Category: Asia Pacific

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: INDIA HAS IMMENSE POTENTIAL TO BECOME SELF-RELIANT IN OILSEED PRODUCTION: LOK SABHA SPEAKER SHRI OM BIRLA

    Source: Government of India

    INDIA HAS IMMENSE POTENTIAL TO BECOME SELF-RELIANT IN OILSEED PRODUCTION: LOK SABHA SPEAKER SHRI OM BIRLA

    INDUSTRY LEADERS MUST COLLABORATE WITH FARMERS AND SCIENTISTS TO STRENGTHEN OILSEEDS SECTOR IN INDIA: LOK SABHA SPEAKER

    START-UP CULTURE AND VOCAL FOR LOCAL INITIATIVES CAN DRIVE INNOVATION IN OILSEEDS INDUSTRY: LOK SABHA SPEAKER

    LOK SABHA SPEAKER ADDRESSES 45th RABI ALL INDIA OILSEEDS SEMINAR IN AGRA

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 5:49PM by PIB Delhi

    Lok Sabha Speaker Shri Om Birla today called upon all stakeholders — farmers, entrepreneurs, scientists, and industry leaders — to unite with determination and play a pivotal role in making India self-reliant and a global leader in oilseed production.

    Noting that India’s demand for edible oil far exceeds its domestic supply, Shri Birla called upon industry leaders and oil millers to innovate and find solutions to reduce import dependency, aligning with Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi’s vision of Atma Nirbhar Bharat. He asserted that India is undergoing transformation, and it is imperative that our farmers become key drivers of this change, empowered with fair prices for their produce.

    Shri Birla was addressing the 45th Rabi All India Oilseeds Seminar, organized by the UP Oil Millers Association in Agra today.

    He stressed that our farmers and the oil processing industry must work hand-in-hand and emphasized that high-quality oilseed production backed by advanced research and innovation is essential. Shri Birla urged agricultural scientists and the Oil Millers Association to collaborate proactively for excellence and self-reliance. The Speaker also urged scientists to focus on developing climate-resilient, high-yield seed varieties, contributing to sustained growth in oilseed production. He emphasized the importance of research collaborations with renowned universities and institutions, and the need to educate the public on the health benefits of Indian oils, supported by scientific studies. Underlining that Central India’s soil and climate are highly conducive to oilseed cultivation, often requiring minimal irrigation, he noted that government initiatives have improved irrigation infrastructure and enhanced agriculture production potential.

    Highlighting the nutritional value of Indian oilseed crops, Shri Birla emphasized the need to promote these indigenous oils to boost both economic and nutritional security. He reaffirmed the importance of the philosophy to embrace indigenous oils reminding that what grows naturally in our soil and climate is most beneficial to health. He also linked the oilseeds sector’s growth with the ‘Vocal for Local’ vision, encouraging farmers to adopt modern technologies, receive proper training, and utilize government schemes for better yields and higher incomes. Shri Birla called for entrepreneurial participation in organic farming, processing, packaging, and distribution of oilseed products, highlighting the immense opportunities Start-Up culture has brought to even smaller regions.

    He expressed confidence that the deliberations at the 45th Rabi All India Oilseeds Seminar would chart a new direction for India’s oilseeds industry and help achieve the goal of self-reliance. Shri S. P. Singh Baghel, Minister of State in the Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and dairying and  Panchayti Raj and other dignitaries were present on this occasion.

    ***

    AM

    (Release ID: 2114480) Visitor Counter : 17

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: New triboelectric nanogenerator with single crystals of organic compound could be useful for biological applications

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 5:26PM by PIB Delhi

    Researchers have developed a triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) wherein flexible single crystals of an organic compound was used as the main component for the fabrication of a self-powered tactile sensor which was used to monitor finger joint movements. This has significant importance particularly in biomedical and robotic system development and could pave the way for their utilization as biomedical wearable devices.

    Organic materials are gaining importance for optoelectronic applications because of their lower cost and environmental footprint, easy fabrication, and practical feasibility. Among various organic materials, single crystals are better suited for device fabrication because of their well-ordered packing and precise spatial arrangements. They also possess intrinsic long range structural order and anisotropy and tuneable optical and electronic properties, thereby resulting in superior device performance. Additionally, the ease of synthesis, crystallization, and device fabrication position organic single crystals as promising candidates to meet the evolving demand for next generation technologies.

    Scientists from Institute of Nano Science and Technology (INST), Mohali, an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology (DST) demonstrated the first ever fabrication of TENG incorporating flexible single crystals of small organic molecules. The research involved has been published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

    Triboelectrification was attained in single crystals as a result of surface functionalization with positively and negatively charged moieties, viz. Zn2+ and F, respectively, which resulted in different surface potentials thereby leading to reversible adhesion through electrostatic interaction and induction phenomena.

    The TENG incorporating the single crystals was capable of charging commercial capacitors thereby ensuring its ability to be used as a self-powered touch sensor. Capitalizing on these features, a self-powered tactile sensor was fabricated to demonstrate limb movements.

    The protocol adopted to vary the surface charge on single crystals through surface functionalization techniques was simple and scalable. Moreover, the TENG developed works in the non-contact mode and promises outstanding endurance properties.

    The excellent mechano-electric sensitivity (∼102 mV/kPa until 6 kPa range) and response time (∼38 ms) establish the viability of flexible organic single crystals for mechanical energy harvesting and biosensing applications.

    Biomechanical signal sensing using TENG. Photographs of TENG attached to a finger along with the measured output voltage response at (a) 30°, (b) 60°, and (c) 90° bending angles.

    ***

    NKR/PSM

    (Release ID: 2114473) Visitor Counter : 56

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Strategic Supply Chain Management for Critical Minerals

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 5:20PM by PIB Delhi

    The Union Cabinet has approved the National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM) on January 29, 2025. The NCMM aims to secure a long-term sustainable supply of critical minerals and strengthen India’s critical mineral value chains encompassing all stages from mineral exploration and mining to beneficiation, processing, and recovery from end-of-life products. The NCMM components also include ‘increasing domestic critical mineral production’ and ‘Acquisition of Critical Mineral Assets abroad’.

    For acquisition of overseas mineral assets, the Ministry of Mines has established a joint venture company, Khanij Bidesh India Ltd. (KABIL). KABIL has signed an Exploration and Development Agreement with CAMYEN, a state-owned enterprise of Catamarca province of Argentina, for exploration and mining of five Lithium Brine Block in Argentina in an area of 15703 Ha.

    Further, an MoU has been signed between KABIL and Critical Mineral Facilitation Office (CMFO), Department of Industry, Science and Resources (DISER), Government of Australia for carrying out joint due diligence and further joint investment in Li & Co mineral assets of Australia.

    NCMM has provision of critical mineral processing parks for which there is budget provision of Rs. 500 Crore. Further, there is also budget provision of Rs. 1500 crore for recycling. In addition, there are also provisions for skill development and R&D activity support.

    The governance framework of NCMM includes an Empowered Committee chaired by the Cabinet Secretary with CEO of NITI Aayog and Secretaries of other stakeholder Ministries as members.

    This information was given by Union Minister of Coal and Mines Shri G. Kishan Reddy in a written reply in Rajya Sabha today.

    ****

    Shuhaib T

    (Release ID: 2114467) Visitor Counter : 72

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Reserves and Extraction of Critical Minerals

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 5:19PM by PIB Delhi

    The cumulative resources of various critical minerals augmented by GSI since the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Amendment Act, 2015 are as follows:

    (in million tonne)

    Sl. No

    Ore of Commodity

    Resource

    Sl. No.

    Ore of Commodity

    Resource

    1.

    REE-RM

    310.94

    9.

    Vanadium

    116.46

    2.

    Niobium

    282.0

    10.

    Molybdenum

    3.6

    3.

    PGE

    1.0

    11.

    Tungsten

    21.5

    4.

    Graphite

    72.91

    12.

    Lithium

    12.3

    5.

    Glauconite/Potash

    1496.0

    13.

    Nickel

    4.8

    6.

    Phosphorite

    31.88

    14.

    Cobalt

    275 (tonne)

    7.

    Titanium

    41.0

    15.

    Tin

    3.0

    8.

    Gallium

    74.0

     

    As per the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and Development) Amendment Act, 2015, the State Governments conduct auction of mineral blocks. The MMDR Amendment Act, 2023 has empowered the Central Government to exclusively auction Mining Leases (ML) and Composite Licences (CL)(prospecting licence-cum-mining lease) in respect of any ‘critical and strategic mineral’ specified in Part D of the First Schedule of the MMDR Act. From 2020-21 till MMDR Amendment Act 2023, a total of 44 critical mineral blocks, (8 MLs and 36 CLs) were auctioned, out of which 20 critical mineral blocks (4 MLs and 16 CLs) were auctioned by State Governments. Post MMDR Amendment 2023, the Central Government has auctioned 24 critical mineral blocks (4 MLs and 20 CLs) till date.

    The Khanij Bidesh India Limited (KABIL), a joint venture company under the Ministry of Mines has signed an Exploration and Development Agreement on 15.01.2024 with the State owned company of Catamarca province of Argentina, CAMYEN S A and has obtained exclusivity rights for exploration, development and mining in 5 brine type Lithium Blocks, covering an area of 15,703 hectares, in Fiambala division of Catamarca province of Argentina.

    This information was given by Union Minister of Coal and Mines Shri G. Kishan Reddy in a written reply in Rajya Sabha today.

    ****

    Shuhaib T

    (Release ID: 2114466) Visitor Counter : 70

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: India to host 3-day FATF Private Sector Collaborative Forum 2025 (PSCF 2025) from 25th -27th March, 2025, in Mumbai

    Source: Government of India (2)

    India to host 3-day FATF Private Sector Collaborative Forum 2025 (PSCF 2025) from 25th -27th March, 2025, in Mumbai

    FATF President Ms. Elisa de Anda Madrazo to formally inaugurate PSCF 2025 on 26th March, 2025, with RBI Governor Shri Sanjay Malhotra presiding over the event

    The PSCF 2025 agenda reflects global priorities, including payment transparency, financial inclusion, and digital transformation of financial systems

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 5:05PM by PIB Delhi

    The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Private Sector Collaborative Forum (PSCF) 2025 will be held from 25th -27th March, 2025, in Mumbai. The forum is being hosted by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Department of Revenue, Ministry of Finance, Government of India, reaffirming India’s responsible leadership in global efforts to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.

     

    FATF President Ms. Elisa de Anda Madrazo will formally inaugurate the PSCF 2025 on 26th March, 2025, with Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shri Sanjay Malhotra presiding over the event. The Indian delegation to PSCF is a multi-disciplinary team led by Shri Vivek Aggarwal, Additional Secretary (Revenue), Ministry of Finance.

    India’s Leadership in AML/CFT Efforts

    India’s participation in FATF initiatives has been widely recognised. India is a member of steering group of FATF and also co-chairs a working group on Risks, Trends and Methodologies work group. In November 2024, India hosted the plenary of Eurasian Group on Combating Money Laundering and Financing of Terrorism (EAG) in Indore. In June 2024, India’s FATF Mutual Evaluation Report was tabled at the FATF Plenary in Singapore and subsequently released in September 2024. India achieved the best possible outcome by being placed in ‘regular follow-up,’ a status that only a few countries have attained in their Mutual Evaluations.

    The report commended India’s exemplary efforts in curbing money laundering and terrorist financing, highlighting the country’s advanced fintech ecosystem, innovations like the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) and Aadhaar-enabled digital identity verification, and proactive inter-agency coordination. India’s approach has set a global benchmark for integrating technology with financial security.

