Category: Asia

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: India’s Economic Renaissance: A New Era of Global Leadership

    Source: Government of India (2)

    India’s Economic Renaissance: A New Era of Global Leadership

    With a forecasted 7% GDP growth rate, India stands at the forefront of economic innovation

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:03PM by PIB Delhi

    Click here for more detail:- India’s Economic Renaissance: A New Era of Global Leadership

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    Santosh Kumar/ Sarla Meena/ Saurabh Kalia

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: International Conference of Telecom Regulators was organized by TRAI

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:09PM by PIB Delhi

    An International Conference of Telecom Regulators conference was organized by TRAI on the sidelines of World Telecom Standardization Assembly (WTSA-24) and India Mobile Congress (IMC-24) in New Delhi.

    The Conference was inaugurated by Dr. Pemmasani ji, Minister of State in the Ministry of Communications and Minister of State in the Ministry of Rural Development in a well-attended inaugural session.  The other dignitaries present at the inaugural session include Ms. Doreen Bogdan-Martin, Secretary General of International Telecommunication Union (ITU),  Mr. Mats Granryd, Director General, GSMA, Shri Anil Kumar Lahoti, Chairman, TRAI and Shri Atul Kumar Chaudhary, Secretary, TRAI.

    This conference was on the theme ‘Emerging Trends in Regulation.’ Many eminent speakers from around the world, who are experts in their domain, spoke and deliberated on many important technical and regulatory issues.  There were three sessions in the conference and each session was on very important and current topics and the sessions were extremely engaging with lot of deliberations and discussions. 

    The first session was titled ‘Regulatory Perspective in Standardization’ in which many burning topics such as Regulator’s Role in Standard Development, Standards as a Tool for Regulators, QoS by Design, Consumer-Centric Approach etc, were discussed. 

    The second session was on the topic “Regulatory Aspects of Satellite Communication, including other Non-Terrestrial Networks”. Some of the topics dealt in this session were Emerging Technological Developments, Deployment Models and Use-Cases of non-terrestrial networks (NTN), Standardization Initiatives, Security and Privacy Concerns, Economic and Social Impact etc.

    The third session “Regulatory Outlook of OTT Communication Services” addressed some complex regulatory issues pertaining to Over-The-Top (OTT) communication services. Key points discussed in this session were, need for OTT Regulation, consumer protection issues, Law enforcement & National security issues etc. 

    The conference received overwhelming response from regulators from around the world who have converged in New Delhi to attend prestigious WTSA-24 and IMC-24 conferences.  The delegates from more than 30 countries registered for this conference and over 150 participants attended the conference including around 80 international delegates, 15 Heads of Regulators/ Minister and domestic participants representing stakeholders from telecom industry.

    A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) was signed between Communications, Space & Technology (CST), the ICT Regulator of Saudi Arabia and Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), during the inaugural session of the conference.

    The conference concluded with a call to action for regulators worldwide to collaborate and share best practices in addressing the challenges posed by emerging technologies and services. 

    For any clarification/information, Ms. Vandana Sethi, Advisor (Admn/IR) may be contacted on advadmn@trai.gov.in

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    SB/DP/ARJ

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Court awards Rs. 10 lakhs as damages to Jan Aushadhi in trademark battle

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:05PM by PIB Delhi

    In a landmark victory in a court battle, the New Delhi District court has issued a permanent injunction against a resemblance in name of the organization operating in the name of “Jan Aushadhi Sangh” at Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh. This firm was deliberately and intentionally using a deceptively similar name of “Jan Aushadhi” a registered trademark of Pradhan Mantri Bhartiya Janaushadhi Pariyojana (PMBJP), Department of Pharmaceuticals, Government of India with malafide intention to create confusion in the mind of the general public and to trade over Jan Aushadhi’s goodwill.  Now, the Court at Delhi has ordered the violator and its proprietors, partners, etc. restraining them from using the said mark “Jan Aushadhi” in any manner. This ruling protects the integrity of PMBI’s brand and ensures consumers receive authentic products at affordable rates through Jan Aushadhi Kendras, which is the main objective of the Pariyojana.

    Apart from issuing direction to violator for delivering all the material bearing the infringement trademark “Jan Aushadhi” to PMBI for destruction, court was pleased to order damages of Rs. 10 lakhs in favour of PMBI.

    With an objective of making quality generic medicines available at affordable prices to all, Pradhan Mantri Bhartiya Janaushadhi Pariyojana (PMBJP) was launched by the Department of Pharmaceuticals, Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers, Government of India and it provides affordable and quality medicines through its network of 13800 Jan Aushadhi Kendra covering almost all districts of the country. People save 50% to 90% on the cost of medicines while buying from these retail outlets. Over the years, Jan Aushadhi has become the largest retail pharmacy chain of the country.

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    MV/AKS

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: World Food Day Celebrated at NIFTEM-K with a Focus on Innovative Research Solutions

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:07PM by PIB Delhi

    NIFTEM-K celebrated World Food Day on 16th of Oct, 2024 with a series of engaging activities aimed at promoting food safety, nutrition and providing solutions to reduce Post Harvest Losses. The event featured technical sessions, product and technology displays, and a recipe competition, along with a showcase of pilot plant products.

    During the inaugural address, Dr.Harinder Singh Oberoi, Director, NIFTEM-K, welcomed all the delegate and guests,stated that the theme “Right to Foods for a better life and a better future” coined by FAO is very appropriate for the day as the theme represents all the facets of food sciences.He said that Food Processing, Food Fortification and food safety are all indispensable part of the food system. He further shared that NIFTEM-K had recently signed Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) with 11 companies and 5 academic institutions at World Food India 2024, held at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi. These strategic collaborations aim to advance research, foster innovation, and enhance skill development in the Indian food processing industry.

    Sh. G. Kamala VardhanaRao, CEO, FSSAI, in his special address praises NIFTEM-K as a pioneer in innovative research solutions for food safety. He noted the growing global population, projected at 8.4 billion and increasing by 1.1 percent annually, stressing the necessity for enhanced safety and nutrition in food systems. As climate change continues to impact agricultural production, Rao underscored the critical role of institutions like NIFTEM-K, play in addressing these challenges. He urged collaboration to ensure safe, nutritious food for all, emphasizing the need for innovative strategies to adapt to changing agricultural patterns.

    The Chief Guest of the function Sh. MinhajAlam, Additional Secretary, Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI), launched NIFTEM-K song and praised NIFTEM-K for  addressing the problem of Food waste and innovations in Food processing. He said, “Aligned with MoFPI’s vision to enhance value addition, reduce wastage, and promote sustainable growth and modernization, the NIFTEM-K will create impactful solutions that will benefit the Indian food industry at large.”

    The Programme was graced by the presence of Sh. Dr.Paramjit S. Jaswal, Vice Chancellor, SRM University, Sonipat (Delhi NCR) and Sh. Sanjai Singh Parmar, CEO, Cremica Food Park Pvt. Ltd.

    This year’s World Food Day theme, “Right to Food for a Better Life and a Better Future,” emphasizes the fundamental human right to accessible, nutritious, affordable, and sustainable food. The theme aligns with NIFTEM-K’s mission to foster innovation and research that contribute to food security and the well-being of all.

    During Technical sessions, very insightful discussions were held covering the various aspects of sustainable food system, food security and strengthening food supply chain. The key note speakers involved Executives and Senior Officers from Food Industry, Academic Institution, R&D Organizations, FPO and Start-ups.

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    STK

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Update on Special Campaign 4.0

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Update on Special Campaign 4.0

    Secretary, Department of Administrative Reforms & Public Grievances and Union Health Secretary reviewed activities undertaken so far by the Department of Health & Family Welfare

    Approximately 190 offices of Central Government Hospitals, Subordinate Offices, Attached Offices, Autonomous Bodies, CPSU under DoHFW are participating in the Special Campaign 4.0

    482 cleanliness campaigns (including plantation) conducted nationwide, 1,971 Public Grievances and 275 Appeals addressed, 20,500 physical files reviewed, revenue of ₹10,66,207 generated and 11,769 Sq. ft. of space generated for office use from scrap disposal

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:13PM by PIB Delhi

    The Government of India launched ‘Special Campaign 4.0’ from 2nd October which will continue till 31st October, 2024. It is focused on institutionalising Swachhata and minimizing pendency in Government offices.

