Category: Asia Pacific

  • MIL-OSI USA: EIA counts U.S. electricity generation in different ways

    Source: US Energy Information Administration

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    In-brief analysis

    May 27, 2025

    Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Hourly Electric Grid Monitor


    At EIA, we publish U.S. electricity net generation from two different perspectives:

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    In-brief analysis

    May 22, 2025

    Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Gasoline and Diesel Fuel Update, and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
    Note: Real prices are adjusted to May 2025 dollars.

    The retail price for regular-grade gasoline in the United States on May 19, the Monday before Memorial Day weekend, averaged $3.17 per gallon (gal), 11% (or 41 cents/gal) lower than the price a year ago. After adjusting for inflation (real terms), average U.S. retail gasoline prices going into Memorial Day weekend are 14% lower than last year, largely because crude oil prices have fallen.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 21, 2025

    Data source: United Nations Statistics Division, UN Comtrade
    Note: Excludes trade within regions.

    China has a major role at each stage of the global battery supply chain and dominates interregional trade of minerals. China imported almost 12 million short tons of raw and processed battery minerals, accounting for 44% of interregional trade, and exported almost 11 million short tons of battery materials, packs, and components, or 58% of interregional trade in 2023, according to regional UN Comtrade data.

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    In-depth analysis

    May 20, 2025


    Colorado State University’s hurricane forecast estimates the 2025 hurricane season will exceed the 1991–2020 average, with an estimate of 17 named storms, compared with a historical average of 14 storms. Meteorologists expect 13–18 named storms, including 3–6 storms with direct impacts on the United States, during this year’s Atlantic hurricane season, according to reports from AccuWeather in April.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 19, 2025


    We expect U.S. hydropower generation will increase by 7.5% in 2025 but will remain 2.4% below the 10-year average in our May Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO). Hydropower generation in 2024 fell to 241 billion kilowatthours (BkWh), the lowest since at least 2010; in 2025, we expect generation will be 259.1 BkWh. This amount of generation would represent 6% of the electricity generation in the country.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 15, 2025

    Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), May 2025, and Oxford Economics
    Note: Excludes 2020 and 2021 as outlier years because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    We forecast consumption growth of crude oil and other liquid fuels will slow over the next two years, driven by a slowdown in economic growth, particularly in Asia, in our May Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO).

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    In-depth analysis

    May 14, 2025


    Retail electricity prices have increased faster than the rate of inflation since 2022, and we expect them to continue increasing through 2026, based on forecasts in our Short-Term Energy Outlook. Parts of the country with relatively high electricity prices may experience greater price increases than those with relatively low electricity prices.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 13, 2025


    In our latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, we forecast U.S. annual electricity consumption will increase in 2025 and 2026, surpassing the all-time high reached in 2024. This growth contrasts with the trend of relatively flat electricity demand between the mid-2000s and early 2020s. Much of the recent and forecasted growth in electricity consumption is coming from the commercial sector, which includes data centers, and the industrial sector, which includes manufacturing establishments.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 12, 2025


    The average electric monthly bill for U.S. residential customers was $144 in 2024, but average costs for customers in some states were much higher or lower. Customers in states such as Hawaii and Connecticut, where retail electricity prices are relatively high, paid more than $200 per month for electricity, or more than twice as much as customers in states such as New Mexico and Utah.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 7, 2025

    Data source: FracFocus
    Note: To calculate the number of wells completed per location, we grouped wells within a 50-foot radius into single locations. We then identified wells completed by their completion start and end dates, counting concurrent completions when their completion periods overlapped.

    We estimate that the average number of wells completed simultaneously at the same location in the Lower 48 states has more than doubled, increasing from 1.5 wells in December 2014 to more than 3.0 wells in June 2024. By completing multiple wells at once rather than sequentially, operators can accelerate their production timeline and reduce their cost per well. The increasing number of simultaneous completions reflects significant technological advances in hydraulic fracturing operations, particularly in equipment capabilities and operational strategies.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 6, 2025

    Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Petroleum Supply Monthly; company announcements and trade press
    Note: Other Biofuels includes sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), renewable heating oil, renewable naphtha, renewable propane, renewable gasoline, and other emerging biofuels that are in various stages of development and commercialization. SAF production capacity is an estimate based on company announcements and trade press and only includes hydroprocessed esters and fatty acids (HEFA) SAF. We do not publish SAF production capacity data.

    Sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) production is growing in the United States as new capacity comes online. U.S. production of Other Biofuels, the category we use to capture SAF in our Petroleum Supply Monthly, approximately doubled from December 2024 to February 2025.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 5, 2025

    Data source: AAA

    Retail prices for regular grade gasoline in California are consistently higher than in any other state in the continental United States, often exceeding the national average by more than a dollar per gallon. Several factors contribute to this high price, including state taxes and fees, environmental requirements, special fuel requirements, and isolated petroleum markets.

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    In-brief analysis

    May 1, 2025

    Data source: CME Group, Bloomberg L.P.
    Note: Refinery margin is calculated as the 3-2-1 crack spread on the U.S. Atlantic Coast, which represents two barrels of gasoline and one barrel of distillate fuel oil minus three barrels of Brent crude oil. 1Q25=first quarter of 2025


    During the first quarter of 2025 (1Q25), crude oil prices generally decreased while U.S. refinery margins initially increased before decreasing in the final month of the quarter. In this quarterly update, we review petroleum markets price developments in 1Q25, covering crude oil prices, refinery margins, biofuel compliance credit prices, and natural gas plant liquids prices.

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    In-brief analysis

    Apr 30, 2025

    Data source: Evaluate Energy
    Note: Production expenses include costs of goods sold, operating expenses, and production taxes from company income statements. Interest expenses are in 2024 dollars and deflated using the Consumer Price Index.


    Higher oil prices, increased drilling efficiency, and structurally lower debt needs have contributed to lower interest expenses for some publicly traded U.S. oil companies over the past decade, despite the level of interest rates across the economy being relatively high.

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    In-brief analysis

    Apr 29, 2025


    U.S. imports of petroleum products decreased by 210,000 barrels per day (b/d) in 2024 to average 1.8 million b/d. Imports of all major transportation fuels, such as motor gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel, as well as other products, such as unfinished oils, decreased.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Ormat Technologies Announces $62 Million Hybrid Tax Equity Partnership for Two Energy Storage Facilities

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    RENO, Nev., May 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ormat Technologies, Inc. (NYSE: ORA) (the “Company” or “Ormat”), a leading geothermal and renewable energy company, today announced the signing of a $62 million Hybrid Tax Equity partnership with Morgan Stanley Renewables, Inc. The partnership’s transaction covers the Lower Rio 60MW/120MWh storage facility and the Arrowleaf 35MW/140MWh storage and 42MW solar projects, which are expected to achieve COD by the end of 2025.

    “This Hybrid Tax Equity partnership is the first of its kind for our Energy Storage portfolio and highlights the innovative efforts we are taking to optimize the projects’ economics and the Company’s profitability to ensure that we have the funding we need to support our long-term growth, while simultaneously helping advance our explicit goal of monetizing $160 million of tax benefits this year,” said Doron Blachar, Chief Executive Officer of Ormat Technologies. “By continuing to effectively monetize the benefits of ITCs for our growing Energy Storage project portfolio through 2026, we are strengthening our ability to further invest in our development pipeline and ensure that we remain well-positioned to support the growing demand for energy storage projects.”

    Ormat was represented in the transaction by Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton, LLP and Morgan Stanley Renewables Inc. was represented in the transaction by Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP.

    ABOUT ORMAT TECHNOLOGIES

    With six decades of experience, Ormat Technologies, Inc. is a leading geothermal company, and the only vertically integrated company engaged in geothermal and recovered energy generation (“REG”), with robust plans to accelerate long-term growth in the energy storage market and to establish a leading position in the U.S. energy storage market. The Company owns, operates, designs, manufactures and sells geothermal and REG power plants primarily based on the Ormat Energy Converter – a power generation unit that converts low-, medium- and high-temperature heat into electricity. The Company has engineered, manufactured and constructed power plants, which it currently owns or has installed for utilities and developers worldwide, totaling approximately 3,400MW of gross capacity. Ormat leveraged its core capabilities in the geothermal and REG industries and its global presence to expand the Company’s activity into energy storage services, solar Photovoltaic (PV) and energy storage plus Solar PV. Ormat’s current total generating portfolio is 1,538MW with a 1,248MW geothermal and solar generation portfolio that is spread globally in the U.S., Kenya, Guatemala, Indonesia, Honduras, and Guadeloupe, and a 290MW energy storage portfolio that is located in the U.S.

    ORMAT’S SAFE HARBOR STATEMENT

    Information provided in this press release may contain statements relating to current expectations, estimates, forecasts and projections about future events that are “forward-looking statements” as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, included in this press release that address activities, events or developments that we expect or anticipate will or may occur in the future, including such matters as our projections of annual revenues, expenses and debt service coverage with respect to our debt securities, future capital expenditures, business strategy, competitive strengths, goals, development or operation of generation assets, market and industry developments and the growth of our business and operations, are forward-looking statements. When used in this press release, the words “may”, “will”, “could”, “should”, “expects”, “plans”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “estimates”, “predicts”, “projects”, “potential”, or “contemplate” or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain such words or expressions. These forward-looking statements generally relate to Ormat’s plans, objectives and expectations for future operations and are based upon its management’s current estimates and projections of future results or trends. Although we believe that our plans and objectives reflected in or suggested by these forward-looking statements are reasonable, we may not achieve these plans or objectives. Actual future results may differ materially from those projected as a result of certain risks and uncertainties and other risks described under “Risk Factors” as described in Ormat’s annual report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on February 27, 2025, and in Ormat’s subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q that are filed from time to time with the SEC.

    These forward-looking statements are made only as of the date hereof, and, except as legally required, we undertake no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

    Ormat Technologies Contact:
    Smadar Lavi
    VP Head of IR and ESG Planning & Reporting
    775-356-9029 (ext. 65726)
    slavi@ormat.com
    Investor Relations Agency Contact:
    Joseph Caminiti or Josh Carroll
    Alpha IR Group
    312-445-2870
    ORA@alpha-ir.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: H

    Source: ASEAN

    The ASEAN Secretariat is honoured to welcome H.E. Emmanuel Macron, President of the French Republic, on the occasion of his visit to the ASEAN Headquarters/ ASEAN Secretariat, on 28 May 2025.
     
    This visit marks a significant milestone in the growing partnership between ASEAN and France. In 2020, France was officially conferred the status of Development Partner of ASEAN, underscoring its commitment to deepening cooperation with the region.
    The post H.E. Emmanuel Macron, President of French Republic to visit ASEAN Headquarters/ASEAN Secretariat appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN Attends the 16th IMT-GT Summit

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, this afternoon participated in the 16th Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT) Summit, highlighting the sub-regional framework’s key role in enhancing connectivity, promoting trade, and driving sustainable growth in the region. Secretary-General Dr. Kao also underscored the importance of IMT-GT’s contribution to the realisation of the ASEAN Community Vision 2045.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN Attends the 16th IMT-GT Summit appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: UConn Has Record-Breaking Cohort for Gilman Scholars

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    A record-breaking 31 UConn students have been awarded a Gilman Scholarship in the latest cohort of the prestigious academic award. The award is congressionally funded through the Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs at the State Department.

    The funding supports expanding student participation in study abroad programs and encourages travel to diverse locations around the globe, along with intensive language study and internship experiences.

    The 31 UConn students, who will study in 14 different countries, will receive a total of nearly $94,000 in scholarship funds through the Gilman program. A total of 40 UConn students have earned Gilman awards in the last two cohorts, this one and October 2024, for a total of more than $121,500 in scholarship funding.

    Students applying for Gilman Scholarships work with advisors in UConn’s Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships (ONSF) and Experiential Global Learning (EGL). Rachel Gleicher, an advisor in EGL, and Michael Cunningham, assistant director of ONSF and UConn’s Fulbright program advisor, are UConn’s two Gilman certifying advisors.

    “We are very excited that the Gilman program has selected so many UConn students this cycle,” says Cunningham. “It’s a testament to the quality of our students and to the hard work that they put into their applications.”

    Upon their return from studying abroad, each Gilman Scholar is required to complete a service project in their campus or home community with the goal of sharing the value of participation in study abroad and promoting the scholarship to prospective students. Applications are reviewed with consideration for the proposed follow-up service project.

    “We are so proud of these students for staying determined and focused on their study abroad goals,” says Gleicher. “Amid uncertain times, with federal funding freezes and broader uncertainty, they remained committed to their aspirations. Now more than ever, it is crucial to ensure students are aware of the funding opportunities available to them.”

    Eligibility for the Gilman Scholarship requires undergraduate students to be Pell Grant-eligible United States citizens who plan to study abroad for academic credit through a program approved by their home institution. Supporting students with high financial need provides access to students who are historically underrepresented in study abroad, including first-generation college students, STEM majors, ethnic and racial minority students, students with disabilities, LGBTQ+ students, and others who experience barriers to participation.

    Students from underrepresented areas of the U.S. are also considered during the application process and this year there are recipients from all 50 states.

    The following UConn students were selected as Gilman Scholars in this cycle, and they are listed with the location of where they will study as part of the program:

    Carina Adams-Szabo ’27 (CLAS), a psychology and political science major from Greenwich, who will be studying neuroscience this summer in Salamanca, Spain.

    Ashley Barragan ’27 (NUR), a nursing major who will be studying at the University of Dublin Summer Applied Research for Nursing Practice in Dublin, Ireland.

    Rhys Brauer ’27 (CLAS), a psychological sciences major, who will be studying neuroscience this summer in Salamanca.

    Brooke Catellier ’26 (CAHNR), an allied health major, who will be studying the Mediterranean diet and Tuscan cuisine in Florence, Italy, this summer.

    Kylene Chino ’26 (CLAS), a human rights and political science major, who will be studying in the fall at the Pusan National University in Shanghai, China.

    Jaiyliah Cochran ’25 (CLAS), a microbiology major, who will be studying field ecology this summer in Limpopo Province, South Africa.

    Mia Dansby ’26 (BUS), a management major, who will be studying this summer at ISI in Florence.

    Andrea D’Oleo ’27 (NUR), a nursing major from East Hartford, who will be studying in the Dublin Summer Applied Research Program for Nursing Practice in Ireland.

    Danyelix Echevarria Figueroa ’28 (ACES), a pre-teaching major from New Britain, who will study next spring at the University of Grenda in Grenda, Spain.

    Dahiana Fernandez-Ramirez ’26 (CLAS), a psychological sciences major, who will be studying this fall at ISI Florence.

    Adiriana Garcia Vazquez ’25 (CLAS), a cognitive science major from Bridgeport, who will be studying this fall at the Interdisciplinary Ethnography Field School in Mauritius.

    Hannah Ginste ’26 (CLAS), a communications major, who will be doing a summer internship in London.

    Jessica Glowacki ’25 (CLAS), a biological sciences major who will be studying field ecology this summer in Limpopo Province, South Africa.

    Emma Hazard ’27 (CAHNR), a diagnostic genetic sciences major, who will be studying the Mediterranean diet and Tuscan cuisine in Florence this summer.

    Danecia Henry ’28 (BUS), a management major from New Haven, will be studying in the summer at Camino de Santiago in Spain.

    Ty’Laisha Huff ’27 (NUR), a nursing major from Hartford, will be studying at the Dublin Summer Applied Research Program for Nursing Practice in Ireland.

    Layan Jahaf ’28 (CLAS), a political science and Arabic and Islam civics major, who will be studying this fall in London.

    Dee Jerome ’26 (CAHNR), an allied health sciences major from Bridgeport, who will be studying this summer in Accra, Ghana.

    Evelyn Pazan ’27 (CLAS), a finance and German major, who will be studying during the 2025-26 academic year at the University of Mannheim in Germany.

    Danielle Phillips ’27 (CLAS), an individualized major in industrial and labor relations from Bridgeport, who will be studying this summer at the Intercultural Leadership Program in Strasbourg, France.

    Jocelyn Ramirez ’26 (BUS), a management major from New Haven, who will be studying this summer at ISI.

    Jamie Ross ’27 (CLAS), a physiology and neurobiology major, who will be studying next winter in Barcelona, Spain.

    Ellie Sanders ’27 (CAHNR), a nutritional sciences major from West Cornwall, who will be studying the Mediterranean diet and Tuscan cuisine in Florence this summer.

    Fabio Silveira ’26 (CLAS), a pathobiology major, who will be studying neuroscience this summer in Salamanca, Spain.

    Amber Szymanski ’26 (CLAS), a political science and human rights major, who will be studying this fall at the Pusan National University in Busan, South Korea.

    Angel Uchupailla ’26 (CAHNR), an allied health major from Stamford, who will be studying this winter in Rome.

    Lyric Vargas ’27 (CLAS), a political science and psychological science major, who will be studying this fall at the University of Lisbon in Portugal.

    Erica Wong ’26 (CLAS), a political science and urban and community studies major, who will be studying this fall at Fudan University in Shanghai, China.

    Morgan Xu ’26 (ENG), a materials science and engineering major from Chesire, who will be studying this fall at the National University of Singapore.

    Ada Yeung ’27 (CLAS), an individualized major, who will be studying next spring at Fudan University.

    Maggie Zheng ’27 (BUS), an accounting major, who will be studying next spring at Fudan University.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: BIO-key and Runlevel Secure First Major IAM Deployment with a National Bank in Mozambique; Extends Growing List of Banking Customers

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LISBON, Portugal and HOLMDEL, N.J., May 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BIO-key International, Inc. (NASDAQ: BKYI), a global leader in Identity and Access Management (IAM) solutions featuring Identity-Bound Biometrics (IBB), today announced a strategic partnership with Runlevel, a specialized cybersecurity solutions provider, as well as the partnership’s first customer deployment. Runlevel focuses on Portuguese-speaking African countries (“Países Africanos de Língua Oficial Portuguesa or “PALOP”) and Timor-Leste in Asia.

    Runlevel joins BIO-key’s Channel Alliance Partner (CAP) program as a Value-Added Reseller (VAR) for businesses and government institutions in PALOP countries and Timor-Leste, which face increasing cybersecurity challenges. The Runlevel partnerships marks the beginning of a broader effort to expand adoption of BIO-key solutions across the region, ensuring financial institutions, government agencies and enterprises can benefit from secure, scalable and compliant digital identity solutions. In support of BIO-key’s solutions, Runlevel will provide pre-sales consulting, deployment support and technical training tailored to regulatory requirements in PALOP and Timor-Leste.

