Category: Asia Pacific

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: GBA promoted in Hungary

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for Constitutional & Mainland Affairs Erick Tsang and Commissioner for Development of Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area Maisie Chan visited Hungary to promote development opportunities of the Greater Bay Area (GBA).
     
    After arriving in Budapest yesterday, Mr Tsang called on Chinese Ambassador to Hungary Gong Tao.
     
    Today, he met State Secretary for Bilateral Relations at the Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Trade Boglárka Illés, and Hungarian National Assembly Deputy Speaker Lajos Oláh to share views on issues relating to the promotion of exchange and collaboration between Hong Kong and Hungary.
     
    Mr Tsang also attended the “Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area – Europe (Hungary) Economic & Trade Cooperation Exchange Conference” jointly organised by the People’s Government of Guangdong Province, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government and the Macao Special Administrative Region Government to promote business opportunities brought about by the GBA to the European business community, and Hong Kong’s position as a GBA international entry point and roles as a “super connector” and “super value-adder”.
     
    Speaking at the conference, he encouraged enterprises and talent to capitalise on Hong Kong’s unique advantages of having the staunch support of China and being closely connected to the world by establishing a foothold in the city and tapping into the huge market of the GBA, and to turn challenges into opportunities under the current international situation.
     
    Under “one country, two systems”, Hong Kong would maintain its status as a free port, implement a free trade policy, maintain the free flow of capital, goods, people and information, and firmly support a rules-based multilateral trading system, he emphasised.
     
    Mr Tsang will depart for Cairo, Egypt, tomorrow to attend the “Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area – Africa (Egypt) Economic & Trade Cooperation Exchange Conference”.
     
    He will return to Hong Kong on May 19.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Lo Chung-mau to join WHO meeting

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for Health Prof Lo Chung-mau will depart tomorrow for Geneva, Switzerland, where he will attend the World Health Organization’s 78th World Health Assembly on May 19 as a member of the Chinese delegation.
     
    Director of Health Dr Ronald Lam will accompany Prof Lo to Switzerland.
     
    The theme of this year’s assembly is “One World for Health”. Key discussions will cover universal health coverage, prevention and control of non-communicable diseases, antimicrobial resistance, health emergency preparedness and response, mental health and social connection, standardisation of medical devices nomenclature, and the International Health Regulations.
     
    Additionally, Prof Lo will take the opportunity to exchange views on public health-related issues with senior officials of the World Health Organization and other member states.
     
    Prof Lo and Dr Lam will return to Hong Kong on May 22. During Prof Lo’s absence, Under Secretary for Health Dr Libby Lee will be Acting Secretary.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • Youth-centric ‘Yoga Unplugged’ gains momentum ahead of International Day of Yoga 2025

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    As preparations intensify for the 11th International Day of Yoga (IDY), the Ministry of Ayush’s youth-focused initiative “Yoga Unplugged” is gaining momentum, with leading yoga institutions lending their support to inspire young minds across the country.
     
    One of the prominent contributors to the initiative is Kaivalyadhama, one of the world’s oldest and most respected yoga institutes. In a significant endorsement of “Yoga Unplugged,” the institute has launched a series of youth-oriented programmes, including the “Yoga for Young Minds” campaign. Through this campaign, students and youth changemakers are being offered free access to the Common Yoga Protocol training via Kaivalyadhama’s online platform, enabling widespread participation regardless of location.
     
    In addition, Kaivalyadhama will take part in the upcoming global virtual summit, Yoga Connect, with its digital offering “Yoginar,” further expanding the reach of authentic yoga teachings among the youth.
     
    Established in 1924 by Swami Kuvalayananda, Kaivalyadhama is known for preserving the pure and scientific tradition of yoga, as articulated in the Yoga Sutras of Maharishi Patanjali. Its active participation in “Yoga Unplugged” adds a deep-rooted credibility to the movement aimed at making yoga relevant to modern youth.
     
    Designed to connect with young audiences through interactive and engaging formats, “Yoga Unplugged” is expected to be a standout feature of this year’s IDY celebrations. With more institutions expected to join the initiative in the coming weeks, the campaign is set to mobilize youth participation on an unprecedented scale.
     
    Meanwhile, the Ministry of Ayush has announced ten signature events that will mark this year’s celebrations. These include Yoga Sangam — a synchronized yoga demonstration at one lakh locations, Yoga Bandhan — promoting international exchange programmes, and Harit Yoga — a sustainability initiative combining yoga with environmental action.
     
    Other major events include Yoga Samavesh, Yoga MahaKumbh, and Samyoga, each focusing on inclusion, large-scale participation, and integration of yoga into modern healthcare systems. Yoga Connect will serve as a global platform for discussions with leading experts, while Yoga Prabhav will examine yoga’s long-term impact on public health.
     
    The Ministry has called upon individuals, organizations, and communities across India and the world to be part of this collective journey towards well-being. Citizens are encouraged to participate in events or host their own yoga demonstrations by registering on the official portal — yoga.ayush.gov.in/yoga-sangam.
     
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Global fashion group establishes regional headquarters in Hong Kong with corporate treasury function to drive global expansion (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         Invest Hong Kong (InvestHK) announced today (May 17) that Fashion Momentum Group (FMG), a Chinese fast-fashion retailer, has established its regional headquarters and first outlet of URBAN REVIVO in Hong Kong as part of its global strategy to oversee the Group’s corporate treasury function, retail business and global markets expansion.
          
         The Acting Director-General of Investment Promotion at InvestHK, Mr Arnold Lau, said, “Hong Kong as an international business hub and financial centre has solidified its reputation as a leading global hub for supply chain management. Brands like URBAN REVIVO can leverage Hong Kong’s strategic location and extensive international resources to expand their international retail networks efficiently. We wish URBAN REVIVO every success in Hong Kong and beyond.”
          
         The Chief Executive Officer of International Business at URBAN REVIVO, Ms Vivian Chen, said that the Group started to work with InvestHK on the launch since last year, and was introduced to various international brands and merchandisers, giving them the confidence to establish a presence in the city.
          
         “Hong Kong opens us to a diverse customer profile with an open and friendly business environment featuring zero tariffs and effective infrastructure. The city serves as a bridge between the Mainland and the global market. It’s an ideal place for our global expansion,” she said, adding “Hong Kong, as a key hub for international fashion exchanges with a vibrant professional services sector, enables for us the further internationalisation of our global operations. We are looking forward to accelerating our growth into both developed and high-potential markets.”
          
         Founded in 2006, FMG offers a diverse range of fashion via various brands. Catering to fashion-conscious consumers worldwide, URBAN REVIVO has become a go-to destination for trendsetters, delivering fresh and exciting collections each season. With design centres in London and Guangzhou, the Group combines a unique brand identity with global fashion expertise to consistently captivate its audience.
          
         For more information about URBAN REVIVO, please visit: urbanrevivo.com.
          
         To obtain a copy of the photos, please visit www.flickr.com/photos/investhk/albums/72177720326111303.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Former South Korean President Yoon Seok-yel quits party ahead of presidential election

    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

    SEOUL, May 17 (Xinhua) — Former South Korean President Yun Seok-yeol on Saturday announced his withdrawal from the ruling conservative Citizens’ Power Party ahead of the June 3 presidential election.

    “Today I am leaving the Civil Power party. I bow to my comrades who believed in me and stayed with me for a long time,” he said in an online statement.

    Yun Seok-yul said he believes his resignation from the party is the best way to ensure the victory of its candidate in the early presidential election and protect liberal democracy in the country.

    There have been recent calls for Yun Seok-yul to leave the Civil Force in order to attract undecided voters in the upcoming elections. The ruling party’s ratings have fallen following the former president’s declaration of martial law, his subsequent impeachment and eventual removal from office.

    Yun Seok-yeol called on the public to join forces with Kim Moon-soo, the presidential candidate of the Civil Power Party, and vote in the June 3 election to protect freedom, sovereignty and prosperity. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • India to dispatch All-Party Delegations abroad to reaffirm zero-tolerance policy on terrorism

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    In a firm reiteration of its zero-tolerance approach towards terrorism, India is set to send seven All-Party Delegations to key partner countries later this month. These visits come in the backdrop of Operation Sindoor and reflect India’s ongoing efforts to combat cross-border terrorism.
     
    The delegations will engage with counterparts in several nations, including member states of the United Nations Security Council, to underscore India’s united stance against terrorism in all its forms and manifestations. The move is aimed at strengthening international cooperation while conveying India’s clear message: terrorism will not be tolerated under any circumstance.
     
    Each delegation will include Members of Parliament from across political parties, senior political leaders, and experienced diplomats. The initiative reflects a rare show of political unity, with leaders from various ideological backgrounds joining hands on a critical national issue.
     
    The following Members of Parliament will lead the respective delegations:
     
    1. Shashi Tharoor (Indian National Congress)
    2. Ravi Shankar Prasad (Bharatiya Janata Party)
    3. Sanjay Kumar Jha (Janata Dal-United)
    4. Baijayant Panda (Bharatiya Janata Party)
    5. Kanimozhi Karunanidhi (Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam)
    6. Supriya Sule (Nationalist Congress Party)
    7. Shrikant Eknath Shinde (Shiv Sena)
     
    The visits are expected to reinforce India’s consistent demand for decisive global action against terrorism and reflect the country’s resolve to work with the international community for long-term peace and security.
     
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Six Polytechnic and ITE Students Awarded Environmental Services Scholarships

    Source: Government of Singapore

    Singapore, 17 May 2025 – The National Environment Agency (NEA) has awarded scholarships to six students under the NEA-Industry Scholarship Programme for the Environmental Services (ES) industry. At a ceremony today, Dr Koh Poh Koon, Senior Minister of State for Sustainability and the Environment, emphasised the industry’s indispensable role in providing essential environmental and public hygiene services to the nation. Introduced in 2020, the NEA-Industry Scholarship programme forms part of ongoing industry transformation efforts to attract talent, create quality jobs, and improve job prospects in the ES Industry.

    Fourth cycle of NEA-Industry Scholarship

    2          Since 2020, the programme has awarded 26 scholarships. NEA received 60 applications in this fourth cycle and through a rigorous selection process, six[1] deserving individuals received scholarships. They will take on job roles such as Data Analysts, Environmental Services Specialists, Field Application Engineers, IT Solution Coordinators, and Robotics Research Analysts with sponsoring organisations Chye Thiam Maintenance Pte Ltd, Hong Ye Group Pte Ltd, Metabots Pte Ltd, and LS 2 Services Pte Ltd upon graduation.

    3            Amongst the recipients is 18-year-old Ms Ng Jing Yi Kellyn, a Year 2 student at ITE College Central who is currently pursuing a Higher Nitec in Mechatronics Engineering. Kellyn recognises that the work in cleaning, pest management and waste management is crucial in ensuring a clean, and safe environment. Matters relating to landfill utilisation are particularly concerning to her, and she understands that every action counts towards reducing the amount of waste that is generated. Kellyn will be joining Hong Ye Group Pte Ltd, a company which offers tailored cleaning and facility management services, as an IT Solutions Coordinator. She looks forward to making an impact on the environment and public health and is excited to learn the ropes to optimise IT infrastructure and ensure smooth operations during her career.