    In line with this initiative, Mr. V. Srinivas, Secretary, Department of Administrative Reforms & Public Grievances (DARPG) visited Nirman Bhawan in New Delhi and, along with Ms. Punya Salila Srivastava, Union Health Secretary, reviewed the activities undertaken so far by the Department of Health & Family Welfare (DoHFW) during the Campaign. Both the Secretaries emphasized the importance of monitoring pending matters on daily basis and advised the officers dealing with public grievances to contact the individuals to ensure that their grievances are being addressed effectively. Importance of evolving innovative and creative practices in the offices / hospitals / institutes was also emphasized.

    Approximately 190 offices of Central Government Hospitals, Subordinate Offices, Attached Offices, Autonomous Bodies, CPSU under DoHFW are participating in the Special Campaign 4.0. DoHFW is particularly focussing on minimizing references from Members of Parliament, references from PMO and resolving Public Grievances and associated Appeals.

     

    Key Highlights of Mid-Campaign Progress made by DoHFW:

    •  482 cleanliness campaigns (including plantation) have been conducted nationwide with an effort of institutionalising Swachhata.

    •  1,971 Public Grievances and 275 Appeals have been addressed by enhancing service delivery and public satisfaction.

    •  20,500 physical files have been reviewed resulting in weeding out of 16,057 files and 1,874 e-files have been reviewed resulting in closing of 1811 e-files by improving record management and creating a more efficient office environment.

    •  The Campaign has also generated revenue of ₹10,66,207 and 11,769 Sq. ft. of space has been generated for office use from scrap disposal, including e-waste.

     

    DoHFW remains committed to minimizing pending matters and maintaining cleanliness and beautification of office rooms and premises.

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    HFW/ MoS ICDRA Plenary /16th October 2024/1

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: The cumulative overall exports during April -September 2024 is estimated at USD 393.22Billion, as compared to USD 375Billion in April-September 2023, with an estimated growth of 4.86%.

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Ministry of Commerce & Industry

    The cumulative overall exports during April -September 2024 is estimated at USD 393.22Billion, as compared to USD 375Billion in April-September 2023, with an estimated growth of 4.86%.

    The cumulative value of merchandise exports during April-September 2024 was USD 213.22 Billion, as compared to USD 211.08 Billion during April-September 2023, registering a positive growth of 1.02%.

    Non-petroleum & Non-Gems & Jewellery exports registered an increase of 9.14% from USD 24.76 Billion in September 2023 to USD 27.03 Billion in September 2024.

    Major drivers of merchandise exports growth in September 2024 include Engineering Goods, Organic & Inorganic Chemicals, Plastic & Linoleum, Drugs & Pharmaceuticals and RMG of all Textiles.

    Engineering Goods exports increased by 10.55% from USD 8.89 Billion in September 2023 to USD 9.82 Billion in September 2024.

    Organic & Inorganic Chemicals exports increased by 11.21% from USD 2.12 Billion in September 2023 to USD 2.36 Billion in September 2024.

    Plastic & Linoleum exports increased by 28.32% from USD 0.62 Billion in September 2023 to USD 0.79 Billion in September 2024.

    Drugs & Pharmaceuticals exports increased by 7.22% from USD 2.39 Billion in September 2023 to USD 2.57 Billion in September 2024.

    RMG of all Textiles exports increased by 17.30% from USD 0.95 Billion in September 2023 to USD 1.11 Billion in September 2024.

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:10PM by PIB Delhi

    India’s total exports (Merchandise and Services combined) for September 2024* is estimated at USD 65.19 Billion, registering a positive growth of 3.76 percent vis-à-vis September 2023.Total imports (Merchandise and Services combined) for September 2024* is estimated at USD 71.68 Billion, registering a positive growth of 3.79 percent vis-à-vis September 2023.

    Table 1: Trade during September 2024*

     

     

    September 2024

    (USD Billion)

    September 2023

    (USD Billion)

    Merchandise

    Exports

    34.58

    34.41

    Imports

    55.36

    54.49

    Services*

    Exports

    30.61

    28.42

    Imports

    16.32

    14.58

    Total Trade

    (Merchandise +Services) *

    Exports

    65.19

    62.83

    Imports

    71.68

    69.06

    Trade Balance

    -6.49

    -6.23

    * Note: The latest data for services sector released by RBI is for August2024. The data for September 2024 is an estimation, which will be revised based on RBI’s subsequent release. (ii) Data for April-September 2023 and April-June 2024 has been revised on pro-rata basis using quarterly balance of payments data.

    Fig 1: Total Trade during September2024*

     

    India’s total exports during April-September2024* is estimated at USD 393.22 Billion registering a positive growth of 4.86 percent. Total imports during April-September 2024* is estimated at USD 448.05 Billion registering a growth of 6.89 percent.

    Table 2: Trade during April-September 2024*

     

     

    April-September 2024

    (USD Billion)

    April-September 2023

    (USD Billion)

    Merchandise

    Exports

    213.22

    211.08

    Imports

    350.66

    330.32

    Services*

    Exports

    180.00

    163.92

    Imports

    97.39

    88.86

    Total Trade

    (Merchandise +Services) *

    Exports

    393.22

    375.00

    Imports

    448.05

    419.18

    Trade Balance

    -54.83

    -44.18

     

    Fig 2: Total Trade during April-September 2024*    

          

    MERCHANDISE TRADE

    • Merchandise exports during September 2024 were USD 34.58 Billion as compared to USD 34.41 Billion in September 2023.
    • Merchandise imports during September 2024 were USD 55.36 Billion as compared to USD 54.49 Billion in September 2023.

     

    Fig 3: Merchandise Trade during September 2024

    • Merchandise exports during April-September 2024 were USD 213.22 Billion as compared to USD 211.08Billion during April-September 2023.
    • Merchandise imports during April-September 2024 were USD 350.66 Billion as compared to USD 330.32 Billion during April-September 2023.
    • Merchandise trade deficit during April-September 2024 was USD 137.44 Billion as compared to USD 119.24 Billion during April-September 2023.

    Fig4: Merchandise Trade during April-September 2024

    • Non-petroleum and non-gems & jewellery exports in September 2024 were USD 27.03Billion compared to USD 24.76Billion in September 2023.
    • Non-petroleum, non-gems & jewellery (gold, silver & precious metals) imports in September 2024 were USD 36.49Billion compared to USD 34.21Billion in September 2023.

     

    Table 3: Trade excluding Petroleum and Gems & Jewellery during September 2024

     

    September 2024

    (USD Billion)

    September 2023

    (USD Billion)

    Non- petroleum exports

    29.85

    27.95

    Non- petroleum imports

    42.82

    40.48

    Non-petroleum & Non-Gems & Jewellery exports

    27.03

    24.76

    Non-petroleum & Non-Gems & Jewellery imports

    36.49

    34.21

    Note: Gems & Jewellery Imports include Gold, Silver & Pearls, precious & Semi-precious stones

     

    Fig 5: Trade excluding Petroleum and Gems & Jewellery during September 2024

    • Non-petroleum and non-gems & jewellery exports in April-September 2024 were USD 162.77 Billion, compared to USD 153.71 Billion in April-September 2023.
    • Non-petroleum, non-gems & jewellery (gold, silver & precious metals) imports in April-September 2024 were USD 222.72 Billion, compared to USD 211.34 Billion in April-September 2023.

    Table 4: Trade excluding Petroleum and Gems & Jewellery during April-September 2024

     

    April-September 2024

    (USD Billion)

    April-September 2023

    (USD Billion)

    Non- petroleum exports

    176.68

    169.33

    Non- petroleum imports

    261.75

    246.36

    Non-petroleum &Non Gems& Jewellery exports

    162.77

    153.71

    Non-petroleum & Non Gems & Jewellery imports

    222.72

    211.34

    Note: Gems & Jewellery Imports include Gold, Silver & Pearls, precious & Semi-precious stones

    Fig 6: Trade excluding Petroleum and Gems & Jewellery during April-September 2024

     

    SERVICES TRADE

    • The estimated value of services export for September 2024* is USD 30.61 Billion as compared to USD 28.42Billion in September 2023.
    • The estimated value of services imports for September 2024* is USD 16.32 Billion as compared to USD 14.58Billion in September 2023.