    Partnership’s First Major Deployment
    BIO-key and Runlevel have already secured their first customer in the region — a National Bank in Mozambique — which is deploying a comprehensive suite of BIO-key’s biometric-based IAM solutions.

    This deployment highlights the growing need for robust IAM solutions in the partnership’s territories and reinforces BIO-key’s position as a trusted cybersecurity partner within the global financial sector.

    The deployment includes the following BIO-key solutions:

    • PortalGuard On-Prem
    • Highly secure IAM platform with Multi-factor Authentication (MFA)
    • Single Sign-On (SSO) capabilities.

    Miguel Guerreiro, Managing Partner at Runlevel, commented, “Runlevel is committed to delivering cutting-edge security solutions that address the unique challenges faced by customers in PALOP and Timor-Leste. Partnering with BIO-key enables us to provide advanced IAM technologies that enhance cybersecurity, streamline authentication, and ensure compliance. Securing our first major deal together is a strong validation of this partnership and demonstrates the critical need for robust identity security solutions in the financial sector.”

    Alex Rocha, International Managing Director at BIO-key, added, “Runlevel is an ideal partner to expand BIO-key’s reach into Portuguese speaking markets. Their deep knowledge of the local cybersecurity landscape and strong relationships with key enterprises and public institutions make them a perfect fit for delivering BIO-key’s IAM solutions. Securing our first project together with a National Bank in Mozambique confirms the demand we believe exists for advanced IAM solutions in these regions and adds to BIO-key’s growing presence in the financial sector. Together, we are committed to supporting customers with secure, scalable, and regulation-compliant authentication technologies.”

    About Runlevel (www.runlevel.pt)
    Runlevel is a specialized cybersecurity solutions provider focusing on Portuguese-speaking African countries (PALOP) and Timor-Leste. The company delivers advanced IT security, infrastructure, and compliance solutions, helping organizations navigate the evolving cybersecurity landscape with best-in-class technology and expert consulting services.

    About BIO-key International, Inc. (www.BIO-key.com)
    BIO-key is revolutionizing authentication and cybersecurity with biometric-centric, multi-factor identity and access management (IAM) software securing access for over forty million users. BIO-key allows customers to choose the right authentication factors for diverse use cases, including phoneless, tokenless, and passwordless biometric options. Its cloud-hosted or on-premise PortalGuard IAM solution provides cost-effective, easy-to-deploy, convenient, and secure access to computers, information, applications, and high-value transactions.

    BIO-key Safe Harbor Statement
    All statements contained in this press release other than statements of historical facts are “forward-looking statements” as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (the “Act”). The words “estimate,” “project,” “intends,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “believes” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements are made based on management’s beliefs, as well as assumptions made by, and information currently available to, management pursuant to the “safe-harbor” provisions of the Act. These statements are not guarantees of future performance or events and are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those included within or implied by such forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include factors set forth under the caption “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 and other filings with the SEC. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date made. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to disclose any revision to these forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

    Investor Contacts
    William Jones, David Collins
    Catalyst IR
    BKYI@catalyst-ir.com or 212-924-9800

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Cajo Technologies Secures Investment to Accelerate Global Expansion of Sustainable Laser Marking Solutions

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KEMPELE, Finland, May 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cajo Technologies, a leading Finnish developer of advanced laser marking solutions, has secured investment from Emerald Technology Ventures to scale the global rollout of its patented marking technologies. The round will support Cajo’s mission to redefine industrial marking with more sustainable, efficient, and cost-effective alternatives to traditional ink-based and labelling systems.

    Driving Sustainable Transformation in Packaging and Manufacturing

    Cajo offers complete and easy-to-use solutions for traceability and product marking optimized for industrial production processes. Long-lasting and maintenance-free solutions have been developed to replace traditional marking methods such as inkjet, print, label, etching, and painting technologies.

    Cajo’s intelligent technology makes it possible to implement high-quality machine-readable traceability markings that last throughout the product’s life cycle even in challenging conditions. Cajo’s sustainable laser technology offers manufacturers an over 90 % reduction of the carbon footprint of industrial labelling compared to for example inkjets thanks to additive-free technology.

    Cajo’s systems are already deployed across industries in more than 80 countries to market leaders in various industries including metal, cable, wire, battery, medical, wood, packaging, and end products. Among these market leaders are industrial players across diverse sectors, including PepsiCo, SSAB, Fiskars, and Prysmian.

    The Growing Need for Sustainable Packaging Marking

    Traditional marking methods such as inkjets rely on consumables that generate waste and fail to meet increasingly high industry standards and strict environmental regulations. As businesses strive to meet sustainability targets and regulatory requirements, the demand for innovative, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly marking solutions has never been higher.

    Cajo’s solutions cater to forward-thinking stakeholders in the industry looking to significantly improve production processes while lowering operational costs.

    Fueling the Next Phase of Global Growth

    The Series B investment will be used to accelerate commercial scale-up in key markets including Europe, India, and North America. Cajo will invest in its international sales operations, strengthen its customer success capabilities, and expand production capacity in line with demand from major accounts and partners.

    “This investment marks a pivotal milestone in our journey,” said Niko Karsikas, CEO and Founder of Cajo Technologies. “With Emerald by our side, we are well-positioned to scale our impact, bring MakeBright™ and other innovations to new geographies, and continue supporting our industrial partners with reliable, traceable, and eco-friendly marking technologies.”

    “We are thrilled to partner with Cajo to accelerate the transition to sustainable packaging,” said Fredric Petit, Partner at Emerald. “Cajo’s technology is not only a powerful enabler of traceability and eco-efficiency but also commercially validated by global industry leaders.”

    About Emerald Technology Ventures

    Emerald is a globally recognized venture capital firm, founded in 2000, that manages and advises assets of over €1 billion from its offices in Zurich, Toronto and Singapore. The firm invests in start-ups that tackle big challenges in climate change and sustainability, with four current funds, hundreds of venture transactions and five third-party investment mandates, including loan guarantees to over 100 start-ups.

    Bold Ideas. Bright Future. www.emerald.vc

    CONTACT FOR EMERALD:

    info@emerald.vc

    Cajo Technologies: Pioneering Sustainable Product Marking

    In an era where sustainability is a key driver of industrial innovation, Finnish SME Cajo Technologies Ltd. is revolutionizing product marking with its patented laser solutions. By eliminating the need for ink, labels, and chemicals, Cajo provides an eco-friendly and cost-efficient alternative to traditional marking methods.

    Headquartered in Kempele, Finland, with subsidiaries in India, Cajo Technologies is rapidly expanding its global presence. The company offers comprehensive, easy-to-use solutions for traceability and product marking, leveraging proprietary software and patented technology. Fully optimized for industrial production, Cajo’s marking solutions seamlessly integrate into existing manufacturing processes, significantly reducing maintenance and operational costs.

    Beyond efficiency, Cajo’s technology ensures high-precision traceability markings, even in the harshest industrial environments, while reducing the carbon footprint by up to 90%. This sustainable alternative allows companies to eliminate consumables and harmful additives from their production, aligning with the growing demand for zero-waste manufacturing solutions.

    With a trusted presence in over 80 countries and partnerships with global industry leaders, Cajo Technologies is setting a new benchmark in sustainable manufacturing. By combining innovation with environmental responsibility, the company demonstrates that sustainability and profitability can go hand in hand.

    Cajo MakeBright™: A Game-Changer in Cardboard Marking

    Cajo MakeBright™ introduces a revolutionary way to produce precise and permanent product markings on cardboard with unparalleled sustainability. The patented technology allows for markings without the use of ink, glue, ribbons, or labels, which not only simplifies the recycling process but also enables significant cost savings.

    Cajo MakeBright™ supports both 1D and 2D codes, ensuring maximum readability and achieving A-grade results in compliance with ISO 29158 (AIM-DPM). By eliminating unnecessary materials, MakeBright™ enhances sustainability, streamlines production efficiency, and reduces operational costs. The technology operates without additives, removing the need for single-use plastics and simplifying cardboard recycling. Additionally, it reduces SKU typically over 70%, minimizes stockholding requirements, and decreases supply chain disruptions.

    Choose Cajo for intelligent product marking.

    CONTACT FOR CAJO:

    info@cajotechnologies.com

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/c36cf048-5807-4cf6-9ad6-bf5080be9471

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8696e5ec-11ca-4d6a-a4e5-96a0172b745a

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-Evening Report: Plea for UN intervention over illegal PNG loggers ‘stealing forests’

    RNZ Pacific

    A United Nations committee is being urged to act over human rights violations committed by illegal loggers in Papua New Guinea.

    Watchdog groups Act Now! and Jubilee Australia have filed a formal request to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination to consider action at its next meeting in August.

    “We have stressed with the UN that there is pervasive, ongoing and irreparable harm to customary resource owners whose forests are being stolen by logging companies,” Act Now! campaign manager Eddie Tanago said.

    He said these abuses were systematic, institutionalised, and sanctioned by the PNG government through two specific tools: Special Agriculture and Business Leases (SABLs) and Forest Clearing Authorities (FCAs) — a type of logging licence.

    “For over a decade since the Commission of Inquiry into SABLs, successive PNG governments have rubber stamped the large-scale theft of customary resource owners’ forests by upholding the morally bankrupt SABL scheme and expanding the use of FCAs,” Tanago said.

    He said the government had failed to revoke SABLs that were acquired fraudulently, with disregard to the law or without landowner consent.

    “Meanwhile, logging companies have made hundreds of millions, if not billions, in ill-gotten gains by effectively stealing forests from customary resource owners using FCAs.”

    Abuses hard to challenge
    The complaint also highlights that the abuses are hard to challenge because PNG lacks even a basic registry of SABLs or FCAs, and customary resource owners are denied access to information to the information they need, such as:

    • The existence of an SABL or FCA over their forest;
    • A map of the boundaries of any lease or logging licence;
    • Information about proposed agricultural projects used to justify the SABL or FCA;
    • The monetary value of logs taken from forests; and
    • The beneficial ownership of logging companies — to identify who ultimately profits from illegal logging.

    “The only reason why foreign companies engage in illegal logging in PNG is to make money,” he said, adding that “it’s profitable because importing companies and countries are willing to accept illegally logged timber into their markets and supply chains.”

    ACT NOW campaigner Eddie Tanago . . . “demand a public audit of the logging permits – the money would dry up.” Image: Facebook/ACT NOW!/RNZ Pacific

    “If they refused to take any more timber from SABL and FCA areas and demanded a public audit of the logging permits — the money would dry up.”

    Act Now! and Jubilee Australia are hoping that this UN attention will urge the international community to see this is not an issue of “less-than-perfect forest law enforcement”.

    “This is a system, honed over decades, that is perpetrating irreparable harm on indigenous peoples across PNG through the wholesale violation of their rights and destroying their forests.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • India committed to peace and progress, says PM Modi in Gandhinagar

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday reiterated India’s commitment to peace, progress, and the welfare of all citizens, while addressing a large public gathering at Mahatma Mandir in Gandhinagar. The Prime Minister inaugurated development projects worth ₹5,536 crore as part of the 20-year celebration of Gujarat’s Urban Growth Story.

    The Prime Minister said that India has always extended a hand of friendship and support in times of crisis, yet often faced violent responses in return. Addressing the youth, he urged them to understand how the country has been systematically undermined over the decades.

    Referring to the Indus Waters Treaty, which has recently been put in abeyance, the Prime Minister highlighted concerns regarding water management in Jammu and Kashmir. He said that although dams were constructed, proper maintenance, including desilting and gate operations, was neglected for six decades. As a result, storage capacity dropped drastically, with reservoirs functioning at only 2 to 3 percent of their full potential. He asserted that every Indian has a rightful claim to access water and that while no drastic step has been taken, initial corrective measures have now begun.

    Reaffirming India’s peaceful approach, the Prime Minister said, “We seek no hostility with anyone. India desires peace and prosperity, not only for itself but for the entire world.” He underlined the government’s firm determination to ensure national progress and improve the quality of life for every citizen.

    The Prime Minister noted that May 26 marks the anniversary of his first swearing-in ceremony as Prime Minister in 2014. At that time, India ranked 11th in the global economy. He spoke of the numerous challenges the country has faced since then, including the COVID-19 pandemic, border tensions, and natural disasters. Despite these hurdles, he said India had moved up to become the world’s fourth-largest economy, showcasing the country’s resilience and developmental strides.

    The Prime Minister also recalled his roots in Gujarat, acknowledging the values and lessons he imbibed from his upbringing. He expressed gratitude to citizens for their continued faith in him and reaffirmed his commitment to working tirelessly for their welfare.

    Congratulating the Gujarat government for its sustained focus on urban development, Prime Minister Modi praised the state’s initiative -Gujarat Urban Growth Story- launched in 2005, which now completes two decades. He said that the Gujarat Government had not only celebrated its achievements but also used the learnings of the past to prepare a roadmap for the future. The newly unveiled strategy, he said, reflects a clear and structured vision to ensure sustainable urban progress for the next generation.

  • India’s rise in global economy a moment of national pride: PM Modi

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday said India’s steady rise in the global economy is a matter of immense national pride. Addressing a public gathering in Gandhinagar, the Prime Minister recalled the sense of excitement across the country when India moved from being the sixth to the fifth-largest economy in the world. He noted that this enthusiasm was especially visible among the youth.

    PM Modi described the moment India surpassed the United Kingdom—its former colonial ruler—as historic. “India is now the fourth-largest economy in the world,” he said, “and there is growing pressure to reach the third position soon.”

    He reiterated the nation’s goal of becoming a fully developed country by 2047, when India completes 100 years of independence. The Prime Minister said that global recognition of India as a prosperous and strong nation must be the collective aim.

    Drawing a parallel to the freedom struggle, PM Modi paid tribute to national icons such as Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, Veer Savarkar, Shyamji Krishna Varma, Mahatma Gandhi, and Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. He remarked that if the 25 to 30 crore population at the time could rally for independence and succeed in driving out colonial rulers in just a few decades, the current population of 140 crore can certainly achieve the vision of a developed India within the next 25 years.

    Looking ahead to Gujarat’s 75th year in 2035, the Prime Minister emphasized the need to begin long-term planning now. He said preparations must cover key sectors such as industry, agriculture, education, and sports to shape the state’s future in line with national progress.

    PM Modi also highlighted India’s aspiration to host the Olympics in 2036, reflecting the country’s growing global stature and readiness for leadership on the world stage.

  • India retains forecast of above average monsoon rains

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    India is likely to see above average monsoon rains for the second straight year in 2025, the government said on Tuesday, retaining the forecast it gave last month.

    The monsoon is expected to total 106% of the long-term average this year, said M. Ravichandran, secretary in the Ministry of Earth Sciences.

    The India Meteorological Department defines average or normal rainfall as ranging between 96% and 104% of a 50-year average of 87 cm (35 inches) for the four-month season from June to September.

    (Reuters)

  • Indian stock market ends lower over profit booking

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Indian equity markets closed lower on Tuesday, as investors booked profits amid concerns over high valuations and weakness in global cues. The benchmark indices ended the session in the red, snapping recent gains.

    The BSE Sensex declined by 624.82 points, or 0.76 per cent, to settle at 81,551.63, while the NSE Nifty dropped 174.95 points, or 0.70 per cent, to close at 24,826.20.

    Selling pressure was visible across several key sectors, with FMCG, IT, auto, and metals leading the decline. The Nifty FMCG index fell by 0.88 per cent, Nifty IT by 0.75 per cent, Nifty Auto by 0.70 per cent, and Nifty Financial Services by 0.64 per cent.

    In contrast, midcap and smallcap stocks showed relative strength. The Nifty Midcap 100 rose 87.25 points (0.15%) to end at 57,154.50, while the Nifty Smallcap 100 gained 17.35 points (0.10%) to close at 17,725.15.

    Rupak De, Senior Technical Analyst at LKP Securities, said that Nifty has been in a consolidation phase for the past 10–11 days, reflecting investor indecision. “The overall trend remains positive as long as the index stays above its short-term moving average,” he said, adding that Nifty could move towards the 25,000–25,150 range, with support at 24,700.

    The trading session was marked by volatility, with sharp intraday swings on both sides. Sectoral performance remained mixed. While PSU banks and realty stocks showed strength, consumer goods, IT, auto, and financial services sectors witnessed weakness.

    Sundar Kewat of Ashika Institutional Equity noted that the day reflected a tug-of-war between bulls and bears. “It was a classic session of market indecision,” he said.

    Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services, observed that midcap and smallcap stocks were buoyed by strong Q4 earnings and a moderation in valuation premiums.

    On the currency front, the rupee traded with a slightly negative bias. Dilip Parmar, Research Analyst at HDFC Securities, said the USD-INR pair is expected to see upward movement in the near term due to month-end adjustments and demand from oil importers. Resistance is seen at 85.90, with support at 84.80.

    -IANS

  • Bharat, the Sutradhar

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    At the WAVES Summit earlier this month, the icons of an industry that once framed itself as the voice of India stood still for a moment, not on a set, not in a scene, but in real time. Khans and Kapoors, studio heads and screenwriters, streaming moguls and old-guard directors — all of them under one roof, hosted not by a production house, but by a government they had, not long ago, considered creatively toxic. The man whose rise to power had been declared the death of free speech in India was now sharing the stage with them, gently inviting creators to tell the story of Bharat to the world — and in doing so, nudging them to first listen to Bharat themselves.

    But WAVES is not the story. It is only the stage.

    The real story lies in what led up to this moment: a quiet, sometimes uncomfortable, but wholly inevitable civilisational shift. A rewriting of the grammar of Indian storytelling. For decades, a small coterie dictated what stories would be told about India — often from the vantage point of metro privilege, Western awards circuits, or elite anxieties. The India that reached our screens was often broken, mocked, exoticised, or aestheticised. The India of slums, scams, and spiritual contradictions. Tradition was treated as burden, faith as fanaticism, and the village as either comic relief or backwardness. For years, audiences were fed a single narrative: that they had no choice but to accept what was being offered — that they were too unsophisticated to expect more.

    But Bharat — patient, poetic Bharat — was listening. Watching. And then it chose.