    PCSF 2025

    The upcoming PCSF event is another milestone in India’s journey in its efforts in curbing money laundering and terrorist financing. The PSCF is an annual event that provides a critical platform for dialogue between FATF member countries, international organisations, and private sector stakeholders. It aims to enhance the implementation of FATF’s Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing (AML/CFT) standards by fostering collaboration, exchanging best practices, and addressing emerging global challenges.

    This year’s forum will see participation from countries across FATF’s Global Network, along with representatives from financial institutions, designated non-financial businesses and professions (DNFBPs), virtual asset service providers (VASPs), international organisations, and academia.

    Key Highlights and Agenda Focus Areas

    The PSCF 2025 agenda reflects global priorities, including payment transparency, financial inclusion, and digital transformation of financial systems. With financial crimes evolving due to technological advancements — such as cryptocurrency-related laundering — India’s expertise in leveraging technology and fostering a risk-based approach offers valuable insights for the international community. By hosting this significant event, India reinforces its commitment to FATF’s global standards.

    Over the next three days, discussions at the forum will revolve around several critical issues shaping the global AML/CFT landscape. Participants will explore how FATF can continue to address evolving threats while promoting financial inclusion through robust, risk-based supervision of regulated entities. The dialogue will also focus on enhancing transparency in beneficial ownership and leveraging digital tools to strengthen AML/CFT compliance mechanisms.

    Information-sharing practices within the private sector will be evaluated to identify ways to better address emerging financial crime threats. Furthermore, the forum will engage in deliberations on emerging terrorist financing and proliferation financing risks, emphasising the need for measures that reinforce global resilience against these challenges.

    ****

    NB/KMN

    (Release ID: 2114453) Visitor Counter : 28

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: INITIATIVES REGARDING NATIONAL ELECTRICITY PLAN

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:50PM by PIB Delhi

    The National Electricity Plan-Transmission outlines the transmission system required to be added in the country during the period 2023 to 2032, commensurate with the generation capacity addition and growth of electricity demand in the country. The transmission plan includes the addition of central and state transmission systems (220 kV level and above) to meet the projected peak electricity demand of 388 Giga Watt (GW) by the year 2032.

    High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) lines facilitate bulk transfer of power over long distances. New HVDC lines have been primarily planned for transfer of bulk power from Renewable Energy (RE) rich areas to major load centers.

    Resources for electricity generation are unevenly distributed across the country. Some states have huge variable RE potential while some states are rich in hydro potential. The increase in Inter- Regional transfer capacity from 119 GW to 168 GW by 2032 would facilitate seamless transfer of power from power surplus regions/states to power deficit regions/states, thereby helping the states to meet their electricity demand.

    The National Electricity Plan -Transmission, inter-alia, outlines the transmission system for evacuation of power from major RE potential Zones/ areas. Further, transmission system has also been planned for delivery of power to the Green Hydrogen/Green Ammonia manufacturing potential hubs in the country. The transmission projects associated with integration of RE and for delivery of power to Green Hydrogen manufacturing hubs are under different stages of implementation.

    The reply was given by THE MINISTER OF STATE IN THE MINISTRY OF POWER SHRI SHRIPAD NAIK in Rajya Sabha Today.

    ***

    SK

    (Release ID: 2114440) Visitor Counter : 59

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: 1,84,865 Beneficiaries Availed Concessional Credit under NMDFC Schemes

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:47PM by PIB Delhi

    1,84,865 beneficiaries have availed concessional credit under the National Minorities Development and Finance Corporation (NMDFC) schemes of the Ministry of Minority Affairs during the Financial Year 2023-24. The percentage of women beneficiaries amongst them is 90.57%.

    This information was given by the Union Minister of Minority Affairs & Parliamentary Affairs, Shri Kiren Rijiju in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha today

    ***

    SS/ISA

    (Release ID: 2114436) Visitor Counter : 75

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: NEW SCHEMES AND PROGRAMMES TO SUPPORT SMEs

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:42PM by PIB Delhi

    During the FY 2024-25, the Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) has launched a sub scheme under Central Sector Scheme Raising and Accelerating MSME Performance Program (RAMP), namely MSME Trade Enablement and Marketing (MSME TEAM) Initiative on 27th June 2024. The MSME Trade Enablement and Marketing Initiative aims to propagate e-commerce among MSMEs in the country by leveraging Digital Public Infrastructure through ONDC so as to benefit the Micro and Small Enterprises with a special focus on Women entrepreneurs. The financial outlay for the scheme is Rs 27.35 crores.

     

    To ensure successful implementation of the Scheme, Ministry of MSME has appointed National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC) as the Implementing Agency for the TEAM Scheme. Funds have been allocated for different activities / benefits under the scheme for effective utilization of funds. National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC) is conducting various workshops with support from the Ministry of MSME, State Governments/ UTs, industry bodies and ONDC to create awareness among MSMEs about benefits of e-commerce. The Scheme aims to facilitate their eventual onboarding onto ONDC compliant Seller Network Participants (SNPs).

    The reply was given by MINISTER OF STATE FOR MICRO, SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES SUSHRI SHOBHA KARANDLAJE in Rajya Sabha Today.

    ***

    SK

    (Release ID: 2114432) Visitor Counter : 59

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: LegCo to consider Courts (Remote Hearing) Bill

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    LegCo to consider Courts (Remote Hearing) Bill 
         The Legislative Council (LegCo) will hold a meeting on Wednesday (March 26) at 11am in the Chamber of the LegCo Complex. During the meeting, the Second Reading debate on the Courts (Remote Hearing) Bill will resume. If the Bill is supported by Members and receives its Second Reading, it will stand committed to the committee of the whole Council. After the committee of the whole Council has completed consideration of the Bill and its report is adopted by the Council, the Bill will be set down for the Third Reading.
     
         Meanwhile, the Electoral Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Bill 2025, the Buildings Energy Efficiency (Amendment) Bill 2025, the Electronic Health Record Sharing System (Amendment) Bill 2025, the Supplementary Medical Professions (Amendment) Bill 2025 and the Merchant Shipping (Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships) Bill will be introduced into the Council for the First Reading and the Second Reading. The Second Reading debate on the Bills will be adjourned.
     
         On Government motion, the Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development will move a proposed resolution under the Hong Kong Export Credit Insurance Corporation Ordinance to resolve that the maximum percentage prescribed for section 13(2) of the Hong Kong Export Credit Insurance Corporation Ordinance is 95 per cent. The proposed resolution is set out in Appendix 1.
     
         On Members’ motions, Mr Dennis Leung will move a motion on accelerating the development of a smart government to better assist the public in integrating into the life in the Greater Bay Area. The motion is set out in Appendix 2. Mr Chan Siu-hung and Mr Steven Ho will move separate amendments to Mr Leung’s motion.
     
         Mr Tommy Cheung will move a motion on reviewing the effectiveness of the small class teaching mode in primary and secondary schools. The motion is set out in Appendix 3. Mr Chu Kwok-keung will move an amendment to Mr Cheung’s motion.
     
         Members will also ask the Government 22 questions on various policy areas, six of which require oral replies.
     
         The agenda of the above meeting can be obtained via the LegCo Website (www.legco.gov.hkIssued at HKT 19:30

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: CAD updates regulations on air passengers carrying lithium battery power banks to further enhance aviation safety

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    CAD updates regulations on air passengers carrying lithium battery power banks to further enhance aviation safety 
    According to the latest requirements, in addition to complying with the International Civil Aviation Organization’s relevant regulations on the carriage of items by passengers onboard, starting from April 7, local airlines should not allow their passengers to use power banks to charge other portable electronic devices and/or recharge power banks during flight. Stowage of power banks in the overhead compartments is also prohibited with the same effective date.
     
    For any queries, passengers are advised to check with relevant airlines on the latest regulations before their flight.
     
    The CAD will continue to maintain close communication with relevant parties and actively follow up on the implementation of these new regulations.
    Issued at HKT 19:06

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Government steps to ensure energy security

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:35PM by PIB Delhi

    Prices of petrol and diesel are market determined and Public Sector Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) take appropriate decision on pricing of petrol and diesel.

    Domestically, Petrol and Diesel prices have come down to Rs. 94.77 and Rs. 87.67 per litre respectively (Delhi prices) as a result of various steps taken by Government and PSU OMCs, Central Excise duty was reduced by the Central Government by a total of Rs. 13/litre and Rs. 16/litre on petrol and diesel respectively in two tranches in November 2021 and May 2022, which was fully passed on to consumers. Some State Governments also reduced state VAT rates to provide relief to citizens. In March, 2024, OMCs reduced the retail prices of petrol and diesel by Rs. 2 per litre each.

    India has been the only major economy in the world where the prices of petrol and diesel have come down in recent years. Changes in prices of petrol and diesel in some major economies between November 2021 and January 2025 are as under:

    % age Change in Prices between Nov-21 and Jan-25

    Country

    Petrol

    Diesel

    India (Delhi)

    -13.60%

    -10.92%

    France

    14.21%

    15.08%

    Germany

    7.87%

    12.43%

    Italy

    8.65%

    11.39%

    Spain

    8.67%

    12.93%

    UK

    0.08%

    2.61%

    Canada

    10.52%

    23.05%

    USA

    4.83%

    12.86%

    Changes in prices of petrol and diesel in some neighboring economies between November 2021 and January 2025

    % age Change in Prices between Nov-21 and Jan-25

    Country

    Petrol

    Diesel

    India (Delhi)

    -13.60%

    -10.92%

    Pakistan

    29.76%

    34.97%

    Bangladesh

    13.94%

    30.82%

    Sri Lanka

    53.98%

    101.59%

    Nepal

    22.02%

    31.32%

    India imports about 60% of the domestic LPG consumed. Price of LPG in the country is linked to its price in the international market. While the average Saudi CP (international benchmark for LPG pricing) rose by 63% (from US$ 385/MT in July 2023 to US$ 629/MT in February 2025), the effective price for Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) consumers for domestic LPG was reduced by 44% (from Rs. 903 in August 2023 to Rs. 503 in February 2025).

    The retail selling price of a 14.2 Kg domestic LPG cylinder is currently Rs. 803 in Delhi. After a targeted subsidy of Rs. 300/cylinder to PMUY consumers, Government of India is providing 14.2 Kg LPG cylinders at an effective price of Rs.503 per cylinder (in Delhi). This is available to more than 10.33 crore Ujjwala beneficiaries, across the country.

    Globally, PMUY is the biggest program of its kind that provides Domestic LPG to more than 100 million poor households at an effective price of just about Rs. 35/Kg. Further, the effective price of domestic LPG cylinder in neighbouring countries as on 01.01.2025 is as below.

    Country

    Domestic LPG (Rs./14.2 kg.cyl.)

    India

    503.00*

    Pakistan

    1094.83

    Sri Lanka

    1231.53

    Nepal

    1206.65

    Government of India is closely monitoring global energy markets as well as potential energy supply disruptions as a fall-out of the evolving geopolitical situation. To ensure security of crude supplies and to mitigate the risk of dependence on crude oil from single region, Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) have diversified their petroleum import basket and are procuring crude from countries located at various geographical locations.

    Government has adopted a multi-pronged strategy to reduce the dependency on crude oil which, inter alia, include demand substitution by promoting usage of natural gas as fuel/feedstock across the country towards increasing the share of natural gas in economy and moving towards gas based economy, promotion of renewable and alternate fuels like ethanol, second generation ethanol, compressed bio gas and biodiesel, refinery process improvements, promoting energy efficiency and conservation, efforts for increasing production of oil and natural gas through various policies initiatives, etc. For promoting the use of Compressed Bio Gas (CBG) as automotive fuel, Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation (SATAT) initiative has also been launched.