    4            Another scholar is 20-year-old Ms Chan Xi Cecilia, a Year 3 student studying Big Data and Analytics at Temasek Polytechnic, who believes in the transformative power of data in enabling better business decisions. Cecilia is looking forward to contributing to the ES industry as a Robotic Research Analyst with Metabots Pte Ltd, where she will analyse large volumes of data generated by the company’s cleaning robots to enhance robot performance. She will also conduct research to improve robotics through data analysis, machine learning, and new algorithm development. She hopes to apply her knowledge in data analytics which will help front line workers perform their jobs with greater ease.

    5            The NEA-Industry Scholarship programme continues to receive strong industry support from industry partners. LS 2 Services Pte Ltd, a home-grown company offering integrated environmental services and returning sponsoring organisation, has hired four scholars across three cycles of the programme. LS 2’s scholars are from Temasek Polytechnic, which is home to Singapore’s pioneering Enviro Tech Innovation Hub (ETIH@TP). Ms Tan Wei Ying, COO of LS 2 Services said, “The scholars are environmental champions who apply intelligent, interoperable solutions to enhance productivity and address manpower challenges. It is important that we continue to groom tech-savvy talents to lead industry innovation.” LS 2’s scholars will have the opportunity to gain real-world experience through direct involvement in ETIH projects. This development pathway prepares them to drive the future of ES.

    6          The NEA-Industry Scholarship is an initiative under the ES Industry Transformation Map (ITM), and a key programme in attracting young talent to the ES industry to build a skilled and resilient workforce[2]. The ES industry plays a pivotal role in providing essential services that upholds Singapore’s cleanliness and environmental sustainability. The collective effort of all stakeholders is key to upholding high standards of public cleanliness and safeguarding the environment for tomorrow.


    [2] More information on the NEA-Industry Scholarship Awards can be found here.

     

    ~~ End ~~

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

     Annex A

    Profiles of scholarship recipients

    Name (age),

     

    School (Course) Company sponsor (Sector) Background / profile
    Kaeden Ang Xuan Wen (18)  ITE College West (Nitec in Mechatronics and Robotics)  Metabots Pte Ltd 
    (Cleaning) 
     
    • Kaeden is a hands-on person and has a natural affinity for practical, applied engineering. He technical interests span PLC programming, pneumatics, and robotics coding.  
    • His interest in hands-on activities and practical applied engineering led him to participate in a friendly robotics soccer drone competition between the 3 ITE colleges, and his team eventually clinched first place in the competition.  
    • He is also people-oriented in nature and makes it a point to express care for the unsung workers who work behind the scenes, such as the cleaners who labour tirelessly. He hopes to be a positive influence and to bring an impact to the lives of these cleaners in due time.  
    • Kaeden also plays his part to recycle right, minimise food waste, and conserve energy usage. He believes that every household has a civic responsibility to keep their residential estates clean.  
    Ng Jing Yi Kellyn (18) ITE College Central (H. Nitec in Mechatronics Engineering)  Hong Ye Group Pte Ltd 
    (Cleaning) 
     
    • Kellyn is a bubbly and dynamic individual who aims to inject fresh ideas to solve existing problems in the Environmental Services Industry.  
    • She is particularly concerned about landfill management and plastic pollution. She believes that effective waste management is key to solving many of the world’s environmental challenges, and she wants to be a part of the solution.  
    • A true environmental champion, Kellyn regularly encourages her community to recycle right by washing single use plastic cups and bottles before disposing this into the recycling bin. She had previously participated in a school-based plastics recycling drive and in existing initiatives to repurpose plastic bottles, to reduce single-use plastic consumption and promote sustainable alternatives.   
    • Kellyn has a strong passion to help the elderly workers in the cleaning sector and recognises that their work is physically taxing. She feels that technology would play a key role to streamline their workflows, and to direct their efforts to high human traffic spaces that may require the most attention. She believes that technology would play a key role in making their work easier.  
    • Kellyn chose a career in the Environmental Services Industry as she recognises that the work in cleaning, pest management and waste management is crucial in ensuring a clean, and safe environment. She looks forward to making an impact on the environment and public health and is excited to learn the ropes to optimise IT infrastructure and ensure smooth operations during her career.
    Chan Xi Cecilia (20) Temasek Polytechnic (Diploma in Big Data & Analytics) Metabots Pte Ltd 
    (Cleaning) 
     
    • Cecilia is a passionate Big Data Analytics student at Temasek Polytechnic who sees the transformative potential of data in enabling better business decisions. She aspires to apply her data analytics competencies and improve data driven decision making processes.  
    • Over the years, Cecilia has gained experience in data analytics through volunteering experiences, where she monitored the web traffic data for a website, examined the data, and generated insights to retain public interest on the webpage.  
    • Cecilia applied for the NEA-Industry Scholarship programme to fast track her career in an industry that aligns with her passion to care for both the planet as well as the Environmental Services workforce. She recognises that there is more to the Environmental Services Industry than what most people see. She hopes to apply her knowledge in data analytics to help cleaning robots perform optimally, and to consequently help front line workers perform their jobs with greater ease.  
    • Looking ahead, Cecilia is excited to apply her knowledge in machine learning or predictive modelling in a real-world setting, and to see how data analytics could transform the Environmental Services Industry.  
    Eugenia Heng Yu See (18) Temasek Polytechnic (Diploma in Big Data & Analytics)  LS 2 Services Pte Ltd 
    (Cleaning) 
     
    • Eugenia has a deep appreciation for the work of front-line Environmental Services workforce. She recognises that many cleaners work tirelessly to ensure our living spaces remain clean, and hopes to make their work easier through data analytics and cleaning technology.  
    • She feels strongly about recycling and hopes to use her data analytics capabilities to find more efficient ways to monitor, manage and reduce the amount of waste that goes to the landfill, to contribute to attaining Singapore’s Zero Waste goals.  
    • Her commitment to environmental stewardship is demonstrated through her active participation in beach clean-ups, where she witnessed firsthand the impact of improper waste disposal on marine ecosystems. This experience strengthened her resolve to contribute to the Environmental Services industry.  
    • Looking ahead, she aims to work with large datasets, identifying trends and extracting actionable insights from cleaning data to ensure better data-driven decision making. Her goal is to optimise operations while supporting the workforce, demonstrating her unique combination of technical expertise and social consciousness. 
    Tan Yi Kai, Jonathan (18) Ngee Ann Polytechnic (Diploma in Environmental and Water Technology)  Chye Thiam Maintenance Pte Ltd 
    (Cleaning) 
     
    • Jonathan is a hands-on Environmental and Water Technology student who combines a strong mathematical aptitude with practical problem solving skills. His natural interests lean towards working with his hands and learning experientially.  
    • Jonathan has a strong interest in environmental protection and in safeguarding public health. He considers himself to be an advocate for the environment and encourages others to do their part in maintaining a clean and green Singapore.  
    • Through various clean-up initiatives at Bishan Park and Kallang River, he has gained firsthand experience of local environmental challenges, and a deeper appreciation about the dangers of improper waste disposal. These experiences have reinforced his commitment to environmental protection and his belief about the growing importance of environmental sustainability. 
    • This appreciation led him to pursue a career in the Environmental Services Industry. He hopes to use both his engineering and environment-related training to address challenges in cleaning and waste management to safeguard public health.  
    Song Hao Yan (20) Temasek Polytechnic (Diploma in Integrated Facility Management)  Chye Thiam Maintenance Pte Ltd 
    (Cleaning) 
     
    • Hao Yan represents a new generation of Environmental Services professionals who understand that the Industry is far more sophisticated than common perceptions suggest.  
    • He recognises that the work of the industry goes beyond basic operations, and instead, recognises that there is an increasing integration of advanced technology and innovative solutions.  
    • He is drawn to the Environmental Services Industry as the work involved affects everyday life and looks forward to seeing how he can contribute to making the world cleaner and more sustainable.  
    • Hao Yan is keen on reducing corporate carbon footprint and hopes to inject new ideas into his company to achieve a better waste management system.  
    • His passion for sustainability also extends to his personal life where he avoids using single use plastics, using reusable items, and conserving electricity. While these habits are small, he believes that every effort counts when it comes to reducing our collective environmental footprint.  

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Issue of ₹20 Denomination Banknotes in Mahatma Gandhi (New) Series bearing the signature of Shri Sanjay Malhotra, Governor

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India will shortly issue ₹20 denomination Banknotes in Mahatma Gandhi (New) Series bearing the signature of Shri Sanjay Malhotra, Governor. The design of these notes is similar in all respects to ₹20 banknotes in Mahatma Gandhi (New) Series. All banknotes in the denomination of ₹20 issued by the Reserve Bank in the past will continue to be legal tender.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/358

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Chris Hipkins Speech Auckland regional conference

    Source: New Zealand Labour Party

    The energy in this room shows exactly why I believe we are on track to make history and ensure this is New Zealand’s first one-term National Government.

    Because after just 18 months in office, it’s clear: this Coalition is out of ideas, out of touch, and out of time.

    New Zealanders were promised stability, leadership, and solutions. What they’ve had instead is broken promises, bad choices, division, and dysfunction.

    And that’s why Labour is working tirelessly—to build the next government. One that’s stable, focused, and relentlessly committed to making things better for all New Zealanders.

    Earlier this year, right here in Auckland, I set out the priorities of the next Labour Government.

    It’s a simple and powerful vision: jobs, health, and homes.

    We will deliver a fair economy with secure, well-paid jobs.

    We will rebuild a health system New Zealanders can rely on.

    And we will get back to building warm, affordable homes in thriving communities—backed by quality local schools.

    In other words, we’ll go back to what matters—and push forward to what’s next.

    We won’t govern by nostalgia or try to turn the clock back to some fictional golden age. The world is changing too fast for that.

    New Zealanders don’t need fairy tales. They need leadership that looks forward, not backward.

    We will tackle the big challenges head-on: climate change, child poverty, the disruption of artificial intelligence, and the rising cost of living.

    Because that’s what real leadership looks like—facing the future with courage, honesty and determination. Not blaming, not dodging, not dividing—but bringing people together and moving the country forward.

    This is what Labour stands for: a government that fights for you. Whoever you are.

    Whether you’re a nurse in Palmerston North, a teacher in Ōtaki, a small business owner in Timaru, a cleaner in South Auckland, a builder in Rotorua, or a farmer in Wairoa—your contribution matters.

    Whether you’re Māori, Pākehā, Pasifika, Asian or a new Kiwi, whether you’re young or old, gay, straight, transgender, wealthy or struggling—Labour sees you. Labour hears you. Labour is fighting for you.

    Because we are the party of inclusion, unity and fairness. The current Government? They govern for a few—and it shows.

    Christopher Luxon and Nicola Willis keep telling us there’s “no alternative.” That the economy is in such a dire state, they can’t invest in the things that matter—like jobs, health, and homes.

    But don’t be fooled. There are always choices.

    And this Government is making the wrong ones.

    They say there’s “no alternative” as they hand $3 billion in tax breaks to landlords.