    It began, as all awakenings do, not with fireworks, but with quiet exits. Audiences stopped showing up. The Friday buzz started fading. And then, the economy of choice — powered by the democratisation of platform thanks to social media — transformed the whole content consumption experience. Viewers discovered that they were no longer bound to whatever landed in the multiplex. They had access to stories that hadn’t passed through the old gatekeepers. Stories that didn’t need to beg for distribution or approval. Stories that simply spoke — in dialects they understood, with values they recognised, and emotions they had lived.

    Narrative Reimagining: From India to Bharat, there has been a change in the stories we tell, the heroes we celebrate, and the India we portray.

    The Stories We Tell. The Heroes We Celebrate. The India We Portray. In the last decade, something subtle yet seismic has shifted in Indian cinema. We are no longer merely telling stories about India. We are beginning to speak as Bharat.

    For too long, the global gaze shaped our storytelling — a cinematic self-consciousness that chased validation from Western film festivals or mimicked Western narrative forms. The India that appeared on screens abroad was either exotic and spiritual or broken and begging for sympathy — poverty porn, partition pain, or palace love stories.

    But today, there’s a slow, confident move from India-as-imagined-by-others to Bharat-as-felt-by-itself. We are witnessing a shift from victimhood to valour — where the once-forgotten warriors of our soil, from Rani Durgavati to Veer Savarkar, are being reclaimed as cinematic protagonists.

    There is a visible shift –
    From metro gaze to mandir towns, where stories now unfold in Ayodhya, Kashi, Bastar, and Bhuj, without apology.
    From mimicry to myth-making, where homegrown philosophies, epics, and aesthetics are stepping forward as source material, not backdrop.

    Cinema is slowly catching up — from mytho-scientific films to historical epics, from women-led entrepreneurship stories to narratives anchored in Kashi, Kedarnath, and Kanyakumari. This is not nostalgia. It is civilisational reclaim. And through cinema — our most powerful export — we are reimagining ourselves and inviting the world to see a new Bharat: rooted, radiant, and ready.

    We stopped exporting sympathy. We started inviting the world to witness a civilisation coming into consciousness — not as a wounded past, but as a living, luminous future. Shrinking the colonial-leftist gaze that showcased India as land of suffering, spiritual detachment, and economic decay, we have slowly and steadily decided to chose civilisational pride over postcolonial pity, and replace cinematic self-pity with cinematic self-respect.

    We have now begun to see ourselves not as a country waiting to be explained, but as a civilisation finally choosing how to be shown.

    And that is how and why the old guard began to flounder. The industry that had once dictated taste — with its boy-meets-girl montages and designer depression — has found itself gasping. Friday releases have dried up. Cinemas play reruns. Star-studded films have crashed at the box office. Bollywood, as we knew it, is experiencing an identity crisis. And which is why the presence of erstwhile ‘Lords’ of the industry at the recently concluded WAVES summit in Mumbai is a story in itself.

    In 2015, Aamir Khan remarked that his wife no longer felt safe in India — a moment that revealed not just his personal fears, but a deeper cultural disconnect. It wasn’t just about intolerance. It was about entitlement. The idea that cultural authority could be claimed, not earned.

    Fast forward to WAVES 2025, and Aamir is back on stage — praising government support, urging for theatres in every corner of India. Not because he changed. But because Bharat did. And he knows it.

    The stars are no longer in the sky. They are on the ground. Because their castles have crashed. They now stand at the shore, waiting — not just for a comeback, but for newer waves. Pun very much intended.

    WAVES 2025, in that sense, wasn’t just a summit. It was a reckoning. The very actors, studios, and production houses that once scoffed at tradition were now attending a government-backed cultural platform with folded hands. And the irony was not lost on anyone. But this wasn’t revenge. It was realignment.

    Prime Minister Modi’s address didn’t speak of censorship or surveillance. He spoke of story. He invoked the Natyashastra. He reminded us that even our gods sing and dance. He urged creators to dream big, to tell the one billion untold stories of Bharat to the world.

    No diktats. Just direction. A gentle, civilisational nudge. Because Bharat, long silenced, is now narrating. It is no longer the subject of someone else’s script. It is the sutradhar — the narrator, the conscience, the cultural compass. It is not waiting to be validated. It is speaking in its own rhythm, its own language, its own light.

    The world doesn’t need a rebranded India. It needs to meet Bharat — as it has always been, and as it is now willing to show itself. The script is being rewritten, many many frames at a time.

     

    (Harsha Bhat is a versatile writer, journalist, and content strategist with over a decade of experience in storytelling, editing, and campaign curation. Currently working as a freelance writer and content strategist, Harsha has a proven track record of delivering impactful content for diverse platforms, including political campaigns, cultural heritage initiatives, and reputed publications like Swarajya Magazine and South First. Her editorial expertise spans conceptualizing special editions, managing newsroom operations, and mentoring aspiring writers. Notable accomplishments include spearheading acclaimed editorial campaigns like the Kashi and Ayodhya urban rejuvenation stories and publishing the transformative biography From Manjunath to Manjamma (HarperCollins, 2023).

    She holds M.A. in Linguistics from University of Mumbai and a graduate in Journalism (BMM) from St. Xavier’s College, Harsha blends creativity with analytical depth to craft compelling narratives. Beyond writing, Harsha is a sought-after speaker and panelist at literary events and a passionate advocate for linguistic and cultural diversity. As a skilled journalist and cultural chronicler, Harsha’s work delves into heritage, politics, and community-driven stories. Harsha Bhat continues to inspire through stories that bridge tradition and modernity, championing meaningful narratives that leave a lasting impact.)

  • MIL-OSI China: China-Cambodia “Golden Dragon 2025” joint exercise completes adaptive training

    Source: People’s Republic of China – Ministry of National Defense

      BEIJING, May 26 — As of May 24 local time, the participating troops of the China-Cambodia “Golden Dragon 2025” joint exercise have completed multi-subject adaptive training and got ready for the comprehensive live-force drills.

      Upon receiving the order, a radar detachment maneuvered to the designated location. They set up radar equipment, adjusted parameters, searched and tracked mock aerial targets, in a bid to provide situational awareness support for air operations.

      The helicopters then arrived at the designated airspace and carried out precise aerial strikes on the mock targets.

      During the joint maritime search and rescue, helicopters from both China and Cambodia promptly set out for the rescue operations upon receiving the order. After locating the target, the rescue personnel exited the helicopter and conducted maritime hoist rescue.

      When the injured were transferred to the vessel, the onboard medical team conducted emergency treatment immediately.

      The Chinese military medical members also conducted training with their Cambodian counterparts, focusing on emergency medical treatment and related subjects.

      (Video Editor: Huang Panyue)

    loading…

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: S. Korean police ban ex-PM, ex-deputy PM from leaving country

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

    South Korea’s police banned former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, and Choi Sang-mok, former deputy prime minister for economic affairs, for alleged insurrection charges, multiple media outlets said on Tuesday.

    Han and Choi have been under investigation as suspects of insurrection and prevented from leaving the country in the middle of this month.

    The police special investigative unit summoned Han and Choi as well as Lee Sang-min, former interior minister who was prohibited from leaving the country last December, for questioning on Monday.

    The three former government officials were suspected of being involved in the botched martial law bid by former President Yoon Suk-yeol, who was removed from office in April.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China ready to expand economic, trade cooperation with Cambodia

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

    Chinese Premier Li Qiang said Tuesday that China is ready to work with Cambodia to promote trade and investment liberalization and facilitation, so as to further expand economic and trade cooperation.

    Li made the remarks in his meeting with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet on the sidelines of the ASEAN (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations)-China-GCC (the Gulf Cooperation Council) Summit.

    Li said that Chinese President Xi Jinping has lately paid a historic visit to Cambodia, during which both sides jointly announced the building of an all-weather China-Cambodia community with a shared future in the new era.

    China-Cambodia relations have once again taken the lead in building a community with a shared future for mankind, and the ironclad friendship between the two countries has been further deepened, he added.

    China stands ready to work with Cambodia to follow through on the outcomes of Xi’s visit, strengthen high-level exchanges, deepen political mutual trust, make good use of the China-Cambodia Intergovernmental Coordination Committee, and steadily advance practical cooperation across various fields, Li said.

    The Chinese premier called on China and Cambodia to respond to external uncertainties with the certainty of building a China-Cambodia community with a shared future, jointly promote their economic development and safeguard their common interests.

    China is willing to work with Cambodia to accelerate the synergy between high-quality Belt and Road cooperation and Cambodia’s Pentagonal Strategy, speed up the implementation of the cooperation plans for the Industrial Development Corridor and the Fish and Rice Corridor, and create more new highlights of cooperation and foster new areas for growth, Li noted.

    Encouraging more Chinese enterprises to invest in Cambodia, China is willing to strengthen cooperation with Cambodia in such areas as infrastructure, digital economy, advanced manufacturing and clean energy, he said.

    China and Cambodia have achieved positive results in recent joint efforts to combat cross-border crimes, Li said, calling for stronger and more effective measures to safeguard the safety and security of the two peoples.

    At present, the international situation is becoming more turbulent and chaotic, Li noted.

    China is willing to work with Cambodia and other countries in the region to strengthen solidarity and cooperation, jointly oppose unilateralism and power politics, safeguard international fairness and justice, uphold the multilateral trading system and maintain the stable and smooth flow of industrial and supply chains, so as to inject more positive energy into world peace, stability, prosperity and development, he said. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI: OwlTing Group Unveils AI-Powered OwlPay® Harbor™ for Stablecoin On/Off-Ramping

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ARLINGTON, Va., May 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — OwlTing Group (the “Company”), a global blockchain fintech company, today announced an integration of AI features into its payment API infrastructure, OwlPay® Harbor™ (the “Platform”). This AI-driven technical support feature helps developers accelerate onboarding the Company’s API, which aims to provide secure on/off-ramping services to send, receive, and hold funds in U.S. dollars and USDC1 stablecoin for global payouts across over 100 countries2. With competitive fees and robust regulatory compliance coverage across over 30 U.S. states3, OwlPay® Harbor™ offers a trusted and scalable solution for businesses worldwide.

    The newly adapted Model Context Protocol (MCP)4 tool, similar to a “USB-C port for AI models,” provides a unified approach for AI to get the real-time context with smarter responses, interacting with a human developer. This AI feature simplifies the process to integrate the Company’s API, lowers the onboarding time and maintenance efforts, and more importantly, allows developers to leverage their existing AI models without sharing sensitive data with external systems.

    Global businesses such as banks, digital wallets, DeFi companies, or fintech providers that are seeking embedded crypto-to-fiat conversions will be able to offer their customers a seamless payment experience with their own products or platforms behind the scenes.

    “We’re excited to bring AI to our flagship payment platform,” said Darren Wang, Founder and CEO at OwlTing Group. “With our wide compliance footprint, AI-driven support, and flexible service models, OwlPay® Harbor™ offers global companies the legitimacy and efficiency of payments in the U.S. and beyond borders.”

    OwlPay® Harbor™ provides enterprise-ready APIs for USD–USDC conversions via Wire and ACH transfers, with cross-chain compatibility for supported transactions across Stellar, Ethereum, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism, and Avalanche blockchains. It will also support Solana in the future. As a Stellar Anchor, it brings businesses an easier integration using SEP-24 (deposit/ withdrawal)5 and SEP-10 (authentication)6 protocols to the Stellar network.

    The platform offers extensive global reach and budget-friendly pricing tailored for all kinds of businesses. Holding over 30 Money Transmitter Licenses (MTLs) or their equivalent, adhering to strict KYC/AML standards, and securing ISO 27001 certification for its payment solution, OwlPay® Harbor™ stands ready to deliver with trust and reliability for global operations.

    Photo Caption: OwlPay® has obtained the ISO 27001 certification, underscoring its commitment to minimizing cyber risks and safeguarding users’ data.

    OwlPay® Harbor™ now offers two flexible service models:

    Partnership Model:

    • Designed for platforms like marketplaces or payment processors that collect funds from users for global payouts. Approved platforms manage funds and pay OwlPay® directly.
    • Supports USD payouts in supported regions globally. It also supports local payouts in 10 currencies: EUR (via SEPA), CAD, GBP, JPY, SGD, HKD, ZAR, AED, MXN, and BRL.
    • Use Case: An e-commerce platform collects USD from customers, converts it to USDC via OwlPay®, and pays retailers or freelancers in the Americas, hedging the currency fluctuations.

    End User Model:

    • Designed for other platforms wishing to avoid handling funds directly, with end users paying OwlPay® directly for implementing USD-USDC conversions.
    • Supports USD payouts in supported regions globally.
    • Use Case: An U.S. app allows users to buy USDC with USD via OwlPay® behind their own user interface, while its customers would enjoy an integrated customer journey.

    The stablecoin market has soared to a record $240 billion7 and is projected to reach $2 trillion by 20288. As demands for efficient digital payments surge, businesses integrating with the platform that combines seamless AI-driven APIs, regulatory compliance, and cross-chain compatibility for supported blockchains are positioned to be at the forefront of this thriving economy.

    OwlTing continues expanding its regulatory coverage and aims to obtain MTLs in all U.S. states as applicable, along with ongoing license applications in global markets such as Japan and the EU. The company will deploy AI tools across its OwlPay® product suites to enhance efficiency and user experience, strengthening its global leadership in stablecoin payments.

    About OwlTing Group
    Founded in 2010, OwlTing is a global blockchain fintech company based in Taiwan and has subsidiaries in the U.S., Japan, Poland, Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand, and Malaysia. In 2022, it was selected by KPMG and HSBC as “the Leading 3 Emerging Giants in Taiwan.” With the mission to usher in the digital transformation of traditional payment processes, while ensuring legal compliance, OwlTing introduced OwlPay®, a Web2 and Web3 hybrid payment solution, to empower global businesses to operate confidently in the evolving digital landscape. For more information, visit https://www.owlting.com/portal/?lang=en.

    Media Contact
    PR Office at OwlTing Group
    pr_office@owlting.com

    1 USDC is an internet-native, fully-reserved, regulated digital dollar that leverages blockchain networks to enable businesses, developers, and individuals to conduct near-real-time, low-cost global transactions. It is a leading, fully-reserved global stablecoin issued through Circle’s regulated affiliates. To learn more about using or accessing USDC, visit USDC.com. To learn more about Circle’s regulatory authorizations, visit Circle’s Licenses page https://www.circle.com/legal/licenses
    2 Availability may vary by jurisdiction and is subject to change. Please refer to the most current service documentation or contact support for the latest coverage.
    3 Availability may vary by jurisdiction and is subject to change. As of May 2025, OwlTing Group has obtained MTL licenses or their equivalent in over 30 U.S. states and is in the process of applying for relevant legal trading licenses in other U.S. states. For a list of U.S. licenses obtained, please see https://www.owlting.com/owlpay/licenses?lang=en. Please refer to the most current service documentation or contact support for the latest coverage.
    4 Model Context Protocol (MCP) is the open standard released by Anthropic, it’s a communication protocol that enables AI agents to interpret, respond to, and take action based on structured context within API workflows. By minimizing data exposure, MCP supports personalized interactions while preserving user privacy, and reduces hallucinations by grounding AI responses in verifiable external data. For more information, please see https://modelcontextprotocol.io/introduction
    5 SEP-24 is the standardized protocol for hosted deposits and withdrawals on Stellar’s ecosystem. With OwlPay® HarborTM, businesses can make their on/off-ramping services available as an in-app experience through Stellar-based applications such as wallets and exchanges, extending their reach and connecting with users through the applications they already use.
    6 SEP-10 is the authentication protocol of Stellar. This is used to verify the user’s KYC information.
    7 According to DeFiLlalma, the data aggregator for DeFi, the total stablecoin market cap is $242 billions as of May 2025.
    8 According to a Standard Chartered Bank report, titled “Stablecoins, USD Hegemony, and UST Bills” published in April 2025.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/c6bcf23b-ff93-4137-a40e-74e21baebe22

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/7d98cda1-6f72-4048-9a0c-1738bc76a2bb

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/426a725d-5e74-4993-9f96-c4a1f8e4454d

    The MIL Network

  • INDIA’S SANITATION REVOLUTION

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Sitting beneath a neem tree, right outside his house in Dhamnar village of Madhya Pradesh, Lakhan Singh (age – 35) told me about one of his happiest memories – the birth of his son Sachin in September of 2014. However, a little further into this conversation, Lakhan’s smile quickly gave way to a tense expression. This change in mood was triggered by his memories of his son experiencing frequent cases of diarrhoea since he started walking in early 2016. He recounted days when both he and his wife used to make rounds to the local hospital. The first few instances of illness were handled by the family without any major distress. However, when they realised that these cases were repeating frequently, that was when they started to get worried. According to Lakhan, during the monsoon season of 2016, his son suffered five episodes of diarrhoea within a span of two and a half months. This prompted Lakhan to go to a doctor, begging for answers. The answer that the doctor gave Lakhan is still crystal clear in his mind even after several years. The doctor, from the conversation with the family, suspected that Sachin’s frequent episodes of diarrhoea might have primarily been caused by his coming into contact with faecal matter during their visits to a local field for defecation. However, the solution to this problem, according to the doctor, was simple – construction of a toilet in his house. However, being a daily wage earner and the sole breadwinner of his family, Lakhan did not possess the financial means to construct a toilet all by himself. He was, however, advised by his neighbour to reach out to his gram Pradhan to recommend his name for financial incentives for the construction of a toilet in his house. Once his application was filed, within 2 weeks Lakhan received a sum of ₹12,000 in his bank account.  With joy once again in his voice, Lakhan said that he vividly remembers 17th November 2016, the day when the construction of the toilet in his house was finally completed. The biggest beneficiary in this case has been Sachin, who has never experienced such frequent cases of diarrhoea since.

    The story of Sachin is one of hope. However, lakhs of children were not as fortunate as him. Until recently, millions of Indian children were at daily risk from diseases caused by poor sanitation. Until recently majority of the households in our villages did not have personal toilets. This meant people engaged in open defecation which resulted in outbreaks of diarrhoea due to a direct exposure of faecal matter or indirect exposure from contamination of soil and water. Frequent cases of diarrhoea also led to chronic malnutrition in many cases, a fact highlighted in the data from NFHS – 4 (2015-16) which suggested that roughly 38% of children under-fives were stunted in part due to poor sanitation and infections[1]. A grimmer reality according to UNICEF was that nearly 1,00,000 children under five died each year in India from diarrhoea caused by unsafe water and improper sanitation[2]. Sachin was fortunate to be born at a time where India was making major progress towards becoming open-defecation-free, sparing him from these hazards. In fact, studies show that India’s sanitation revolution has already saved countless young lives.