    The government has been taking various steps to boost domestic oil and gas production which, inter-alia, include:

    i.          Policy under PSC regime for early monetization of hydrocarbon discoveries, 2014.

    ii.         Discovered Small Field Policy, 2015.

    iii.        Hydrocarbon Exploration and Licensing Policy (HELP), 2016.

    iv.        Policy for Extension of PSCs, 2016 and 2017.

    v.         Policy for early monetization of Coal Bed Methane, 2017.

    vi.        Setting up of National Data Repository, 2017.

    vii.       Appraisal of Un-appraised areas in Sedimentary Basins under National Seismic Programme, 2017.

    viii.      Policy framework for extension of PSCs for Discovered Fields and Exploration Blocks

    under Pre-New Exploration Licensing Policy (Pre-NELP), 2016 and 2017.

    ix.        Policy to Promote and Incentivize Enhanced Recovery Methods for Oil and Gas, 2018.

    x.         Policy Framework for exploration and exploitation of Unconventional Hydrocarbons under Existing Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs), Coal Bed Methane (CBM) Contracts and Nomination Fields, 2018.

    xi.        Natural Gas Marketing Reforms, 2020.

    xii.       Lower Royalty Rates, Zero Revenue Share (till Windfall Gain) and no drilling commitment in Phase-I in OALP Blocks under Category II and III basins to attract bidders.

    xiii.      Release of about 1 million Sq. Km. (SKM) ‘No-Go’ area in offshore which were blocked for exploration for decades.

    xiv.      Government is also spending about Rs.7500 Cr. for acquisition of seismic data in onland and offshore areas and drilling of stratigraphic wells to make quality data of Indian Sedimentary Basins available to bidders. Government has approved acquisition of additional 2D Seismic data of 20,000 LKM in onland and 30,000 LKM in offshore beyond Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of India.  

    This information was given by THE MINISTER OF STATE IN THE MINISTRY OF PETROLEUM AND NATURAL GAS SHRI SURESH GOPI, in a written reply in Rajya Sabha today.

    ****

    MONIKA

    (Release ID: 2114428) Visitor Counter : 13

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: 18.19 lakh new workers enrolled under ESI Scheme in the month of January, 2025

    Source: Government of India

    18.19 lakh new workers enrolled under ESI Scheme in the month of January, 2025

    8.67 lakh young employees upto the age group of 25 years constitute new registrations

    3.65 lakh female employees enrolled in the ESI Scheme

    27,805 new establishments registered under ESI Scheme in the month of January, 2025

    85 transgender employees registered under ESI Scheme in January, 2025

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:48PM by PIB Delhi

    The provisional payroll data of ESIC reveals that 18.19 lakh new employees have been added in the month of January, 2025.

    27,805 new establishments have been brought under the social security ambit of the ESI Scheme in the month of January, 2025 thus ensuring social security to more workers.

    Month on Month Comparison

    Head

    Dec 2024

    Jan 2025

    Growth

    Remarks

    Number of newly registered employees during the month

    17,00,848

    18,19,219

    1,18,371

    6.95%

    Increase

    Number of New establishments registered during the month

     

    20,360

     

    27,805

     

    7,445

     

    36.56% increase

    Year on Year Comparison

    Head

    Jan 2024

    Jan 2025

    Growth

    Remarks

    Number of newly registered employees during the month

    17,77,480

    18,19,219

    41,739

    2.34%

    Increase

                 

    Through the data, it is noticeable that out of the total 18.19 lakh employees added during the month, 8.67 lakh employees amounting to around 47.66% of the total registrations belong to the age group of upto 25 years.

    Also, the gender-wise analysis of the payroll data indicates that net enrolment of female members has been 3.65 lakh in January, 2025. Besides, a total of 85 transgender employees have also got registered under ESI Scheme in the month of January, 2025 which attests the commitment of ESIC to deliver its benefits to every section of the society.

    The payroll data is provisional since the data generation is a continuous exercise.

    ******

    Himanshu Pathak

    (Release ID: 2114439) Visitor Counter : 28

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Prime Minister’s New 15 Point Programme Implemented in The Country, Including Odisha

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:34PM by PIB Delhi

    The Prime Minister’s New 15 Point Programme for welfare of minorities is implemented in the country, including Odisha, as an overarching programme. The programme covers various schemes/initiatives of the Government implemented by various Ministries/Departments, with an aim to ensure that underprivileged and weaker sections of six centrally notified minority communities have equal opportunities for availing the various Government welfare Schemes.

    The schemes of the Ministry of Minority Affairs covered under the 15 Point Programme are exclusively meant for six notified minorities. Further, 15% of the outlays and targets, to the extent possible, of schemes/ initiatives implemented by other participating Ministries/ Departments are earmarked for notified minorities. However, the Schemes are being implemented by the respective Ministries/Departments under the saturation approach of Government. Under the saturation approach of the Government many of the components have achieved mainstreaming. Furthermore, consistent efforts are being made to improve the full delivery of benefits in the various relevant schemes for minority communities.

    The schemes of Ministry of Minority Affairs and other participating Ministries included in the Programme are as under:

    i. Pre-Matric Scholarship Scheme (Ministry of Minority Affairs)

    ii. Post-Matric Scholarship Scheme (Ministry of Minority Affairs)

    iii. Merit-cum- Means based Scholarship Scheme (Ministry of Minority Affairs)

    iv. National Minorities Development Finance Corporation (NMDFC) Loan Schemes

    v. Samagra Shiksha Abhiyaan (M/o Education)

    vi. Deen Dayal Antyodaya Yojana (DAY-NRLM) (M/o Rural Development)

    vii. Deen Dayal Upadhyay Gramin Kaushal Yojana (M/o Rural Development)

    viii. Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana (M/o Rural Development)

    ix. Deen Dayal Antyodaya Yojana -National Urban Livelihoods Mission (M/o Housing & Urban Affairs)

    x.  Priority Sector Lending by Banks (Department of Financial Services)

    xi.  Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (Department of Financial Services)

    xii.  POSHAN Abhiyaan (Ministry of Women & Child Development)

    xiii.  National Health Mission (Department of Health & Family Welfare)

    xiv.  Ayushman Bharat (Department of Health & Family Welfare)

    xv. National Rural Drinking Water Programme (Jal Jeevan Mission), (Department of Drinking Water & Sanitation)

    This information was given by the Union Minister of Minority Affairs & Parliamentary Affairs, Shri Kiren Rijiju in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha today

    ***

    SS/ISA

    (Release ID: 2114427) Visitor Counter : 16

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: PM VIKAS Scheme Focuses on Upliftment of Minority Communities

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:33PM by PIB Delhi

    The Pradhan Mantri Virasat Ka Samvardhan (PM VIKAS) is a Central Sector Scheme of the Ministry of Minority Affairs which converges five erstwhile schemes viz. ‘Seekho Aur Kamao’, ‘Nai Manzil’, ‘Nai Roshni’ and ‘USTTAD’ & ‘Hamari Dharohar’ schemes and focuses on upliftment of six notified minority communities through the following:

    1. Skilling and Training (Non-traditional and traditional)
    2. Women Leadership and Entrepreneurship
    3. Education (through National Institute of Open Schooling)
    4. Infrastructure Development (through Pradhan Mantri Jan Vikas Karyakram)

    The scheme also provisions to facilitate credit linkages by connecting beneficiaries with loan programs offered by the National Minorities Development & Finance Corporation (NMDFC).

    Export Promotion Council for Handicrafts (EPCH) is a knowledge partner of the Ministry under the PM VIKAS scheme to extend support to artisans trained under traditional training components of the scheme in terms of (i) providing marketing linkages; (ii) development of related Course Module content for training; (iii) provide brand positioning & visual merchandizing to the artisan products; (iv) organise awareness program during Ministry’s events/exhibition; (v) mobilise artisans for formation of producer group companies; etc.

    Under the PM VIKAS Scheme, the implementing partners are to ensure placement of 75 per cent of total candidates trained under NSQF aligned skill programs.

    This information was given by the Union Minister of Minority Affairs & Parliamentary Affairs, Shri Kiren Rijiju in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha today

    ***

    SS/ISA

    (Release ID: 2114426) Visitor Counter : 16

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Minority Affairs Ministry Supports Artisans Through Organisation of Lok Samvardhan Parvs under PM VIKAS Scheme

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:32PM by PIB Delhi

    Under the Pradhan Mantri Virasat Ka Samvardhan (PM VIKAS) Scheme, the Ministry of Minority Affairs supports the artisans from across India through organisation of Lok Samvardhan Parvs to showcase and market their traditional arts/crafts, which enable them to connect with national and international buyers, understand current market trends, and explore new business opportunities. During organisation of such parvs, specialised lectures/ seminars/ live workshops on a wide range of topics covering market linkages, loan facilities, various government schemes for the artisanal entrepreneurs, etc. were also arranged to educate participating artisans/ entrepreneurs. This exposure is intended to ensure sustainable livelihoods and enhance economic prospects for participating artisans/craftsperson.

    As part of the programme, the Ministry supported artisans from across India to showcase their traditional crafts in home decor, fashion, textiles, gifts, furniture and many other crafts at Bharat Tex 2025. Participation of artisans/craftsperson in such events is expected to enhance their market access, boost income, and drive economic growth by connecting them with national and international buyers and designers. This exposure not only expands their trade opportunities but also empowers them with knowledge of global trends, sustainable practices, and contemporary designs, making their craft more competitive. Additionally, it encourages cultural preservation, encourages youth and women’s participation, and strengthens the artisanal ecosystem, positioning traditional crafts as a key contributor to India’s global trade footprint.

    This information was given by the Union Minister of Minority Affairs & Parliamentary Affairs, Shri Kiren Rijiju in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha today

    ***

    SS/ISA

    (Release ID: 2114424) Visitor Counter : 16

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: NCM to Host Conference of State Minorities Commissions Focusing on Education, Inclusion, and Empowerment of Minorities

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:31PM by PIB Delhi

    The National Commission for Minorities (NCM) is set to host a pivotal Conference of State Minorities Commissions on 25th March, 2025, focusing on education, inclusion, and empowerment of minorities in India. The event will bring together policymakers, experts, and stakeholders to deliberate on strategies for ensuring equitable opportunities and welfare for minority communities. 

    Minister of State for Minority Affairs, Shri George Kurian, will grace the occasion as the Guest of Honour, inaugurating the conference with the ceremonial lighting of the lamp. NCM Chairman, Shri Iqbal Singh Lalpura, will set the tone for the discussions with his address, followed by insightful sessions featuring distinguished panellists. 

    The conference will feature two key technical sessions

    • Education: Ensuring Access and Support to Minorities: Addressing challenges and solutions for inclusive education. 
    • Minority Inclusion and Welfare: Exploring the government’s role in fostering empowerment and development. 

    The Chief Guest, Union Minister of Minority Affairs, Shri Kiren Rijiju, will address the gathering underscoring the Government’s commitment to minority welfare. The event will conclude with an open-house discussion on challenges faced by State Minority Commissions, followed by the valedictory address by Shri Iqbal Singh Lalpura. 

    This conference promises to be a significant platform for dialogue, policy recommendations, and collaborative efforts toward an inclusive and empowered future for India’s minority communities.

     ***

    SS/ISA

    (Release ID: 2114423) Visitor Counter : 13

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Text of the Vice-President’s address to the Sixth Batch of Participants of the Rajya Sabha Internship Programme (RSIP-I) (Excerpts)

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 24 MAR 2025 4:06PM by PIB Delhi

    Boys and girls, I welcome you to the sixth batch. We have had so far five batches and we have been benefited by youth of the country participating in these internships to the extent of 142 so you, a group of 34, will join the group of 142.