    “No alternative” as they pour hundreds of millions into tax cuts for tobacco companies.

    “No alternative” as they pursue divisive, ideological vanity projects—like the Treaty Principles Bill and their culture war against gender identity and human rights.

    But perhaps the clearest, most disturbing choice they’ve made is this: after a string of economic missteps and busted budgets, they’re now asking low-paid Kiwi women to pay for their mistakes.

    Let’s be clear: National’s decision to change the law and wipe out all 33 existing pay equity claims isn’t just bad policy. It’s a disgrace.

    They knew what they were doing. David Seymour even admitted it—saying the quiet part out loud. Scrapping equal pay, he said, “saved the Budget.”

    That’s what this coalition stands for: balancing the books on the backs of the people who can least afford it.

    There is only one C word we should’ve been focussing on in Parliament this week – and that’s cuts!

    Women across this country—nurses, carers, educators, public servants—are being told their work isn’t worth what men are paid for the same contribution. That is unacceptable, and Labour will not stop fighting until pay equity is restored and respected.

    The reality is this: after 18 months of this Coalition Government, New Zealanders have seen enough.

    National has no plan for the future. No ideas. No hope.

    Just slogans. Blame. And division.

    But Labour? We do have a plan. A serious, credible, forward-looking plan—rooted in our values of fairness, decency and community.

    We’re not just opposing this Government. We’re offering a better way forward.

    • We will create jobs, not cut them.
    • We will invest in health, not hollow it out.
    • We will build homes, not flog them off.
    • We will invest in education, not cut specialist teachers.
    • We will protect our environment and build a future where children can breathe clean air and drink safe water.

    And yes—we will make the tax system fairer.

    Because New Zealand needs a tax system where everyone pays their fair share. Not to punish success—but to ensure that those who’ve done well contribute to the roads that connect them, the hospitals that care for them, and the schools that taught them.

    You can’t build a strong economy on a weak society. And you can’t solve a cost-of-living crisis by making it worse for the people who already feel it most.

    We want to build a country where:

    • Our young people can stay and thrive.
    • Our elders are treated with dignity and respect.
    • No child goes hungry.
    • Small businesses are supported, not strangled.
    • Being a nurse, a teacher, a builder, or a farmer is a path to pride—not a path to burnout.

    We want New Zealand to be the best place in the world to grow up and grow old. A place of opportunity, hope, and fairness.

    We know the future won’t be easy. AI, automation, climate change—these are massive forces reshaping our world.

    But these aren’t reasons to fear the future. They are reasons to shape it.

    That’s why Labour will be a government of ideas and innovation. A government that sees what’s coming—and gets ready for it.

    That’s why we’re doing the hard work now.

    There are three things we’ve focused on since the last election—and they remain our focus today.

    First, we’ve been an effective opposition. Every week in Parliament, we’ve held the Government to account. We’ve exposed the cuts, the backroom deals, and the broken promises.

    Second, we’re developing new policies and ideas—solutions for the challenges of tomorrow, not just complaints about yesterday.

    We’ll be rolling out some new policies in the second half of this year, and I want to thank every one of you who’s contributed ideas, shared feedback, and taken part in the regional conferences and last year’s Annual Conference.

    This is the most collaborative and future-focused Labour opposition in a very long time.

    And third, we’re rebuilding our movement. We’ve made enormous progress already—but the job isn’t done.

    We need to keep going to where people are. Talking with them, not at them. Listening, not lecturing.

    Because if the 2023 election taught us anything, it’s this: voters decide what matters. And if we’re not talking about the things they care about—then we’re not earning their trust.

    We have a lot of work to do. There are tough conversations ahead. But we are Labour. We don’t shy away from the hard stuff—we get stuck in and do it together.

    This next election will take all of us. Every volunteer. Every organiser. Every conversation on every doorstep.

    Because we cannot afford another three years of this Government.

    New Zealanders are better than what they’re being offered right now. We deserve a Government that believes in the people. That backs its communities. That builds a better future—not tears it down.

    We are a country of workers and dreamers. Of doers and believers.

    We are the country that gave women the vote, built a world-leading welfare state, and led the world in standing up for peace and nuclear disarmament.

    We are a nation of fairness, decency and community.

    And we believe the role of Government is not to sit on the sidelines—but to step up, to serve, to lead.

    Labour will invest in the things that matter: jobs, health, and homes.

    We will govern for all New Zealanders—not just the lucky few.

    And with your help, we will win.

    So let’s get out there. Let’s organise. Let’s mobilise. Let’s grow our movement and get New Zealand back on track.

    We haven’t got a day to lose.

    Let’s get to work.

    Nō reira, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Amata Honors Service Members

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Aumua Amata (Western Samoa)

     

    Washington, D.C. – Congresswoman Uifa’atali Amata is honoring all who serve for this Armed Forces Day (Saturday) and highlighting Military Appreciation Month.

    “On this Armed Forces Day, we think of our great Toa o Samoa serving the cause of peace and freedom, using their time and energy in the protection of others,” said Congresswoman Amata. “I find our people absolutely everywhere I go, serving honorably and making us proud. I meet up with our people in uniform when I’m on international congressional trips, in the Middle East, right here at home in the Army Reserve, and the many of our own I see each time I visit the U.S. east coast military installations like I did early this year.”

    “To each of you, we say thank you, and we are so proud of you!” continued Aumua Amata. “You are in our thoughts, and we know you are deeply missed at home. May the Lord bless and keep you in his care, as many Scriptures promise.”

    “It is God who arms me with strength, and makes my way perfect.” Psalm 18:32 (NKJV) 

    Armed Forces Day is the third Saturday of May, specifically honoring those currently serving, positioned at the center of Military Appreciation Month in May, which then ends with the important observance of Memorial Day. 

    Armed Forces Day has been a tradition since its creation under President Harry Truman and each year closes out Armed Forces Week.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • Terror Inc.: How Pakistani Army has hijacked the state acting as an agent of Chaos & Conflict

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Pakistan’s economy has long ceased to be a level playing field. While democratic institutions, civilian enterprises, and private sector innovation struggle to survive under chronic political instability and fiscal mismanagement, one institution not only survives but thrives i.e. the Pakistani Army. Far from being merely a military force, the army has built an unrivalled corporate empire that operates through a vast network of foundations, front companies, and patronage networks. This economic leviathan has embedded itself across vital sectors including real estate, banking, agribusiness, manufacturing, media, and logistics. Its control is not informal it is institutional, legalized through special exemptions, military-backed land ordinances, and bureaucratic dominance. As a result, the military runs a parallel economy that undermines competition, distorts public policy, and undermines democracy.

    The cornerstone of the Pakistan Army’s corporate empire lies in its foundations i.e. semi-governmental yet commercially active entities that were originally set up for the welfare of ex-servicemen but have since evolved into sprawling conglomerates. The Fauji Foundation, founded in 1954, is the most powerful of these entities. Ostensibly a charitable trust, Fauji operates over three dozen subsidiaries including Fauji Fertilizer Company (FFC), Fauji Cement Company Limited (FCCL), Fauji Oil Terminal & Distribution Company (FOTCO), and Askari Bank. FFC alone is one of Pakistan’s largest fertilizer producers, consistently generating billions in revenue and dividends, a significant portion of which goes back to the army. Askari Bank, likewise, operates under military supervision, with its board stacked with retired generals, and acts as a key financial vehicle for other military-affiliated ventures.

    Another major player is the Army Welfare Trust (AWT), which controls more than 25 commercial enterprises. These range from AWT Investments and Askari General Insurance to sugar mills, textiles, trucking, and aviation services. In real estate, the Army’s footprint is massive. Through the Defence Housing Authority (DHA), the military has become the largest land developer in Pakistan, with projects in cities like Lahore, Islamabad, Karachi, Multan, Gujranwala, and Bahawalpur. DHA projects often involve coercive land acquisition, where civilian and minority-owned lands are seized under the pretext of national security or public interest, only to be converted into luxury gated communities for serving and retired officers.

    The Pakistan Air Force operates the Shaheen Foundation, which manages diverse assets including FM radio stations, construction companies like Shaheen Builders, travel agencies, and educational institutions. The Pakistan Navy runs the Bahria Foundation, whose holdings include Bahria Maritime Services, Bahria University, and port-related logistics. Together, these four military foundations operate over 100 subsidiaries spanning dozens of industries, including grain storage, packaging, medical services, cement, and even advertising.

    Despite being commercial entities, these businesses are shielded from competition and financial scrutiny. They enjoy tax exemptions, priority access to government contracts, and the use of military logistics and infrastructure. Their dominance pushes out private enterprises and distorts the market. Civilian regulators often headed by retired officers fail to hold them accountable. Moreover, much of the income generated is not reinvested into national development but siphoned off for the elite military class. The benefits of these ventures rarely trickle down to the rank-and-file soldiers, let alone the public. Instead, they create a closed-loop economy where military officers retire into boardrooms and continue to wield economic and political influence.

    This commercial empire also acts as a platform for political control. The military uses its economic levers to shape media narratives, buy influence in the judiciary, and co-opt politicians. Media groups like the Nawa-i-Waqt Group and Bol News have faced closure or harassment when deviating from military narratives, while ISPR the army’s media wing actively funds propaganda campaigns and online troll armies. Business leaders who fund opposition parties are often subjected to National Accountability Bureau (NAB) probes, tax audits, or asset seizures. Through these tactics, the military consolidates not just wealth but unchallenged authority.

    However, the most dangerous and opaque part of the army’s economic footprint lies in its integration with Pakistan’s narco-terror complex. From the days of the Soviet-Afghan war, when the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence) under General Akhtar Abdur Rahman facilitated heroin production and smuggling to fund covert Mujahideen operations, the army’s involvement in narcotics has grown into a transnational pipeline. Opium grown in Afghanistan is processed in makeshift labs across Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, then transported via Balochistan’s Makran coast and Karachi ports. The logistics for these movements are often handled through military-controlled transport units, particularly those attached to the National Logistics Cell (NLC), which has long enjoyed immunity from customs inspections.

    Key individuals who are linked to this drug-financed ecosystem include former ISI chiefs like Hamid Gul and Shuja Pasha, both of whom oversaw extensive intelligence operations involving militant financing during their tenures. The Haqqani Network, long a proxy of the ISI, operated with impunity across the Af-Pak region and controlled smuggling routes for both arms and drugs. Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) have all received funding via hawala channels sourced from narco-trafficking and arms sales. The proceeds are laundered through front charities such as the Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation (FIF) and ostensibly other organisational fronts registered in Gulf states.

    In recent years, the growing convergence between Pakistan’s military and drug cartels operating in the Middle East, particularly in UAE and Oman, has given rise to a “military-narco-intelligence” axis. Front companies tied to retired army officials like Lt. Gen. Javed Nasir (former ISI chief) and certain members of the notorious business family have been implicated in narcotics laundering investigations across the Gulf and UK. The black money generated through this system is used to fund proxy wars in Jammu & Kashmir, Afghanistan, and increasingly Africa, where Pakistani mercenaries are now known to operate in conjunction with both Chinese and Turkish military logistics.