     

    Fig 7: Services Trade during September2024*

     

    • The estimated value of service exports during April-September 2024* is USD 180 Billion as compared to USD 163.92 Billion in April-September 2023.
    • The estimated value of service imports during April-September 2024* is USD 97.39 Billion as compared to USD 88.86 Billion in April-September 2023.
    • The services trade surplus for April-September 2024* is USD 82.61 Billion as compared to USD 75.06 Billion in April-September 2023.

    Fig 8: Services Trade during April-September 2024*

    • Exports of Coffee (74.75%), Tobacco (50.9%), Handicrafts Excl. Hand Made Carpet (48.09%), Plastic & Linoleum (28.32%), Spices (26.66%), Rice (24.93%), Rmg Of All Textiles (17.3%), Jute Mfg. Including Floor Covering (16.45%), Cereal Preparations & Miscellaneous Processed Items (15.25%), Carpet (14.93%), Oil Seeds (14.73%), Oil Meals (13%), Man-Made Yarn/Fabs./Made-Ups Etc. (11.41%), Organic & Inorganic Chemicals (11.21%), Engineering Goods (10.55%), Leather & Leather Products (8.86%), Fruits & Vegetables (8.38%), Electronic Goods (7.89%), Meat, Dairy & Poultry Products (7.85%), Drugs & Pharmaceuticals (7.22%), Tea (5.73%), Cotton Yarn/Fabs./Made-Ups, Handloom Products Etc. (3.48%) and Cashew (2.23%) record positive growth during September 2024 over the corresponding month of last year.
    • Imports of Dyeing/Tanning/Colouring Mtrls. (-25.92%), Vegetable Oil  (-23.24%), Pearls, Precious & Semi-Precious Stones (-21.62%), Leather & Leather Products (-16.62%), Newsprint (-13.62%), Petroleum, Crude & Products (-10.44%), Artificial Resins, Plastic Materials, Etc. (-8.76%), Coal, Coke & Briquettes, Etc. (-2.14%), Textile Yarn Fabric, Made-Up Articles (-1.8%) and Transport Equipment (-0.38%) record negative growth during September 2024 over the corresponding month of last year.
    • Services exports is estimated to grow by 9.81percent during April-September 2024* over April-September 2023.
    • Top 5 export destinations, in terms of change in value, exhibiting positive growth in September 2024 vis a vis September 2023 are Netherland (38.6%), U Arab Emts (23.75%), U S A (4.98%), Brazil (41.98%) and Japan (36.35%).
    • Top 5 export destinations, in terms of change in value, exhibiting positive growth in April-September 2024 vis a vis April-September 2023 are Netherland (36.73%), U S A (5.6%), U Arab Emts (11.45%), Malaysia (27.91%) and U K (12.4%).
    • Top 5 import sources, in terms of change in value, exhibiting growth in September 2024 vis a vis September 2023 are U Arab Emts (49.22%), China P Rp (14.46%), Germany (32.52%), Japan (25.72%) and Taiwan (38.17%)
    • Top 5 import sources, in terms of change in value, exhibiting growth in April-September 2024 vis a vis April-September2023 are U Arab Emts (52.01%), China P Rp (11.52%), Russia (5.73%), Taiwan (39.97%) and Oman (51.52%).

    *Link for Quick Estimates

    ***

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    (Release ID: 2065486)

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Government extends “Samarth” (Scheme for Capacity Building in Textiles Sector) till March 2026

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Government extends “Samarth” (Scheme for Capacity Building in Textiles Sector) till March 2026

    Expected to impart employment linked skills to 3 lakh persons with an outlay of 495 crores

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:21PM by PIB Delhi

    Samarth is a demand-driven and placement-oriented umbrella skilling program of the Ministry of Textiles. Samarth Scheme has been extended for two years (FY 2024-25 and 2025-26) with a budget of Rs. 495 Crore to train 3 lakh persons in textile-related skills.

    • Scheme aims to encourage and support the industry in creating jobs in the organized textile and related sectors, covering the entire value chain of textiles, excluding Spinning and Weaving. The training program and curriculum have been rationalized to meet the evolving technological and market needs.

    In addition to entry-level skilling, the scheme also provides upskilling/reskilling programs to improve the productivity of existing workers in Apparel & Garmenting segments. Samarth also caters to the upskilling/reskilling needs of traditional textile sectors such as handloom, handicraft, silk, and jute.

    The scheme is implemented through Implementing Partners (IPs) comprising Textile Industry/Industry Associations, Central/State government agencies, and Sectoral Organizations of the Ministry of Textiles like DC/Handloom, DC/Handicrafts, Central Wool Development Board, and Central Silk Board.

    Under Samarth Scheme, the Ministry, through implementing partners, has trained 3.27 lakh candidates, of which 2.6 lakh (79.5%) have been employed. There is a strong emphasis on women’s employment, and 2.89 lakh (88.3%) women have been trained so far.

    Details may be accessed through below given links:

    Samarth website: https://samarth-textiles.gov.in

    ***

    VN

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: A permanent exhibition titled “Black Diamond: Unveiling the Depths” to be inaugurated at National Science Centre tomorrow

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:17PM by PIB Delhi

    The permanent exhibition titled ‘Black Diamond: Unveiling the Depths’ shall be jointly inaugurated by Union Minister of Culture and Tourism Shri Gajendra Singh Shekhawat in the august presence of Minister of State for Coal and Mines Shri Satish Chandra Dubey, Secretary, Ministry of Culture Shri Arunish Chawla, Joint Secretary & FA, Ministry of Coal Ms. Nirupama Kotru and Joint Secretary, Ministry of Culture Shri Sanjay Kaul.

    The prime objective in developing the gallery has been to showcase the process of exploration and extraction of coal, the technologies used, safety protocols followed and to understand and appreciate the intricacies, technologies, value of minerals and mining and pivotal role of coal in shaping the global energy landscape, as well as dispelling the myth that coal mining is a polluting activity. This exposition will go a long way in fostering a spirit of enquiry, innovation & scientific temper in society and student in particular, and will create deeper understanding about coal.

    This exhibition has been conceptualised, designed and curated by National Science Centre, Delhi (NCSM). High-resolution visuals and interactive exhibits in this exhibition bring the ancient world to life, offering a unique perspective on coal’s formation over millions of years. One can witness the geological processes that have shaped this valuable resource over millennia, offering a mesmerizing perspective on coal’s formation.

    The large dynamic diorama of open-cast mining provides a unique opportunity for visitors to witness the grandeur and complexity of open-cast mining operations. Designed with meticulous attention to detail, this diorama showcases the intricacies of open-cast mining, providing a vivid and immersive experience that captures the scale and dynamism of the industry. One can walkthrough simulated coal mine that brings the mining process to life. Take a virtual descent into the depths of a coal mine with simulated coal mine lift. Once the magical lift descends to the deep coal seam, visitors come out and gear up with safety equipment for the next leg of the journey into the underground coal mine. Explore the workings of long wall mining machines and continuous miners showcased in a diorama, providing an up-close view of their operations. Witness the twin-bolt machine in a specially arranged setting, simplifying the explanation of the technology used to support the mine ceiling after coal extraction. The model of Ranigunj Mining Rescue Operation Capsule is a testament to human courage. Visitors experience the dramatic event where miners faced challenges to save lives.

    The dragline simulator takes centre stage as a star attraction within the gallery. Here, visitors have the opportunity to virtually operate and grasp the nuances of controlling this colossal machine. The simulator seamlessly blends a real-world operation console with virtual representations of the boom bar and bucket, providing an interactive and instructive experience. “Coal Exploration” section will embark you on a modern exploration odyssey, witnessing the advanced technologies employed to uncover hidden coal reserves. A digital diorama on Kayakalp, a transformative initiative by Coal India Limited, represents a pioneering approach to land reclamation and environmental stewardship in the coal mining industry. The term “Kayakalp” translates to rejuvenation and the program aims to reclaim abandoned coal mines, transforming them into eco-parks or tourist spots.