    I strongly urge you to be in connect with the group all your life. There is a platform that will help you connect with them and members of the group are diversified as is your group. In terms of educational qualifications, in terms of gender, in terms of regional commitments, in terms of mother tongue but one thing is very common, spirit of nationalism is throbbing in the hearts of all.

    This is a unique opportunity, you are not going to be taught anything here, you will be inspired and motivated to self-learn. Your stay here in this internship is with a very laudable purpose. India is mother of democracy, largest democracy, most functional democracy, the only constitutional democracy that is at the village level, at the municipal level, at the district level, at the state level, and at the central level. Other countries have democracies but if you examine our election to Panchayat, our election to Municipality, our election to Zila Parishad or Panchayat Samiti is held under Election Commission, which is under the Constitution.

    They have the same structure, and Constitution was amended for it, part IX and part IXA of the Constitution. If you will read, you will find two Schedules 11 and 12, which give the areas of operation of Panchayati Raj institutions and Municipal institutions. As you are aware, there is a commission, Finance Commission. The job of the Finance Commission is to divide funds between the Union and the States. Similarly, there is a fund at the Panchayat and Municipal level, where funds are divisible between the State government funds, Panchayat institutions and Municipalities so Panchayat and Municipalities are institutions of self-governance.

    Now, your primary purpose is to handhold the public representative. You will have to equip yourself with parliamentary procedure, about working of Parliament, role of Members of Parliament and once you are given a lead, you have to learn on your own.

    Our country is governed first by constitutional provisions. You will have the occasion to see the Constitution signed by the Members of the Constitutional Assembly so go to the root of the matter. Try to get to micro level, try to find out that what changes have taken place in the Constitution and changes in the Constitution is the sole prerogative of Parliament but there are some changes where Parliament alone is not sufficient to endorse constitutional amendment. It has to be endorsed by 50% of State Legislatures but when it comes to amendment of the Constitution, Parliament is the repository of it, in some cases alongside State Legislatures and the final arbiter, the final authority, no intervention from any agency whatsoever is permissible with respect to constitutional amendment, but with respect to the laws made by Parliament or state legislatures, the courts have a role. The role is of judicial review and judicial review is to see if the law is in accord with constitutional provisions.

    You would have seen recently that in one state there is an indication that they will make reservation for contracts that is in the domain of business to a particular community, a religious denomination. Now look at the constitutional provisions. Does our Constitution allow any reservation on religious considerations? Find out what Dr. B.R. Ambedkar had said, and you will be enlightened that there can be no reservation on religious considerations. That is something you have to go into it, deep into it.

    Remember, the Constitution provides for hand-holding mechanism, affirmative mechanism and that is for scheduled caste, scheduled tribe, and socially and educationally backward classes, so when I was a Member of Parliament in 1989, the government of the day of which I was a part, as a Minister, promulgated what came to be known as Mandal Commission Report applicability. This was challenged in the Supreme Court after the government of which I was part had collapsed, a government collapses means it did not complete its term.

    The next government came and the next government granted further reservation to economic weaker sections. Both were challenged in the Indra Sawhney case, and nine judges of the Supreme Court, boys and girls, dealt with that judgement. The Mandal reservation, the affirmative hand-holding policy which is sanctified under Articles 14, 15 and 16, was upheld by the majority but reservation on account of economic backwardness, economy being a criteria, was struck down as unconstitutional.

    Now the question immediately arises, how come we have reservation now based on economic criteria? Because then the route was not taken through the Constitution. This time the route was taken by the government through Constitution. First the provision in the Constitution was amended, and economic criteria was made a basis, and that is why the courts upheld it. So you have to be very discerning about what you face. You can’t guide yourself immediately by perception. You have to move with a thought process.

    It is after a long gap, long gap of centuries, that we are in a state of hope and possibility. There was a time when India’s contribution to global trade was nearly one-third. There was a time when India was reckoned as Vishwaguru. There was a time when you had Nalanda but 1300 years ago, Nalanda was set on fire. The fire was there for several days. Lakhs of books were destroyed, and then followed foreign regime, reckless, brutal, destroying our culture, destroying our religious places. So was the blatant retributive approach that they destroyed our religious places and had their own. Then we were ruled by the British.

    But now there is an atmosphere of hope and possibility. Now, an ecosystem where every young boy and girl can aspire to exploit talent, potential, realise dreams and aspirations. I would urge all of you as interns, please find out the basket of opportunities that for the youth is growing up, enlarging day by day. Find out India’s development in deep sea, India’s development on the surface of sea, deep ground, on the ground, in the sky and space. We are making a huge mark. There are avenues in all these areas, Blue Economy, Space Economy, we have to have a share of it and therefore, you all will have to be messengers of the change for youth that come out of your silos.

    Youth in the country at the moment is in a silo, limited view, Government job, Private job but now things have changed. You can experiment if India is home to unicorns, startups. It is by boys and girls from tier two cities, from villages, from tier three cities. Affirmative governance, innovative schemes, financial assistance enable you. Just think one thing, if global institutions, International Monetary Fund says that India is a hot spot, a destination which is favourite for investment and opportunity, surely, it is not for Government jobs.

    The change that has taken place is, there was a time with global institutions, Indian mind was not there. Now, there is no global institution without Indian mind dominating. Girls are far ahead of it at a global level. You have to today realise that you are lucky to be living in times where India is focal centre of the world on account of economy that is performing around 8% annually.

    India is no longer a Nation with a potential, India is on a nation on progress. The development is unstoppable, incremental. A developed nation objective is no longer a dream, it’s our destination but it will be wishful thinking if as youth, you do not contribute because you are the serious stakeholders in governance in future, and therefore, you have to change the mindset of people. You have to define citizen’s attitude, you have to persuade everyone around that fundamental rights are fine, but we must first carry out fundamental duties. You’ll be surprised to know that most people are neither aware of fundamental duties nor they are aware of our rich culture, Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas. I don’t want to pose a question to you, but my experience is most people have not even seen physically Vedas. I’m sure steps will be taken to give you a book that will enlighten you about Vedas, the one which was circulated at my directive to all the Members of Parliament by Union Minister Dharmendra Pradhan.

    You have to be positive in your approach. Just imagine a country like ours, where to change the lives of people, to pick them up. 800 million people and more are getting free ration from April 1, 2020 and look at some perverted mind, they say, oh, over 800 million people are poor. They can’t feed on their own, therefore, are feeding them. I lament their negativity. I lament their perversion. They’re hand-holding them. When you go to an airport, most people walk, but there is a skeletal force and there is horizontal movement mechanism also. That is not that you are disabled, it helps you improve your proficiency.

    We have to believe in certain things which you must learn and that is countries in the world are developed. We will be developed. Our target is 2047 when India celebrates centenary of independence, and it can be earlier also, but which country in the world, number is only two, three that of civilisational depth of thousands of years. The countries that are developed, their history is 300 years, 400 years. We are that rich so we have to nurture our civilisational values while promoting indigenous development and the challenges are emanating every day because of social media also. People allow us to be calibrated by others, why? We as a Nation, we are what we are.

    Now, we have ongoing debates, when I told you about reservation in contracts to a religious denomination. Violating equality, violating level-playing field and outraging constitutional prescriptions. Therefore, we must always work that we iconize our heroes. Can we iconize our invaders, destroyers, those who engaged in reckless brutalisation of our civilisational values? Every young boy and girl has power individually, also collectively to thwart these menacing, sinister trends.

    I am sometimes amazed. How can we have public disorder? How can we have disruption of normal working? How can we have reprehensible spectacles of public property being set to fire? And if these people are visited with consequences in exemplary manner, after all, a building has to be raised to the ground only by mechanised method. Call it bulldozer then this is different hour. A bulldozer if it carries out a lawful command, is an accessory of law, not against the rule of law. We have to create national climate, national fervour that we will always keep Nation first. Partisan, economic, personal interest can never be a premise, a justifiable ground to compromise your nationalism. You must in this society move ahead by persuasion, positivity, and propriety.

    We have become so impatient, so intolerant, we don’t want to listen to the other person. We believe in ourselves being always right. We are judgemental that we alone are right and others are wrong. Democracy is all about expression and dialogue, you have a right of expression, your right of expression cannot be thwarted. If it is thwarted, or you are in fear before you speak the truth, or your point of view. Governance is not democracy but what use is expression when you don’t allow the other person to say anything contrary? And therefore dialogue is essential. Dialogue is nectar of democracy, dialogue is human interactive session. It has been reflected in our culture Vedas, as Anantavada, anyone who believes in one way traffic of expression leads to authoritarianism. It is dialogue that rationalises expression.

    Second, if you believe only you alone being right, you become victim of aham and ahankar. Human genius is aplenty. It is not in the captivity of any position, of anyone, a parliamentarian, a bureaucrat, or a judge. Every individual is gifted, and India abounds in this.

    Most of us are always in some kind of a mental tussle. We want autonomy of thought process. How do we dress? How do we eat? How do we practise? But this autonomy is not incompatible to accountability. These two are complementary, if I have a religion, and I wish to profess my religion, the religion professing has to be there as a private affair. It can’t be on a public street, or a public space like a railway station or airport, or even a flight because when you are at these places, you are bound by rules, rules of the game as they say. There has to be rule-based regime in every working and therefore, to converge, to demonstrate, it is a right to create an unsettled situation. Young minds have to change the mindset of others and work in that direction.

    Time has come when we must nurture our culture, One Nation, One Culture. No civilisation in the world is as inclusive as Bharat, no civilisation. We have never believed in confrontation, never in adversarial stance but what we find is, even political temperature is very high in the country. We quickly take irretrievable, confrontational, positioning on issues. We are the only way out in dialogue. You will have the occasion to go through what happened in the Constituent Assembly. It happened in 18 sessions, a little less than three years- two years, 11 months and few days.

    You will be surprised, they dealt with very divisive issues of language, of reservation. Very divisive, contentious issues, but there was no disruption. There was no disturbance, there were no placards, there was no shouting. All in a spirit of cooperation, coordination, convergence and that is why consensual approach is fundamental to evolution of democratic values.

    India is recognised in the world as a great power because of you boys and girls. Our demographic dividend, it is envy of the world and you have to perform. You have to neutralise racism, negativity. There is effort in the nation and outside to run us down but you must always realise India’s rise is for global stability. India’s rise is for global peace and youth alone can bring big change. I’m sure you all will work in that direction.

    You will have the occasion to get a real intellectual feast of experienced minds; but most of it will have to be self-learning. Use every moment with inquisitiveness, self-learning, what you can add more every day. Write a diary daily. Pose good questions to one another also. I will have the occasion to interact with you at completion and that I will organise at Vice-President’s House.

    I have indicated and you will have the occasion to ask searching questions. Let me give you two, three poses, you’ll be surprised. There are 12 nominated members in Rajya Sabha. They vote for the Vice-President, they don’t vote for the President. Surprised! 12 nominated Members of Rajya Sabha vote for the Vice-President.

    Now the reasoning given is that the President appoints him, that situation arose earlier but there has been a constitutional change, which was not earlier. That the President is bound 100% by the advice of Council of Ministers s       o the fact is the President doesn’t appoint as such. He goes by the advice of the Council of Ministers then why the distinction? Second, if an MLA has to vote for the President, which he does, there is secrecy of ballot but if the same MLA has to vote for a Member of Rajya Sabha, like two of them here on my right, he has to show his vote to his party boss. Why? Just think about it. These things must be in your mind.