    Swachh Bharat Mission – Origins and Nationwide Rollout 

    The inception of this revolution can be linked to 2nd October 2014, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi initiated the Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM) aiming for an open-defecation-free (ODF) India by 2019. He not only encouraged the public to view sanitation as a national responsibility but also demonstrated this by using a broom in public and calling on citizens in speeches to participate in a “Jan Andolan” for hygiene. The SBM adopted a two-pronged strategy for improving the state of sanitation. On the demand front, it launched extensive awareness initiatives – ranging from school events to television commercials – to encourage changes in behaviour. Officials and volunteers (called as Swachhagrahis) visited homes, raising awareness among villagers about toilet usage, cleanliness, and the health dangers associated with open defecation. From the supply side, the government provided financial aid of ₹12,000 to ensure that even the most impoverished families could construct a toilet. This blend of community-based learning and financial motivation demonstrated significant strength. Residents who previously accepted open defecation as normal started requesting toilets. Further, an innovative use of technology in the provision to track applications by an individual on an online portal or mobile app, transfer of funds for toilet construction using DBTs and verifying the status of toilet construction using geo-tagged images, ensured that the mission remained effective and efficient hence, avoiding the failure of the previous sanitation programs.   

    During the duration of Phase I of SBM (2014-2019), India underwent an unparalleled transformation. Over 100 million toilets for rural households were constructed nationwide, with women and children frequently, taking the lead in the inauguration events for their new latrines. Rural sanitation access surged from about 40% of households in 2014 to near universal coverage by 2019. The Swachh Bharat Mission’s success owed much to political will – with Prime Minister Modi’s constant encouragement – and its blending of patriotism, community pride, and practical support with sanitation.

    Broader Benefits: From Health Gains to Women’s Safety 

    The impact of the Swachh Bharat Mission extends far beyond the convenience of having a toilet. First and foremost, by eliminating open defecation has meant far fewer harmful germs in the environment leading to a sharp decline in occurrences of diseases like cholera, typhoid, and diarrhoea. By 2019, the World Health Organization estimated that improved sanitation under SBM had averted over 300,000 deaths (especially from diarrheal illness and malnutrition) compared to the baseline scenario[3]. Community health workers report seeing far fewer cases of children wracked by dehydration from diarrhoea, and hospitals note declines in water-borne disease outbreaks during monsoon season. Childhood nutrition has improved as well – with kids falling sick less often, they can absorb nutrients better. India’s child stunting rates, while still high, have been dropping faster in areas that eliminated open defecation. In economic terms, sanitation is paying dividends for rural families and the nation. When illnesses decrease, households save on medical bills and parents miss fewer work days. A UNICEF analysis found that a typical family in an ODF (open defecation free) village saved about ₹50,000 per year in health costs and productivity, thanks to better sanitation[4]. This is a huge relief for poor families – money that might otherwise be spent treating recurrent diarrhoea or lost due to sick days can now go towards food, education, and improving livelihoods. Further, the study also highlights that every rupee invested in building toilets is yielding over four rupees in social and economic benefits – a remarkable 430% return on investment according to one independent cost-benefit study.

    Perhaps the most profound change has been brought in the lives of our women and girls. For decades, the lack of a household toilet meant that women had to wait until darkness (either before sunrise or after sunset) to relieve themselves in fields or behind bushes. This was not only uncomfortable and unhealthy, but also dangerous. Countless women often faced embarrassment, harassment and even threats of sexual assault when they went out to defecate in the open. The Swachh Bharat Mission has brought a massive improvement in this aspect of daily life. With nearly every home now equipped with a latrine, women can use a toilet with privacy and security. A survey by the government found that 93% of women reported feeling safer after getting a toilet at home[5]. No longer must they trek to isolated areas late at night, or fear for their safety and dignity while attending to a basic bodily need. Privacy has improved as well – teenage girls, for instance, no longer dread the lack of sanitation during menstruation, and older women speak of a newfound sense of self-respect. Apart from safety, having a toilet has indirect benefits for women’s empowerment: it reduces school absenteeism among girls (who previously might avoid school if no toilets were available). All these changes translate into greater dignity and quality of life.

    The Swachh Bharat Mission – Grameen has been much more than a construction spree; it has been a transformative public health campaign and a social revolution. It has saved lives by the lakhs, cut medical expenses, and improved children’s growth and development. It has given rural women a sense of security and pride that was long denied to them. By coupling data-driven strategy with a people-powered movement, SBM managed to achieve what many once thought impossible – eliminate open defecation across most of rural India – and in doing so, unlocked a cascade of benefits for health, economic development, and human dignity. What began as one leader’s vision quickly became a nationwide celebration of cleanliness. India’s villages are cleaner, safer, and healthier today, and future generations like young Sachin are reaping the rewards of this cleanliness revolution.

     

    (Ishan Singh is a dedicated public policy professional with hands-on experience in urban governance, policy analysis, and stakeholder mapping. He has worked as a research associate at Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Hyderabad, and led the “Making of a Cyberabad” project, examining urban growth dynamics by mapping stakeholder linkages, analyzing land-use changes through satellite imagery, and studying institutional frameworks driving urban development.

    Ishan Singh holds an M.A. in Public Policy and Governance from TISS. He completed his undergraduate studies in Economics, Political Science, and Sociology at St. Joseph’s College, Bangalore. With his robust academic background, Ishan contributed to analyzing Delhi’s budget, designing surveys, and leading comprehensive data collection across households while working at the National Institute of Urban Affairs. During his internship at the Public Policy and Good Governance Lab in Jalandhar, he developed actionable reports on MGNREGA policy reforms, optimizing District Mineral Funds, and improving vaccination coverage for persons with disabilities. Ishan has co-authored research on NFHS-5 health indicators and digital democracy during COVID-19. Proficient in policy research qualitative and quantitative analysis. He is passionate about inclusive cities, social equity, regulatory frameworks, and climate change.)

  • MIL-OSI Russia: /China Focus/ British aero engine giant starts operations at new plant in Beijing

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    BEIJING, May 27 (Xinhua) — Rolls-Royce Corp.’s first aircraft engine maintenance, repair and overhaul (AER) joint venture (JV) on the Chinese mainland plans to start operations by the end of 2025, an official from the British aircraft engine maker said.

    The new plant, located in the northeastern suburbs of Beijing, marks a significant expansion of the aircraft engine giant’s presence in one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets, reflecting the corporation’s optimism about the Chinese market and its recognition of the country’s supply chain.

    Beijing Aero Engine Services Ltd (BAESL), a joint venture between Rolls-Royce and Air China, plans to initially service Trent 700 engines for Airbus A330 aircraft, and then move on to Trent XWB and Trent 1000 engines for Airbus A350 and Boeing 787 aircraft respectively, Troy Wang, executive vice president of Rolls-Royce Greater China, told Xinhua in an exclusive interview.

    “When the facility reaches full capacity, which is expected to be reached by the mid-2030s, BAESL will be able to handle up to 250 requests per year,” he said.

    The plant, which will employ up to 800 people at full capacity, represents a strategic growth initiative in China, Rolls-Royce’s third-largest single-country market globally by revenue.

    Prior to the creation of BAESL, Rolls-Royce served Chinese customers through its global network of retail outlets, which included Hong Kong-based HAESL, established in 1997.

    BAESL is the latest in a series of Rolls-Royce investments in China, including five joint ventures with Chinese partners.

    The aviation sector is projected to need more than 8,200 new passenger aircraft by 2043 to meet growing demand, including more than 1,500 wide-body jets, according to a report released by the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC).

    “China is not only a market, but also an important part of our supply chain,” said Troy Wang, stressing that Rolls-Royce has built a vast network of more than 50 suppliers across the country who produce key engine components and parts, “innovating in digitalization and automation.”

    BAESL is being established as “the world’s leading aircraft engine repair shop using the latest digital technologies.” The joint venture is already collaborating with leading digital solution providers in China to develop capabilities using artificial intelligence.

    Despite global economic uncertainty, China’s aviation sector is showing surprising resilience and growth potential as its industrial ecosystem continues to demonstrate competitiveness in cost, quality and lead times, according to Troy Wang.

    Last year, Rolls-Royce expanded its joint venture in China with Guangxi Yuchai Machinery Co. Ltd., a Chinese internal combustion engine maker, to tap into the country’s fast-growing market. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Exclusive: ASEAN, GCC, China cooperation to benefit global trade and investment: Malaysian expert

    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

    KUALA LUMPUR, May 27 (Xinhua) — Amid the rise of protectionism and unilateralism, closer cooperation between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries will boost global trade and investment, Bunn Nagara, director and senior fellow at the Belt and Road Initiative Conference for Asia-Pacific, an independent think tank based in the Malaysian capital, told Xinhua on Saturday.

    “China, as well as ASEAN and GCC countries, share common development aspirations and face the same global challenges. So it makes sense for us to work more closely than before in many sectors,” the expert noted.

    Energy, food security and supply chain resilience offer the greatest potential for trilateral cooperation, according to Nagara, who said the GCC is a leader in oil and gas, China in renewable energy and electric vehicles, and ASEAN is a key consumer market and manufacturing hub.

    “Strengthening resilience can be achieved by starting to work together more closely and then addressing any challenges along the way,” the source said. “An open approach is important, receptive to new areas and ways of working together, while remaining sensitive to the needs of other partners,” the expert noted.

    B. Nagara views the Belt and Road Initiative as a key mechanism for developing trilateral cooperation. “The Belt and Road is a large-scale project covering many related areas, including the digital economy and green transition,” he said.

    The Belt and Road Initiative is closely linked to the three parties’ shared interests in sustainable growth, providing fertile ground for interaction among ASEAN, the GCC and China.

    Against the backdrop of strong barriers to global trade from protectionism and unilateralism, ASEAN-GCC-China cooperation serves as a model for the Global South, says B. Nagara. “China and the ASEAN and GCC states are also countries of the Global South, not just Asia,” he noted. The interaction between them can stimulate similar initiatives among African and Latin American countries that share common aspirations, the expert is sure.

    “What we do is to protect our legitimate development interests, not to threaten other countries or regions. We prefer non-confrontation because it is the best way to ensure mutual benefit,” the agency’s source said.

    “Part of our interest is to protect global trade, on which our national development programs depend. This will also benefit other countries and regions around the world,” Nagara said. “We should now look forward to several more decades of development, underpinned by complementarity,” he concluded. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: SJ attends seventh Hong Kong Legal Services Forum in Xi’an (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    SJ attends seventh Hong Kong Legal Services Forum in Xi’an  
         With the theme of “Serving the Belt and Road Initiative: A New Chapter in Shaanxi-Hong Kong Cooperation”, the Forum this year explored issues of interest to Shaanxi enterprises as they “go global” in handling trade, commerce and foreign investment under the Belt and Road Initiative. The Forum also introduced the international legal and dispute resolution services which Hong Kong can offer as a “super connector” for cross-border transactions and as a centre for dispute resolution services. The Minister of Justice, Ms He Rong, the Secretary of the CPC Shaanxi Provincial Committee, Mr Zhao Yide, and others attended the Forum and delivered opening addresses.

         In his opening address, Mr Lam said that Shaanxi and Hong Kong have maintained close exchanges and co-operation over the years. Last year, the governments of the two places signed the Strengthening Hong Kong/Shaanxi Co-operation Agreement, which covers legal and dispute resolution services. The Department of Justice of Shaanxi Province and the DoJ also signed the Framework Arrangement on Co-operation in Legal Services to Support the “Belt and Road Initiative” to strengthen the exchanges and co-operation in legal services and talent-nurturing between the two places to better facilitate legal services bodies in both places to provide quality and efficient legal services for the high-quality Belt and Road development and for national enterprises and citizens to “go global”. The Forum represented a significant concrete action in implementing the above Agreement. Mr Lam said that he looked forward to strengthening exchanges and co-operation with Shaanxi to serve the country’s needs. 
         The Hong Kong Legal Services Forum has been held by the DoJ on a biennial basis in Mainland cities since 2010. The Forum has been held in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Qingdao, Nanjing and Chengdu to promote Hong Kong’s international legal and dispute resolution services to enterprises and other service users on the Mainland.
     
         Mr Lam attended the graduation ceremony of the Hong Kong Common Law and Dispute Resolution Practical Training Course organised by the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Academy with the assistance of the Shaanxi Province Lawyers Association. The programme is the first foreign-related legal talent training programme held by the Academy in a Mainland city. Through seminars, mock arbitration clause negotiations, moot court debates and arbitration trial workshops, a total of about 140 foreign-related lawyers, mainly from the Shaanxi Province and surrounding provinces, cities, autonomous regions and municipalities, gained a comprehensive understanding of Hong Kong’s common law system, the city’s characteristics and experience in dispute resolution, thereby contributing to the country’s nurturing of foreign-related legal talents.
     
         In addition, Mr Lam and the delegation visited the Belt and Road Demonstration Zone for International Commercial Legal Services in Xi’an, and toured the Xi’an Arbitration Commission, Xi’an China-Europe Railway Express Assembly Center and the “three centres” of the Ministry of Justice of the People’s Republic of China to learn about Shaanxi’s efforts in fostering an international first-class business environment and the local demand for foreign-related legal services in the Belt and Road context. They also discussed how Hong Kong’s international legal and dispute resolution services can provide relevant professional support.
     
         Mr Lam will conclude his visit to Xi’an this afternoon and return to Hong Kong. 
    Issued at HKT 16:30

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: S6 student portal updated

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Education Bureau has updated its Designated Webpage for S6 Students to help them prepare for the release of Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education (HKDSE) Examination results on July 16.

    The webpage provides “Reminders for 2025 HKDSE Exam & Exam Results Release” infographics  to show the important dates and points to note for students’ easy reference and future planning.

    Students can also input their predicted or actual HKDSE Examination results into the electronic tool e-Navigator to search for matching local programmes including degrees, sub-degrees and the Diploma of Applied Education.

    In addition, the bureau launched cheer up videos to encourage students to maintain a positive attitude.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: President Lai meets delegation from European Parliament

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    Details
    2025-05-20
    President Lai hosts state banquet for President Surangel Whipps Jr. of Republic of Palau
    On the evening of May 20, President Lai Ching-te, accompanied by Vice President Bi-khim Hsiao, hosted a state banquet at the Presidential Office in honor of President Surangel Whipps Jr. of the Republic of Palau and his wife. In remarks, President Lai said that he looks forward to working closely with President Whipps to promote tourism exchanges and sports cooperation so that Taiwan and Palau shine brightly together on the international stage. A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows: It is a pleasure to host this banquet tonight at the Presidential Office for President Whipps, First Lady Valerie Whipps, and the esteemed members of their delegation. Welcome to Taiwan. During my trips to Palau in 2022 and last year, President and First Lady Whipps received me with great hospitality. Wearing my island shirt, I enjoyed a very friendly reception from the people of Palau. It felt warm and friendly, just like being welcomed back home. The first time I visited Palau, President Whipps and I piloted a boat to the Milky Way lagoon. We both tried volcanic mud facial masks. We also fished together and enjoyed the breeze as we walked on the beach. Last year, on my second visit to Palau, I was honored to be invited to address the National Congress. I also observed the results of the close bilateral cooperation between our two nations. Due to its world-famous ocean scenery, Palau is sometimes referred to as “God’s aquarium.” And it is even possible to snorkel with sharks. It leaves a deep impression. Nothing compares to seeing Palau firsthand. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Taiwan and Palau launched a travel bubble that created a safe means of travel. Now, with the pandemic behind us, I hope that even more Taiwanese can tour Palau and gain a greater understanding of our diplomatic ally. In addition to tourism exchanges, I mentioned on my visit to Palau last year that I hoped Taiwan and Palau could promote sports cooperation by providing training away from home. Next month, Palau will be holding the Pacific Mini Games. And right now, Palau’s national baseball and table tennis teams are holding training sessions here in Taiwan. We will do our utmost to support Palau’s national players and we hope they stand out and achieve outstanding results in the events. I look forward to working closely with President Whipps so that Taiwan and Palau shine brightly together on the international stage. Thank you! Mesulang! President Whipps then delivered remarks, saying that it is truly an honor to be here once again one year after President Lai’s inauguration. Mentioning that this is his first state visit after being reelected to a second term, he said that it is important to be here among friends, and that we are more than friends, we are family. He thanked President Lai for the generous words and, most importantly, Taiwan’s enduring support. He remarked that our relationship continues to get stronger in each passing year. President Whipps said that President Lai’s diplomacy initiative, leadership, and vision deeply resonate with them. Diplomacy must be rooted in our shared values, he said, and an unwavering support for our allies and a commitment to a sustainable, inclusive development are all deeply appreciated by their people. President Whipps emphasized that, as we look into the future and the challenges that we face, from security to climate change, it is so important that we are united. He added that it is important for the world, and especially important for them in Palau, that they stand up for Taiwan, so that Taiwan can participate on international fora that address climate change, security, and health, because they know the world is better when Taiwan has a seat at the table. Mentioning that Palau will host the Pacific Islands Forum next year, President Whipps said that Palau remains committed to working closely with Taiwan to ensure a successful event, and that they will continue to speak up for Taiwan’s indispensable contributions as we stand together against any efforts to silence or isolate democratic partners. President Whipps said that our nations have navigated challenges and emerged stronger, bound by a partnership that is built on trust, respect, and hope for a better world. Whether it is in clean energy, education, smart medicine, or tourism, our shared journey is just beginning, he said, and we are stronger together.  Also in attendance at the banquet were Palauan Minister of State Gustav Aitaro, Minister of Public Infrastructure and Industries Charles Obichang, Minister of Human Resources, Culture, Tourism and Development Ngiraibelas Tmetuchl, Senate Floor Leader Kerai Mariur, House of Delegates Floor Leader Warren Umetaro, High Chief of Ngiwal State Elliot Udui, Governor of Peleliu State Emais Roberts, and Governor of Koror State Eyos Rudimch.