    This exhibition, proudly supported by the Ministry of Coal, transcends traditional displays by merging cutting-edge technology, immersive experiences, and a comprehensive exploration of coal’s geology, exploration, extraction, sustainable practices, and its pivotal role in shaping the global energy landscape. Through captivating displays, delve into the geological processes that transformed plant matter into the black gold we rely on today.

    In essence, this exhibition isn’t just a journey into the depths of coal; it’s a narrative of innovation, sustainability, and the evolution of an industry that has shaped our world. The National Science Centre, Delhi extends heartfelt gratitude to the Ministry of Coal for making this immersive exploration possible. One should enjoy visiting this educational odyssey, where coal’s rich history and significance come to life, transcending the conventional boundaries of exhibitions and offering an experience that is truly unparalleled.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Mid Campaign Progress of Ministry of Women and Child Development under Special Campaign 4.0

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:22PM by PIB Delhi

    Ministry of Women and Child Development, including all Autonomous Bodies under its administrative control, has initiated efforts and prepared action plans to implement Special Campaign 4.0 for improving Swachhata and disposal of pending references from 2nd October – 31st October, 2024, on the lines of the Special Campaigns held in the preceding 3 years.

    The identification of targets such as Cleanliness Campaign sites, Planning for Space management and beautification of offices, identifying Scrap and redundant items and their disposal procedure as per GFR, pending references from MP’s, State Governments, Inter-Ministerial references (Cabinet Notes), PMO, Parliamentary Assurances pending for more than 3 months, Public Grievances and Appeals (CPGRAMS as well as grievances received from other sources), Record Management – Review of files/recording and weeding of files/closing of e-files have been completed during the preparatory phase of the campaign and uploaded on the portal.

    During the ongoing Implementation Phase of the Campaign (2nd October-31st October, 2024), the Ministry is taking concerted efforts for disposal of identified pending references. The status of disposal of pending references under various categories as on 15.10.2024 is detailed below –

    MP References – 18, Public Grievances – 430, Public Grievance Appeals – 66, Parliamentary Assurance – 1, Physical Files weeded out – 978, E-Files closed – 335, Cleanliness Campaigns Conducted – 21,843, Space Freed – 60,281 sq. ft., Revenue Earned – Rs.1,76,600/-

    Weekly meetings are being convened by Shri Gyanesh Bharti, Additional Secretary & Nodal officer, Special Campaign 4.0 of the Ministry with Divisions and autonomous bodies to review the status of disposal of pending references and cleanliness activities being undertaken during the implementation phase of Special Campaign 4.0.

    The following best practices have been adopted under Special Campaign 4.0:

    • One Stop Centre functionaries in Indore have collaborated with students to create awareness on cleanliness through nukkad nataks.
    • One Stop functionaries in Delhi conducted an awareness drive on cleanliness in hospitals with focus on maintaining hygiene for prevention of Dengue and Malaria.
    • One Stop Centre and Women Helpline functionaries in Meghalaya have committed to adopt sustainable and environmental friendly practices such as use of energy efficiency light bulbs, reusing the waste papers amongst others.
    • One Stop Centre and Women Helpline functionaries have taken a pledge to realize not only garbage-free surroundings but also clean the society from menace to make women feel safer.

    The staff and residents of Shakti Sadan in Thoubal District, Manipur undertook a comprehensive cleaning of the dormitory, toilets, verandah and training hall

      

     Swachhata activities being conducted in One Stop Centre, Assam Cleanliness activities being undertaken in Working Women Hostel in Jammu

    Several Swachhata activities are being undertaken in the cleanliness campaign sites such as Anganwadi Centres, One Stop Centres, Child Care Institutions, Sakhi Niwas, Shakti Sadans etc. all over the country.

    *****

    SS/MS

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Ministry of Textiles earns revenue of INR 3,75,000, frees 15,606 Sq ft space, reviews 19,882 files and weeds out 2,462 files under “Special Campaign 4.0”

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:21PM by PIB Delhi

    Ministry of Textiles along with its organizations had commenced the “Special Campaign 4.0” from 2nd October till 31st October, 2024. It is a significant initiative aimed at achieving the goals of institutionalizing Swachhata and minimizing pendency.

    The “Special Campaign 4.0” comprises of two phases. Preparatory Phase was carried out from 16th September 2024 to 30th September 2024, the Ministry had set specific targets, including the identification of cleanliness campaign sites, planning for space management & office beautification, recognizing scrap & redundant items, and identification of VIP References, Public Grievances &Appeals for resolution. Files had been identified for reviewing for the purpose of weeding out. Further Scrap material had also been identified in the form of obsolete electronic items, broken and dilapidated furniture etc. for disposal.

    As on date Ministry achievement includes 19,882 files reviewed, 2,462 files weeded out. A total of 15,606 Sq ft space had been freed and revenue of over INR 3,75,000 has been earned.

    Ministry underlines its unwavering commitment towards achieving the targets set under “Special Campaign 4.0,” making the initiative a notable success and reaffirming the Ministry’s dedication for institutionalizing Swachhata and minimizing pendency across its operations.

     

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Special Campaign 4.0 in full swing to minimize the pendency and institutionalizing Swachhata in the Ministry of Culture

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:31PM by PIB Delhi

    During second week of Implementation Phase of Special Campaign 4.0, Ministry of Culture along with its Attached, Subordinate and Autonomous Organizations is enthusiastically participating in the Special Campaign 4.0 in full swing to minimize the pendency and institutionalizing Swachhata

    Ministry has freed approx. 19407 Sq. Ft. of area by disposing of scrap and generated revenue of Rs. 9,37,375. Besides 6334 physical files and 1630 e-files out of 12668 physical files & 3261 E-files, respectively have been reviewed.

    Best Initiatives: As part of best initiatives, some of the organizations under Ministry of Culture have undertaken the following initiatives: –

    1. The Victoria Memorial Hall in Kolkata has implemented the practice of using a waste composting machine to manage its organic waste efficiently. This eco-friendly initiative helps convert garden waste, such as leaves and plant trimmings, into compost. The compost is then used to fertilize the memorial’s lush gardens, promoting sustainable landscaping. The benefits include reduced waste sent to landfills, decreased carbon footprint, and the creation of nutrient-rich soil, contributing to greener surroundings while promoting environmental awareness among visitors.

     

     

    1. Preventive and Curative Conservation of the Rāmāyaṇaa manuscript in the Asiatic Society, Kolkata

     

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: “Music and dance are languages that transcend borders and are universally understood”: Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi

    Source: Government of India

    “Music and dance are languages that transcend borders and are universally understood”: Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi

    “Engaging youth in such festivals helps them stay connected to their roots and strengthens their role in nation-building”: Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi

    Union Minister of Culture and Tourism Shri Gajendra Singh Shekhawat Inaugurates International Festival on Indian Dance

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:33PM by PIB Delhi

    The Sangeet Natak Akademi hosted its first-ever International Festival on Indian Dance, featuring artists from around the world. Prime Minister Narendra Modi shared a special message for the festival, highlighting the significance of dance in India’s cultural heritage and its role in engaging youth with the nation’s traditions.

    The six-day festival was inaugurated by Shri Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, Minister of Culture and Tourism, at the A.P. Shinde Symposium Hall, NASC Complex, Pusa, New Delhi. The event brings together artists, scholars, and students to celebrate and explore the diversity and richness of Indian dance forms.

    In his message, Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi expressed gratitude to the Sangeet Natak Akademi and the Ministry of Culture, stating, “This is a historic moment and a memorable occasion for all of us. The participation of artists from various nations helps in cultural exchange. Music and dance are languages that transcend borders and are universally understood.” PM Modi highlighted the significance of dance for the younger generation, calling it an integral part of India’s cultural identity. He added, “The earliest scriptures dedicated to performing arts were written by Bharat Muni in India. Carrying forward this legacy is both a source of pride and a responsibility.” He emphasized that engaging youth in such festivals helps them stay connected to their roots and strengthens their role in nation-building.