    You must find out how many members were there in the Constituent Assembly to begin with. With the partition, how many went? Who are those six who did not sign, or could not sign? You have to think deeply why the country started celebration of Constitution Day. It was not earlier. It was started 10 years back. Why did a decision was taken to have Samvidhan Hatya Diwas? Why? Because you boys and girls are not aware that the nation was plunged in darkness in 1975. Lakhs of people were put in jail. The glorious rights of democracy, one of which being the right to approach the court, access to judiciary was availed. Nine high courts decided citizens have that right. Supreme Court declined and said two things. One, during emergency, you have no fundamental rights so people languished in jail and who languished in jail, they later on became Prime Ministers. So Chaudhary Charan Singh became a Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee became Prime Minister, Chandra Shekharji became Prime Minister, to just name a few but it happened.

    Then how long will Emergency last? It was decided by the court as long as the executive wants. So we were plunged in darkness. You are not aware and therefore to remind you, that why do we have Constitution at the House. If you will find out other things also, get to the deep of it. Parakram Diwas, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, we had forgotten him. Birsa Munda, Janjatiya Diwas, we had forgotten him. Many like him.

    Therefore we have rediscovered our real heroes, who should have been well sung but either they were not well sung, or unsung, or forgotten because culture is something, history is something that has to inspire and motivate us. Do we have a box where we can put suggestions? We have a portal. 

    I am initiating a new mechanism, a box will be put, where during the day without revealing your identity, you can make any suggestion and I will look into that on a daily basis.

    Best of luck. Enjoy your day.

    ****

    JK

    (Release ID: 2114408) Visitor Counter : 75

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Kabaddi World Cup ends in spectacular style in city

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    Sell out crowds packed into WV Active Aldersley on Saturday and Sunday to watch the semi finals and finals of the competition which was being hosted outside of Asia for the first time ever.

    England, Scotland and Wales were involved in the action as well as tournament favourites India who ended up winning both the men’s and women’s competitions.

    The finals brought a week of action to a close, with Wolverhampton joining Coventry, Birmingham and Walsall in hosting the competition across the region.

    Councillor Bhupinder Gakhal, the City of Wolverhampton Council’s Cabinet Member for Resident Services, said the event had been a triumph for Wolverhampton and West Midlands.

    He said: “There’s only one word to describe the Kabaddi World Cup and that is ‘wow’.

    “From start to finish the event has been a triumph for everyone involved. It’s been a celebration of different cultures and communities and its legacy will be the impact on local school children and everyone who had the chance to experience it first hand.

    “Wolverhampton has had fantastic exposure on TV with the whole world watching and it has been brilliant to see what we have achieved together as a city.”

    The first match on finals day was a feisty affair between Wales and Scotland for the men’s third place, with Scotland coming out as the winners 67-56. 

    The women’s final then followed with a match between India and England in which India were crowned champions, with a dominant display throughout and a scoreline of 57-34.

    The men’s final was the last game and an entertaining affair with India starting strong but then with England putting up a real fight in the second half to close the gap in the scoreline, the match finishing 44-41.

    The event was then capped off by the closing ceremony which saw the first, second and third placed nations collect their medals and India lift the World Cup for both their men’s and women’s teams.  

    British Kababbi League Chief Executive Prem Singh said: “We are honoured to have played a role in this historic moment – hosting the first Kabaddi World Cup outside of Asia.

    “The positive impact of this tournament has been evident through the incredible support from our community, fans filling the venues, engaging across social media and tuning in via broadcasters around the world. We hope this event has contributed to the sport’s long term legacy and helped showcase Kabaddi’s power to bring unite and inspire people.”

    The tournament was supported by £500,000 of funding support from the UK Government’s Commonwealth Games Legacy Enhancement Fund.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Radix Recognized in the 2025 Verdantix APM Buyers Guide for Shaping Asset-Intensive Industries with Operational Value

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HOUSTON, March 24, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Radix, a global leader in Asset Performance Management (APM), has been recognized in the 2025 Verdantix APM Buyers Guide, highlighting its robust expertise in enhancing operational value for Asset-Intensive Industries. This recognition underscores Radix’s longstanding commitment to assisting clients in overcoming operational challenges through strategic cost reductions, streamlined operations, improved safety, and extending asset longevity.

    Kiran Darmasseelane, Senior Analyst at Verdantix, said: “Industrial organizations are increasing spend on consulting services for industrial maintenance and operations over the next 12 months, with the Verdantix report expecting the IAM digital services market to reach $2.5 billion by 2025. Radix is seizing on this growing trend by leveraging strong partnerships with AVEVA and Cognite to deliver comprehensive APM and industrial data management services. With a proven track record in bespoke integrations, predictive models, digital twins, multi-site deployments, and navigating complex change management challenges, Radix helps firms in high-risk environments, such as pipelines, FPSOs, and power plants, reduce costs, improve asset integrity, enhance reliability, and achieve regulatory and decarbonization goals.”

    The Verdantix report emphasizes Radix’s extensive experience in delivering digital asset management solutions to high-risk industries, including pipelines, floating production storage and offloading (FPSOs) units, and power plants. Radix’s capabilities have consistently enabled customers to enhance reliability, reduce operational costs, strengthen asset integrity, and meet stringent regulatory and sustainability objectives.

    Alex Clausbruch, CEO of Radix North America, said: “APM for many of our customers is vital to their goals of achieving operational excellence. Here at Radix, we enjoy the unique challenges that we can solve for our customers. As a result, they continue to trust our work and come back for more services as we continue to help customers not just in North America, but globally. It is an honor to be mentioned with a stamp of approval by Verdantix. We look forward to helping other asset intensive companies scale.”

    The Verdantix 2024 survey indicates that 84% of industrial firms intend to boost maintenance budgets, and 46% plan digital transformations for plant operations within the next year. This growing trend has led businesses to increasingly partner with industrial asset management (IAM) technology providers to modernize maintenance strategies effectively. Verdantix’s annual asset management report highlights 12 leading IAM implementation providers, offering valuable insights for executives addressing asset maintenance challenges and guiding them in forming successful asset management partnerships and strategies.

    Flavio Guimaraes, Chief Practices & Alliances Officer, Radix, said: “As we continue to grow our portfolio at Radix, I am proud of our entire company and everything we have been building in the past 15 years, and we are also honored for being recognized by Verdantix. This auspicious acknowledgement shows the value of our expertise and the trust our customers have in Radix; highlighting our work in the market in Asset Performance Management.”

    The full report is available online for Radix clients and corporate customers at www.radixeng.com.

    About Radix

    Founded in 2010, Radix is a privately held global technology solutions company providing consulting, engineering, operations technology, and data and software technology solutions.

    Radix combines key capabilities and practices to empower customers to thrive along their digital transformation journey. Radix provides technology-based, data-driven solutions to industrial and non-industrial companies worldwide. Radix has experience leading projects in more than 30 countries and has more than 1,700+ employees around the globe, with North American headquarters in Houston, Texas, main headquarters in Rio de Janeiro, additional offices in Sao Paulo and Belo Horizonte, and a presence in Singapore and Amsterdam. To learn more, visit www.radixeng.com.

    For more information:
    Citalouise Geiggar, Ph.D.
    citalouise.geiggar@radixeng.com
    Radix

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/bc2f9128-6a35-4f3a-8bd7-23a61fd383a2

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: ‘Don’t cut the aid’: Insecurity worsens for stateless Rohingya, says UNHCR’s Grandi

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI

    Migrants and Refugees

    The plight of Myanmar’s ethnic Rohingya is intensifying almost eight years since hundreds of thousands fled persecution and sought shelter in Bangladesh, the UN said on Monday, in an appeal for $934.5 million to help them.

    In a joint appeal, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, and the UN International Organization for Migration (IOM) urged all countries to step up to support the displaced Rohingya – the world’s largest stateless population.

    A ‘frightening’ place

    The humanitarian situation in Cox’s Bazar – home to around one million Rohingya in Bangladesh – has worsened.

    “This is not a place where people want to live,” said IOM Director-General Amy Pope. “It’s frightening. If you are a young woman, you do not leave your tent at night.”

    Cross-border recruitment into terrorist organizations has risen sharply, while job opportunities have remained scarce and insecurity has spiked, humanitarians say.

    Families are weighing options and many are choosing to migrate illegally in search of safety and a better life on the outside, the agencies warned.

    Refugee city of one million people

    The Bangladesh authorities – together with the UN and other relief agencies – are “basically running a city of more than a million people in one of the most vulnerable areas in the world”, said UNHCR’s High Commissioner Filippo Grandi, at the launch of a Joint Response Plan for the Rohingya and host communities.  

    Echoing that message, IOM’s Ms. Pope warned that the crisis could spill out globally if States do not renew their efforts.  

    Amid the 2017 Rohingya exodus from Rakhine state in Myanmar, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein described the crisis as a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing”.

    Today, conditions in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar – which sprung up in a matter of days – have deteriorated further – and conflict in Myanmar sparked by a military coup in 2021 mean that it is too dangerous for the Rohingya to return.

    Terror link

    If nations do not step up to provide Rohingya with alternatives to dependency on international aid, “we will see young people choose crime or terrorism as an alternative when they have no future”, Ms. Pope warned.  

    “We’ll see young, young people, girls, sexually abused will see people have children at very young ages, will see a culture disappear.”

    “The short-term solution is don’t cut the aid,” Ms. Pope continued, reminding States of the need to push for a political outcome that will addresses longstanding inequality and discrimination against Rohingya in Myanmar.

    Soundcloud

    Putting the issue back on the map

    Mr. Grandi said he hoped the plan would put the issue “back on the map”, as global interest has declined in recent years.

    “It’s not just the suffering of the people, but also the space that gets created for violence, for extremists, for criminal groups, for onward boat movements, to other countries in Southeast Asia,” Mr. Grandi explained. 

    Further arrivals and births have further crowded Cox’s Bazar, strained resources for host communities and mounted pressure on the Bangladeshi authorities.  

    “I say this to my development partners – this is no time to leave the market,” said Dr. Khalilur Rahman, High Representative on the Rohingya Crisis and Priority Affairs of the Government of Bangladesh.

    Dr. Rahman called on countries to seize the opportunity to reinvest political will in stabilizing Rakhine state, to “plant a seed of peace” in a troubled region and turn the crisis into a “win”.

    “Behind each statement, there are people, and there are people who have languished for a long eight years to go back, people who have suffered untold miseries, and still have their hopes up,” the official said. “So, let’s not disappoint them.”

    Filling the vacuum

    Priorities include addressing food security to maintaining distributions of liquid gas, meaning refugees won’t need to cut down trees, damaging the environment, Mr. Grandi said.

    The UNHCR chief noted that young people were pleading for work opportunities to give their lives more meaning, while they wait in limbo to return home. One in three Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh is aged between 10 and 24.

    Hostilities must cease

    Fighting must stop for refugees to go home, the agency chiefs said, with Dr. Rahman of the Bangladeshi Government echoing that message. 

    “What we need to promote is peaceful coexistence between communities in Rakhine State,” Mr. Grandi said. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Breast cancer screening is ripe for change. We need to assess a woman’s risk – not just her age

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Carolyn Nickson, Associate Professor, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne; Adjunct Associate Professor, Sydney School of Public Health, University of Sydney

    Pablo Heimplatz/Unsplash

    Australia’s BreastScreen program offers women regular mammograms (breast X-rays) based on their age. And this screening for breast cancer saves lives.

    But much has changed since the program was introduced in the early 90s. Technology has developed, as has our knowledge of which groups of women might be at higher risk of breast cancer. So how we screen women for breast cancer needs to adapt.

    In a recent paper, we’ve proposed a fundamental shift away from an age-based approach to a screening program that takes into account women’s risk of breast cancer.

    We argue we could save more lives if screening tests and schedules were personalised based on someone’s risk.