    Details
    2025-05-20
    President Lai and President Surangel S. Whipps, Jr. of Palau hold bilateral talks and witness signing of cooperation agreements  
    On the afternoon of May 20, following a welcome ceremony with military honors for President Surangel S. Whipps, Jr. of the Republic of Palau and his wife, President Lai Ching-te, accompanied by Vice President Bi-khim Hsiao, held bilateral talks with President Whipps at the Presidential Office. The two leaders also jointly witnessed the signing of a technical cooperation agreement and an agreement on diplomatic staff training cooperation. In remarks, President Lai thanked Palau for standing firm in its backing of Taiwan’s international participation as geopolitical tensions continue to increase in the Pacific region. He added that he looks forward to the cooperative ties between Taiwan and Palau continuing to expand into even broader areas, allowing our economies and societies to further progress as we jointly advance peace, stability, and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region. A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows: I welcome our guests to Taiwan once again. Last year on May 20, President Whipps led a delegation to attend the inauguration ceremony for myself and Vice President Hsiao. I am delighted, on the anniversary of my first year in office, to meet with old friends of Taiwan again, as President Whipps returns for this visit. Taiwan-Palau relations have grown even closer in recent years thanks to the strong support of President Whipps. In 2022, during my term as vice president, I led a delegation to Palau as a demonstration of how our nations were together boosting tourism development as we jointly faced the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. Every time I visit Palau, and every time I meet with President Whipps, I feel very deeply that Taiwan and Palau are like family. We are both maritime nations and share a common Austronesian heritage and culture. We are also staunch partners in upholding such values as freedom, democracy, and respect for human rights. Last December, when I went on my first overseas trip since taking office, one of the nations I visited was Palau. We celebrated the 30th anniversary of Palau’s independence and 25 years of diplomatic relations, underscoring our friendly ties. Taiwan and Palau enjoy close exchanges and cooperation in a range of areas, including climate change, education, agriculture and fisheries, healthcare, humanitarian assistance, sports, and culture. After this meeting, President Whipps and I will witness the signing of a technical cooperation agreement and an agreement on diplomatic staff training cooperation, demonstrating once again our diverse collaboration and strong friendship. I believe that by working together, Taiwan and Palau can contribute to each other’s development and overcome the regional and global challenges we currently face. In particular, as geopolitical tensions continue to increase in the Pacific region, Palau has wisely and courageously upheld democratic values and stood firm in its backing of Taiwan’s international participation. Palau has never stopped voicing support for Taiwan, including at the United Nations General Assembly, the World Health Organization, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of the Parties, and the UN Ocean Conference. We have been deeply moved by this support. I thank President Whipps again for his high regard and support for Taiwan. I look forward to the cooperative ties between our nations continuing to expand into even broader areas. This will allow our economies and societies to further progress as we jointly advance peace, stability, and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region. President Whipps then delivered remarks, saying that it is a great honor for him to be here, standing in this historic place – a symbol of strength, resilience, and the democratic spirit of the Taiwanese people. On behalf of the government of Palau, President Whipps extended heartfelt gratitude to President Lai and the people of Taiwan for the warm welcome and gracious hospitality toward him and his delegation. President Whipps then extended sincere thanks for President Lai’s visit to Palau in December – his second visit to Palau – and for having Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) attend his inauguration as a special envoy. He added that this also marks his third visit to Taiwan since President Lai took office, saying that this demonstrates the strength of our growing relationship. President Whipps indicated that the increased engagements and numerous entrepreneurs that President Lai has brought from Taiwan to Palau have resulted in fruitful visits, and that President Lai’s leadership represents hope, unity, and continued advancement of democracy and freedom, not only for Taiwan, but for the broader Indo-Pacific region. President Whipps went on to say that this visit to Taiwan reaffirms our deep friendship and shared values between our two nations. He emphasized that Palau and Taiwan are bound not by proximity, but by purpose, in that both are island nations and believe in human dignity, the rule of law, and the right of our people to determine their own futures. President Whipps stated that although we are celebrating 26 years of diplomatic relations, Taiwan has been a steadfast partner of Palau for decades, and that one of the MOUs they are signing further extends the relationship that began in December of 1984. From healthcare and medical missions, to education, agriculture, renewable energy, infrastructure, the private sector, tourism development, and climate resilience, he said, our cooperation has improved lives and strengthened our communities. The president also indicated that during the COVID-19 pandemic, Taiwan stood with Palau, noting that both sides began the tourism bubble, and that President Lai came to Palau to reopen the two weekly direct flights that have now been increased to four. That solidarity will never be forgotten, he said. As the world faces growing uncertainty and complex challenges from climate change to global tensions, President Whipps said, this friendship becomes even more vital. The president concluded his remarks by expressing hope that both nations continue to stand together, work together, and advocate together for peace, prosperity, and for the right of small nations to be seen, heard, and respected. After the bilateral talks, President Lai and President Whipps witnessed the signing of the technical cooperation agreement and the agreement on diplomatic staff training cooperation by Minister Lin and Palauan Minister of State Gustav Aitaro. The delegation also included Palauan Minister of Public Infrastructure and Industries Charles Obichang, Minister of Human Resources, Culture, Tourism and Development Ngiraibelas Tmetuchl, Senate Floor Leader Kerai Mariur, House of Delegates Floor Leader Warren Umetaro, High Chief of Ngiwal State Elliot Udui, Governor of Peleliu State Emais Roberts, and Governor of Koror State Eyos Rudimch.  

    Details
    2025-05-20
    President Lai interviewed by Nippon Television and Yomiuri TV
    In a recent interview on Nippon Television’s news zero program, President Lai Ching-te responded to questions from host Mr. Sakurai Sho and Yomiuri TV Shanghai Bureau Chief Watanabe Masayo on topics including reflections on his first year in office, cross-strait relations, China’s military threats, Taiwan-United States relations, and Taiwan-Japan relations. The interview was broadcast on the evening of May 19. During the interview, President Lai stated that China intends to change the world’s rules-based international order, and that if Taiwan were invaded, global supply chains would be disrupted. Therefore, he said, Taiwan will strengthen its national defense, prevent war by preparing for war, and achieve the goal of peace. The president also noted that Taiwan’s purpose for developing drones is based on national security and industrial needs, and that Taiwan hopes to collaborate with Japan. He then reiterated that China’s threats are an international problem, and expressed hope to work together with the US, Japan, and others in the global democratic community to prevent China from starting a war. Following is the text of the questions and the president’s responses: Q: How do you feel as you are about to round out your first year in office? President Lai: When I was young, I was determined to practice medicine and save lives. When I left medicine to go into politics, I was determined to transform Taiwan. And when I was sworn in as president on May 20 last year, I was determined to strengthen the nation. Time flies, and it has already been a year. Although the process has been very challenging, I am deeply honored to be a part of it. I am also profoundly grateful to our citizens for allowing me the opportunity to give back to our country. The future will certainly be full of more challenges, but I will do everything I can to unite the people and continue strengthening the nation. That is how I am feeling now. Q: We are now coming up on the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, and over this period, we have often heard that conflict between Taiwan and the mainland is imminent. Do you personally believe that a cross-strait conflict could happen? President Lai: The international community is very much aware that China intends to replace the US and change the world’s rules-based international order, and annexing Taiwan is just the first step. So, as China’s military power grows stronger, some members of the international community are naturally on edge about whether a cross-strait conflict will break out. The international community must certainly do everything in its power to avoid a conflict in the Taiwan Strait; there is too great a cost. Besides causing direct disasters to both Taiwan and China, the impact on the global economy would be even greater, with estimated losses of US$10 trillion from war alone – that is roughly 10 percent of the global GDP. Additionally, 20 percent of global shipping passes through the Taiwan Strait and surrounding waters, so if a conflict breaks out in the strait, other countries including Japan and Korea would suffer a grave impact. For Japan and Korea, a quarter of external transit passes through the Taiwan Strait and surrounding waters, and a third of the various energy resources and minerals shipped back from other countries pass through said areas. If Taiwan were invaded, global supply chains would be disrupted, and therefore conflict in the Taiwan Strait must be avoided. Such a conflict is indeed avoidable. I am very thankful to Prime Minister of Japan Ishiba Shigeru and former Prime Ministers Abe Shinzo, Suga Yoshihide, and Kishida Fumio, as well as US President Donald Trump and former President Joe Biden, and the other G7 leaders, for continuing to emphasize at international venues that peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait are essential components for global security and prosperity. When everyone in the global democratic community works together, stacking up enough strength to make China’s objectives unattainable or to make the cost of invading Taiwan too high for it to bear, a conflict in the strait can naturally be avoided. Q: As you said, President Lai, maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait is also very important for other countries. How can war be avoided? What sort of countermeasures is Taiwan prepared to take to prevent war? President Lai: As Mr. Sakurai mentioned earlier, we are coming up on the 80th anniversary of the end of WWII. There are many lessons we can take from that war. First is that peace is priceless, and war has no winners. From the tragedies of WWII, there are lessons that humanity should learn. We must pursue peace, and not start wars blindly, as that would be a major disaster for humanity. In other words, we must be determined to safeguard peace. The second lesson is that we cannot be complacent toward authoritarian powers. If you give them an inch, they will take a mile. They will keep growing, and eventually, not only will peace be unattainable, but war will be inevitable. The third lesson is why WWII ended: It ended because different groups joined together in solidarity. Taiwan, Japan, and the Indo-Pacific region are all directly subjected to China’s threats, so we hope to be able to join together in cooperation. This is why we proposed the Four Pillars of Peace action plan. First, we will strengthen our national defense. Second, we will strengthen economic resilience. Third is standing shoulder to shoulder with the democratic community to demonstrate the strength of deterrence. Fourth is that as long as China treats Taiwan with parity and dignity, Taiwan is willing to conduct exchanges and cooperate with China, and seek peace and mutual prosperity. These four pillars can help us avoid war and achieve peace. That is to say, Taiwan hopes to achieve peace through strength, prevent war by preparing for war, keeping war from happening and pursuing the goal of peace. Q: Regarding drones, everyone knows that recently, Taiwan has been actively researching, developing, and introducing drones. Why do you need to actively research, develop, and introduce new drones at this time? President Lai: This is for two purposes. The first is to meet national security needs. The second is to meet industrial development needs. Because Taiwan, Japan, and the Philippines are all part of the first island chain, and we are all democratic nations, we cannot be like an authoritarian country like China, which has an unlimited national defense budget. In this kind of situation, island nations such as Taiwan, Japan, and the Philippines should leverage their own technologies to develop national defense methods that are asymmetric and utilize unmanned vehicles. In particular, from the Russo-Ukrainian War, we see that Ukraine has successfully utilized unmanned vehicles to protect itself and prevent Russia from unlimited invasion. In other words, the Russo-Ukrainian War has already proven the importance of drones. Therefore, the first purpose of developing drones is based on national security needs. Second, the world has already entered the era of smart technology. Whether generative, agentic, or physical, AI will continue to develop. In the future, cars and ships will also evolve into unmanned vehicles and unmanned boats, and there will be unmanned factories. Drones will even be able to assist with postal deliveries, or services like Uber, Uber Eats, and foodpanda, or agricultural irrigation and pesticide spraying. Therefore, in the future era of comprehensive smart technology, developing unmanned vehicles is a necessity. Taiwan, based on industrial needs, is actively planning the development of drones and unmanned vehicles. I would like to take this opportunity to express Taiwan’s hope to collaborate with Japan in the unmanned vehicle industry. Just as we do in the semiconductor industry, where Japan has raw materials, equipment, and technology, and Taiwan has wafer manufacturing, our two countries can cooperate. Japan is a technological power, and Taiwan also has significant technological strengths. If Taiwan and Japan work together, we will not only be able to safeguard peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and security in the Indo-Pacific region, but it will also be very helpful for the industrial development of both countries. Q: The drones you just described probably include examples from the Russo-Ukrainian War. Taiwan and China are separated by the Taiwan Strait. Do our drones need to have cross-sea flight capabilities? President Lai: Taiwan does not intend to counterattack the mainland, and does not intend to invade any country. Taiwan’s drones are meant to protect our own nation and territory. Q: Former President Biden previously stated that US forces would assist Taiwan’s defense in the event of an attack. President Trump, however, has yet to clearly state that the US would help defend Taiwan. Do you think that in such an event, the US would help defend Taiwan? Or is Taiwan now trying to persuade the US? President Lai: Former President Biden and President Trump have answered questions from reporters. Although their responses were different, strong cooperation with Taiwan under the Biden administration has continued under the Trump administration; there has been no change. During President Trump’s first term, cooperation with Taiwan was broader and deeper compared to former President Barack Obama’s terms. After former President Biden took office, cooperation with Taiwan increased compared to President Trump’s first term. Now, during President Trump’s second term, cooperation with Taiwan is even greater than under former President Biden. Taiwan-US cooperation continues to grow stronger, and has not changed just because President Trump and former President Biden gave different responses to reporters. Furthermore, the Trump administration publicly stated that in the future, the US will shift its strategic focus from Europe to the Indo-Pacific. The US secretary of defense even publicly stated that the primary mission of the US is to prevent China from invading Taiwan, maintain stability in the Indo-Pacific, and thus maintain world peace. There is a saying in Taiwan that goes, “Help comes most to those who help themselves.” Before asking friends and allies for assistance in facing threats from China, Taiwan must first be determined and prepared to defend itself. This is Taiwan’s principle, and we are working in this direction, making all the necessary preparations to safeguard the nation. Q: I would like to ask you a question about Taiwan-Japan relations. After the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011, you made an appeal to give Japan a great deal of assistance and care. In particular, you visited Sendai to offer condolences. Later, you also expressed condolences and concern after the earthquakes in Aomori and Kumamoto. What are your expectations for future Taiwan-Japan exchanges and development? President Lai: I come from Tainan, and my constituency is in Tainan. Tainan has very deep ties with Japan, and of course, Taiwan also has deep ties with Japan. However, among Taiwan’s 22 counties and cities, Tainan has the deepest relationship with Japan. I sincerely hope that both of you and your teams will have an opportunity to visit Tainan. I will introduce Tainan’s scenery, including architecture from the era of Japanese rule, Tainan’s cuisine, and unique aspects of Tainan society, and you can also see lifestyles and culture from the Showa era.  The Wushantou Reservoir in Tainan was completed by engineer Mr. Hatta Yoichi from Kanazawa, Japan and the team he led to Tainan after he graduated from then-Tokyo Imperial University. It has nearly a century of history and is still in use today. This reservoir, along with the 16,000-km-long Chianan Canal, transformed the 150,000-hectare Chianan Plain into Taiwan’s premier rice-growing area. It was that foundation in agriculture that enabled Taiwan to develop industry and the technology sector of today. The reservoir continues to supply water to Tainan Science Park. It is used by residents of Tainan, the agricultural sector, and industry, and even the technology sector in Xinshi Industrial Park, as well as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company. Because of this, the people of Tainan are deeply grateful for Mr. Hatta and very friendly toward the people of Japan. A major earthquake, the largest in 50 years, struck Tainan on February 6, 2016, resulting in significant casualties. As mayor of Tainan at the time, I was extremely grateful to then-Prime Minister Abe, who sent five Japanese officials to the disaster site in Tainan the day after the earthquake. They were very thoughtful and asked what kind of assistance we needed from the Japanese government. They offered to provide help based on what we needed. I was deeply moved, as former Prime Minister Abe showed such care, going beyond the formality of just sending supplies that we may or may not have actually needed. Instead, the officials asked what we needed and then provided assistance based on those needs, which really moved me. Similarly, when the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011 or the later Kumamoto earthquakes struck, the people of Tainan, under my leadership, naturally and dutifully expressed their support. Even earlier, when central Taiwan was hit by a major earthquake in 1999, Japan was the first country to deploy a rescue team to the disaster area. On February 6, 2018, after a major earthquake in Hualien, former Prime Minister Abe appeared in a video holding up a message of encouragement he had written in calligraphy saying “Remain strong, Taiwan.” All of Taiwan was deeply moved. Over the years, Taiwan and Japan have supported each other when earthquakes struck, and have forged bonds that are family-like, not just neighborly. This is truly valuable. In the future, I hope Taiwan and Japan can be like brothers, and that the peoples of Taiwan and Japan can treat one another like family. If Taiwan has a problem, then Japan has a problem; if Japan has a problem, then Taiwan has a problem. By caring for and helping each other, we can face various challenges and difficulties, and pursue a brighter future. Q: President Lai, you just used the phrase “If Taiwan has a problem, then Japan has a problem.” In the event that China attempts to invade Taiwan by force, what kind of response measures would you hope the US military and Japan’s Self-Defense Forces take? President Lai: As I just mentioned, annexing Taiwan is only China’s first step. Its ultimate objective is to change the rules-based international order. That being the case, China’s threats are an international problem. So, I would very much hope to work together with the US, Japan, and others in the global democratic community to prevent China from starting a war – prevention, after all, is more important than cure.