    The arms trade is another critical node in this network. Pakistan Ordnance Factories (POF), based in Wah Cantt, manufactures everything from bullets and grenades to mortars and automatic rifles. While officially intended for the Pakistani military, these arms often find their way into conflict zones. Documented recoveries of POF-manufactured arms in India’s Jammu & Kashmir state, Syria, Libya, and Nigeria underscore how the ISI uses weapon flows to back proxy forces. Smuggling routes operate across the Durand Line, Baluchistan’s desert terrain, and even through diplomatic pouches. Pakistani naval assets, particularly cargo shipments flagged through Bahria Maritime Services, have been used for covert arms transfers. Intelligence intercepts in East Africa and the Persian Gulf have pointed to Pakistani arms deliveries to Hamas and Hezbollah intermediaries.

    Pakistan’s terror infrastructure is essentially sustained through this fusion of narco profits, arms trade, and ideological training. Groups like Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), LeT, and JeM have training facilities, safehouses, and logistical support provided by elements within the army or the ISI. Interrogations of captured operatives have repeatedly revealed training stints at army-run camps in Muridke, Bahawalpur, and Muzaffarabad. These groups serve multiple functions, they destabilize India, threaten Afghanistan, and help maintain chaos that justifies international military aid. Even China, despite its Balochistan investments, has turned a blind eye to this nexus, so long as its economic interests remain protected.

    The role of state-affiliated institutions in laundering terror funds further reinforces the military’s omnipotence. The Habib Bank scandal in the United States, where the Pakistani bank was fined for facilitating transactions linked to terrorism, was just the tip of the iceberg. Banks like Askari Bank and Summit Bank, both closely tied to military interests, have come under scrutiny for suspicious transactions involving Gulf donors and shell companies. In Karachi, businessmen with ties to the MQM and ISI have also been accused of channelling narcotics profits into real estate and construction firms.

    The political consequences of this militarized economy are immense. Civilian governments, lacking control over the purse or arms, are reduced to caretakers. Parliament has little say over defence budgeting. The judiciary, itself often filled with pro-military judges or intimidated through surveillance, rarely challenges army operations. In 2022, the controversial removal of Prime Minister Imran Khan initially backed and later discarded by the military illustrated how no political leader is safe from Rawalpindi’s coercive power once they deviate from script. Khan’s campaign to expose army interference led to mass arrests, internet blackouts, and an orchestrated crackdown, executed with both police and ISI coordination.

    The Pakistani military’s role as an agent of regional chaos has long been subsidized by foreign powers seeking to use it as a counterweight to India’s rise. The United States alone has funnelled over $33 billion in military and economic aid to Pakistan since 2001, including $14.5 billion in Coalition Support Funds, much of which empowered the ISI’s proxy terror infrastructure rather than dismantling it. Simultaneously, the IMF has approved 23 bailout programs, the latest being a $1.02 billion package on 9th May 2025, effectively rescuing a bankrupt regime without civilian accountability. China, under the $62 billion CPEC initiative, has fortified its alliance with Pakistan’s military, funding dual-use infrastructure while arming it with drones, radar systems, and port access.

    Turkey, too, has become a critical enabler exporting Bayraktar drones, expanding joint training, and backing Islamist networks aligned with Pakistani interests. Following India’s recent precision strikes on Pakistani airbases, including key terror installations in Muridke and Bahawalpur, these powers have grown visibly uneasy, fearing that India’s assertiveness could dismantle the utility of Pakistan as a destabilizing tool. Their aid, veiled as strategic cooperation, in reality props up a militarized state whose primary export is instability used not only to bleed India but also to disrupt the emergence of a multipolar Asia where India could assert sovereignty independent of Western or Chinese-led frameworks i.e. G2 Consensus.

    Navroop Singh is an Intellectual Property Attorney in New Delhi and a geopolitical analyst with the ‘Niti Shastra’ platform. He has co-authored three books and writes on foreign policy, law, history, and public affairs.

  • Rain brings relief to Mumbai, IMD forecasts more showers across India

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Mumbai experienced early morning showers on Saturday, offering a welcome break from the persistent humidity that had gripped the city in recent days. The rainfall brought cooler temperatures and much-needed relief to residents.
     
    The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has predicted a partly cloudy sky throughout the day with a likelihood of light showers continuing. According to the department, light to moderate rain is expected across various parts of the city as part of the ongoing pre-monsoon activity.
     
    This spell of rain comes amid broader weather patterns affecting several regions across the country. The IMD has forecast continued rainfall and thunderstorm activity in different parts of India over the next five days.
     
    Very heavy rainfall is likely in Arunachal Pradesh on May 17, while Assam and Meghalaya are expected to receive intense showers between May 16 and 18. The Konkan and Goa regions are predicted to experience heavy rainfall on May 21 and 22. Similarly, Kerala and Mahe are expected to receive significant showers from May 19 to 21, and Coastal Karnataka could see heavy rainfall on May 20 and 21.
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Five killed in landslide at hydroelectric power plant construction site in northern Vietnam

    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

    HANOI, May 17 (Xinhua) — At least five workers were killed and three others injured on Friday when a landslide occurred at a hydroelectric power station construction site in northern Vietnam’s mountainous Lai Chau province, the Vietnam News Agency reported.

    The incident occurred at around 10:30 /03:30 GMT/ at the Ta Pao Ho 1A hydroelectric power station in Phong To district during excavation work on the foundation of the dam, which caused a section of the road embankment to collapse. Soil and rocks slid down, burying several workers.

    Local authorities have launched an investigation into the causes of the incident. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • PM Modi hails Neeraj Chopra’s landmark 90m throw at Doha Diamond League

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday congratulated Olympic gold medalist Neeraj Chopra for breaching the 90-metre mark in javelin throw during the Doha Diamond League 2025. The Prime Minister praised Chopra for achieving his personal best with a throw of 90.23 metres, calling it a reflection of the athlete’s relentless dedication, discipline, and passion.
     
    In a post on X, the Prime Minister said, “A spectacular feat! Congratulations to Neeraj Chopra for breaching the 90 m mark at Doha Diamond League 2025 and achieving his personal best throw. This is the outcome of his relentless dedication, discipline and passion. India is elated and proud.”
     
    Chopra’s historic throw made him the first Indian to cross the 90-metre milestone in javelin, setting a new national record in the process. The throw earned him a second-place finish at the prestigious international event, narrowly missing gold to Germany’s Julian Weber, who recorded a throw of 91.06 metres in the final round.
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: S for Housing to visit Paris

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    S for Housing to visit Paris 
         During her visit to Paris, Ms Ho will visit local social housing projects, eco-districts, smart construction technology centres and sustainable urban developments. She will also meet with relevant government officials, industry representatives and several organisations to share Hong Kong’s experiences and efforts in enhancing the quantity, speed, efficiency and quality of public housing construction by embracing various innovative construction technologies and AI technologies, continuously enhancing public estate management, aiming to build a more pleasant living environment for residents.
     
         Ms Ho will return to Hong Kong on May 23 afternoon. During her absence, the Under Secretary for Housing, Mr Victor Tai, will be the Acting Secretary for Housing.
    Issued at HKT 12:00

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI China: S. Korea’s ex-president Yoon leaves party ahead of presidential election

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

    Former South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol announced departure from his conservative People Power Party on Saturday ahead of the June 3 presidential election.

    “I’m leaving the People Power Party today. I bow down to my comrades in the party who believed in me and stayed with me for a long time,” Yoon said in an online statement.

    Yoon noted that his departure from the party, he believed, would be the best way he can to win the snap presidential election and protect the country’s liberal democracy.

    Calls recently emerged for Yoon to leave the party to woo swing voters in the upcoming election, caused by Yoon’s botched martial law bid, his impeachment and his permanent removal from office.

    Yoon asked the public to join forces with Kim Moon-soo, presidential candidate of the People Power Party, and cast their ballots in the June 3 election to safeguard freedom, sovereignty and prosperity.

    In recent polls, Kim lagged far behind Lee Jae-myung, the majority liberal Democratic Party’s presidential candidate who lost the 2022 presidential election to Yoon by the country’s narrowest margin of 0.73 percentage points.

    According to local pollster Flower Research’s survey of 4,016 voters from Monday to Thursday, Lee gained a support rate of 51.7 percent while Kim took 28.7 percent.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: McCaul to Co-Chair Friends of Australia Caucus

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Michael McCaul (10th District of Texas)

    WASHINGTON — Today, U.S. Congressman Michael McCaul (R-Texas) — chairman emeritus of the House Foreign Affairs Committee — announced he will co-chair the Congressional Friends of Australia Caucus alongside long-time co-chair, Congressman Joe Courtney AO (D-Conn.).

    “As the United States’ adversaries work together to create an increasingly dangerous world, trusted allies like Australia are as critical as ever. That’s why I’ve worked diligently to strengthen AUKUS — the Australia-U.K.-U.S. alliance that keeps Chairman Xi up at night,” said Rep. McCaul. “A strong U.S. relationship with Australia benefits both of our economies, enhances our mutual security, and deters the CCP’s malign ambitions in the Indo-Pacific. I look forward to working with Congressman Courtney, who has a proven commitment to the U.S.-Australia alliance, to continue bolstering the caucus’ work at this important time in history.” 

    “I am very excited to work with Congressman McCaul, who demonstrated his active support for the U.S.-Australia alliance in 2023 by partnering to enact historic bipartisan AUKUS authorities,” said Rep. Courtney AO. “As Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, he guided committee approval of key ITAR provisions that were incorporated into the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act. The bipartisan Friends of Australia Caucus has more work to do to build on that success, and I look forward to working with Michael to achieve this goal.”

    Background:

    The Congressional Friends of Australia Caucus seeks to expand and enrich the partnership between the United States and Australia, which enjoy strong economic and defense ties. McCaul has long supported the relationship between the U.S. and Australia, acknowledging that Australia is one of our most important strategic allies in the Indo-Pacific.

    Last Congress, McCaul championed several pieces of legislation to strengthen the Australia-United Kingdom-United States (AUKUS) defense pact. He also penned a recent op-ed in the National Review on the critical importance of AUKUS.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: McCaul Praises Trump Admin’s Border Security Efforts at Hearing with Secretary Noem

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Michael McCaul (10th District of Texas)

    WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Congressman Michael McCaul (R-Texas) — chairman emeritus and current vice chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee — delivered remarks on the Trump administration’s swift success in securing the border and questioned Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem about the importance of passing House Republicans’ reconciliation bill.

    Click to watch

    Transcript of Vice Chair McCaul’s Interaction with Secretary Noem:

    Vice Chair McCaul: Madam Secretary, it was great to serve with you in Congress. It was an honor, and it’s an honor to see you as secretary of this important department. Let me say on behalf of my state of Texas, thank you for what you’ve done in a very short period of time.

    I’ve worked on this issue — as a federal prosecutor [and] as chairman of this committee — for over 25 years. I never saw the border more broken, more chaotic, than I did under the prior administration. Yet within months, you have restored order to the border, and the stats speak for themselves. And I want to commend you and President Trump for that.