    We don’t yet know exactly how this might work in practice. We need to consult with all parties involved, including health professionals, government and women, and we need to begin Australian trials.

    But here’s why we need to rethink how we screen for breast cancer in Australia.

    Why does breast screening need to change?

    Australia’s BreastScreen program was introduced in 1991 and offers women regular mammograms based on their age. Women aged 50–74 are targeted, but screening is available from the age of 40.

    The program is key to Australia’s efforts to reduce the burden of breast cancer, providing more than a million screens each year.

    Women who attend BreastScreen reduce their risk of dying from breast cancer by 49% on average.

    Breast screening saves lives because it makes a big difference to find breast cancers early, before they spread to other parts of the body.

    Despite this, around 75,000 Australian women are expected to die from breast cancer over the next 20 years if we continue with current approaches to breast cancer screening and management.

    Who’s at high risk, and how best to target them?

    International evidence confirms it is possible to identify groups of women at higher risk of breast cancer. These include:

    • women with denser breasts (where there’s more glandular and fibrous tissue than fatty tissue in the breasts) are more likely to develop breast cancer, and their cancers are harder to find on standard mammograms

    • women whose mother, sisters, grandmother or aunts have had breast or ovarian cancer, especially if there are multiple relatives and the cancers occurred at young ages

    • women who have been found to carry genetic mutations that lead to a higher risk of breast cancer (including women with multiple moderate risk mutations, as indicated by what’s known as a polygenic risk score).

    For some higher-risk women, could MRI be an option?
    VesnaArt/Shutterstock

    Women in these and other high-risk groups might warrant a different form of screening. This could include screening from a younger age, screening more frequently, and offering more sensitive tests such as digital breast tomosynthesis (a 3D version of mammography), MRI or contrast-enhanced mammography (a type of mammography that uses a dye to highlight cancerous lesions).

    But we don’t yet know:

    • how to best identify women at higher risk

    • which screening tests should be offered, how often and to whom

    • how to staff and run a risk-based screening program

    • how to deliver this in a cost-effective and equitable way.

    The road ahead

    This is what we have been working on, for Cancer Council Australia, as part of the ROSA Breast project.

    This federally funded project has estimated and compared the expected outcomes and costs for a range of screening scenarios.

    For each scenario we estimated the benefits (saving lives or less intense treatment) and harms (overdiagnosis and rates of investigations in women recalled for further investigation after a screening test who are found to not have breast cancer).

    Of 160 potential screening scenarios we modelled, we shortlisted 19 which produced the best outcomes for women and were the most cost effective. The shortlisted scenarios tended to involve either targeted screening technologies for higher-risk women or screening technologies other than mammography for all screened women.

    For example, in our estimates, making no change to the target age range or screening intervals but offering a more sensitive screening test to the 20% of women deemed to be at highest risk would save 113 lives over ten years.

    Alternatively, commencing targeted screening from age 40 and offering a more sensitive screening test annually to the 20% of women at highest risk, and three-yearly screening (of the current kind) to the 30% of women at lowest risk, would save 849 lives over ten years.

    However, less frequent screening of the lower risk group was expected to lead to small increases in breast cancer deaths in that group.

    How do we best assess women for their risk of breast cancer? At this stage, there’s no one answer.
    Tint Media/Shutterstock

    We also outlined 25 recommendations to put into action, and set out a five-year roadmap of how to get there. This includes:

    • a large scale trial to find out what is feasible, effective and affordable in Australia

    • making sure women at higher risk in different parts of Australia are offered suitable options regardless of where they live and who they see

    • better data collection and reporting to support risk-based screening

    • testing how we assess women for their risk of breast cancer, including whether these assessments work as intended and make sense to women from a range of backgrounds

    • clinical studies of screening technologies to determine the best delivery models and associated costs

    • ongoing engagement with groups including women, health professionals and government.

    Breast cancer screening review out soon

    Federal health minister Mark Butler said a review of the BreastScreen program would consider our recommendations. The results of this review are expected soon.

    We’re not alone in calling for a move towards risk-based breast cancer screening. This is backed by national and international submissions to government, policy briefing documents and the Breast Cancer Network Australia.

    We’ve provided an evidence-based roadmap towards better screening for breast cancer. Now is the time to commit to this journey.


    We acknowledge Louiza Velentzis from the Daffodil Centre, and Paul Grogan and Deborah Bateson from the University of Sydney, who co-authored the paper mentioned in this article.

    Carolyn Nickson led the ROSA Project for Cancer Council Australia. She receives funding from the Australian government Department of Health and Aged Care, the Medical Research Future Fund, the National Health and Medical Research Council and Melbourne Health.

    Bruce Mann works as a surgeon at Northwestern BreastScreen in Melbourne. He was a board member of the Breast Cancer Network Australia, which has improved screening as a key strategic objective. He is director of research at Breast Cancer Trials.  If trials are done in this space, Breast Cancer Trials may be involved. He was a member of the ROSA Project coordination group and jointly chaired the project advisory groups.

    Karen Canfell was executive lead for the ROSA Project discussed in this article. She has received grants from the Australian government’s Department of Health and Aged Care and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, the National Health and Medical Research Council and Medical Research Future Fund, the US National Cancer Institute and CDC, Cancer Research UK, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and government agencies in several countries. She co-leads an investigator-initiated trial of cervical screening, Compass, run by the Australian Centre for Prevention of Cervical Cancer (ACPCC), which is a government-funded not-for-profit charity. Compass receives infrastructure support from the Australian government and the ACPCC has received equipment and a funding contribution from Roche Molecular Diagnostics, USA.  She also co-leads an implementation program Elimination of Cervical Cancer in the Indo-Pacific which has received support from the Australian government and the Minderoo Foundation, and equipment donations from Cepheid and Microbix.  

    ref. Breast cancer screening is ripe for change. We need to assess a woman’s risk – not just her age – https://theconversation.com/breast-cancer-screening-is-ripe-for-change-we-need-to-assess-a-womans-risk-not-just-her-age-252182

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Will $1 on your ticket help save Australian live music? A UK model is much more ambitious

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sam Whiting, Vice-Chancellor’s Senior Research Fellow in Music Industries and Cultural Economy, RMIT University

    iam_os/Unsplash

    The Australian Music Venue Foundation launched this month to advocate for and potentially administer an arena ticket levy to support grassroots live music venues. Funds would be raised through a small levy, approximately A$1 per ticket, on the price of tickets to large music events, over 5,000 capacity.

    The foundation is partly modelled on the United Kingdom’s Music Venue Trust, a charity and advocacy body founded in 2014 that has advocated for a big ticket levy.

    While the proposed levy would certainly help to level the playing field between grassroots music venues and the big end of touring, the Music Venue Trust was founded on much more radical principles and ambitions than simple redistribution.

    Socialising live music

    Although the Music Venue Trust has moved into advocacy and policy work, such as vocal support for the big ticket levy, the trust’s original and continuing mission is to socialise grassroots music venues. This means they work to help venues transition away from for-profit models and towards alternative ownership structures.

    The trust’s “Own Our Venues” campaign spawned Music Venue Properties, a charitable landlord funded by the broader music community. The scheme has now purchased five grassroots venues around the UK, leased on the condition they continue to run as live music venues.

    The goal is to take the profit motive out of running a venue. Surplus is reinvested into venue spaces, ensuring their long-term sustainability.

    As the trust’s founder and CEO Mark Davyd states, “[the community] is the best person to own a venue”.

    We don’t want money going to private landlords, we want it in the cultural economy because that’s the way we generate more great artists and give more people the opportunity to be involved in music.

    Acknowledging that such radical ambitions require funding, the trust have been long term advocates for a big ticket levy. However, this advocacy has always accompanied their greater goal of socialising live music venues.

    The trust have helped to change the broader cultural understanding of grassroots venues in the UK. Between 2014 and 2022, the proportion of music venues in the country run as not-for-profit ventures increased from 3% to 26%.

    The Australian context

    Melbourne’s Gasometer Hotel and Brisbane’s The Bearded Lady are the latest small, but culturally significant, live music venues to face closure. The number of venues licensed for live music in Australia is falling, with the greatest reductions in the small-to-medium range.

    The recent parliamentary inquiry into the live music industry found costs like insurance and rent have risen sharply in the last five years. Meanwhile, income from alcohol sales – a core revenue source for smaller venues – has dropped in connection with changing youth culture, the cost-of-living crisis, and excises hitched to inflation.

    Costs to run music venues have increased, while income from avenues like alcohol sales have fallen.
    Frankie Cordoba/Unsplash

    Surveys of young people and other groups affirm that Australians value live music, and most people would like to attend more. The most commonly cited barrier is cost, followed by distance from appropriate venues, especially in regional areas.

    An arena ticket levy was a key recommendation of the inquiry, with the committee recommending government agency Music Australia should manage the funds.

    The committee proposed a levy could enable Music Australia to fund:

    • performances with minimum pay rates for musicians

    • capital improvements to venues, such as sound-proofing or disability access

    • festivals promoting regional, all-ages, First Nations and community participation.

    Neither the Labor government nor the opposition have indicated a position on this recommendation, which would require legislation.

    The industry proposal

    The Australian Music Venue Foundation is asking big music businesses to opt in to an industry-managed ticket levy to fund grassroots live music.

    While there has been advocacy for such a voluntary arrangement in the UK, this is yet to come to fruition. The UK government’s deadline for the arrangement of a voluntary scheme by the end of March is approaching, opening up the alternative scenario of a legislated mandatory levy.

    Australian advocates believe they may have the relationships to create a different outcome, arguing all industry players have a stake in a healthy music ecosystem.

    In the proposed Australian scheme, the recipients and use of funding would be decided by a board of industry professionals. This raises questions around potential conflicts of interest. The foundation has applied for charity status, which requires transparency around operations and finances. However, there are broader questions about priorities.

    The foundation argues all levels of the industry have a stake in their being a healthy ecosystem of venues.
    Austin/Unsplash

    If the scheme gets up, the foundation will need to consider whether to restrict its support to Australian-owned, independent venues of a certain size. Alternatively, funds may be available to venues that are part-owned by the same major, for-profit, international companies paying into the scheme.

    To replace the proposed government levy, the foundation would also need to find ways of supporting access to live music for regional, all-ages, First Nations, and other disadvantaged communities, as recommended by the inquiry’s report.

    To ensure benefits flow to artists, venue support could also be made conditional on paying a minimum performer’s fee, something venue’s have previously opposed.

    The foundation could promote social objectives such as performer diversity, patron safety, and environmental sustainability, but there are no guarantees of this under an industry-led scheme.

    These examples demonstrate the issues that can arise when economic redistribution is managed within an industry, rather than by government.

    Lofty ambitions

    The Music Venue Trust has successfully argued for grassroots music venues as a public good, worthy of longterm community and public investment as well as a structural approach to support.

    Through their work, they have provided a new narrative for live music in the UK, supporting innovative ownership and operating models that go beyond the default of a commercially-leased space run as a for-profit small business.

    Ambition and innovation has made the trust much more than another industry association advocating for the interests of a particular group of businesses. The Australian Music Venue Foundation should aspire to similar heights if it is to have the same level of influence and impact.

    Sam Whiting receives funding from RMIT University and the Winston Churchill Trust.

    Ben Green receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    ref. Will $1 on your ticket help save Australian live music? A UK model is much more ambitious – https://theconversation.com/will-1-on-your-ticket-help-save-australian-live-music-a-uk-model-is-much-more-ambitious-252733

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Academic publishing is a multibillion-dollar industry. It’s not always good for science

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lucy Montgomery, Dean of Research, Humanities, Curtin University

    Mykhailo Kopyt/Shutterstock

    In December 2024, the editorial board of the Journal of Human Evolution resigned en masse following disagreements with the journal’s publisher, Elsevier. The board’s grievances included claims of inadequate copyediting, misuse of artificial intelligence (AI), and the high fees charged to make research articles publicly available.