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    2025-05-13
    President Lai interviewed by Japan’s Nikkei  
    In a recent interview with Japan’s Nikkei, President Lai Ching-te responded to questions regarding Taiwan-Japan and Taiwan-United States relations, cross-strait relations, the semiconductor industry, and the international economic and trade landscape. The interview was published by Nikkei on May 13. President Lai indicated that Nikkei, Inc. is a global news organization that has received significant recognition both domestically and internationally, and that he is deeply honored to be interviewed by Nikkei and grateful for their invitation. The president said that he would like to take this rare opportunity to thank Japan’s government, National Diet, society, and public for their longstanding support for Taiwan. Noting that current Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru and former Prime Ministers Abe Shinzo, Suga Yoshihide, and Kishida Fumio have all strongly supported Taiwan, he said that the peoples of Taiwan and Japan also have a deep mutual affection, and that through the interview, he hopes to enhance the bilateral relationship between Taiwan and Japan, deepen the affection between our peoples, and foster more future cooperation to promote prosperity and development in both countries. In response to questions raised on the free trade system and the recent tariff war, President Lai indicated that over the past few decades, the free economy headed by the Western world and led by the US has brought economic prosperity and political stability to Taiwan and Japan. At the same time, he said, we have also learned or followed many Western values. The president said he believes that Taiwan and Japan are exemplary students, but some countries are not. Therefore, he said, the biggest crisis right now is China, which exploits the free trade system to engage in plagiarism and counterfeiting, infringe on intellectual property rights, and even provide massive government subsidies that facilitate the dumping of low-priced goods worldwide, which has a major impact on many countries including Japan and Taiwan. If this kind of unfair trade is not resolved, he said, the stable societies and economic prosperity we have painstakingly built over decades, as well as some of the values we pursue, could be destroyed. Therefore, President Lai said he thinks it is worthwhile for us to observe the recent willingness of the US to address unfair trade, and if necessary, offer assistance. President Lai emphasized that the national strategic plan for Taiwanese industries is for them to be rooted in Taiwan while expanding their global presence and marketing worldwide. Therefore, he said, while the 32 percent tariff increase imposed by the US on Taiwan is indeed a major challenge, we are willing to address it seriously and find opportunities within that challenge, making Taiwan’s strategic plan for industry even more comprehensive. When asked about Taiwan’s trade arrangements, President Lai indicated that in 2010 China accounted for 83.8 percent of Taiwan’s outbound investment, but last year it accounted for only 7.5 percent. In 2020, he went on, 43.9 percent of Taiwan’s exports went to China, but that figure dropped to 31.7 percent in 2024. The president said that we have systematically transferred investments from Taiwanese enterprises to Japan, Southeast Asia, Europe, and the US. Therefore, he said, last year Taiwan’s largest outbound investment was in the US, accounting for roughly 40 percent of the total. Nevertheless, only 23.4 percent of Taiwanese products were sold to the US, with 76.6 percent sold to places other than the US, he said.  The president emphasized that we don’t want to put all our eggs in one basket, and hope to establish a global presence. Under these circumstances, he said, Taiwan is very eager to cooperate with Japan. President Lai stated that at this moment, the Indo-Pacific and international community really need Japan’s leadership, especially to make the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) excel in its functions, and also requested Japan to support Taiwan’s CPTPP accession. The president said that Taiwan hopes to sign an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with Japan to build closer ties in economic trade and promote further investment, and that we also hope to strengthen relations with the European Union, and even other regions. Currently, he said, we are proposing an initiative on global semiconductor supply chain partnerships for democracies, because the semiconductor industry is an ecosystem. The president raised the example that Japan has materials, equipment, and technology; the US has IC design and marketing; Taiwan has production and manufacturing; and the Netherlands excels in equipment, saying we therefore hope to leverage Taiwan’s advantages in production and manufacturing to connect the democratic community and establish a global non-red supply chain for semiconductors, ensuring further world prosperity and development in the future, and ensuring that free trade can continue to function without being affected by dumping, which would undermine future prosperity and development. The president stated that as we want industries to expand their global presence and market internationally while staying rooted here in Taiwan, having industries rooted in Taiwan involves promoting pay raises for employees, tax cuts, and deregulation, as well as promoting enterprise investment tax credits. He said that we have also proposed Three Major Programs for Investing in Taiwan for Taiwanese enterprises and are actively resolving issues regarding access to water, electricity, land, human resources, and professional talent so that the business community can return to Taiwan to invest, or enterprises in Taiwan can increase their investments. He went on to say that we are also actively signing bilateral investment agreements with friends and allies so that when our companies invest and expand their presence abroad, their rights and interests as investors are ensured.  President Lai mentioned that Taiwan hopes to sign an EPA with Japan, similar to the Taiwan-US Initiative on 21st-Century Trade and the Economic Prosperity Partnership Dialogue, or the Enhanced Trade Partnership arrangement with the United Kingdom, or similar agreements or memorandums of understanding with Canada and Australia that allow Taiwanese products to be marketed worldwide, concluding that those are our overall arrangements. Looking at the history of Taiwan’s industrial development, President Lai indicated, of course it began in Taiwan, and then moved west to China and south to Southeast Asia. He said that we hope to take this opportunity to strengthen cooperation with Japan to the north, across the Pacific Ocean to the east, and develop the North American market, making Taiwan’s industries even stronger. In other words, he said, while Taiwan sees the current reciprocal tariffs imposed by the US as a kind of challenge, it also views these changes positively. On the topic of pressure from China affecting Taiwan’s participation in international frameworks such as the CPTPP or its signing of an EPA with Japan, President Lai responded that the key point is what kind of attitude we should adopt in viewing China’s acts of oppression. If we act based on our belief in free trade, he said, or on the universal values we pursue – democracy, freedom, and respect for human rights – and also on the understanding that a bilateral trade agreement between Taiwan and Japan would contribute to the economic prosperity and development of both countries, or that Taiwan’s accession to the CPTPP would benefit progress and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region, then he hopes that friends and allies will strongly support us. On the Trump administration’s intentions regarding the reciprocal tariff policy and the possibility of taxing semiconductors, as well as how Taiwan plans to respond, President Lai said that since President Trump took office, he has paid close attention to interviews with both him and his staff. The president said that several of President Trump’s main intentions are: First, he wants to address the US fiscal situation. For example, President Lai said, while the US GDP is about US$29 trillion annually, its national debt stands at US$36 trillion, which is roughly 124 percent of GDP. Second, he went on, annual government spending exceeds US$6.5 trillion, but revenues are only around US$4.5 trillion, resulting in a nearly US$2 trillion deficit each year, about 7 percent of GDP. Third, he said, the US pays nearly US$1.2 trillion in interest annually, which exceeds the US$1 trillion defense budget and accounts for more than 3 percent of GDP. Fourth, President Trump still wants to implement tax cuts, aiming to reduce taxes for 85 percent of Americans, he said, noting that this would cost between US$500 billion and US$1 trillion. These points, President Lai said, illustrate his first goal: solving the fiscal problem. President Lai went on to say that second, the US feels the threat of China and believes that reindustrialization is essential; without reindustrialization, the US risks a growing gap in industrial capacity compared to China. Third, he said, in this era of global smart technology, President Trump wants to lead the nation to become a world center of AI. Fourth, he aims to ensure world peace and prevent future wars, President Lai said. In regard to what the US seeks to achieve, he said he believes these four areas form the core of the Trump administration’s intentions, and that is why President Trump has raised tariffs, demanded that trading partners purchase more American goods, and encouraged friendly and allied nations to invest in the US, all in order to achieve these goals. President Lai indicated that the 32 percent reciprocal tariff poses a critical challenge for Taiwan, and we must treat it seriously. He said that our approach is not confrontation, but negotiation to reduce tariffs, and that we have also agreed to measures such as procurement, investment, resolving non-tariff trade barriers, and addressing origin washing in order to effectively reduce the trade deficit between Taiwan and the US. Of course, he said, through this negotiation process, we also hope to turn challenges into opportunities. The president said that first, we aim to start negotiations from the proposal of zero tariffs and seek to establish a bilateral trade agreement with the US. Second, he went on, we hope to support US reindustrialization and its aim to become a world AI hub through investment, while simultaneously upgrading and transforming Taiwan’s industries, which would help further integrate Taiwan’s industries into the US economic structure, ensuring Taiwan’s long-term development.  President Lai emphasized again that Taiwan’s national industrial strategy is for industries to stay firmly rooted in Taiwan while expanding their global presence and marketing worldwide. He repeated that we have gone from moving westward across the Taiwan Strait, to shifting southbound, to working closer northward with Japan, and now the time is ripe for us to expand eastward by investing in North America. In other words, he said, while we take this challenge seriously to protect national interests and ensure that no industry is sacrificed, we also hope these negotiations will lead to deeper Taiwan-US trade relations through Taiwanese investment in the US, concluding that these are our expectations. The president stated that naturally, the reciprocal tariffs imposed by the US will have an impact on Taiwanese industries, so in response, the Taiwanese government has already proposed support measures for affected industries totaling NT$93 billion. In addition, he said, we have outlined broader needs for Taiwan’s long-term development, which will be covered by a special budget proposal of NT$410 billion, noting that this has already been approved by the Executive Yuan and will be submitted to the Legislative Yuan for review. He said that this special budget proposal addresses four main areas: supporting industries, stabilizing employment, protecting people’s livelihoods, and enhancing resilience. As for tariffs on semiconductors, President Lai said, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) has committed to investing in the US at the request of its customers. He said he believes that TSMC’s industry chain will follow suit, and that these are concrete actions that are unrelated to tariffs. However, he said, if the US were to invoke Section 232 and impose tariffs on semiconductors or related industries, it would discourage Taiwanese semiconductor and ICT investments in the US, and that we will make this position clear to the US going forward. President Lai indicated that among Taiwan’s exports to the US, there are two main categories: ICT products and electronic components, which together account for 65.4 percent. These are essential to the US, he said, unlike final goods such as cups, tables, or mattresses. He went on to say that what Taiwan sells to the US are the technological products required by AI designers like NVIDIA, AMD, Amazon, Google, and Apple, and that therefore, we will make sure the US understands clearly that we are not exporting end products, but the high-tech components necessary for the US to reindustrialize and become a global AI center. Furthermore, the president said, Taiwan is also willing to increase its defense budget and military procurement. He stated that Taiwan is committed to defending itself and is strongly willing to cooperate with friends and allies to ensure regional peace and stability, and that this is also something President Trump hopes to see. Asked whether TSMC’s fabs overseas could weaken Taiwan’s strategic position as a key hub for semiconductor manufacturing, and whether that could then give other countries fewer incentives to protect Taiwan, President Lai responded by saying that political leaders around the world including Japan’s Prime Minister Ishiba and former Prime Ministers Abe, Suga, and Kishida have emphasized, at the G7 and other major international fora, that peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait are essential for global security and prosperity. In other words, he explained, the international community cares about Taiwan and supports peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait because Taiwan is located in the first island chain in the Indo-Pacific, directly facing China. He pointed out that if Taiwan is not protected, China’s expansionist ambitions will certainly grow, which would impact the current rules-based international order. Thus, he said, the international community willingly cares about Taiwan and supports stability in the Taiwan Strait – that is the reason, and it has no direct connection with TSMC. He noted that after all, TSMC has not made investments in that many countries, stressing that, on that point, it is clear. President Lai said that TSMC’s investments in Japan, Europe, and the US are all natural, normal economic and investment activities. He said that Taiwan is a democratic country whose society is based on the rule of law, so when Taiwanese companies need to invest around the world for business needs, the government will support those investments in principle so long as they do not harm national interests. President Lai said that after TSMC Chairman C.C. Wei (魏哲家) held a press conference with President Trump to announce the investment in the US, Chairman Wei returned to Taiwan to hold a press conference with him at the Presidential Office, where the chairman explained to the Taiwanese public that TSMC’s R&D center will remain in Taiwan and that the facilities it has already committed to investing in here will not change and will not be affected. So, the president explained, to put it another way, TSMC will not be weakened by its investment in the US. He further emphasized that Taiwan has strengths in semiconductor manufacturing and is very willing to work alongside other democratic countries to promote the next stage of global prosperity and development. A question was raised about which side should be chosen between the US and China, under the current perception of a return to the Cold War, with East and West facing off as two opposing blocs. President Lai responded by saying that some experts and scholars describe the current situation as entering a new Cold War era between democratic and authoritarian camps; others assert that the war has already begun, including information warfare, economic and trade wars, and the ongoing wars in Europe – the Russo-Ukrainian War – and the Middle East, and the Israel-Hamas conflict. The president said that these are all matters experts have cautioned about, noting that he is not a historian and so will not attempt to define today’s political situation from an academic standpoint. However, he said, he believes that every country has a choice, which is to say, Taiwan, Japan, or any other nation does not necessarily have to choose between the US and China. What we are deciding, he said, is whether our country will maintain a democratic constitutional system or regress into an authoritarian regime, and this is essentially a choice of values – not merely a choice between two major powers. President Lai said that Taiwan’s situation is different from other countries because we face a direct threat from China. He pointed out that we have experienced military conflicts such as the August 23 Artillery Battle and the Battle of Guningtou – actual wars between the Republic of China and the People’s Republic of China. He said that China’s ambition to annex Taiwan has never wavered, and that today, China’s political and military intimidation, as well as internal united front infiltration, are growing increasingly intense. Therefore, he underlined, to defend democracy and sovereignty, protect our free and democratic system, and ensure the safety of our people’s lives and property, Taiwan’s choice is clear. President Lai said that China’s military exercises are not limited to the Taiwan Strait, and include the East China Sea, South China Sea, and even the Sea of Japan, as well as areas around Korea and Australia. Emphasizing that Taiwan, Japan, Australia, and the Philippines are all democratic nations, the president said that Taiwan’s choice is clear, and that he believes Japan also has no other choice. We are all democratic countries, he said, whose people have long pursued the universal values of democracy, freedom, and respect for human rights, and that is what is most important. Regarding the intensifying tensions between the US and China, the president was asked what roles Taiwan and Japan can play. President Lai responded that in his view, Japan is a powerful nation, and he sincerely hopes that Japan can take a leading role amid these changes in the international landscape. He said he believes that countries in the Indo-Pacific region are also willing to respond. He suggested several areas where we can work together: first, democracy and peace; second, innovation and prosperity; and third, justice and sustainability. President Lai stated that in the face of authoritarian threats, we should let peace be our beacon and democracy our compass as we respond to the challenges posed by authoritarian states. Second, he added, as the world enters an era characterized by the comprehensive adoption of smart technologies, Japan and Taiwan should collaborate in the field of innovation to further drive regional prosperity and development. Third, he continued, is justice and sustainability. He explained that because international society still has many issues that need to be resolved, Taiwan and Japan can cooperate for the public good, helping countries in need around the world, and cooperating to address climate change and achieve net-zero transition by 2050. Asked whether he hopes that the US will continue to be a leader in the liberal democratic system, President Lai responded by saying that although the US severed diplomatic ties with the Republic of China, for the past few decades it has assisted Taiwan in various areas such as national defense, security, and countering threats from China, based on the Taiwan Relations Act and the Six Assurances. He pointed out that Taiwan has also benefited, directly and indirectly, in terms of politics, democracy, and economic prosperity thanks to the US, and so Taiwan naturally hopes that the US remains strong and continues to lead the world. President Lai said that when the US encounters difficulties, whether financial difficulties, reindustrialization issues, or becoming a global center for AI, and hopes to receive support from its friends and allies to jointly safeguard regional peace and stability, Taiwan is willing to stand together for a common cause. If the US remains strong, he said, that helps Taiwan, the Indo-Pacific region, and the world as a whole. Noting that while the vital role of the US on the global stage has not changed, the president said that after decades of shouldering global responsibilities, it has encountered some issues. Now, it has to make adjustments, he said, stating his firm belief that it will do so swiftly, and quickly resume its leadership role in the world. Asked to comment on remarks he made during his election campaign that he would like to invite China’s President Xi Jinping for bubble tea, President Lai responded that Taiwan is a peace-loving country, and Taiwanese society is inherently kind, and therefore we hope to get along peacefully with China, living in peace and mutual prosperity. So, during his term as vice president, he said, he was expressing the goodwill of Taiwanese society. Noting that while he of course understands that China’s President Xi would have certain difficulties in accepting this, he emphasized that the goodwill of Taiwanese society has always existed. If China reflects on the past two or three decades, he said, it will see that its economy was able to develop with Taiwan as its largest foreign investor. The president explained that every year, 1 to 2 million Taiwanese were starting businesses or investing in China, creating numerous job opportunities and stabilizing Chinese society. While many Taiwanese businesses have profited, he said, Chinese society has benefited even more. He added that every time a natural disaster occurs, if China is in need, Taiwanese always offer donations. Therefore, the president said, he hopes that China can face the reality of the Republic of China’s existence and understand that the people of Taiwan hope to continue living free and democratic lives with respect for human rights. He also expressed hope that China can pay attention to the goodwill of Taiwanese society. He underlined that we have not abandoned the notion that as long as there is parity, dignity, exchange, and cooperation, the goodwill of choosing dialogue over confrontation and exchange over containment will always exist. Asked for his view on the national security reforms in response to China’s espionage activities and infiltration attempts, President Lai said that China’s united front infiltration activities in Taiwan are indeed very serious. He said that China’s ambitions to annex Taiwan rely not only on the use of political and military intimidation, but also on its long-term united front and infiltration activities in Taiwanese society. Recently, he pointed out, the Taiwan High Prosecutors Office of the Ministry of Justice prosecuted 64 spies, which is three times the number in 2021, and in addition to active-duty military personnel, many retired military personnel were also indicted. Moreover, he added, Taiwan also has the Chinese Unification Promotion Party, which has a background in organized crime, Rehabilitation Alliance Party, which was established by retired military personnel, and Republic of China Taiwan Military Government, which is also composed of retired generals. He explained that these are all China’s front organizations, and they plan one day to engage in collaboration within Taiwan, which shows the seriousness of China’s infiltration in Taiwan. Therefore, the president said, in the recent past he convened a high-level national security meeting and proposed 17 response strategies across five areas. He then enumerated the five areas: first, to address China’s threat to Taiwan’s sovereignty; second, to respond to the threat of China’s obscuring the Taiwanese people’s sense of national identity; third, to respond to the threat of China’s infiltrating and recruiting members of the ROC Armed Forces as spies; fourth, to respond to the threat of China’s infiltration of Taiwanese society through societal exchanges and united front work; and fifth, to respond to the threat of China using “integration plans” to draw Taiwan’s young people and Taiwanese businesses into its united front activities. In response to these five major threats, he said, he has proposed 17 response strategies, one of which being to restore the military trial system. He explained that if active-duty military personnel commit military crimes, they must be subject to military trials, and said that this expresses the Taiwanese government’s determination to respond to China’s united front infiltration and the subversion of Taiwan. Responding to the question of which actions Taiwan can take to guard against China’s threats to regional security, President Lai said that many people are worried that the increasingly tense situation may lead to accidental conflict and the outbreak of war. He stated his own view that Taiwan is committed to facing China’s various threats with caution. Taiwan is never the source of these problems, he emphasized, and if there is an accidental conflict and it turns into a full-scale war, it will certainly be a deliberate act by China using an accidental conflict as a pretext. He said that when China expanded its military presence in the East China Sea and South China Sea, the international community did not stop it; when China conducted exercises in the Taiwan Strait, the international community did not take strong measures to prevent this from happening. Now, he continued, China is conducting gray-zone exercises, which are aggressions against not only the Taiwan Strait, the South China Sea, and the East China Sea, but also extending to the Sea of Japan and waters near South Korea. He said that at this moment, Taiwan, the Philippines, Japan, and even the US should face these developments candidly and seriously, and we must exhibit unity and cooperation to prevent China’s gray-zone aggression from continuing to expand and prevent China from shifting from a military exercise to combat. If no action is taken now, the president said, the situation may become increasingly serious. Asked about the view of some US analysts who point out that China will have the ability to invade Taiwan around 2027, President Lai responded that Taiwan, as the country on the receiving end of threats and aggression, must plan for the worst and make the best preparations. He recalled a famous saying from the armed forces: “Do not count on the enemy not showing up; count on being ready should it strike.” This is why, he said, he proposed the Four Pillars of Peace action plan. First, he said, we must strengthen our national defense. Second, he added, we must strengthen economic resilience, adding that not only must our economy remain strong, but it must also be resilient, and that we cannot put all our eggs in the same basket, in China, as we have done in the past. Third, he continued, we must stand shoulder to shoulder with friends and allies such as Japan and the US, as well as the democratic community, and we must demonstrate the strength of deterrence to prevent China from making the wrong judgment. Fourth, he emphasized, as long as China treats Taiwan with parity and dignity, Taiwan is willing to conduct exchanges and cooperate with China and seek cross-strait peace and mutual prosperity through exchanges and cooperation. Regarding intensifying US-China confrontation, the president was asked in which areas he thinks Taiwan and Japan should strengthen cooperation; with Japan’s Ishiba administration also being a minority government, the president was asked for his expectations for the Ishiba administration. President Lai said that in the face of rapid and tremendous changes in the political situation, every government faces considerable challenges, especially for minority governments, but the Japanese government led by Prime Minister Ishiba has quite adequately responded with various strategies. Furthermore, he said, Japan is different from Taiwan, explaining that although Japan’s ruling party lacks a majority, political parties in Japan engage in competition domestically while exhibiting unity externally. He said that Taiwan’s situation is more challenging, because the ruling and opposition parties hold different views on the direction of the country, due to differences in national identity. The president expressed his hope that in the future Taiwan and Japan will enjoy even more comprehensive cooperation. He stated that he has always believed that deep historical bonds connect Taiwan and Japan. Over the past several decades, he said, when encountering natural disasters and tragedies, our two nations have assisted each other with mutual care and support. He said that the affection between the people of Taiwan and Japan is like that of a family. Pointing out that both countries face the threat of authoritarianism, he said that we share a mission to safeguard universal values such as democracy, freedom, and respect for human rights. The president said that our two countries should be more open to cooperation in various areas to maintain regional peace and stability as well as to strengthen cooperation in economic and industrial development, such as for semiconductor industry chains and everyday applications of AI, including robots and drones, adding that we can also cooperate on climate change response, such as in hydrogen energy and other strategies. He said our two countries should also continue to strengthen people-to-people exchanges. He then took the opportunity to once again invite our good friends from Japan to visit Taiwan for tourism and learn more about Taiwan, saying that the Taiwanese people wholeheartedly welcome our Japanese friends.  