    Speaking on the occasion, Minister of Culture and Tourism, Shri Gajendra Singh Shekhawat elaborates that, “This festival celebrates the grand tradition of Indian dance, bringing together artists, scholars, and practitioners from across the globe to honor our cultural heritage. Like the ever-flowing Ganga, these traditions thrive through the dedication of generations, connecting us to a deeper unity amidst diversity. He said that I come from the deserts of Rajasthan, where art flourished even in scarcity. I have witnessed how music and dance bring joy and meaning to life, just as Mirabai’s devotional songs did. In today’s turbulent world, where geopolitical instability and moral decline are prevalent, India offers a cultural compass through its ancient wisdom, arts, and values. As global acceptance of our practices—from yoga to Ayurveda—grows, it is our responsibility to carry this legacy forward. This festival serves as a platform to exchange ideas, like the churning of the ocean that produced nectar, empowering India and the world with inspiration and direction for future generations.”

    Ms. Uma Nanduri, Joint Secretary of the Ministry of Culture, extended her heartfelt congratulations to the Sangeet Natak Akademi for organizing this incredible event and bringing together so many young participants. At the Ministry of Culture, we are working towards the welfare and equality of the cultural, artistic, and dance communities. We are committed to achieving significant progress in the years ahead under the leadership of our culture minister.”

    Dr. Sonal Mansingh addressed the media, stating, “Hard movement has been replenished again and again by dance. The idea of Nataraj attains greater significance in our times. When people are talking about scientific advancement, artificial intelligence, and more, I fear artificial intelligence might one day lead to a scenario where Sonal Mansingh dances with the help of AI. We have to step ahead while accumulating all these things with propriety, balance, and an understanding of creativity.”

    Dr. Sandhya Purecha, Chairperson, Sangeet Natak Akademi, stated, that she had the good fortune to experience a wide array of performing arts across India. It was almost instinctive that I envisioned uniting all our rich and diverse dance traditions under one roof for a nuanced exploration of Indian dance in its many dimensions. As Prime Minister stated, preserving and carrying forward such a rich legacy is a source of pride as well as a responsibility.”

    About The festival:

    The International Festival on Indian Dance, organized by the Sangeet Natak Akademi, is bringing together artists, scholars, dance critics, and performers from around the world. The festival kicked off today. It will include thirty seminars exploring various themes, including the historical and contemporary evolution of Indian dance, dance education, research methodologies, and the impact of artificial intelligence on the arts. Discussions will also cover corporate social responsibility (CSR) funding and sustainable livelihoods for performers.

    Each evening, the Kamani Auditorium will feature cultural performances showcasing the talents of renowned artists, including Dr. Sonal Mansingh and Ramli Ibrahim, as well as solo and group acts from India and abroad. Additionally, two exhibitions, opening today, will be featured: one at the Lalit Kala Akademi highlighting the history of the Sangeet Natak Akademi and another at the A.P. Shinde Symposium Hall showcasing the achievements of participating artists. The festival aims to foster discussions on sustainable careers in the arts and promote institutional support for Indian dance, creating a platform for collaboration and cultural exchange.

    About Sangeet Natak Akademi:

    About Sangeet Natak Akademi: Sangeet Natak Akademi- India’s national academy of music, dance and drama – is the first national academy of the arts set up by the Republic of India. It was created by a resolution of the (then) Ministry of Education, Government of India, dated 31 May 1952.

    The Akademi became functional the following year, with the appointment of its first Chairman, Dr P.V. Rajamannar, and the formation of its all-India council of representatives, the General Council. The first President of India, Dr Rajendra Prasad, inaugurated it on 28 January 1953 at a special function held in the Parliament House. Since its inception, the Akademi has been functioning as the apex body in the field of Performing arts in the country, preserving and promoting the vast intangible heritage of India’s diverse culture expressed in forms of music, dance and drama. In furtherance of its objectives, the Akademi coordinates and collaborates with Government and arts academies of different States and Union Territories of the Union of India, as also with major cultural institutions in the country.

    The Akademi establishes and looks after institutions and projects of national importance in the field of the performing arts. As the apex body specializing in the Performing arts, the Akademi also renders advice and assistance to the Government of India in the task of formulating and implementing policies and programmes in the field of the performing arts. Additionally, the Akademi carries a part of the responsibilities of the state for fostering cultural contacts between various regions in India, and between India and the world.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Department of Expenditure along with its organizations is implementing the Special Campaign 4.0 for institutionalizing swachhata and minimizing pendency

    Source: Government of India

    Department of Expenditure  along with its organizations is implementing the Special Campaign 4.0 for institutionalizing swachhata and minimizing pendency

    Campaign aims to improve overall cleanliness of Government offices and enhance public experience of common public with Government Offices

    Special health camps organised for Safai Mitras

    Swachhata pledge administered

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:44PM by PIB Delhi

    The Department of Expenditure along with its organizations namely Controller General of Accounts, Chief Adviser Cost, Central Pension Accounting Office, Arun Jaitley National Institute of Financial Management is implementing the Special Campaign 4.0 for institutionalizing swachhata and minimizing pendency. The Campaign aims to improve overall cleanliness of Government offices and enhance public experience of common public with Government Offices.

    The Campaign started with the Preparatory Phase from 16th to 30th September, 2024, wherein targets/ activities under various categories have been identified for implementation/disposal during Implementation Phase from 2nd to 31st October, 2024. With the start of implementation phase w.e.f 2nd October, 2024, the Department of Expenditure has started liquidating the pendencies/ targets identified in respect of Public Grievances, Public Grievances Appeals, MP References, State Government References, Inter Ministerial Reference, PMO References, simplification of rules/ procedures, record management, etc. During the remaining period of this phase, the focus will be on achieving maximum disposal of the identified targets.

    Apart from identifying and liquidating pendencies as well as regular cleaning activities, the Department of Expenditure  also undertook  thematic activities/practices during the Campaign.-

    The Senior Officers of the Department inspected the offices and building premises in North Block to monitor the preparations/ progress of the Campaign and emphasized on maintaining highest standards of cleanliness.

     

       

     

      

    A Medical Test Camp under Safai Mitra Surakasha Shivir was conducted on 17th September, 2024 at North Block, New Delhi for Safai Mitras. A team of lab technicians collected their blood samples for the purpose of conducting basic medicals tests such as LFT, KFT, Blood Sugar (HbA1c + BSF) and HMG. A total of 102 Safai Mitras participated in the Camp.

     

     

     

    Safai Mitra Surakasha Shivir was organized on 20th September, 2024 in North Block, New Delhi for Safai Mitras. The Shivir was inaugurated by Dr. Manoj Govil, Secretary (Expenditure) in a traditional lamp-lighting ceremony. More than 100 Safai Mitras, who underwent medical blood tests on 17th September, 2024, were examined in the Shivir by two general physicians from Rural Health Training Centre, Najafgarh and an Ophthalmologist from Sharp Sight Eye Centre, New Delhi. The medicines prescribed by the Doctors were also provided to the Safai Mitras. The Shivir concluded with a closing note of Additional Secretary (Pers.) and by felicitating the Doctors and their support staffs.

     

    Finance Secretary & Secretary (DIPAM), in presence of Secretaries of Department of Economic Affairs and Department of Expenditure, administered Swachhata Pledge to officials/staff of the Departments of Expenditure, Economic Affairs and Revenue on 25th September, 2024 to encourage cleanliness, environment protection and sustainable development.

     

    In addition to above activities, the Department of Expenditure has organized Swachhata Shramdaan drive on 3rd October, 2024 in the premises of North Block, New Delhi under the Special Campaign 4.0. The Secretaries of Department of Economic Affairs and Department of Expenditure led the cleanliness drive and other Senior Officers as well as Staff of Department of Expenditure, Department of Economic Affairs and Department of Revenue actively participated in the mega cleanliness drive to spread awareness about cleanliness and environmental friendliness.