    The previous year, more than 40 scientists who made up the entire academic board of a leading journal for brain imaging also walked off the job. The journal in question, Neuroimage, is also published by Elsevier, which the former board members accused of being “too greedy”.

    Elsevier has previously denied using AI and has disputed that its business practices are untoward.

    Mass resignations of journal editors are becoming more frequent. They highlight the tension between running a for-profit publishing business and upholding research integrity.

    From a niche to a multibillion-dollar business

    The world’s first academic journal was called Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. It was established in 1665 as a publication that allowed scientists to share their work with other scientists.

    For a long time, academic journals were a niche branch of publishing. They were run by and for research communities. But this started to change from the second world war onwards.

    The expansion of research, combined with an influx of commercial publishing players and the rise of the internet in the 1990s, have transformed journal publishing into a highly concentrated and competitive media business.

    Elsevier is the biggest player in this business. It publishes roughly 3,000 journals and in 2023 its parent company, Relx, recorded a profit of roughly A$3.6 billion. Its profit margin was nearly 40% – rivalling tech giants such as Microsoft and Google.

    Along with Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley, SAGE, and Taylor & Francis make up what are known as the “big five” in academic publishing. Collectively, these publishers are responsible for roughly 50% of all research output.

    Many of the most trusted and prestigious research journals are owned by commercial publishers. For example, The Lancet is owned by Elsevier.

    A key factor in their profitability is volunteer labour provided by researchers. Traditional models of peer review are a good example of this. Academics provide publishers with content, in the form of journal articles. They also review their peers’ work for free. University libraries then pay for access to the final published journal on behalf of their research community.

    Alongside the pressure on academics to publish, the push to “speed up science” through these systems of peer-review only contribute to issues of trust in research.

    In 2023, academic publisher Elsevier recorded a profit of roughly $3.6 billion.
    T.Schneider/Shutterstock

    Profit at the expense of research integrity

    The increasing frequency of editorial board resignations reflects the tension between researchers trying to uphold scientific and research integrity, and publishers trying to run a for-profit business answerable to shareholders.

    Research is most often built on spending taxpayers’ money.

    Yet there is often little alignment between the profit imperatives of large, multinational publishers and the expectations of the communities and funding bodies that pay for the costs of research.

    For example, for-profit publishing models mean the results of research often end up locked behind paywalls. This has implications for the dissemination of research findings. It also means the public may not be able to access information they need most, such as medical research.

    The business of academic publishing also doesn’t always sit comfortably with the values and motives of scholarly inquiry and researchers.

    Publishers may focus on maximising shareholder gains by publishing research outputs, rather than on the content of the research or the needs of the research community.

    As Arash Abizadeh, a former editor of Philosophy & Public Affairs – a leading political philosophy journal – wrote in The Guardian in July 2024:

    Commercial publishers are incentivised to try to publish as many articles and journals as possible, because each additional article brings in more profit. This has led to a proliferation of junk journals that publish fake research, and has increased the pressure on rigorous journals to weaken their quality controls.

    The world’s first academic journal, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, was established in 1665.
    Henry Oldenburg/Philosophical Transactions, CC BY

    Better publishing practices

    What could alternative academic publishing practices that safeguard the integrity of research look like?

    The “publish-review-curate” model is one example.

    This model has been adopted by community research
    initiative MetaROR. It involves authors publishing their work as “preprints” which are immediately accessible to the community.

    The work then goes through an open peer review process. Finally, an assessment report is produced based on the reviews.

    This model aims to accelerate the dissemination of knowledge. It also aims to encourage a more transparent, collaborative, and constructive review process.

    Another important advantage of preprints is that they are not locked behind paywalls. This makes it faster and easier for research communities to share new findings with other researchers quickly.

    There are some drawbacks to this model. For example, preprints can cause confusion if they are publicised by the media too early.

    The question of who should pay for and maintain online preprint servers, on which global research communities depend, is also a subject of continuing debate.

    As the academic ecosystem continues to evolve, we will need publishing models that can adapt to the changes and needs of the research community and beyond.

    Lucy Montgomery is part of the Curtin Open Knowledge Initiative, and serves on Advisory Boards for several not-for-profit organisations involved in scholarly publishing and open access. She is a member of the UWA Press Board; as well as Chair of the Scientific Committee for the Directory of Open Access Books. She has received funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Arcadia Fund, and has previously consulted to both commercial and non-commercial scholarly presses.

    Emilia Bell receives funding from an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship for their doctoral research. They are a non-executive director of the Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) and Manager, Research and Digital Services at Murdoch University Library. Emilia is also affiliated with several organisations in the wider not-for-profit, higher education, and library sectors.

    Karl Huang is affiliated with the Curtin Open Knowledge Initiative (COKI) project, which receives or has received funding from Curtin University, Mellon Foundation, and Arcadia Fund. COKI also works closely with non-profit partners internationally and in Australia. Karl is also affiliated with the Centre for Culture and Technology, as its current Director, at Curtin University.

    ref. Academic publishing is a multibillion-dollar industry. It’s not always good for science – https://theconversation.com/academic-publishing-is-a-multibillion-dollar-industry-its-not-always-good-for-science-250056

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Plants breathe with millions of tiny mouths. We used lasers to understand how this skill evolved

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tim Brodribb, Professor of Plant Physiology, University of Tasmania

    Stomata – the breathing ‘mouths’ of leaves – under the microscope. Barbol / Shutterstock

    Plant behaviour may seem rather boring compared with the frenetic excesses of animals. Yet the lives of our vegetable friends, who tirelessly feed the entire biosphere (including us), are full of exciting action. It just requires a little more effort to appreciate.

    One such behaviour is the dynamic opening and closing of millions of tiny mouths (called stomata) located on each leaf, through which plants “breathe”. In this process they let out water extracted from the soil in exchange for precious carbon dioxide from the air, which they need to produce sugar in the sunlight-powered process of photosynthesis.

    Opening the stomata at the wrong time can waste valuable water and risk a catastrophic drying-out of the plant’s vascular system. Almost all land plants control their stomata very precisely in response to light and humidity to optimise growth while minimising the damage risk.

    How plants evolved this extraordinary balancing act has been the subject of considerable debate among scientists. In a new paper published in PNAS we used lasers to find out how the earliest stomata may have operated.

    Tiny valves, global consequences

    Much depends on the way stomata behave: plant productivity, sensitivity to drought, and indeed the pace of the global carbon and water cycles.

    However, they are difficult to observe in action. Each stomata is like a tiny, pressure-operated valve. They have “guard cells” surrounding an opening or pore which lets water vapour out and carbon dioxide in.

    When pressure increases in stomata guard cells, the pore opens – and vice versa.
    Artemide / Shutterstock

    When fluid pressure increases inside the stomata’s guard cells, they swell up to open the pore. When pressure drops, the cells deflate and the pore closes. To understand stomata behaviour, we wanted to be able to measure the pressure in the guard cells – but it’s not easy.

    Lasers, bubbles and evolution

    Enter Craig Brodersen of Yale University with a newly developed microscope-guided laser. It can create microscopic bubbles inside the individual cells that operate the stomatal pore.

    When Brodersen spent a sabbatical at the University of Tasmania (where I am based), we found we could determine the pressure inside stomatal cells by tracking the size of these bubbles and how quickly they collapsed. This involved theoretical calculations guided by bubble expert Philippe Marmottant, of the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Grenoble.

    This new tool gave us the perfect opportunity to explore how the behaviour of stomata is different among major plant groups. The aim was to test our hypothesis that the evolution of stomatal behaviour follows a predictable trajectory through the history of plant evolution.

    We argue it began with a relatively simple ancestral passive control state, currently represented in living ferns and lycophytes, and developed to a more active hormonal control mechanism seen in modern conifers and flowering plants.

    Against this hypothesis, some researchers have previously reported complex behaviours in some of the most ancient of stomata-bearing plants, the bryophytes. We wanted to test this finding using our newly developed laser instrument.

    400 million years of development

    What we found was firstly that our laser pressure probe technique worked extremely well. We made nearly 500 measurements of stomatal pressure dynamics in the space of a few months. This was a marked improvement on the past 45 years, in which fewer than 30 similar measurements had been made.

    Secondly, we found that the stomata of our representative bryophytes (hornworts and mosses) lacked even the most basic responses to light found in all other land plants.

    The stomata of hornworts and mosses showed no response to changes in light.
    Gondronx Studio / Shutterstock

    This result supported our earlier hypothesis that the first stomata found in ancestors of the modern bryophytes 450 million years ago should have been very simple valves. They would have lacked the complex behaviours seen in modern flowering plants.

    Our results suggest that stomatal behaviour has changed substantially through the process of evolution, highlighting critical changes in functionality that are preserved in the different major land plant groups that currently inhabit the Earth.

    How plants will survive the future

    We can now say with confidence that stomata in mosses, ferns, conifers and flowering plants all behave in very different ways. This has an important corollary: they will all respond differently to the heaving changes in atmospheric temperature and water availability that they face now and into the near future. Predicting stomatal behaviour in the future will help us to predict these impacts and highlight plant vulnerability.

    In terms of agricultural benefit, our new laser method should be fast and sensitive enough to reveal even small differences in the the behaviour of closely related plants. This may help to identify crop variants that use water in a more efficient or productive way, which will assist plant breeders to find varieties that better translate increasingly unpredictable soil water supplies into food.

    So next time you look upon a leaf, consider the frantic pace of dynamic calculation and adjustment of millions of little mouths, reacting as your breath falls upon them. Realise that our own fate, tied to the performance of forests and crops in future climates, hangs on the behaviour of the stomata of different species. A good reason for us to understand these unassuming little valves.

    Tim Brodribb receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    ref. Plants breathe with millions of tiny mouths. We used lasers to understand how this skill evolved – https://theconversation.com/plants-breathe-with-millions-of-tiny-mouths-we-used-lasers-to-understand-how-this-skill-evolved-249362

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE San Franciso and partners take transnational criminal off the streets in California

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    SAN FRANCISCO — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Gurdev Singh, 23, an Indian national and criminal alien, March 12 in French Camp, California, as part of a targeted criminal enforcement action.

    “ICE welcomes partnerships between federal and local law enforcement,” said ERO San Francisco acting Field Office Director Polly Kaiser. “Leveraging professionalism, dedication to public safety, and combined investigative resources saves lives and makes not only the U.S. a safer nation, but those from which criminal aliens come.”

    Singh illegally entered the United States at an unknown location or date without admission or parole by U.S. immigration authorities. Singh was encountered by the U.S. Border Patrol near Lukeville, Arizona, Sept. 2, 2023, and was released on his own recognizance with a notice to appear before an immigration judge.

    Singh was later identified as a person known to be associated with transnational criminal organizations and further investigation showed Singh was known to carry firearms illegally and was actively engaged in criminal activity in both the U.S. and abroad.

    The California Highway Patrol arrested Singh March 6 for carrying a loaded firearm in public, not being the registered owner of a loaded firearm, possession of a stolen vehicle and child endangerment. An additional seven guns in Singh’s residence and two in a car located on the property were located with a subsequent search warrant.

    ICE discovered Singh was in the custody of the San Joaquin Sheriff’s Office and lodged a detainer request on March 12, but the sheriff’s office was unable to honor that request. ICE took Singh into custody without incident at 11 p.m. that evening upon his release from San Joaquin County Jail. Singh will remain in ICE custody pending removal proceedings.

