presented at the Hong Kong New Power Project Showcase Project Pitching Session, namely “The Marriage Drive”, “Open Fire”, “Altarage”, “Prison of Love” and “The Excreman – On the Road”, with project teams sharing their creative ideas and market potential of their projects with investors and filmmakers in attendance. Special guest mentors, including the Chief Executive Officer of Bona Film Group Co Ltd, Mr Jiang Defu; Senior Vice President of iQiyi Pictures, Mr Ya Ning; and director Anselm Chan were also invited to give professional advice to the project teams.
     
    The CCIDA and the FDC also organised the Making Waves – Navigators of Hong Kong Cinema film programme, presenting seven Hong Kong films at the SIFF, including “Montages of a Modern Motherhood”, “An Abandoned Team”, “Four Trails” and the restored edition of four classics “Father and Son”, “Shanghai Blues”, “The System” and “PTU”. Director Oliver Chan, actors Tam and Lo of “Montages of a Modern Motherhood”, and director Robin Lee of “Four Trails” participated in the post-screening discussions of their films.
    Issued at HKT 16:28

    NNNN

    CategoriesMIL-OSI

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    June 18, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: GTreasury Launches GSmart AI, Setting the Standard for Secure, Adaptable, and Agentic AI in Treasury Operations

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHICAGO, June 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — GTreasury, the global leader in Adaptable Treasury Solutions for the Office of the CFO, today announced the launch of GSmart AI, a comprehensive and purpose-built AI platform uniquely designed for treasury and finance operations. Leveraging best-in-class AI enterprise infrastructure, governance, and agent-driven workflows, GSmart AI empowers CFOs and treasurers to confidently navigate the increasingly complex treasury landscape by providing secure, actionable insights and agentic actions to amplify the value of GTreasury’s solutions, spanning connectivity, liquidity management, cash forecasting, payments, risk, netting, and other core treasury functions.

    CFOs and treasury teams face an evolving mix of complex data, unpredictable market conditions, and increasing regulatory pressure. Reliable AI support is a strategic necessity, and GTreasury’s GSmart AI addresses these demands with powerful capabilities, built-in compliance, and full transparency into every action it takes.

    “For AI to create real value for CFOs, it has to be based on clear design principles of security, removing inefficiencies, fast problem solving, and quick delivery,” said Renaat Ver Eecke, Chief Executive Officer, GTreasury. “GSmart AI, born from our recent investment in our Development Hub in Dublin, Ireland, amplifies our solutions, empowering CFOs and treasury teams to confidently take advantage of powerful insights and value without sacrificing compliance or oversight. We’re proud of our recent investment and expansion in development, which advances our vision of adaptable solutions that provide financial leaders with the clarity to act.”

    The value of GSmart AI lies in its adaptable and scalable capabilities, where AI actively reduces manual effort by performing routine-but-time-consuming treasury tasks, proactively identifying risks and variances, and recommending strategic actions to support more informed decision-making. Its flexible architecture empowers treasury teams to deploy and schedule AI agents tailored to specific operational needs, ensuring maximum adaptability and relevance.

    “With GSmart AI, we’ve built an enterprise-class AI platform that not only analyzes data but actively infers, reasons, and acts on behalf of treasury professionals, amplifying the value of our solutions,” said Mark Johnson, Chief Product Officer, GTreasury. “GSmart AI provides CFOs and treasurers full visibility and control, with clear traceability of every AI-generated output back to its source data. The depth of governance and explainability embedded into GSmart AI distinctly set our platform apart from generalized AI solutions or any other treasury technology.”

    GSmart AI’s differentiated value includes full alignment with ISO/IEC 42001 and ISO/IEC 27001 standards, readiness for the upcoming EU AI Act, and stringent data sovereignty practices. The platform strictly isolates client data, ensures no client data is used in AI model training, and maintains complete transparency through comprehensive audit logs and observability tools.

    Among the key features and benefits of GSmart AI:

    • Enterprise-class infrastructure: A scalable, API-driven agentic platform designed specifically for the complex needs of treasury and finance.
    • Security and compliance: Comprehensive encryption, zero-trust architecture, data residency controls, and rigorous global regulatory compliance including GDPR and CCPA.
    • Complete transparency and auditability: Full visibility into AI operations with explainable outputs linked directly to source documentation, backed by automated security monitoring and audit logging.
    • Client control and data sovereignty: Full user control over AI features through feature flags, explicit opt-in workflows, and strict client-specific data isolation.

    GSmart AI integrates seamlessly within GTreasury’s adaptable treasury management platform, providing flexible and intuitive interaction with existing solutions and workflows.

    To learn more about GSmart AI and request a demo, visit https://www.gtreasury.com/solutions/ai/treasury-ai-platform.

    About GTreasury

    GTreasury provides CFOs and Treasurers with The Clarity to Act on strategic financial decisions with the world’s most adaptable treasury platform, empowering them to face the challenges of today and tomorrow. Because each company faces different points of complexity and needs, our industry-leading solutions are purposefully designed, and amplified by GSmart AI, to support every stage of treasury complexity, from Liquidity Management and Cash Forecasting to Payments, Risk, and Netting. With GTreasury, financial leaders gain comprehensive connectivity across all banks and ERPs to build an orchestrated data environment, enabling rapid value realization with implementations up and running in weeks. Plus, our unmatched industry expertise ensures clients’ continued success through dedicated guidance and top-tier support. Trusted by over 1,000 customers across 160 countries, GTreasury provides treasury and finance teams with the ability to connect, compile, and manage mission-critical data to optimize cash flows and capital structures. To learn more, visit GTreasury.com.

    GTreasury is headquartered in Chicago, with locations serving EMEA (Dublin and London) and APAC (Sydney, Singapore, and Manila).

    Contact
    Kyle Peterson
    kyle@clementpeterson.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/b5d13173-97cc-4049-bb43-ab390988e8d0

    The MIL Network –

    June 18, 2025
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