     

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Sahitya Akademi at Frankfurt International Book Fair

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:44PM by PIB Delhi

    Sahitya Akademi, India’s premier literary institution, is participating in the 75th edition of the prestigious Frankfurt International Book Fair to be held from 16 to 20 October 2024 in Frankfurt, Germany. Frankfurter Buchmesse, the world’s largest trade fair for books, brings best publishers and authors from all over the world. In this edition, Sahitya Akademi will be displaying 100 of its titles and will be engaging the best publishers from around the globe to exchange the permissions. This effort is part of Sahitya Akademi’s commitment to promote Indian literature beyond the shores of India. Apart from professional publishing engagements, Sahitya Akademi will be organizing three literary events at the fair. On 16 October 2024, there will be a panel discussion on the “Literary Heritage of India” featuring eminent writers and scholars, Prof. Badri Narayan, Prof Dhananjay Singh and Sri Vishwas Patil. On the evening of 16th October 2024, there will be a “Meet the Author” programme with Sri Vishwas Patil. Both the events will be moderated by Dr K. Sreenivasarao, Secretary, Sahitya Akademi. Prof Badri Narayan is an eminent poet and Director and Professor at the G.B. Pant Institute of Social Science, Allahabad, Prof Dhananjay Singh is the Member Secretary of ICSSR and Sri Vishwas Patil is an eminent Marathi writer and scholar. On 17th a Meet the Author is scheduled with Prof. Badri Narayan, moderated by Secretary Sahitya Akademi. Sahitya Akademi sends Indian writers’ delegations to attend the fair whenever Akademi takes part in the book fair to enable them to have the firsthand exposure of various literatures from around the world and interact with the best minds from various countries.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Department of Financial Services along with its organisations organises massive cleanliness activities under Special campaign 4.0

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Department of Financial Services along with its organisations organises massive cleanliness activities under Special campaign 4.0

    More than 10000 sites cleaned across the country and approx. 3.50 lakh sq. ft have been freed up

    Platform of Special Campaign 4.0 being used to spread the awareness among general public on Cyber Fraud, Nomination in accounts, Updation of KYC

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:49PM by PIB Delhi

    The Department of Financial Services along with its organisations (PSBs, PSFIs, PSICs, RRBs etc.), have carried out massive cleaning activities covering its own premises and public places including bus stands, beaches, temples and schools during the second week of the Special Campaign 4.0.

    More than 10000 sites have been cleaned across the country and approx. 3.50 lakh sq. ft have been freed. These freed spaces will be utilized for various purposes like lounge area for customers, parking, storage, creche for employees etc.

    Furthermore, all the Public Sector Banks and RRBs are undertaking other activities in campaign mode viz. dormant accounts activation, renewal of locker agreements, pension grievances redressal and nomination updation in accounts. More than 35 lakhs dormant accounts have been activated and more than 10 lakhs nomination has been updated.  More than 20,000 pensioners have been contacted during the first fortnight of the campaign to address their grievances and educate them with various initiatives taken by PSBs like online submission of life certificate, door step banking facilities etc.

    The organisations of DFS are utilizing the platform of Special Campaign 4.0 to spread the awareness among general public on Cyber Fraud, Nomination in accounts, Updation of KYC etc.

     

     

     

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Union Minister of State Sh. Jitendra Singh emphasizes collaboration and innovation as key drivers of India’s climate action

    Source: Government of India

    Union Minister of State Sh. Jitendra Singh emphasizes collaboration and innovation as key drivers of India’s climate action

    National Action Plan on Climate Change quintessential to India’s climate strategy and adaptation efforts:- Dr. Jitendra Singh

    Dr. Singh urges citizens for collective efforts in climate fight, encourages simple daily steps towards sustainability

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:46PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science & Technology, Dr. Jitendra Singh has said that there is an urgent need for decisive action to combat climate change, a challenge that is no longer a distant threat but an immediate reality affecting lives, economies, and the future of the planet. He was addressing the Times Now Global Sustainability Alliance’s 6th edition of the SDG Summit 2024 in New Delhi today. The theme for the address was Game Changing India’s Science Based Targets for Climate Change.

    Recognizing India’s responsibility as one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, Dr. Singh reaffirmed the country’s commitment to balancing sustainable development with global climate change mitigation efforts. He highlighted the importance of science-based targets, which, in alignment with the goals of the Paris Agreement, aim to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius, with aspirations to restrict it to 1.5 degrees.

    He outlined India’s key climate targets, which include:

    A reduction of 33-35% in greenhouse gas emissions intensity by 2030, using 2005 levels as a baseline.

    A commitment to increasing non-fossil fuel energy capacity to 500 GW.

    An ambitious goal to achieve net-zero emissions by 2070.

    The Minister of State underscored the importance of collaboration in achieving these targets, urging stronger partnerships between government, industry, academia, and civil society. He highlighted that innovation will be central to India’s strategy, whether through advancements in renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, or green technologies. The government is committed to supporting research and development to drive these innovations under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership.

     

    Dr. Singh pointed to the robust policy framework established by the Government of India to guide climate action, with the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) playing a pivotal role. The NAPCC, launched in 2008, comprises eight key missions that address various aspects of climate adaptation and mitigation:

    1. National Solar Mission: Aims to promote solar energy technologies and achieve 100 GW of solar power capacity by 2022.

    2. National Wind Energy Mission: Focuses on expanding wind energy capacity and encouraging innovation in wind technology.

    3. National Mission for Energy Efficiency: Seeks to enhance energy efficiency through programs such as the Perform, Achieve and Trade (PAT) scheme.

    4. National Mission on Sustainable Habitat: Aims to promote energy efficiency in buildings, urban planning, and waste management.

    5. National Water Mission: Focuses on water conservation and equitable distribution, addressing the impacts of climate change on water resources.

    6. National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem: Works to protect the fragile Himalayan ecosystem through research and monitoring.

    7. National Mission on Agricultural Adaptation: Aims to build resilience in agriculture by promoting sustainable practices and crop diversification.

    8. National Mission on Green India: Seeks to increase forest cover, restore degraded ecosystems, and enhance ecosystem services.

    Moreover, He emphasized that India has developed various sector-specific strategies to strengthen its climate goals. These goals include:

    Energy Sector: Investments in renewable energy sources like solar, wind, and biomass, alongside the implementation of smart grids and energy storage.

    Transportation: Promotion of electric vehicles (EVs) and enhancement of public transportation systems.

    Agriculture: Focus on climate-resilient crops, improved irrigation, and sustainable farming practices.

    Urban Development: Encouragement of sustainable urban planning, green building practices, and waste management initiatives.

    Water Resources: Promotion of water conservation, rainwater harvesting, and enhanced river basin management.

    Disaster Management: Strengthening resilience against climate-induced disasters through improved early warning systems and community preparedness.

    Dr. Singh urged every citizen to actively participate in the fight against climate change, emphasizing that simple changes in daily life can have a significant impact. He stressed the importance of fostering a culture of sustainability and urged all stakeholders to collaborate towards a resilient and sustainable future.

    He congratulated the organisers and wished success to the event.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Repayment of ‘6.18% GS 2024’

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:53PM by PIB Delhi

    The outstanding balance of ‘6.18% GS 2024 is repayable at par on November 04, 2024. No interest will accrue thereon from the said date. In the event of a holiday being declared on repayment day by any State Government under the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, the Loan/s will be repaid by the paying offices in that State on the previous working day.

    As per sub-regulations 24(2) and 24(3) of Government Securities Regulations, 2007 payment of maturity proceeds to the registered holder of Government Security held in the form of Subsidiary General Ledger or Constituent Subsidiary General Ledger account or Stock Certificate, shall be made by a pay order incorporating the relevant particulars of his bank account or by credit to the account of the holder in any bank having facility of receipt of funds through electronic means. For the purpose of making payment in respect of the securities, the original subscriber or the subsequent holders of such Government Securities, shall submit the relevant particulars of their bank account well in advance.

     However, in the absence of relevant particulars of bank account / mandate for receipt of funds through electronic means, to facilitate repayment of the loan on the due date, holders may tender the securities, duly discharged, at the Public Debt Offices, Treasuries/Sub-Treasuries and branches of State Bank of India (at which they are enfaced / registered for payment of interest) 20 days in advance of the due date for repayment.

    The details of the procedure for receiving the discharge value may be obtained from any of the aforesaid paying offices.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: TCIL celebrates 46th Foundation Day on 15th Oct 2024

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:49PM by PIB Delhi

    Telecommunications Consultants India Limited (TCIL), a leading public sector undertaking, celebrated its 46th Foundation Day at a glittering function organized at SCOPE Convention Center, New Delhi on 15th October 2024, which was well attended by esteemed dignitaries from the industry, TCIL’s Ex- CMDs/Directors and employees.