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    2025-05-09
    President Lai extends congratulations on election of His Holiness Pope Leo XIV  
    Following the successful election of the 267th pope of the Roman Catholic Church, His Holiness Pope Leo XIV, on May 8, President Lai Ching-te extended sincere congratulations on behalf of the people and government of Taiwan, including its Catholic community. The president stated that he looks forward to working with Pope Leo XIV to continue deepening cooperation in the area of humanitarian aid and jointly defend the universal value of religious freedom, expanding and strengthening the alliance between Taiwan and the Vatican. Upon learning of the election results, President Lai directed the Republic of China (Taiwan) Embassy to the Holy See to convey a message of congratulations. In the message, President Lai extended sincere congratulations to Pope Leo XIV on behalf of the people and government of Taiwan, including its Catholic community, expressing confidence that His Holiness will lead the Catholic Church and its 1.4 billion followers worldwide with profound wisdom. President Lai also emphasized that Taiwan looks forward to continuing to work alongside the Holy See in the shared pursuit of peace, justice, religious freedom, solidarity, friendship, and human dignity. This year marks the 83rd anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between Taiwan and the Vatican. Enjoying a strong alliance, Taiwan and the Vatican share such universal values as freedom of religion, respect for human rights, peace, and benevolence, and conduct close exchanges. Taiwan will continue to engage in exchanges and cooperation with the Holy See, further strengthen bilateral relations, and work alongside the Holy See to contribute even more to the world.  

    Details
    2025-05-20
    President Lai interviewed by Nippon Television and Yomiuri TV
    In a recent interview on Nippon Television’s news zero program, President Lai Ching-te responded to questions from host Mr. Sakurai Sho and Yomiuri TV Shanghai Bureau Chief Watanabe Masayo on topics including reflections on his first year in office, cross-strait relations, China’s military threats, Taiwan-United States relations, and Taiwan-Japan relations. The interview was broadcast on the evening of May 19. During the interview, President Lai stated that China intends to change the world’s rules-based international order, and that if Taiwan were invaded, global supply chains would be disrupted. Therefore, he said, Taiwan will strengthen its national defense, prevent war by preparing for war, and achieve the goal of peace. The president also noted that Taiwan’s purpose for developing drones is based on national security and industrial needs, and that Taiwan hopes to collaborate with Japan. He then reiterated that China’s threats are an international problem, and expressed hope to work together with the US, Japan, and others in the global democratic community to prevent China from starting a war. Following is the text of the questions and the president’s responses: Q: How do you feel as you are about to round out your first year in office? President Lai: When I was young, I was determined to practice medicine and save lives. When I left medicine to go into politics, I was determined to transform Taiwan. And when I was sworn in as president on May 20 last year, I was determined to strengthen the nation. Time flies, and it has already been a year. Although the process has been very challenging, I am deeply honored to be a part of it. I am also profoundly grateful to our citizens for allowing me the opportunity to give back to our country. The future will certainly be full of more challenges, but I will do everything I can to unite the people and continue strengthening the nation. That is how I am feeling now. Q: We are now coming up on the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, and over this period, we have often heard that conflict between Taiwan and the mainland is imminent. Do you personally believe that a cross-strait conflict could happen? President Lai: The international community is very much aware that China intends to replace the US and change the world’s rules-based international order, and annexing Taiwan is just the first step. So, as China’s military power grows stronger, some members of the international community are naturally on edge about whether a cross-strait conflict will break out. The international community must certainly do everything in its power to avoid a conflict in the Taiwan Strait; there is too great a cost. Besides causing direct disasters to both Taiwan and China, the impact on the global economy would be even greater, with estimated losses of US$10 trillion from war alone – that is roughly 10 percent of the global GDP. Additionally, 20 percent of global shipping passes through the Taiwan Strait and surrounding waters, so if a conflict breaks out in the strait, other countries including Japan and Korea would suffer a grave impact. For Japan and Korea, a quarter of external transit passes through the Taiwan Strait and surrounding waters, and a third of the various energy resources and minerals shipped back from other countries pass through said areas. If Taiwan were invaded, global supply chains would be disrupted, and therefore conflict in the Taiwan Strait must be avoided. Such a conflict is indeed avoidable. I am very thankful to Prime Minister of Japan Ishiba Shigeru and former Prime Ministers Abe Shinzo, Suga Yoshihide, and Kishida Fumio, as well as US President Donald Trump and former President Joe Biden, and the other G7 leaders, for continuing to emphasize at international venues that peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait are essential components for global security and prosperity. When everyone in the global democratic community works together, stacking up enough strength to make China’s objectives unattainable or to make the cost of invading Taiwan too high for it to bear, a conflict in the strait can naturally be avoided. Q: As you said, President Lai, maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait is also very important for other countries. How can war be avoided? What sort of countermeasures is Taiwan prepared to take to prevent war? President Lai: As Mr. Sakurai mentioned earlier, we are coming up on the 80th anniversary of the end of WWII. There are many lessons we can take from that war. First is that peace is priceless, and war has no winners. From the tragedies of WWII, there are lessons that humanity should learn. We must pursue peace, and not start wars blindly, as that would be a major disaster for humanity. In other words, we must be determined to safeguard peace. The second lesson is that we cannot be complacent toward authoritarian powers. If you give them an inch, they will take a mile. They will keep growing, and eventually, not only will peace be unattainable, but war will be inevitable. The third lesson is why WWII ended: It ended because different groups joined together in solidarity. Taiwan, Japan, and the Indo-Pacific region are all directly subjected to China’s threats, so we hope to be able to join together in cooperation. This is why we proposed the Four Pillars of Peace action plan. First, we will strengthen our national defense. Second, we will strengthen economic resilience. Third is standing shoulder to shoulder with the democratic community to demonstrate the strength of deterrence. Fourth is that as long as China treats Taiwan with parity and dignity, Taiwan is willing to conduct exchanges and cooperate with China, and seek peace and mutual prosperity. These four pillars can help us avoid war and achieve peace. That is to say, Taiwan hopes to achieve peace through strength, prevent war by preparing for war, keeping war from happening and pursuing the goal of peace. Q: Regarding drones, everyone knows that recently, Taiwan has been actively researching, developing, and introducing drones. Why do you need to actively research, develop, and introduce new drones at this time? President Lai: This is for two purposes. The first is to meet national security needs. The second is to meet industrial development needs. Because Taiwan, Japan, and the Philippines are all part of the first island chain, and we are all democratic nations, we cannot be like an authoritarian country like China, which has an unlimited national defense budget. In this kind of situation, island nations such as Taiwan, Japan, and the Philippines should leverage their own technologies to develop national defense methods that are asymmetric and utilize unmanned vehicles. In particular, from the Russo-Ukrainian War, we see that Ukraine has successfully utilized unmanned vehicles to protect itself and prevent Russia from unlimited invasion. In other words, the Russo-Ukrainian War has already proven the importance of drones. Therefore, the first purpose of developing drones is based on national security needs. Second, the world has already entered the era of smart technology. Whether generative, agentic, or physical, AI will continue to develop. In the future, cars and ships will also evolve into unmanned vehicles and unmanned boats, and there will be unmanned factories. Drones will even be able to assist with postal deliveries, or services like Uber, Uber Eats, and foodpanda, or agricultural irrigation and pesticide spraying. Therefore, in the future era of comprehensive smart technology, developing unmanned vehicles is a necessity. Taiwan, based on industrial needs, is actively planning the development of drones and unmanned vehicles. I would like to take this opportunity to express Taiwan’s hope to collaborate with Japan in the unmanned vehicle industry. Just as we do in the semiconductor industry, where Japan has raw materials, equipment, and technology, and Taiwan has wafer manufacturing, our two countries can cooperate. Japan is a technological power, and Taiwan also has significant technological strengths. If Taiwan and Japan work together, we will not only be able to safeguard peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and security in the Indo-Pacific region, but it will also be very helpful for the industrial development of both countries. Q: The drones you just described probably include examples from the Russo-Ukrainian War. Taiwan and China are separated by the Taiwan Strait. Do our drones need to have cross-sea flight capabilities? President Lai: Taiwan does not intend to counterattack the mainland, and does not intend to invade any country. Taiwan’s drones are meant to protect our own nation and territory. Q: Former President Biden previously stated that US forces would assist Taiwan’s defense in the event of an attack. President Trump, however, has yet to clearly state that the US would help defend Taiwan. Do you think that in such an event, the US would help defend Taiwan? Or is Taiwan now trying to persuade the US? President Lai: Former President Biden and President Trump have answered questions from reporters. Although their responses were different, strong cooperation with Taiwan under the Biden administration has continued under the Trump administration; there has been no change. During President Trump’s first term, cooperation with Taiwan was broader and deeper compared to former President Barack Obama’s terms. After former President Biden took office, cooperation with Taiwan increased compared to President Trump’s first term. Now, during President Trump’s second term, cooperation with Taiwan is even greater than under former President Biden. Taiwan-US cooperation continues to grow stronger, and has not changed just because President Trump and former President Biden gave different responses to reporters. Furthermore, the Trump administration publicly stated that in the future, the US will shift its strategic focus from Europe to the Indo-Pacific. The US secretary of defense even publicly stated that the primary mission of the US is to prevent China from invading Taiwan, maintain stability in the Indo-Pacific, and thus maintain world peace. There is a saying in Taiwan that goes, “Help comes most to those who help themselves.” Before asking friends and allies for assistance in facing threats from China, Taiwan must first be determined and prepared to defend itself. This is Taiwan’s principle, and we are working in this direction, making all the necessary preparations to safeguard the nation. Q: I would like to ask you a question about Taiwan-Japan relations. After the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011, you made an appeal to give Japan a great deal of assistance and care. In particular, you visited Sendai to offer condolences. Later, you also expressed condolences and concern after the earthquakes in Aomori and Kumamoto. What are your expectations for future Taiwan-Japan exchanges and development? President Lai: I come from Tainan, and my constituency is in Tainan. Tainan has very deep ties with Japan, and of course, Taiwan also has deep ties with Japan. However, among Taiwan’s 22 counties and cities, Tainan has the deepest relationship with Japan. I sincerely hope that both of you and your teams will have an opportunity to visit Tainan. I will introduce Tainan’s scenery, including architecture from the era of Japanese rule, Tainan’s cuisine, and unique aspects of Tainan society, and you can also see lifestyles and culture from the Showa era.  The Wushantou Reservoir in Tainan was completed by engineer Mr. Hatta Yoichi from Kanazawa, Japan and the team he led to Tainan after he graduated from then-Tokyo Imperial University. It has nearly a century of history and is still in use today. This reservoir, along with the 16,000-km-long Chianan Canal, transformed the 150,000-hectare Chianan Plain into Taiwan’s premier rice-growing area. It was that foundation in agriculture that enabled Taiwan to develop industry and the technology sector of today. The reservoir continues to supply water to Tainan Science Park. It is used by residents of Tainan, the agricultural sector, and industry, and even the technology sector in Xinshi Industrial Park, as well as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company. Because of this, the people of Tainan are deeply grateful for Mr. Hatta and very friendly toward the people of Japan. A major earthquake, the largest in 50 years, struck Tainan on February 6, 2016, resulting in significant casualties. As mayor of Tainan at the time, I was extremely grateful to then-Prime Minister Abe, who sent five Japanese officials to the disaster site in Tainan the day after the earthquake. They were very thoughtful and asked what kind of assistance we needed from the Japanese government. They offered to provide help based on what we needed. I was deeply moved, as former Prime Minister Abe showed such care, going beyond the formality of just sending supplies that we may or may not have actually needed. Instead, the officials asked what we needed and then provided assistance based on those needs, which really moved me. Similarly, when the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011 or the later Kumamoto earthquakes struck, the people of Tainan, under my leadership, naturally and dutifully expressed their support. Even earlier, when central Taiwan was hit by a major earthquake in 1999, Japan was the first country to deploy a rescue team to the disaster area. On February 6, 2018, after a major earthquake in Hualien, former Prime Minister Abe appeared in a video holding up a message of encouragement he had written in calligraphy saying “Remain strong, Taiwan.” All of Taiwan was deeply moved. Over the years, Taiwan and Japan have supported each other when earthquakes struck, and have forged bonds that are family-like, not just neighborly. This is truly valuable. In the future, I hope Taiwan and Japan can be like brothers, and that the peoples of Taiwan and Japan can treat one another like family. If Taiwan has a problem, then Japan has a problem; if Japan has a problem, then Taiwan has a problem. By caring for and helping each other, we can face various challenges and difficulties, and pursue a brighter future. Q: President Lai, you just used the phrase “If Taiwan has a problem, then Japan has a problem.” In the event that China attempts to invade Taiwan by force, what kind of response measures would you hope the US military and Japan’s Self-Defense Forces take? President Lai: As I just mentioned, annexing Taiwan is only China’s first step. Its ultimate objective is to change the rules-based international order. That being the case, China’s threats are an international problem. So, I would very much hope to work together with the US, Japan, and others in the global democratic community to prevent China from starting a war – prevention, after all, is more important than cure.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • Russian drone attacks dip in intensity after three nights of massive bombardment

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Russia launched 60 drones at Ukraine overnight, injuring several people, officials in Kyiv said on Tuesday, indicating a sharp decrease in the intensity of Moscow’s attacks after it conducted three nights of massive aerial bombardment.

    The earlier attacks – which the Ukrainian Air Force said included a record barrage of 355 drones on Sunday night – prompted U.S. President Donald Trump to say that Russian President Vladimir Putin had “gone absolutely CRAZY” and threaten sanctions.

    The air force said Russia’s latest drone attack hit targets in nine locations and used 60 drones. A 17-year-old boy was among 10 people who were injured overnight and early on Tuesday, officials said.

    “Air defence forces were working during the night in Dnipropetrovsk,” Serhiy Lysak, governor of the central-eastern region, said on the Telegram messaging app.

    The latter attack sparked a fire in a private house and an outbuilding in one district and destroyed an agricultural enterprise, a private house and a car in another, he said.

    A 59-year-old man was injured in a morning drone attack on the southern city of Kherson, the military administration said, while in a separate drone attack close to 8 a.m. (0500 GMT), six city employees were injured.

    The city regularly comes under Russian shelling and drone attacks.

    In the northeastern city of Sumy, a drone strike sparked a fire in a building of an industrial enterprise. An airstrike damaged at least seven private and one two-storey buildings and cars in another area, the military administration said. There were no casualties, it added.

    Russia, which began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, did not immediately comment on the reports.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has repeatedly called for the West to step up sanctions pressure on Russia to force it to accept the need for peace.

    (Reuters)

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Museum takes time to pay striking tribute to city’s classic clocks

    Source: City of Leeds

    Beautiful vintage clocks will take museum visitors in Leeds on a journey through time this week.

    The carefully curated collection of historic timepieces will be going on show at the Leeds Discovery Centre during a special family workshop exploring the art of clockmaking while looking at some of the museum’s huge collection.

    With examples including cuckoo clocks, long case clocks, better known as Grandfather clocks, and even retro digital bedside alarm clocks, the event will give visitors of all ages the opportunity to find out about some of the city’s esteemed clockmakers while getting an up-close look at their work and taking part in clock-themed some craft activities.

    Among the pieces featured in the event will be elaborate painted clock faces by Leeds artisans J C Elliott and G Winter, who both had local workshops in the late 19th Century, when many such small, family-run shops would have been located in big cities like Leeds.

    An intricate, early 20th Century Swiss-made wooden cuckoo clock and some classic examples of 19th and 20th Century carriage clocks are also included. They will be shown alongside a more modern, 1970s Minitman digital bedside alarm clock.

    Kitty Ross, Leeds Museums and Galleries’ curator of social history, said: “The variety of the timepieces in our collection really demonstrates how keeping time has been a blend of form and function for generations, with people not only wanting an accurate and reliable way to tell the time, but also a decorative and often beautiful one too.

    “This led to a wealth of remarkably talented and artistic clockmakers honing their craft in cities like Leeds, often passing on their skills to their descendants and forming highly respected family businesses which made a lasting contribution to the city.

    “Their work has very much stood the test of time and it’s a tribute to their skill that we’re still able to see and appreciate their work today and share it with visitors and families.”