    You know, on day one, [the Biden administration] rescinded the Remain in Mexico policy, which led to the chaos. It said, we’re open for business, come on in. And they did. Over 10 million encounters, 2 million gotaways. Yet within months of your administration, that number [of encounters] has gone down 93%.

    Catch and release. I’ve been fighting that one for years [through solutions like Remain in Mexico]. The Biden administration did away with it. Now we’re decreased to 99.99%. Almost zero catch and release. A very dangerous policy. Remain in Mexico’s [underlying statute] has been on the books for 30 years. Yet I marked it up on the Foreign Affairs Committee last year as part of the Secure the Border Act.

    Most offensively, and the reason I was an impeachment manager against Mayorkas, was his dereliction of duty to basically prioritize allowing aggravated felons into the country, even though Congress, by federal law, said “shall detain” aggravated felons. Yet, what did he do? He told his agents, that’s discretionary. You can release these dangerous criminals into our society.

    What have you done within months? [In the first] 50 days, you have 14,000 criminal aliens arrested, some of the most brutal gang members like MS-13 and TDA, and it’s making this country safer.

    Fentanyl, each year more Americans die from fentanyl than the number of Americans who died in the Vietnam War over 20 years. You recently had the largest massive seizure of these deadly drugs just this last couple weeks [that were being trafficked] by the Sinaloa cartel. And again, my state thanks you for that.

    Terrorism. You said 250 known or suspected terrorists have been deported. We saw after Afghanistan, the debacle of the collapse of Afghanistan, when Bagram was shut down, the prisons were unleashed, ISIS-K went to the Khorasan region, crossed into the United States, and eight were found plotting in this country.

    You are making this country safer by your actions. The Biden administration made it dangerous, and it didn’t take a bunch of new laws. It [took] new leadership, which you have provided and the president has provided as well.

    My question to you is, as you know, you need resources. And nobody knows that better than I do. We marked up a bill — about $70 billion — that can be put into your department to [enforce] these laws already passed by the Congress. The Foreign Terrorist Organization designation [for cartels] was huge.

    Let me just ask you this. How will this bill, the reconciliation bill, assist you in your efforts to continue and promote safety in the United States?

    Secretary Noem: Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I appreciate all of your leadership on our national security issues in the past and still continue in the future to focus on that.

    The reconciliation bill is imperative to our future in securing our nation. For years previous, the Department of Homeland Security has been neglected. It’s one of the larger agencies in the federal government with one of the smallest budgets. And certainly under the previous administration, the Coast Guard was hollowed out. Border Patrol and ICE were not allowed to do their jobs. They were not allowed to invest in new technologies that they could utilize for interdiction. Also, our borders need surveillance and technology to make sure that we know who’s coming into this country and why. Our ports of entry need new scanners so that we’re truly scanning our shipping containers and much of our air freight. We don’t know what’s coming in by air either.

    Those kinds of adjustments and technology and software upgrades are needed to compete, but also to secure our country with the threats that we face. And we don’t just face threats from gangs and cartels. It’s from China and the PRC and Iran and hackers that come into our system. Salt and Volt Typhoon have taught us that we’re extremely vulnerable to these kinds of attempts in the future.

    In fact, one of the most alarming things I heard as soon as I was nominated for this position, I was in a briefing from CISA that told me that they knew with salt typhoon that we had been hacked, but they also said they didn’t know how it happened or how to stop it in the future. Now the main goal of CISA is to hunt and to harden our systems. Hunt bad actors and harden our systems for our small and medium sized critical infrastructure. Department of Homeland Security has 10 of the 16 components of critical infrastructure, and that’s what we need to focus our resources on.

    Vice Chair McCaul: Thank you.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • Neeraj Chopra breaks 90m barrier, finishes second

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    India’s Olympic gold medalist and world champion javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra delivered a historic performance at the Doha Diamond League on Friday, becoming the first Indian to cross the 90-metre mark in the sport. Despite the achievement, he finished second in the event following a remarkable final throw by Germany’s Julian Weber.
     
    Chopra began his season on a high note, launching his first throw to a distance of 88.44 metres. Grenada’s Anderson Peters followed with 85.64m, and Trinidad and Tobago’s Keshorn Walcott stood third with 84.65m. Chopra’s second throw was a foul, but he retained the lead. Germany’s Julian Weber was close behind with a best of 85.57m.
     
    In his third attempt, Chopra made history with a throw of 90.23 metres, breaking his own national record of 89.94m set during the 2022 Stockholm Diamond League. The throw extended his lead and marked a landmark moment in Indian athletics. Weber, meanwhile, threw 89.06m, staying within reach.
     
    Chopra’s fourth throw measured 80.56m, and his fifth was a foul. Still, he held the lead heading into the final round, with Weber in second and Peters in third.
     
    However, the competition took a dramatic turn in the final set of throws. Weber unleashed a massive effort of 91.06 metres, overtaking Chopra and clinching the top podium spot. Chopra’s final throw was 88.20 metres, which secured him the second position.
     
    Anderson Peters remained third with his earlier best of 85.64 metres.
     
    While Neeraj Chopra narrowly missed out on a win, his historic 90.23m throw marks a new chapter in Indian athletics and sets a strong tone for the upcoming season.
  • MIL-OSI USA: Sen. Johnson Joins Sen. Cotton in Introducing Bipartisan Bill to Protect Military Installations from Unauthorized Drones

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Wisconsin Ron Johnson

    WASHINGTON – Yesterday, U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) joined U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) in introducing the Comprehensive Operations for Unmanned-System Neutralization and Threat Elimination Response (COUNTER) Act. The bipartisan legislation will help enhance airspace security at military installations.

    Sens. Johnson and Cotton were joined by U.S. Senators Jim Banks (R-Ind.), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), John Boozman (R-Ark.), Katie Britt (R-Ala.), Ted Budd (R-N.C.), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W. Va.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), John Cornyn (R-Texas), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Jim Justice (R-W. Va.), Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), James Lankford (R-Okla.), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.), Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.), Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.), Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), and Todd Young (R-Ind.).

    U.S. Reps. Chrissy Houlahan (D-Penn.) and August Pfluger (R-Texas) are introducing companion legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    Full text of the letter can be found here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Blue Ridge Arrives in Wellington, New Zealand for the First Time

    Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand — U.S. 7th Fleet flagship USS Blue Ridge (LCC 19) arrived in Wellington, New Zealand for a port visit, May 16, 2025. This historic arrival marks the first time Blue Ridge has visited New Zealand as well as its capital city. The last two U.S Navy ships to visit Wellington were USS Howard (DDG 83) in 2021 and USS Sampson (DDG 102) in 2016.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for May 17, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on May 17, 2025.

    A life of service: celebrating the career of Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban
    SPECIAL REPORT: By Moera Tuilaepa-Taylor, RNZ Pacific manager At this year’s May graduation ceremony, Te Herenga Waka Victoria University’s Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban, was awarded an honorary doctorate in recognition for her contribution to education. Although she has now stepped down from the role, Luamanuvao served as the university’s Assistant Vice-Chancellor, Pasifika, for 14 years.

    ‘Manu jumping’: The physics behind making humongous splashes in the pool
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Pankaj Rohilla, Postdoctoral Fellow in Fluid Dynamics, Georgia Institute of Technology Maybe you’ve unknowingly tried to do a manu jump. Isabel Pavia/Moment via Getty Images Whether diving off docks, cannonballing into lakes or leaping off the high board, there’s nothing quite like the joy of jumping into

    Time for NZ media to ditch the propaganda and stand against genocide
    COMMENTARY: By Saige England in Christchurch “RNZ is failing in its duty to inform the public of an entirely preventable humanitarian catastrophe.” Tautoko to Jeremy Rose, Ramon Das and Eugene Doyle for this critique of a review of RNZ’s coverage of a genocide. Sadly, this highlights RNZ’s failure to report the genocide from the perspective

    Media Council makes ‘stop Telikom PNG silencing journalists’ plea to PM Marape
    The Media Council of Papua New Guinea (MCPNG) has called on Prime Minister James Marape to stop Telikom PNG silencing and suppressing media personnel. Telikom PNG, which is 100 percent government-owned, has two key outlets: FM100 radio and EMTV. Recently, it sacked FM100 talkback host Culligan Tanda after he featured opposition East Sepik Governor Allan

    Ben Roberts-Smith has lost an appeal in his long-running defamation case. Here’s why
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rick Sarre, Emeritus Professor in Law and Criminal Justice, University of South Australia The full Federal Court has dismissed Ben Roberts-Smith’s appeal to have his defamation case loss overturned. It is important in seeking to understand this judgement to know the history of the case. In June

    With a new minister for early childhood education, what can the federal government do to make centres safer?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Victoria Minson, Senior Lecturer in Early Childhood Education, Australian Catholic University This week, more reports emerged of horrific abuse of children at childcare centres. An ABC investigation reported young children had suffered burns and been verbally abused. In another case, a baby was repeatedly slapped by an

    Australian researchers use a quantum computer to simulate how real molecules behave
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ivan Kassal, Professor of Chemical Physics, University of Sydney University of Sydney Nano Institute When a molecule absorbs light, it undergoes a whirlwind of quantum-mechanical transformations. Electrons jump between energy levels, atoms vibrate, and chemical bonds shift — all within millionths of a billionth of a second.

    To boost the nation’s health, the government’s proposed food strategy must put people over profits
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rachael Walshe, Post-doctoral Researcher, University of Canberra crbellette/sShutterstock On election night, a triumphant Anthony Albanese took to the stage brandishing a Medicare card as a symbol of the nation’s commitment to public healthcare. As the re-elected government gets to work on its promised national food security strategy

    You usually need more than a few drops of blood, saliva or urine to detect illnesses. Here’s why
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Amali Cooray, PhD Candidate in Genetic Engineering and Cancer, WEHI (Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research) Lumen Photos/Shutterstock In the 2000s, biotech company Theranos promised to revolutionise blood testing. Founder Elizabeth Holmes claimed Theranos technology could perform hundreds of tests using just a finger-prick drop

    Some young trans people take sex hormones so their bodies better align with their gender. What are the benefits and risks?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Cristyn Davies, Senior Research Fellow in the Specialty of Child and Adolescent Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney romain-jorge/Shutterstock Triggered by hormonal changes in the brain and body, puberty marks a physical transformation. Oestrogen and testosterone – often called “sex hormones” – drive many

    Saudi Arabia has big AI ambitions. They could come at the cost of human rights
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Niusha Shafiabady, Associate Professor in Computational Intelligence, Australian Catholic University This week, on his tour of the Middle East, United States President Donald Trump unveiled a suite of new deals with Saudi Arabia. Trump claimed the deals were worth more than US$1 trillion (A$1.5 trillion). This is

    Why Anthony Albanese’s presence at Pope Leo’s inauguration is shrewd politics
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Darius von Guttner Sporzynski, Historian, Australian Catholic University When Prime Minister Anthony Albanese steps into St Peter’s Square for the inaugural Mass of Pope Leo XIV on Sunday, the optics will be far more than pious courtesy. For a day, the Vatican will temporarily be the world’s

    The space race is being reshaped by geopolitics, offering opportunities for countries such as New Zealand
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Peter Zámborský, Senior Lecturer, Management & International Business, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau NASA/Getty Imges The space economy is being reshaped — not just by innovation, but by geopolitics. What was once dominated by state space agencies, and more recently by private ventures, is evolving into

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: 2025 China-South Asia Forum on Poverty Reduction and Development Cooperation held in Sri Lanka

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

    The 2025 China-South Asia Forum on Poverty Reduction and Development Cooperation was held in Colombo, capital of Sri Lanka, on Thursday, to promote cooperation on poverty alleviation and spark collaborative projects tailored to local needs.