     

    The celebration commenced with a traditional lamp lighting ceremony, followed by recitation of Ganesh Vandana. An audio video film encapsulating TCIL’s journey from building communication infrastructure in remote regions to becoming a pioneer in modern telecommunications across over 80 countries was rolled out.

    Shri Sanjeev Kumar, Chairman & Managing Director TCIL, delivered the keynote address, expressing his gratitude to the employees for their unwavering commitment and contributions to the company’s success. In a special presentation, Shri Kumar highlighted TCIL’s remarkable journey since its inception in 1978. He emphasized TCIL’s strategic alignment with the government’s ‘Make in India’ vision and its ambitious plans to expand its services globally. TCIL’s impressive financial performance including a cumulative dividend of Rs. 4,055.69 crore paid to the government was also acknowledged.

     

    Shri A.S Bansal, Ex- CMD TCIL addressed the gathering & shared his experience on how decision for making investment in BHL was taken and how TCIL Bhawan was constructed.

    Shri Surajit Mandol, Director (Finance), shared TCIL’s robust financial position, noting that the company achieved operating revenue of Rs 2,557.94 crore in 2023-24, surpassing the DPE target. He highlighted the impressive growth in revenue and operating margin over the past four years.

    Shri D. Porpathasekaran, Director (Technical), underscored TCIL’s diversification and its execution of projects in the fields of telecommunications

    and information technology both domestically and internationally. He mentioned the company’s ongoing projects in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, Mauritius, Nepal, and several African countries.

     

    Shri Arun Kumar Chaubey, Director (Projects), emphasized on developing in- house expertise for solution designing in the key focus areas of technology like Data Centre, Cybersecurity, Digital Transformation and Telecom.

    Other notable highlights of the event included addresses by Shri Pramod Kumar Choudhary, Chief Vigilance Officer and Shri Rohit Vaswani, Independent Director.

    The winners of the “Annual Awards” for the FY 2023-24 instituted for recognition of contribution by the Best Business Units/Individuals were felicitated on this occasion.

    A souvenir commemorating TCIL’s contribution to India’s Digital Infrastructure dreams was released in collaboration with Elets Technomedia Pvt Ltd, media Partner for this event. The updated version of TCIL’s HR Manual was also released on this occasion. A melodious cultural performance was arranged on this day.

    The event concluded with a vote of thanks by Dr. Ravi Gupta, Founder-CEO of Elets Techno media Pvt Ltd.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation, Shri Amit Shah hails the decision of Union Cabinet

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation, Shri Amit Shah hails the decision of Union Cabinet

    Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation expresses gratitude towards Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi for taking historic decisions

    Union Cabinet approves the Pandit Deendayal Upadhyay Multi-Tracking Project in Varanasi at a cost of ₹2,642 crore, which includes the construction of a rail and road bridge over the Ganges River

    Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi ji is dedicated to farmer welfare and under his leadership, the Union Cabinet today approved an increase in the MSP for Rabi crops for the 2025-26 season

    The MSP for rapeseed and mustard has seen the largest increase of ₹300 per quintal, while there has been a historic increase of ₹275 per quintal for lentil (Masur)

    These increased MSPs will enhance farmers’ incomes, making our farmers even more prosperous

    During the festive season, the Cabinet announced an additional 3% increase in Dearness Allowance (DA) for central government employees and Dearness Relief (DR) for pensioners

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 6:56PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation Shri Amit Shah hailed the decisions taken by the Union Cabinet today. In a series of posts on the X platform, Shri Amit Shah expressed gratitude towards Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi for taking historic decisions.

    Shri Amit Shah said that under the leadership of Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi, the Union Cabinet has approved the Varanasi-Pandit Deendayal Upadhyay Multi-Tracking Project at a cost of ₹2,642 crore, which includes the construction of a rail and road bridge over the Ganges River. This project will expand the railway network by 30 kilometers. Union Home Minister said, he is grateful to Prime Minister Modi Ji for continuously promoting connectivity in the country.

    Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation said, Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi ji is dedicated to farmer welfare and under his leadership, the Union Cabinet today approved an increase in the MSP for Rabi crops for the 2025-26 season. The MSP for rapeseed and mustard has seen the largest increase of ₹300 per quintal, while there has been a historic increase of ₹275 per quintal for lentil (Masur). These increased MSPs will enhance farmers’ incomes, making our farmers even more prosperous.  Gratitude towards Modi Ji for addressing every concern of the farmers.

    Shri Amit Shah said, during the festive season, under the leadership of Prime Minister Modi, the Cabinet today announced an additional 3% increase in Dearness Allowance (DA) for central government employees and Dearness Relief (DR) for pensioners. This decision will benefit 49.18 lakh central government employees and 64.89 lakh pensioners. Heartfelt gratitude towards Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi for this special gift.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: North-East is on the radar of nation’s development, asserts Vice-President

    Source: Government of India (2)

    North-East is on the radar of nation’s development, asserts Vice-President

    North-East is significant contributor to unity, economic progress and cultural essence of the nation, notes VP

    If there is heaven it is in India, if there is heavenly spirit, it is in Meghalaya, remarks VP

    Look East and Act East Policy resulted in exponential growth in the region, says VP

    Freefall of information that has no factual foundation can not be allowed on public platforms, emphasises VP

    We can not afford to be loose cannons, ignoring our basic commitment to our nation -VP

    Posted On: 16 OCT 2024 7:02PM by PIB Delhi

    The Vice-President, Shri JagdeepDhankhar, today remarked, “North-East is on the radar of nation’s development.” He emphasized that the North-East is significant contributor to unity, economic progress and cultural essence of the nation. Acknowledging the North-East as a very important part of our country, Shri Dhankhar lauded the Look East and Act East Policy which have resulted in exponential growth in communication, connectivity and development of airports in the region.

    Expressing concern over ignorance and ill-informed narratives, the Vice-President questioned if freefall of information that has no factual foundation be allowed on public platforms. He further asked if we could afford to be loose cannons, ignoring our basic commitment to our nation. He upheld that Bharat is on the rise and it is indivisible and stressed on the youth being informed. Shri Dhankhar further exhorted the youth by calling them the most vital contributors and significant stakeholders in India’s march to being a developed nation by 2047.

    Addressing the gathering at the foundation stone laying ceremony of Meghalaya Skill and Innovation Hub At Shillongtoday, the Vice-President highlighted that skill is neither discovered nor innovated, it is in fact the optimal exploitation of talent of a person in that specified field which gives the human resource a qualitative cutting-edge. He underscored that skilling is no longer a quality, it is our need.

    The Vice-President also highlighted the formation of a dedicated Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship and allocation of 60,000 crores towards internship of 5 lakh young individuals over a period of five years, adding that villages and semi-urban towns must be hub of skill centres.

    On his experience in Meghalaya, the Vice-President said, “If there is heaven it is in India, if there is heavenly spirit, it is in Meghalaya.” He asserted that the engine of Meghalaya’s economy could be driven by tourism alone. He further added that nature has bountifully gifted Meghalaya and urged them to exploit it fully by having very talented skilled people in the shape of human resource.

    Shri C.H. Vijayashankar, Governor of Meghalaya, Shri Conrad K Sangma, Chief Minister of Meghalaya, Dr. Mazel AmpareenLyngdoh, Cabinet Minister, Shri Donald Phillips Wahlang, Chief Secretary to the Govt. of Meghalaya and other dignitaries were also present on the occasion.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Experts of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women Commend Canada’s Childcare Programme, Ask about Women’s Representation on Boards of Private Sector Companies and Gender-Based Violence against Indigenous Women

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women today concluded its consideration of the tenth periodic report of Canada, with Committee Experts praising Canada’s childcare programme, and raising questions about the lack of representation of women on the boards of private sector companies and gender-based violence against indigenous women by extractive industry workers.

    One Committee Expert said the State’s childcare programme was very effective in increasing women’s labour participation.  However, the Expert noted that there were shortages in places and staff in some childcare centres.  How was the Government addressing this?

    Another Committee Expert asked if there were mandatory reporting mechanisms for gender representation in large private organizations, where women occupied just one-fifth of board positions.  Just six per cent of management roles were held by women of colour.  How was the Government addressing these issues?