    Members of the public who have information about foreign fugitives, transnational gang members, or other criminal aliens who are in the U.S. illegally are urged to contact ICE by calling the ICE Tip Line at 1 (866) 347-2423 or internationally at 001-1802-872-6199. They can also file a tip online by completing ICE’s online tip form. For more information, visit www.ice.gov or follow @EROSanFrancisco on X.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: WESTMORELAND COUNTY – Department of Human Services, IUP to Announce Health Care Collaboration to Train Future Physicians in Clinical Setting at Torrance State Hospital

    Source: US State of Pennsylvania

    March 25, 2025Torrance, PA

    ADVISORY – WESTMORELAND COUNTY – Department of Human Services, IUP to Announce Health Care Collaboration to Train Future Physicians in Clinical Setting at Torrance State Hospital

    DHS Secretary Dr. Val Arkoosh will join leadership from the Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP) to announce IUP’s College of Osteopathic Medicine at Torrance State Hospital.

    Torrance State Hospital is a DHS facility that provides inpatient services for individuals with severe and persistent mental illness in a supportive and restorative environment. This partnership with IUP will educate and train future osteopathic physicians in a clinical setting at Torrance State Hospital while also addressing the urgent need for health care professionals in rural and underserved communities.

    Governor Josh Shapiro is committed to maintaining rural access to quality health care and his 2025-26 budget proposal makes critical investments that support the health care workforce and address barriers to access for Pennsylvanians in rural communities.

    WHAT:
    DHS, IUP to announce partnership for IUP’s College of Osteopathic Medicine at Torrance State Hospital

    WHEN:
    Tuesday, March 25, 2025, at 1:30 PM

    WHERE:
    Greizman Classroom #2, Torrance State Hospital, 121 Longview Drive Torrance, PA 15779

    MEDIA RSVP:
    Media should email ra-pwdhspressoffice@pa.gov with the name and media outlet for the reporter who will be in attendance. Attendees will require identification to enter the hospital.

    MEDIA CONTACT:
    Brandon Cwalina, DHS – ra-pwdhspressoffice@pa.gov

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: United States Announces Plans to Extradite Three Tren de Aragua Members, Who Have Been Declared Alien Enemies, Wanted by Chile for Homicide and Kidnapping Offenses

    Source: US State of California

    Earlier today, the United States declared three members of Tren de Aragua (TdA) Alien Enemies and announced plans to extradite them to Chile, where they are wanted for violent crimes including homicide, kidnapping for ransom, and other offenses.

    TdA is a foreign terrorist organization with thousands of members, many of whom have unlawfully entered the United States to commit brutal crimes, including murder, kidnapping, extortion, and human and drug trafficking. Three known TdA members, Adrian Rafael Gamez Finol, Miguel Oyola Jimenez, and Edgar Javier Benitez Rubio, illegally entered the United States after allegedly committing horrific crimes in Chile.  Recognizing the grave threat that TdA poses to the nations it infiltrates, Chile has asked the United States to help return these men to Chile to face justice. Today, the Department of Justice announced that it will take swift action to grant these requests and send these Alien Enemies to Chile.   

    “These three Tren de Aragua members pose a grave risk to the public safety and national security of the United States, just as they allegedly did in Chile,” said Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. “Based on their membership in TdA, they have been declared Alien Enemies. We will not tolerate violent illegal aliens in our country. The Justice Department is taking every step within the bounds of the law to ensure these individuals are promptly sent to Chile to face justice for their abhorrent crimes. In fact, we would have already removed these violent gang members to Chile to face justice were it not for the nationwide injunction imposed by a single judge in Washington D.C., which we are challenging today in the D.C. Circuit,” he added.  “We hope common sense and justice will prevail.”

    The three TdA members are:

    • Adrian Rafael Gamez Finol, also known as Rafael Enrique Gamez Salas, 38, a dual Venezuelan and Colombian citizen, is wanted in Chile for extortion, kidnapping resulting in homicide, kidnapping for extortion, unjustified firearm discharge, and criminal association. Gamez Finol was removed from the United States to Venezuela in August 2023, and allegedly subsequently illegally re-entered the United States. On Feb. 18, Gamez Finol was indicted in the Southern District of Texas for illegally reentering the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. Gamez Finol is currently in Texas county prison serving a sentence for human smuggling;
    • Miguel Oyola Jimenez, 37, a dual Venezuelan and Ecuadorian citizen, is wanted in Chile for two counts of kidnapping for ransom. Oyola Jimenez is currently in federal custody in the Western District of Washington, having been arrested on a provisional arrest request submitted by Chilean authorities seeking his return to Chile to stand trial on the kidnapping charges; and
    • Edgar Javier Benitez Rubio, 37, a Venezuelan citizen, is wanted in Chile for kidnapping with homicide, kidnapping for ransom, and criminal association. Benitez Rubio is in immigration custody in the Southern District of Indiana, pending removal.

    The Justice Department will work expeditiously to return these Alien Enemies to Chile to face justice.

    An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: United States Announces Plans to Extradite Three Tren de Aragua Members, Who Have Been Declared Alien Enemies, Wanted by Chile for Homicide and Kidnapping Offenses

    Source: United States Attorneys General

    Earlier today, the United States declared three members of Tren de Aragua (TdA) Alien Enemies and announced plans to extradite them to Chile, where they are wanted for violent crimes including homicide, kidnapping for ransom, and other offenses.

    TdA is a foreign terrorist organization with thousands of members, many of whom have unlawfully entered the United States to commit brutal crimes, including murder, kidnapping, extortion, and human and drug trafficking. Three known TdA members, Adrian Rafael Gamez Finol, Miguel Oyola Jimenez, and Edgar Javier Benitez Rubio, illegally entered the United States after allegedly committing horrific crimes in Chile.  Recognizing the grave threat that TdA poses to the nations it infiltrates, Chile has asked the United States to help return these men to Chile to face justice. Today, the Department of Justice announced that it will take swift action to grant these requests and send these Alien Enemies to Chile.   

    “These three Tren de Aragua members pose a grave risk to the public safety and national security of the United States, just as they allegedly did in Chile,” said Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. “Based on their membership in TdA, they have been declared Alien Enemies. We will not tolerate violent illegal aliens in our country. The Justice Department is taking every step within the bounds of the law to ensure these individuals are promptly sent to Chile to face justice for their abhorrent crimes. In fact, we would have already removed these violent gang members to Chile to face justice were it not for the nationwide injunction imposed by a single judge in Washington D.C., which we are challenging today in the D.C. Circuit,” he added.  “We hope common sense and justice will prevail.”

    The three TdA members are:

    • Adrian Rafael Gamez Finol, also known as Rafael Enrique Gamez Salas, 38, a dual Venezuelan and Colombian citizen, is wanted in Chile for extortion, kidnapping resulting in homicide, kidnapping for extortion, unjustified firearm discharge, and criminal association. Gamez Finol was removed from the United States to Venezuela in August 2023, and allegedly subsequently illegally re-entered the United States. On Feb. 18, Gamez Finol was indicted in the Southern District of Texas for illegally reentering the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. Gamez Finol is currently in Texas county prison serving a sentence for human smuggling;
    • Miguel Oyola Jimenez, 37, a dual Venezuelan and Ecuadorian citizen, is wanted in Chile for two counts of kidnapping for ransom. Oyola Jimenez is currently in federal custody in the Western District of Washington, having been arrested on a provisional arrest request submitted by Chilean authorities seeking his return to Chile to stand trial on the kidnapping charges; and
    • Edgar Javier Benitez Rubio, 37, a Venezuelan citizen, is wanted in Chile for kidnapping with homicide, kidnapping for ransom, and criminal association. Benitez Rubio is in immigration custody in the Southern District of Indiana, pending removal.

    The Justice Department will work expeditiously to return these Alien Enemies to Chile to face justice.

    An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Fort Washakie Man Sentenced to 29 Years of Imprisonment for Second-Degree Murder

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Conrad Troy Tillman, 38, of Fort Washakie, Wyoming, was sentenced to 348 months and 23 days in federal prison with five years of supervised release for second-degree murder. U.S. District Court Judge Kelly H. Rankin imposed the sentence on March 21, 2025, in Casper. The federal sentence considered the fact Tillman had been serving a related tribal sentence for nearly a year. The court also ordered Tillman to pay $6,998.10 in restitution and a $100 special assessment.

    On April 14, 2024, the Wind River Police Department was dispatched to a vehicle located on Highway 287 within the Wind River Indian Reservation. The 911 call indicated that a man had shot his wife. According to court documents and witness testimony, Tillman, his wife, and their adolescent daughter were traveling on Highway 287 when an argument ensued between the couple. It culminated in Tillman firing a semi-automatic pistol, striking his wife in the head, and killing her. Tillman flagged down a passing motorist to call 911. EMS and law enforcement officers arrived on the scene and pronounced the victim deceased.

    The Bureau of Indian Affairs Wind River Police Department and the FBI investigated the case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Cameron J. Cook prosecuted the case.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results. For more information about Project Safe Neighborhoods, please visit Justice.gov/PSN.

    Case No. 24-CR-00086

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Boston Man Pleads Guilty to Extortion Conspiracy

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Defendant involved in Massachusetts State Police Commercial Driver’s License bribery scheme

    BOSTON – A Boston man pleaded guilty on March 21, 2025 to his role in an extortion conspiracy involving former Massachusetts State Police (MSP) troopers who allegedly conspired to give false passing scores to certain Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) applicants who had failed or had taken only partial CDL skills test, in exchange for bribes.

    Eric Mathison, 48, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit extortion. U.S. District Court Judge Indira Talwani scheduled sentencing for June 13, 2025. In January 2024, Mathison was charged in a 74-count indictment along with five others in the alleged conspiracy and related schemes.

    Mathison, who worked for a water company that employed drivers who needed CDLs to drive their delivery vehicles, admitted to his role in an alleged conspiracy with others including former MSP Sergeant Gary Cederquist, then in charge of MSP’s CDL Unit, to give false passing scores to certain CDL applicants affiliated with the water company. It is alleged that Cederquist gave passing scores to multiple applicants who actually failed the CDL skills test, as well as others who took only a partial test, in exchange for bribes of free inventory from the water company, such as cases of bottled Fiji, VOSS and Essentia water, cases of bottled Arizona Iced Tea and coffee and tea products, all of which Mathison delivered to an office trailer at the CDL test site in Stoughton. Mathison admitted to his alleged communications with Cederquist about particular CDL applicants, their performance on the skills test, and inventory from the water company that Cederquist allegedly requested and that Mathison delivered. For example, Mathison admitted that he received texts, allegedly from Cederquist, describing one water company applicant as “an idiot,” who had “no idea what he’s doing,” and “should have failed about 10 times already.” It is alleged that Cederquist then gave this applicant a passing score. On another occasion, Mathison admitted that he asked Cederquist, “Hows the trailer holding,” to which Cederquist allegedly responded, “In desperate need of restocking,” along with a specific request for, among other things, premium bottled water, tea, energy drinks and a “truckload of large water.”

    The charge of conspiracy to commit extortion provides for a sentence of up to 20 years in prison, up to three years of supervised release and a fine of up to $250,000. Sentences are imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and statutes which govern the determination of a sentence in a criminal case.

    United States Attorney Leah B. Foley; Michael J. Krol, Special Agent in Charge of Homeland Security Investigations in New England; and Christopher A. Scharf, Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Department of Transportation Office of Inspector General, Northeast Region made the announcement today. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Christine J. Wichers and Adam W. Deitch of the Public Corruption & Special Prosecutions Unit are prosecuting the case.

    MIL Security OSI