    In his speech, Gamagedara Dissanayake, Sri Lanka’s deputy minister of Buddhasasana, Religious and Cultural Affairs, said China’s success in gaining economic value from cultural heritage is a valuable experience for Sri Lanka.

    He added that despite notable successes in public health, education, and infrastructure development over the decades, Sri Lanka still grapples with persistent pockets of poverty in rural districts and among low-income urban communities.

    Dissanayake expressed the hope that this forum would serve as a platform to foster the exchange of knowledge, identify specific areas for collaboration, and build stronger networks that will contribute to poverty reduction and sustainable development.

    That spirit of practical cooperation was echoed by Du Zhanyuan, president of China International Communications Group (CICG), who noted that poverty eradication is not only a national goal but also a global challenge and a common mission for mankind.

    China and South Asian nations have been continuing to deepen cooperation in various areas, significantly contributing to the promotion of economic development and the improvement of people’s livelihood, Du said.

    Chinese ambassador to Sri Lanka, Qi Zhenhong, outlined his country’s structural efforts to support developing nations in their fight against poverty.

    Qi noted that China has channeled support to developing countries through mechanisms such as the China-United Nations Peace and Development Fund and the South-South Cooperation Assistance Fund. China has also promoted cooperation under frameworks such as the East Asia poverty reduction cooperation initiative and the China-Africa cooperation program for poverty reduction and people’s livelihood improvement.

    The forum, themed “Enhancing Regional Cooperation for South Asia’s Development,” brought together policymakers, diplomats, scholars, and development specialists from China, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and beyond.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Internet majors see accelerated growth

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

    Chinese internet heavyweights have returned to a rapid upward trajectory fueled by the continuously improved business environment and the application of rapidly evolving artificial intelligence technology, as they posted the fastest quarterly revenue growth in core businesses.

    Experts said the robust financial performance demonstrates the immense potential and resilience of Chinese platform enterprises, which have played a pivotal role in expanding domestic demand and boosting consumption, stabilizing employment and driving economic growth.

    Alibaba Group said on Thursday that its revenue stood at 236.45 billion yuan ($32.8 billion) during the January-March period, up 7 percent year-on-year, while its net income reached 29.85 billion yuan, rising 22 percent year-on-year.

    Notably, revenue from its cloud computing business logged the highest growth level in three years, surging 18 percent year-on-year to 30.13 billion yuan, with AI-related product revenue achieving triple-digit growth for the seventh consecutive quarter.

    Wu Yongming, CEO of Alibaba Group, said that looking ahead, the company will remain focused on its core businesses and continue to drive AI and cloud businesses as a new engine for its long-term growth.

    The company has announced that it will invest more than 380 billion yuan in building cloud and AI hardware infrastructure in the next three years. The investment figure exceeds Alibaba’s total cloud and AI spending over the past decade, highlighting its focus on an AI-driven growth strategy.

    JD posted better-than-expected financial results, with its revenue reaching 301.1 billion yuan in the first quarter, an increase of 15.8 percent year-on-year. This represents the highest year-on-year growth rate for the company in nearly three years.

    Xu Ran, CEO of JD, said that its earnings were boosted by improving consumer sentiment and continued enhancements to JD’s supply chain capabilities and user experience. The company aims to capture the emerging market opportunities driven by consumption support policies and the rise of AI large language models.

    Jiang Han, a senior analyst at market consultancy Pangoal, said that Chinese platform companies, which mainly leverage digital platforms to provide services such as e-commerce, payment, short videos and games, have effectively stimulated domestic demand and consumption by providing products and services online for consumers.

    “They have created a large number of jobs, including logistics and distribution, customer services and software development, and played a critical role in bolstering technological innovation, especially in AI, which will be conducive to enhancing production efficiency and bolstering industrial upgrading,” Jiang said.

    He noted that their strong performance in earnings results reflects China’s continued efforts to promote the healthy and well-regulated development of the platform economy by creating a favorable business environment and removing market barriers, while significantly boosting their vitality and confidence. Meanwhile, these companies’ increased investments in cutting-edge technologies, such as AI, have already yielded substantial returns.

    Tencent Holdings said that its revenue rose 13 percent year-on-year to 180 billion yuan in the first quarter, its largest quarterly income since listing in Hong Kong in 2004, driven by continued efforts in AI and video gaming.

    NetEase reported a 7.4 percent year-on-year increase in total revenue, beating market expectations, as the company continues to innovate with AI-driven enhancements in gaming experiences and educational services.

    Zhu Keli, founding director of the China Institute of New Economy, said that the platform economy has become the core engine driving China’s economic transformation and upgrading, with its resilience reflected in the highly efficient matching ability between supply and demand.

    Highlighting platform companies’ significant role in fostering new growth drivers, Zhu called for efforts to encourage enterprises to beef up investment in state-of-the-art technologies and forward-looking fields that better empower the real economy.

    China’s tech and internet sector has garnered revamped interest from investors since the appearance of the AI large language model DeepSeek in January. Leading internet companies have invested large sums of money into a new race to develop and integrate the most cutting-edge AI applications.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-Evening Report: A life of service: celebrating the career of Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban

    SPECIAL REPORT: By Moera Tuilaepa-Taylor, RNZ Pacific manager

    At this year’s May graduation ceremony, Te Herenga Waka Victoria University’s Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban, was awarded an honorary doctorate in recognition for her contribution to education.

    Although she has now stepped down from the role, Luamanuvao served as the university’s Assistant Vice-Chancellor, Pasifika, for 14 years. In that time has worked tirelessly to raise Pasifika students’ achievement.

    “It’s really important that they [Pasifika students] make the most of the opportunities that education has to offer,” she said.

    “Secondly, education teaches you how to write, to research, to critique, but more importantly, become an informed voice and considering what’s happening in society now with AI and also technology and social media, it’s really important that we can tell our stories and share our values, and we counter that by receiving a good education and applying ourselves to do well.”

    When asked about the importance of service, Luamanuvao explained “there’s a saying in Samoan, ‘o le ala i le pule o le tautua’ so the road to authority and leadership is through service”.

    “And we’ve always been taught how important it is not to indulge in our own individual success, but to always become a voice and support our brothers and sisters, and our families and in our communities who are especially struggling.”

    Juliana Faataualofa Lafaialii, Samoa’s Deputy Head of Mission/Counsellor to NZ (from left); Philippa Toleafoa; Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban; Afamasaga Faamatalaupu Toleafoa, Samoa’s High Commissioner to NZ; and Labour MP Pesetatamalelagi Barbara Edmonds . Image: Pesetatamalelagi Barbara Edmonds/RNZ Pacific

    As she accepted her honorary doctorate, she spoke about the importance of women taking on leadership roles.

    ‘Our powerful women’
    “Yes, many Pacific people will know how powerful our women are, especially our mothers, our grandmothers, and great grandmothers. We actually come from cultures of very powerful and very strong women . . .  it’s not centered in the individual women. It’s centered on the well-being of our families, and our communities. And that’s what women leadership is all about in the Pacific.”

    She did not expect the honourary doctorate from Te Herenga Waka Victoria University because “I’ve always been aspirational for others. And we Pacific people have been brought up that we are the people of the ‘we’ and not the me.”

    The number of Pasifika students enrolled at the University, during Luamanuvao’s time as Assistant Vice-Chancellor, increased from 4.70 percent in 2010 to 6.64 pecent in 2024. She said she “would have loved to have doubled that number” so that it was more in line with the number of Pasifika people living in New Zealand.

    Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban and supporters during an International Women’s day event in Wellington. Image: RNZ Pacific

    Two of the initiatives she started, during her time at the University, was the Pasifika Roadshow taking information about university life out to the wider community and the Improving Pasifika Legal Education Project.

    Helping Pasifika Law students succeed was very important to her. While Pasifika make up make up only 3 percent of Lawyers, they are overrepresented in the legal system, comprising 12 percent of the prison population.

    Another passion of hers was encouraging Pasifika to enter academia. “I think we’ve had an increase in Pacific academics in some areas. For example, with the Faculty of Law, we’ve got two senior Pacific women in lecturer positions . . . We’ve also got four associate professors, and now I’ve finished, there’s also a vacancy for another.”

    Prior to her work in education Luamanuvao was the first Pasifika woman to enter New Zealand politics, in 1999.

    First Pacific woman MP
    “I was fortunate that when I ran for Parliament, I ran first as a list MP, and as you know, within the parties, they have selection process that are quite robust, and so I became the first Pacific woman MP.”

    “What motivated me was the car parts factory that closed in Wainuiomata, and most of the workers were men, but they were also Pacific, Māori and palagi, who basically arrived at work one morning and were told the factory was closing.”

    “But what really hit me, and hurt me, that these were not the values of Aotearoa. They’re not the values of our Pacific region. These are human beings, and for many men, particularly, to have a job, it’s about providing for your family. It’s about status.

    “So, if factories were going to close down, where was the planning to upskill them so they could continue in employment? None of them wanted to go for the unemployment benefit.

    “They wanted to continue in paid work. So it’s those milestones that I make it worthwhile. It’s just a pity, because election cycles are three years, and as you know, people will vote how they want to vote, and if there’s a change, all the hard work you’ve put in gets reversed and but fundamentally, I believe that New Zealand and Pacific people have wonderful values that all of us try to live by, and that will continue to feed the light and ensure that people have a choice.”

    Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban PhD and her husband Dr Peter Swain. Image: Trudy Logologo/RNZ Pacific

    Although she first entered Parliament as a list MP, she subsequently won the Mana electorate seat. She retained the seat ,for the Labour party, from 2002 until she stepped away from politics in 2010.

    During that time she was Minister of Pacific Peoples, 2007-2008, and even though Labour was defeated in the 2008 election, she continued to hold the Mana seat by a comfortable margin.

    Mentoring many MPs
    Although she has left political life, Luamanuvao has also been involved in mentoring many Pasifika Members of Parliament, and helping them cope with the challenges and opportunities that go with the role.

    One of the primary motivators in her life has been the struggles of her parents, who left Samoa in 1954 to build a better future for their children, in New Zealand. She acknowledged that all of her successes can be attributed to her parents and the sacrifices they made.

    “Yes, well, I think everybody can look at a genealogy of history of families leaving their homeland to come to Aotearoa, why, to build a better life and opportunities, including education for their children.

    “And I often remind our generation of young people now that your parents left their home, for you. And I’ve often reflected because my parents have passed away on the pain of leaving their parents, but there was always this loving generosity in that both my parents were the eldest of huge families.

    “They left everything for them, and actually arrived in New Zealand with very little. But there was this determination to succeed.