    Other notable Leeds clockmakers include the famed Potts and Sons, established in Pudsey in 1833 by William Potts.

    As the company grew, they supplied 1,568 clocks for locations including at Leeds Town Hall and Leeds Corn Exchange.

    Potts clocks could also be found at Lerwick Town Hall in the Shetland Islands, the Roman Catholic Church Hall in Melbourne, Australia and the post office in Port Lyttleton, New Zealand.

    As well as learning about clockmakers of the past, visitors and families at this week’s workshop will also have the chance to get hands on and make their own wall clock to take home.

    Councillor Salma Arif, Leeds City Council’s executive member for adult social care, active lifestyles and culture, said: “Leeds has been home to so many talented artisans over the years who have really left their mark on the city and it’s fitting that we’re able to pay tribute to their efforts today.

    “The work of our museums and galleries in preserving and celebrating these important parts of our local heritage also enables us to continue to learn and be inspired by the amazing story of Leeds.”

    Turn Back the Clock takes place at Leeds Discovery Centre on May 28 on a give what you can basis, where visitors choose to pay what they can.

    More information and how to book can be found at: Turn Back the Clock | Leeds Museums and Galleries | Days out and exhibitions

    ENDS

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Nokia accelerates mass market multi-Gig broadband with new high-density 25G PON line card

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Press Release
    Nokia accelerates mass market multi-Gig broadband with new high-density 25G PON line card

    • The new 16-port line card solution is optimized for mass market 25G PON, ensuring multi-gigabit can be delivered in a cost-effective way to everyone without compromise.
    • Nokia’s 25G PON line card, based on the Quillion chipset, supports GPON, XGS, and 25G PON, providing flexible upgrade options that can future-proof fiber access networks.
    • 25G PON is the fastest, greenest and most cost-effective way to deliver multi-gig and 10G+ residential services.

    27 May 2025
    Espoo, Finland – Nokia today announced the launch of a new 25G PON high-density line card designed to deliver mass market, multi-gig, residential broadband services that users expect from a premium broadband experience. Supporting a diverse range of PON technology options, the new solution provides operators with a cost-effective way to deliver true 10Gb/s broadband services in a cost-effective way. The 16-port line card, based on Nokia’s Quillion chipset, supports GPON, XGS-PON, 25G PON and multi-PON variants like GPON + XGS-PON, XGS+25G PON and GPON + XGS + 25G PON on every port, giving operators the flexibility to seamlessly evolve with market demands.         

    The need for multi-gigabit is gaining momentum as operators look to move beyond providing sustained, average bandwidth toward differentiated services that can handle bursty, high-peak traffic demands and deliver superior customer experiences. End-users also increasingly seek high-speed upstream and downstream connectivity for real-time access to the cloud, gaming, home working and Wi-Fi 7. With 10G+ connectivity, games can be downloaded in minutes versus an hour with 1 Gigabit speeds, data and application in the cloud can be accessed instantaneously, and Wi-Fi 7 can be effectively backhauled.

    “We’re helping operators deliver unbeatable multi-gigabit experiences today with our new 25G PON solution. It combines speed, scale, and efficiency — giving service providers an efficient path to new revenue streams, without having to rethink their entire network,” said Geert Heyninck, General Manager, Broadband Networks at Nokia.

    “Being able to cost-effectively scale multi-gigabit and true 10Gb/s services across their entire residential subscriber base is critical for service providers in increasingly competitive broadband markets. The ability to offer the highest speeds, and handle high-peak traffic demands with the lowest latency and jitter is how providers will stand out from the crowd and keep subscribers happy,” said Jeff Heynen, Vice President, Broadband Access and Home Networking at Dell’Oro Group.

    Expanding Nokia’s comprehensive 25G PON portfolio, the new line cards can be paired with Nokia’s fiber modems to provide a future-proof, cost-efficient, end-to-end solution for mass market 25G PON residential and enterprise service deployments. Today 20 operators, including Google Fiber, and Hong Kong Broadband are using Nokia’s proven 25G PON technology to address demand for faster broadband speeds.

    “Fiber is a strategic asset that ensures our network can scale and adapt to changing customer needs. The ability to seamlessly upgrade from GPON to XGS-PON and now 25G PON, along with our unique coexistence technology, reflects our commitment to staying ahead of the curve. 25G PON strengthens our competitive position, enabling us to deliver high-speed, future-proof connectivity for businesses and an expanding base of residential customers who increasingly depend on fast, reliable broadband for cloud services, gaming, and immersive digital experiences,” said Veronica Bloodworth, EVP and Chief Network Officer at Frontier.

    Multimedia, technical information and related news 
    Web Page: Nokia 25G PON

    About Nokia
    At Nokia, we create technology that helps the world act together. 

    As a B2B technology innovation leader, we are pioneering networks that sense, think and act by leveraging our work across mobile, fixed and cloud networks. In addition, we create value with intellectual property and long-term research, led by the award-winning Nokia Bell Labs, which is celebrating 100 years of innovation. 

    With truly open architectures that seamlessly integrate into any ecosystem, our high-performance networks create new opportunities for monetization and scale. Service providers, enterprises and partners worldwide trust Nokia to deliver secure, reliable and sustainable networks today – and work with us to create the digital services and applications of the future.

    Media inquiries
    Nokia Press Office
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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE launches Regional Task Force on Education for Just and Inclusive Energy Transition in Central Asia

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE launches Regional Task Force on Education for Just and Inclusive Energy Transition in Central Asia

    As the renewable energy sector in Central Asia grows, so does the need for a skilled and inclusive workforce to support it. In response, the OSCE and the Regional Environmental Centre for Central Asia (CAREC) officially launched the OSCE Regional Task Force on Education for Just and Inclusive Energy Transition (RTEET) in Central Asia with a kick-off meeting in Almaty, Kazakhstan, on 22 and 23 May.
    The RTEET initiative brings together key stakeholders from across Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, including representatives from ministries of energy and education, universities, technical colleges, private sector actors and development partners. Its main goals are to develop pilot curricula in renewable energy and foster long-term collaboration between the education and energy sectors.
    “Education plays a critical role in accelerating the energy transition — but it must be inclusive and adaptable” said Giulia Manconi, Senior Energy Security Adviser at the OSCE. “The OSCE is committed to supporting countries in building the human capital needed for a green and just future. This includes helping to align education systems with evolving energy demands, and empowering women and young professionals in the renewable energy sector”,
    At the two-day meeting, government officials, academic leaders, energy experts, and international partners discussed how renewable energy education can be better aligned with labor market needs, while advancing gender equality and inclusivity within the energy transition.
    Participants also reviewed the preliminary findings of a regional needs assessment conducted by the OSCE, which identified key skill gaps, institutional challenges, and priorities for curriculum development across the five Central Asian countries. The event also included site visits to the scientific laboratories of Kazakh-British Technical University and Satbayev University, where cutting-edge energy technologies were showcased.
    The RTEET initiative will run from March 2025 to May 2026. Major milestones include the development of a regional renewable energy course, pilot implementation in selected institutions, and policy consultations to help mainstream renewable energy education throughout the region.
    The initiative is part of the OSCE extrabudgetary project “Promoting Women’s Economic Empowerment in the Energy Sector in Central Asia”, funded by Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Norway and Poland.
    Further resources, materials, and updates about RTEET will be posted here.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • From Digital India to Digital Classrooms-How Bharat’s Internet Revolution is Reaching its Young Learners

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    New Chapter in Bharat Begins

    In a quiet village in rural Karnataka, five young friends huddle below the sprawling banyan tree wide eyed with wonder at the glow of a tablet. What might seem like an ordinary sight in a metropolitan school is a scene of silent transformation in the heart of Bharat. The internet is here — not just as a public utility, but as a storyteller, a teacher, and a window to a thousand possibilities. It’s not just technology but a revolution at work.

    Today, India moves quickly toward a digital future. And while the dust of the world rages outside, applauding the glories of fibre-optic cables adorning urban skyscrapers and metro cities, the real magic is being spun within the fields, villages, and small towns where Digital India, PM-WANI, and PM eVidya are changing destinies — especially for the young learners of this nation.

    On one of my trips to a village in Shivamogga district of Karnataka, a particular image stayed with me: that of children gathered under a tree, connecting to an internet hotspot for their online classes. Behind this is a real force: PM-WANI (Prime Minister Wi-Fi Access Network Interface), a grand scheme under Digital India.

    What is PM-WANI, and Why It Matters?

    Imagine a village school where eight students share two textbooks. Now imagine the same school with a public Wi-Fi hotspot letting every child get access to digital libraries, educational videos, virtual museums, and interactive learning apps. Which one do you think is better? This is what PM-WANI promises.

    Launched in December 2020, PM-WANI is a project under Digital India mission to democratize access to the Internet through public Wi-Fi hotspots at common places like railway stations, village squares, markets, and even under trees. Ordinary spaces have now turned into digital classrooms.

    Why is it a revolution?

    • First of all, it brings affordable, high-speed Internet where there is none.
    • Second, it removes both the geographical and the economic barriers to knowledge.
    • Third, it empowers children and communities by making digital tools accessible.

    Where PM-WANI brings the pipes, PM eVidya brings the water — rich, culturally relevant educational content for these digital pipelines.

    PM eVidya: India’s Learning Lifeline

    This program was launched in 2020, in light of the closure of schools due to the pandemic. With PM eVidya, no child was left behind in learning- no matter where they live.

    It is a complete program integrating the three modes: digital, radio, and television education, while providing various resources including:

    • Diksha platform- interactive e-content and learning tools
    • Swayam Prabha – 34 DTH channels dedicated for education programming
    • Radio School – lessons broadcast in various languages through All India Radio.

    The strength of PM eVidya is in its multi-mode access so that either the child has a smartphone, a television, or even just a simple radio. There are lessons and stories with which they can easily access to satisfy their learning curiosity.

    Already, this effort has touched more than 12 crore students across our country and opened the door completely to the avenue of knowledge and possibilities.

    The stories that technology makes possible are more inspiring to me than the technology itself. For example, in Jharkhand, I read about a girl named Rekha who attended a virtual science class for the very first time in her life, thanks to a PM-WANI hotspot near to where she lives. Another example is of children who were all gathered together in a house in Kerala to watch eVidya lessons while their parents looked on with doting awe. And in a very remote corner of Ladakh, a group of children downloaded e-books about space exploration, thereby dreaming of becoming astronauts someday. Such things are not one-off events. They are going to make quite a different normal.

    A recent government report states that so far, more than 2 lakh public hot spots have been registered under PM-WANI, and this number is increasing rapidly. Each of these is a gateway to knowledge for the children of Bharat.

    Why Does This Matter for Children’s Literature?

    As a children’s author and educator, I have realized the importance of growing with the times in terms of children’s literature. This digital revolution is not confined to cities; neither should be the stories in children’s literature. These should reflect both the old and the familiar, and the new, exciting transformations shaping their world. Kids should get the idea that technology belongs to them, that their dreams are possible.

    When kids read stories where characters, much like them, traverse through digital terrains, it creates normalcy around progress. I hope to achieve this through Little Dreamers of Bharat, by capturing this changing Bharat – where a farmer’s daughter learns coding under a banyan tree, where a young boy watches his grandmother weave patterns he then animates on a tablet. Evolving storytelling must mirror the world in which children are growing up.

    The Cultural Layer: Keeping Bharat at the Heart

    What makes this digital revolution genuinely Indian is how it merges technology with tradition. In many ways, villages of Bharat are not abandoning their roots but have digitized them.

    Diksha and Swayam Prabha offer online lessons on folk music, classical dances, ancient crafts, and regional history. What earlier survived only through oral tradition now sees recorded survival in cloud libraries. Digital India indeed does not erase Bharat’s soul; it preserves it in pixels!

    In Barabanki, Uttar Pradesh, a government school set up a PM-WANI hotspot and supplemented it with online storytelling sessions in Awadhi and Hindi, introducing the children in the area to regional poetry and folk tales through smartphones. Now that’s an awesome model of culture-rooted digital literacy to replicate.

    From Possible to Powerful

    • India boasts over 1.2 billion mobile connections – and now, thanks to PM-WANI, those connections are reaching beyond city limits.
    • Over 12 crore students accessed digital lessons via PM eVidya.
    • Rural children, once excluded from digital conversations, are now coding, creating, and collaborating.

    Children who walked several miles each day to attend school can now learn coding under trees. Girls who never ventured beyond their village now participate in a science fair via the virtual medium. Villages that had no electricity now stream digital stories.

    In Tamil Nadu, there is this project called “E-Library on Wheels”, which is connecting PM-WANI networks with village libraries and enabling children to enjoy access to free e-book, virtual field trips, and video workshops on local crafts and traditions. Such stories prove how this revolution is real. What more can one ask to point out the highest degree of a revolution?

    What Else Needs to Be Done

    Great strides have been made. Yet challenges still exist. We need:

    • More local-language resources for children;
    • More digital literacy of parents and teachers;
    • Reliable power infrastructure to complement digital initiatives;
    • Stories that help reflect this new Bharat in every library and classroom.

    Digital infrastructure should be matched with social infrastructure-awareness campaigns, community centres with internet access, and culturally rich, age-appropriate digital libraries.

    The government has initiated Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan in schools to integrate digital tools in the government schools, but sustained local engagement would be significant for effective results.

    Join the Movement

    As a nation, we are penning a fresh chapter — in which technology is owned by each child, whether she is in Delhi or Doddaballapura. And, to finish writing this chapter, we need the readers, teachers, authors, parents, and policymakers to:

    • Promote and create digital content that is local and culturally embedded.
    • Help children view technology as a tool, not a toy.
    • Record and share success stories from towns and villages.
    • Help public Wi-Fi and digital learning programs thrive.

    Let’s bridge the digital divide not just with devices and networks, but stories, confidence, and culturally rooted narratives.

    The Story is Just Beginning

    We often say children are the future. But in Bharat, the future is already sitting under banyan trees watching glowing screens and dreaming big. Once again, thanks to Digital India, PM-WANI, and PM eVidya; the budding generations—their learning, growing, and connecting abilities—now seem so possible compared to how things were ten years ago.

    As a writer, I find myself in the fortunate position of bearing witness to this revolution and writing about it. We must nurture this movement, amplify its voices, and ensure that every child — whether in bustling Bengaluru or remote Bastar — feels part of India’s digital, cultural, and literary renaissance.

    That’s the kind of magic story worth telling.

    (R. Savitha is an accomplished educator and author with extensive experience developing innovative teaching-learning materials and training programs. With close to 12 years of teaching experience across grades 1 to 12 (CBSE), she has also served as the Head of the English Department in a premier CBSE school, where she led overall curriculum planning and academic initiatives. A certified teacher-trainer, Savitha specializes in enhancing communication skills, grammar, and vocabulary-building through activities. She has conducted numerous pedagogy programs for teachers, empowering them with effective strategies and innovative approaches.

    R. Savitha holds an MA degree in English, an M. Ed, and an MBA. With her vast educational background, she worked as a project manager for the foundational stage at Samvit Research Foundation, curating textbooks and teacher handbooks aligned with NEP 2020. A core member of the NCERT national team, she has contributed to the syllabus and textbook development for the Foundational and Preparatory stages. She excels in creating engaging books for children, teaching-learning materials, and designing creative activities. Her published works reflect her dedication to fostering effective and meaningful learning experiences and enhancing classroom interactions, inspiring both students and educators to explore the transformative power of language and education for the betterment of our nation.)

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: DH and NMPA organise seminar on “GBA Medical Device Regulations and Registration Process Training” for local medical device trade (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    DH and NMPA organise seminar on “GBA Medical Device Regulations and Registration Process Training” for local medical device trade ???
    China is a vital market and manufacturing hub for the global medical device and pharmaceutical industries. In the future, the DH will continue to organise similar activities for the industry, leveraging Hong Kong’s unique advantages and reinforcing connectivity with the Mainland and the world. The DH is committed to aligning with the nation’s direction of high-standard opening up and promoting healthcare innovation and development.
    Issued at HKT 17:15

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: Malaysia AI Workshop Led by Strategic Partner Spotlights Strong Demand for GPTBots’ Enterprise AI Solutions

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, May 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A high-impact AI workshop hosted by Zanroo Malaysia Sdn. Bhd., a key strategic partner of GPTBots.ai, highlighted strong enterprise demand for practical AI solutions in Southeast Asia and demonstrated the GPTBots platform’s significant overseas market potential. The “Enabling the Future: Your Enterprise AI Journey Starts Here” event achieved an 81% attendance rate among senior business and IT leaders, indicating robust market readiness.

    The workshop successfully demonstrated the tangible value of AI, powered by GPTBots’ capabilities, moving beyond theory to real-world application.

    Workshop Highlights – GPTBots Platform Gains Traction with Key Industries:

    • Real-World AI in Action: Live demonstrations of GPTBots-powered solutions, such as ERP+CRM automation, instant multi-language customer service bots, and real-time analytics, drew strong interest from attendees.
    • Industry Engagement: Leaders from banking, retail, healthcare, and IT sectors experienced hands-on use of the no-code GPTBots platform, recognizing its ease of use and rapid deployment for their business needs.
    • Ecosystem-Powered Scalability: The event highlighted how GPTBots’ robust platform and partner-centric model, exemplified by Zanroo, enable enterprises to quickly deploy tailored AI agents and accelerate digital transformation.

    The enthusiastic response from key industry decision-makers in Kuala Lumpur affirms the effectiveness of GPTBots’ no-code platform and global partnership strategy, strengthening our resolve to expand internationally. In collaboration with partners such as Zanroo, GPTBots will continue to support enterprises worldwide in leveraging AI for transformative growth.

    About GPTBots.ai
    GPTBots.ai is a leading no-code AI agent platform, enabling enterprises worldwide to rapidly deploy AI solutions across diverse business scenarios. With industry-specific templates, multi-language support, and end-to-end delivery, GPTBots empowers businesses to simplify processes and unlock growth.

    About Zanroo Malaysia
    Zanroo, a Data Technology company, leverages online, offline, and real-time data to help businesses overcome challenges. Building on this foundation, Zanroo Malaysia provides data insights via its Data Analytic Hub and optimizes operations with proprietary tools, offering core Enterprise services like Social Listening, Monitoring, Community Management & Social Research.

    Media Contact:
    Silvia
    Senior Marketing Manager
    marketing@gptbots.ai

    The MIL Network