    “Secondly, they are a minority in a country where they’re not the majority, or they are the indigenous people of their country. So also, overcoming those barriers, their hard work, their dreams, but more importantly, the huge love for our communities and fairness and justice was installed in Ken and I my brother, from a very young age, about serving and about giving and about reciprocity.”

    Although she has left her role in tertiary education Luamanuvao vows to continue working to support the next generation of Pasifika leaders, in New Zealand and around the Pacific region.

    Her lifelong commitment to service, continues as she’s a founding member of The Fale Malae Trust, a group whose vision is to build an internationally significant, landmark Fale Malae on the Wellington waterfront.

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

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: ‘Manu jumping’: The physics behind making humongous splashes in the pool

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Pankaj Rohilla, Postdoctoral Fellow in Fluid Dynamics, Georgia Institute of Technology

    Maybe you’ve unknowingly tried to do a manu jump. Isabel Pavia/Moment via Getty Images

    Whether diving off docks, cannonballing into lakes or leaping off the high board, there’s nothing quite like the joy of jumping into water.

    Olympic divers turned this natural act into a sophisticated science, with the goal of making a splash as small as possible. But another sport looks for just the opposite: the extreme maximum splash, one as high, wide and loud as possible.

    Welcome to the world of “manu jumping.” Although not a familiar term in the United States, manu jumping is beloved throughout New Zealand. The sport originated in the Māori community, where popping a manu is a way of life. There, manu jumpers leap from bridges, wharves and diving platforms to make the giant splashes.

    The sport is playful yet competitive. At the Z Manu World Champs, you win based on the height and width of your splash. The current record: a splash more than 32 feet high (10 meters).

    The concept sounds simple, but like Olympic diving, it turns out there’s a science to manu jumping.

    In New Zealand, manu jumping is an obsession.

    The Worthington splash

    As fluid dynamicists, we study the way living organisms interact with fluids – for instance, how flamingos feed with their heads underwater,
    or how insects walk on water.

    So when we stumbled upon viral videos of manu jumping on TikTok and YouTube, our curiosity was triggered. We launched a scientific investigation into the art of making a splash.

    Our research was more than just fun and games. Optimizing how bodies enter fluids – whether those bodies are human, animal or mechanical – is an indispensable branch of science. Understanding the physics of water entry has implications for naval engineering, biomechanics and robotics.

    We discovered that creating the perfect manu splash isn’t just about jumping into the water. Instead, it’s about mastering aerial maneuvers, timing underwater movements and knowing exactly how to hit the surface.

    The microsecond the manu jumper hits the water is critical. Two splashes actually occur: The first, the crown splash, forms as the body breaks the surface. The next, the Worthington splash, is responsible for the powerful burst of water that shoots high into the air. Manu jumping is all about triggering and maximizing the Worthington splash.

    So we analyzed 75 YouTube videos of manu jumps. First, we noticed the technique: Jumpers land glutes first, with legs and torso scrunched up in a V-shaped posture.

    But the moment they go underwater, the divers roll back and kick out to straighten their bodies. This expands the air cavity, the space of air created in the water by the jump; then the cavity collapses, detaching itself from the body. This period of detachment is known as “pinch-off time” – when the collapse sends a jet of water shooting upward. All of this happens within a fraction of a second.

    The science behind making a big splash.

    Answers from Manubot

    We found that jumpers entered the water at a median V-angle of about 46 degrees. Intrigued, we recreated these movements in a lab aquarium, using 3D-printed, V-shaped projectiles to test different V-angles.

    The result? A 45-degree angle produced the fastest, tallest splashes, virtually matching what we observed in the human jumpers. V-angles greater than 45 degrees increased the risk of injury from landing flat on the back. We found it interesting that the jumpers very nearly hit the optimal angle largely through what appeared to be intuition and trial and error.

    Note how the splash of the V-shaped projectiles was highest at 45 degrees.

    Digging deeper, we then built Manubot, a robot that mimics human body movements during manu jumps. It’s able to switch from a V-shape to a straight posture underwater. This is how we learned the optimal timing to maximize splash size.

    For instance, for someone who’s 5-foot-7 and jumping from 1 meter, opening their body within 0.26 to 0.3 seconds of hitting the water resulted in the biggest splash. Open too soon or too late, and splash size is compromised.

    Here’s how the Manubot worked.

    One caveat: Humans are far more complex than any 3D-printed projectile or a Manubot. Factors such as weight distribution, flexibility and anatomical shape add nuance that our models can’t yet replicate.

    For now, though, our findings highlight a simple truth: Creating the perfect manu splash isn’t the result of luck. Instead, it relies on a carefully tuned symphony of aerial and underwater maneuvers. So the next time you see someone spray everyone in the pool with a gigantic jump, remember – there’s a beautiful science behind the splash.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. ‘Manu jumping’: The physics behind making humongous splashes in the pool – https://theconversation.com/manu-jumping-the-physics-behind-making-humongous-splashes-in-the-pool-255837

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Security: DHS Debunks Fake News Narratives About Law Enforcement During Police Week

    Source: US Department of Homeland Security

    WASHINGTON – The Department of Homeland Security today released the following facts about Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) recent operations and Customs and Border Protection arrests to set the record straight on misleading news narratives and reporting.

    “Even during National Police Week, the media, members of Congress, and sanctuary politicians have demonized ICE and CBP officers who bravely serve their country,” said Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin“Attacks and smears against ICE have resulted in officers facing a 413% increase in assaults. We are setting the facts straight and reassuring America that President Trump and Secretary Noem will continue to support ICE and CBP in their efforts to make America safe again.

    Debunking the Biggest False News Stories this Week 

    Delaney Hall Storming was “oversight” by Congressional members  

    • At least three members of Congress, Representatives Robert Menendez, Jr., LaMonica McIver and Bonnie Watson Coleman, claimed that breaking into Delaney Hall was “oversight”—but it is actually trespassing and put ICE officers and detainees at risk.
    • Video footage shows McIver assaulting an ICE officer.
    • The allegations made by Newark politicians that Delaney Hall does not have the proper permitting are false. ICE maintains valid permits and inspections for plumbing and electricity and fire codes have been cleared.
    • Delaney Hall currently confines murderers, rapists, suspected terrorists and gang members.
    • There was no need for Congressional members to storm Delaney Hall—they could have just scheduled a tour. ICE will comply with the law and accommodate Members of Congress seeking to tour an ICE detention facility for the purpose of conducting oversight.
    • Safety, security, and good order are always primary considerations in a detention facility, and visitors must be properly identified and attired. 

    Nashville Mayor Smears ICE Enforcement  

    • Mayor Freddie O’Connell and biased news media framed ICE operations in Nashville as “not focused on making us safer.”
    • In reality, of the 196 illegal aliens ICE arrested, 95 had prior criminal convictions and pending criminal charges and 31 were previously removed individuals who reentered the U.S. illegally, which is a felony offense under federal law.
    • The successful operation resulted in the arrests of an MS-13 affiliate, a murderer, sex offenders, and illegal aliens convicted of assault. 

    ICE’s Hawaii Operation focused on “coffee farmers” 

    • Completely leaving out the facts and rap sheets of criminals arrested, the New York Times peddled a misleading narrative about ICE’s operation in Hawaii targeted criminal illegal aliens.
    • The operation resulted in the arrest of illegal aliens charged with kidnapping, assault, firearms offenses, drug offenses and theft. 

     Yamal Said, Lord Buffalo drummer, detained by border officials at airport

    • Yamal Said is a Mexican national and lawful U.S. permanent resident.
    • Yamal Said had a warrant for his arrest after violating a restraining order at least TWICE.
    • When he was attempting to leave the U.S., he was apprehended by CBP and has been turned over to local law enforcement.
    • If you come to our country and break our laws, you will be arrested. 

    Boston ICE agents arrest mother in front of her daughters 

    • What the media failed to report is the target of this ICE operation was a violent criminal illegal alien, Ferreira de Oliveira. She was arrested by local police for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, and assault and battery of a pregnant victim.
    • District Councilor for the City of Worcester Haxhiaj pulled a political stunt and incited chaos by trying to obstruct law enforcement. ICE officers and local police regained control of the situation and ICE arrested Ferreira de Oliveira.
    • The previous administration’s open border policies allowed this criminal to illegally enter our country in August of 2022. Thanks to President Trump and Secretary Noem this criminal is off our streets.  

    Lies for likes: Influencer claims he was targeted for “political beliefs”  

    • Claims that Hasan Piker’s political beliefs triggered a CBP inspection are baseless.
    • CBP officers follow the law, not agendas. Upon entering the country, this individual was referred for further inspection—a routine, lawful process that occurs daily, and can apply to any traveler.   

    Once his inspection was complete, he was promptly released. 

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: May 16th, 2025 Heinrich, Luján Fight to Protect Head Start, Meals on Wheels, Social Services from Republican Budget Cuts

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Mexico Martin Heinrich
    WASHINGTON — U.S. Senators Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) and Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) joined Democratic Senate colleagues in sending an open letter to the public exposing the Trump Administration and Congressional Republicans’ plan to gut Head Start, Meals on Wheels, and other essential social services like those to prevent child abuse and provide special services for individuals with disabilities. 
    Republican senators are currently writing legislation that will give a tax break to the wealthiest by ripping away programs that American seniors, children, and families rely on. Republicans have targeted two essential funding sources for social services programs—Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) — putting nearly 25 million children, seniors, and families at risk across the country.
    “We write to make our position on this legislation perfectly clear: Congress should not give tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans by ripping away programs that almost 25 million Americans – close to 50% of whom are children – rely on for basic needs,” the senators wrote to the American public. 
    “Earlier this month, Congressional Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate passed a budget that sets the stage for existential cuts to the safety net. Republican leaders claim they have no plans to eliminate essential services, but tens of billions in catastrophic cuts to these programs appeared on Republicans’ published wish list, alongside cuts to Medicaid and SNAP,” the senators continued. “State and local leaders confirm that eliminating SSBG and TANF would reduce programs that serve our most vulnerable as states and localities are already operating under tight budget constraints.”
    The senators’ letter concludes: “Right now, Republicans are writing the most consequential legislation contemplated in decades entirely behind closed doors. That’s because Trump and Congressional Republicans must hide the ugly truth – their legislation feeds corporate and wealthy individuals’ greed by abandoning vulnerable children, starving seniors, and cutting off families in need. You, your family, and your neighbors deserve far better. Democrats are fighting to protect your communities from Republican cuts. Join us and keep up the fight.”
    The open letter to the public is led by U.S. Senators Peter Welch (D-Vt.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), and Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.). Alongside Heinrich and Luján, the letter is signed by U.S. Senators Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.), Gary Peters (D-Mich.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), Andy Kim (D-N.J.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Chris Coons (D-Del.), Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.), Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Patty Murray (D-Wash.), Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Jack Reed (D-R.I.), Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), Mark Warner (D-Va.), John Fetterman (D-Pa.), and Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.).
    The full text of the letter is here and below:
    An open letter to the public:
    The Trump Administration and Congressional Republicans are planning to give another round of tax handouts to the ultra-wealthy and corporations that are paid for by gutting funding that supports Meals on Wheels, Head Start, and other essential programs that seniors, children, and working families rely on. While Republicans maintain that they are not cutting benefits for people, they have zeroed-in on two essential funding sources for these programs – Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) – putting children, seniors, and families at risk across the country.
    We write to make our position on this legislation perfectly clear: Congress should not give tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans by ripping away programs that almost 25 million Americans – close to 50% of whom are children – rely on for basic needs.
    Earlier this month, Congressional Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate passed a budget that sets the stage for existential cuts to the safety net. Republican leaders claim they have no plans to eliminate essential services, but tens of billions in catastrophic cuts to these programs appeared on Republicans’ published wish list, alongside cuts to Medicaid and SNAP. State and local leaders confirm that eliminating SSBG and TANF would reduce programs that serve our most vulnerable as states and localities are already operating under tight budget constraints.
    These devastating cuts will rip away access to child care and early education for close to 40,000 children, taking away programs that help set them up for successful lives. This will force working parents to walk an even tighter economic tightrope and make impossible choices about whether to cut back their hours or leave their jobs altogether to take care of their children. Moreover, these funding cuts will disproportionately impact kinship families – families in which grandparents or other family members raise children – as TANF is often their sole federal support outside of Social Security and the foster care system.
    Along with children, seniors will bear the brunt of these cuts. For example, in South Carolina, the state’s adult protective services is funded entirely by SSBG, raising questions about how the state will be able to effectively identify and prevent elder abuse without these dollars. SSBG is also a critical funding source for Meals on Wheels programs across the country. If Congressional Republicans get away with eliminating SSBG, the local Meals on Wheels program in Abilene, Texas will be forced to cut services for over half of the 1,700 seniors and people with disabilities across 15 rural communities it currently feeds. It doesn’t get crueler than going after a program that seniors rely on to eat what is often their only meal of the day, and there are programs like these in every community.
    Right now, Republicans are writing the most consequential legislation contemplated in decades entirely behind closed doors. That’s because Trump and Congressional Republicans must hide the ugly truth – their legislation feeds corporate and wealthy individuals’ greed by abandoning vulnerable children, starving seniors, and cutting off families in need. You, your family, and your neighbors deserve far better.
    Democrats are fighting to protect your communities from Republican cuts.
    Join us and keep up the fight.
    Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Schatz Votes To Demand Answers On Trump Administration’s Illegal Deportations To Salvadoran Prisons

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Hawaii Brian Schatz
    Published: 05.15.2025
    Senate Republicans Voted To Block The Resolution

    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i) released the following statement after voting for a resolution led by U.S. Senator Tim Kaine (D-Va.) to demand answers on the Trump administration’s compliance with court orders regarding illegal deportations of American citizens and residents as well as more information about El Salvador’s human rights record. The resolution was blocked by Senate Republicans.
    “President Trump’s disappearing of American residents to Salvadoran prisons without due process is immoral and unlawful – and it has to stop.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Schatz Criticizes Trump’s ‘Small, Insular, Mercenary’ Foreign Policy, Discusses Rebuilding American Foreign Assistance

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Hawaii Brian Schatz
    WASHINGTON – Speaking at the Council on Foreign Relations, U.S. Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i), Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on State and Foreign Operations, condemned the Trump administration’s wholesale dismantling of American foreign assistance and its abrupt departure from generations of bipartisan American foreign policy consensus. He underscored the various ways the administration’s cuts are costing lives and disrupting work critical to American interests around the world. Schatz also outlined ways in which the foreign assistance enterprise could be reformed to be more disciplined and effective going forward.
    “The existing tools of American foreign policy have served us, and the world, well,” said Senator Schatz, a member of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. “American leadership has deterred conflict and forged peace; cured diseases and slashed poverty. It has advanced equality, unleashed unprecedented economic prosperity, and powered extraordinary breakthroughs in science and technology. The world order we’ve established, flawed as it is, and as episodically counterproductive as our actions have been, is far better than the alternatives. But we now have a president and Secretary of State in Marco Rubio who are racing to shatter it.”
    Senator Schatz continued, “Legitimate, lawful, and lasting reform is not just possible, but necessary. For foreign assistance, that means rethinking what we do, where we do it, and how we do it. I’m not arguing that we shrink the scope of our ambitions or the scale of our investments. What I am advocating for is a more disciplined approach.”
    “Whether this moment is a requiem or a recess for American leadership is up to all of us. Because for all of the chaos and suffering of the past 4 months, we’re still in a position to rebuild the enterprise. We can still return to being the indispensable nation, as Madeleine Albright used to say. But that requires recapturing our ambition to once again be big, and bold, and expansive, and engaged, and innovative. And it demands a forceful rejection of the false choices being presented about strength and greatness and patriotism,” Senator Schatz concluded.
    A copy of Senator Schatz’s remarks, as prepared for delivery, is below. Video is available here.
    Good evening, everyone. It’s a pleasure to be here with all of you, and I want to thank the Council on Foreign Relations for having me.
    The toll of President Trump’s foreign policy, both on a human level and in policy terms, is rising every day. Children are starving. Mothers are passing HIV onto their newborns. Countries that were partners for decades are now turning to China for help. And our friends and allies, feeling confused and betrayed, are moving on without us.
    But this moment also raises an essential question about the future. Which is: what does a modern American foreign policy – one that is smart and strategic – look like? How do we adapt to reflect the lessons of recent decades and face future challenges?
    And here’s the truth. The existing tools of American foreign policy have served us, and the world, well. American leadership has deterred conflict and forged peace; cured diseases and slashed poverty. It has advanced equality, unleashed unprecedented economic prosperity, and powered extraordinary breakthroughs in science and technology. And so while I get the gravitational pull towards newness, we don’t need to outsmart ourselves, either.
    The world order we’ve established, flawed as it is, and as episodically counterproductive as our actions have been, is far better than the alternatives. But we now have a president and Secretary of State in Marco Rubio who are racing to shatter it.
    President Trump’s narrow and transactional view of the world is not news to anyone. What is genuinely surprising is that Secretary Rubio is aligning himself so closely with it. This is someone who, up until 4 months ago, was an internationalist. Someone who believed in America flexing its powers in all manners, but especially through foreign assistance. And yet, he is now responsible for the evisceration of the whole enterprise. He’s a colleague. I voted for him. And what I’m trying to understand is: what happened? Has he suddenly changed his mind on all of this? Or is someone else in charge?
    We could have done this well – and together. If the goal was to reform foreign assistance, rather than gut it from top to bottom, then the administration was pushing on an open door. In fact, my first meeting with Lindsey Graham at the start of the year when I became Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on State and Foreign Operations was about reforms. What’s working and what’s not? Does our work match our priorities? How can we better align our investments and our objectives? But you don’t fix something by burning it down.
    Legitimate, lawful, and lasting reform is not just possible, but necessary. For foreign assistance, that means rethinking what we do, where we do it, and how we do it. The objectives are the same as they’ve always been – keeping Americans safe, strengthening American businesses overseas, saving lives, and promoting rights and freedoms. The question is: how do we pursue them?
    And it’s through things like PEPFAR which is the most successful global health program in history. It’s saved 26 million lives to date and enabled local health systems to combat the spread of diseases, making the whole world safer and healthier. But because of the administration’s indiscriminate cuts to HIV testing and treatment, thousands of children have already died, and an estimated half a million more could die in the next 5 years. 2030 was our goal to end the HIV/AIDS pandemic. But we’re now moving backwards with more – not fewer – people dying. Kids are dying because we walked away.
    Our work in the Indo-Pacific is important for several reasons – geopolitics, security, trade, climate. But our security partnerships with Vietnam, for example, are possible because of USAID’s health and climate programs which also help address the legacies of the Vietnam War. Abandoning those projects overnight hurts both of our countries.
    And on foreign military financing, which has helped make us the security partner of choice globally, the administration initially froze billions of dollars, forcing our allies to beg for the money that they count on.
    Going forward, the task is two-fold: restoring the things that were clearly working. And that requires processes that actually work and staff who are allowed to work. But most of all, it requires Secretary Rubio’s undivided attention. And then second, we have to look at what we can be doing better.
    And that starts with doing fewer things. Not less, but fewer – and there is a big difference. I’m not arguing that we shrink the scope of our ambitions or the scale of our investments. What I am advocating for is a more disciplined approach. Just because there’s a lot of great and worthy work that we could be doing doesn’t mean we should be the ones doing it. We’re not a private foundation.
    Second, we have to reduce our overreliance on big contractors with high overhead. Contractors shouldn’t be bigger than the agencies that oversee them. And less overhead means more money in the field, actually helping people. Along those lines, we need to stop overregulating our implementing partners and be more flexible about how money is spent.
    Third, there’s a lot of private capital flowing in the world. The challenge sometimes is getting it to flow to the places and projects that we want it to. But we can help fix that with grant dollars that help private sector-led projects pencil out. It’s a good example where the U.S. government doesn’t have to assume the majority of the burden. But we can be smarter about leveraging our resources to achieve outcomes that are in our interest.
    And finally, where possible, we should work to transfer the delivery of basic services – food, water, education – to partner governments. Otherwise, our development programs aren’t actually development programs. They’re service delivery programs with no end in sight. And that’s not helping anyone.
    This isn’t an exhaustive list, but those are the kinds of reforms we should be working toward in our annual appropriations bill. Now, the good news is that there’s longstanding, bipartisan support for this bill. Because leaders and members on both sides of the Capitol understand that we can’t do foreign policy without the tools of foreign policy. It doesn’t matter where you are on the ideological spectrum. You need tools to implement your policies. And so we’re starting to work toward a bill on that basis, and we have a hearing on it next week with Secretary Rubio.
    President Trump’s version of America – small, insular, mercenary – is fundamentally un-American. It’s antithetical to not just our belief, but the world’s belief, in America as the promised land. And it defies generations of American leadership which helped defeat the Nazis, rebuild Europe, prevent nuclear Armageddon, and take down terrorists.
    But whether this moment is a requiem or a recess for American leadership is up to all of us. Because for all of the chaos and suffering of the past 4 months, we’re still in a position to rebuild the enterprise. We can still return to being the indispensable nation, as Madeleine Albright used to say. But that requires recapturing our ambition to once again be big, and bold, and expansive, and engaged, and innovative. And it demands a forceful rejection of the false choices being presented about strength and greatness and patriotism.
    We didn’t become the most powerful nation in human history by walling ourselves off from the world or by trying to extort friends and monetize every relationship. We’re the good guys. And that’s important for its own reasons – separate and apart from geopolitics, though it’s helpful with that too. Being the good guys is foundational to how we move through the world. It’s not woke or left or soft. It has been the perennial, bipartisan consensus since our founding.
    Getting back to that is going to require all of us to do our part. And I really mean that. Many of you here have dedicated your lives to promoting our values and interests. Your work and your voice matter, now more than ever. This is a hard time, but it’s not the hardest of times. We’ve survived greater challenges before, and we can do it again. To save America as we know it, we all have a role to play, both in Congress, but especially outside of it. And as my colleague Sarah McBride’s dad said, if everyone has just a little bit of courage, then no one has to be a hero. So let’s get to it. Thank you.

    MIL OSI USA News