    A Committee Expert noted an increased level of gender-based violence against indigenous women caused by influxes of male extractive industry workers in indigenous communities.  How was the State party ensuring that the free, prior and informed consent of indigenous women was sought regarding extractive activities?

    Introducing the report, Gail Mitchell, Assistant Deputy Minister, Departmental Programmes and Operations, Department of Women and Gender Equality of Canada and head of the delegation, said that in 2018, Canada implemented several measures that strengthened its national machinery to advance women’s equality, including the establishment of the Department for Women and Gender Equality Canada.  The Canadian Gender Budgeting Act of 2018 incorporated gender-responsive budgeting into legislation.

    In the 2021 federal budget, the delegation reported, the Government had devoted 9.2 billion Canadian dollars into ongoing investment in early learning and childcare.  This funding promoted access, affordability and inclusion in childcare.  Fees had already been reduced by around 50 per cent on average across the country. Work was ongoing to address shortcomings in places and staff.

    On women’s representation in the private sector, the delegation said that in 2024, legal amendments were made to require private employers to disclose statistics on the representation of women and equity-deserving groups.  The Canadian Apprenticeship Strategy was supporting women to obtain careers in fields that were traditionally male dominated.

    The Government had developed a plan of action to address violence related to the influx of extractive industry workers in indigenous communities, the delegation said. It provided funding for training for workers on respecting women’s rights, activities to identify risks, and capacity building activities to prepare communities for the arrival of workers. This work had also been expanded to the shipping industry.

    In closing remarks, Ms. Mitchell said the dialogue had been rich, with important contributions from Committee Experts and civil society. The Committee had asked many questions that the State party would do its best to follow up on.

    Marion Bethel, Committee Rapporteur and Acting Chair, in her concluding remarks, said that the dialogue had provided insight on the situation of women and girls in Canada.  The Committee would develop recommendations that would aim to strengthen implementation of the Convention for the benefit of all women and girls in the State.

    The delegation of Canada consisted of representatives from the Department of Justice; Department of Women and Gender Equality; Federal Secretariat on Early Learning and Child Care Employment and Social Development; Department of Public Safety; Statistics Canada; Department of Environment and Climate Change; Department of Global Affairs; Department of Canadian Heritage; Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs; Quebec Ministry of International Relations and la Francophonie; and the Permanent Mission of Canada to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Committee will issue concluding observations on the report of Canada at the end of its eighty-ninth session on 25 October.  All documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, can be found on the session’s webpage.  Meeting summary releases can be found here.  The webcast of the Committee’s public meetings can be accessed via the UN Web TV webpage.

    The Committee will next meet in public at 10 a.m. on Thursday, 17 October to consider the ninth periodic report of Japan (CEDAW/C/JPN/9).

    Report

    The Committee has before it the tenth periodic report of Canada (CEDAW/C/CAN/10).

    Presentation of Report

    GAIL MITCHELL, Assistant Deputy Minister, Departmental Programmes and Operations, Department of Women and Gender Equality of Canada and head of the delegation, said that since its last appearance before the Committee, Canada had made progress in advancing gender equality, but recognised that there was still work to be done.  Canada remained committed to eliminating all forms of discrimination against women and girls.  The State was advancing key priorities regarding respect for the rights of indigenous women and girls, the elimination of gender-based violence, and the empowerment of women and gender-diverse people in the economy and leadership. Canada was also deeply committed to accelerating reconciliation and renewing its relationship with First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples.

    Following a 2016 recommendation from the Committee, Canada’s federal, provincial and territorial governments endorsed a ten-year National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence in 2022.  Combined funding from federal, provincial and territorial governments to address and prevent gender-based violence was more than one billion Canadian dollars over four years, starting in 2022-2023.  This funding contributed to measures such as building capacity to prevent violence through educational resources and other prevention initiatives.  The first annual report on implementation of this funding would be published this year.

    In 2018, Canada implemented several measures that strengthened its national machinery to advance women’s equality, including the establishment of the Department for Women and Gender Equality Canada.  The Canadian Gender Budgeting Act of 2018 incorporated gender-responsive budgeting into legislation and required the Government to consider the impact of policies on all Canadians, particularly women and marginalised groups.  The Gender Results Framework, the Government’s vision for gender equality, was also put in place.

    In 2021, Canada passed the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act to advance the implementation of the Declaration, and in 2023, the State released a detailed action plan to implement the Act.  This action plan included 181 measures to advance transformative change and reconciliation with indigenous peoples over the next five years, including measures to address violence against indigenous women, girls and gender-diverse people.  Following a recommendation from the Committee, the State established an independent national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls, and in response to the inquiry’s findings, a national action plan was launched. The Federal Government had also developed an indigenous justice strategy and made investments to provide safe spaces and transitional housing for indigenous women, children and gender-diverse people experiencing and fleeing violence.

    In 2017, Parliament adopted a bill that added “gender identity or expression” to the list of prohibited grounds of discrimination in the Canadian Human Rights Act and to the list of characteristics of identifiable groups protected from hate propaganda in the Criminal Code.  In 2022, the first “Federal 2SLGBTQI+ Action Plan” was launched.  It aimed to advance rights and equality for this community, prioritising community work and establishing a Partnership Committee between this community and the Government.  Canada had also developed the Gender, Diversity and Inclusion Statistics Hub, and invested 170 million dollars in 2021 in advancing the Disaggregated Data Action Plan.  Data collection on sex and gender at birth had been standardised.

    Since 2019, the Government had also launched two anti-racism strategies that represented an investment of over 200 million dollars.  Last month, Canada’s Action Plan on Combatting Hate was also unveiled. It provided more support to victims of hate and at-risk communities, investing 273.6 million dollars over six years. 

    In 2021, the Government made investments up to 30 billion dollars over five years to build a Canada-wide early learning and childcare system with provinces, territories, and indigenous partners.  Over 750,000 children were already benefitting from the system; eight provinces and territories were delivering regulated childcare for an average of 10 dollars or less.  In 2023, Canada’s labour force participation rate among core-aged mothers with young children was at a record 79.7 per cent, nearly four percentage points higher than pre-pandemic levels, and the overall labour force participation rate of women aged 25 to 54 reached an all-time high of 85.5 per cent. 

    The women entrepreneurship strategy aimed to increase women-owned businesses’ access to the financing, networks, and expertise they needed to start up, scale up, and access new markets.  In January 2023, Canada ratified the International Labour Organization Violence and Harassment Convention, which came into force in January 2024.

    Canada had been pursuing a feminist foreign policy since 2016 through the Feminist International Assistance Policy; the Trade Diversification Strategy, with its inclusive approach to trade; and the National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security.  Canada ranked as a top Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development bilateral donor for the share of aid supporting gender equality for the past five years.  It continued to rank among the top donors investing in women’s rights organizations and ending violence against women and girls, as well as in sexual and reproductive health and rights.

    Questions by a Committee Expert 

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, said Canada had made many efforts to address gender equality, including the commendable federal strategy for gender equality.  Canada had closed 76.5 per cent of the gender gap.  There had been an almost overwhelming number of reforms aiming to promote gender equality over the reporting period.  How did the State party ensure that the substantial funds invested and the various programmes created to promote gender equality were effective?  Did the State party have plans to improve disaggregated data on gender, ethnicity, race and other characteristics? 

    The current framework for responding to treaty body recommendations reportedly did not engage sufficiently with civil society.  How would the framework be improved?  There had been few programmes targeting men and promoting positive masculinity.  What was the State party doing to address masculinised stereotypes and to encourage men to take up care roles?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the national action plan to end gender-based violence included multi-level actions to engage men and boys, including educational programmes.  The federal “It’s Not Just” campaign aimed to raise men and boys’ awareness about various forms of violence, including technology-assisted violence.

    For years, Statistics Canada had collected statistics through the national census.  In 2021, data on gender was collected in the census for the first time. A disaggregated data action plan was also launched in 2021, which aimed to improve data on marginalised groups. There were plans to add questions on gender identity and ethnicity in future surveys.  Funding was also being provided to regional partners to improve their disaggregated data.

    In Quebec, childcare aimed to develop the potential of children and support women’s labour participation. Daily costs for childcare users were around 10 dollars, thanks to Government subsidies.  This had helped to increase the regional employment rate to over 90 per cent.

    The federal body providing follow-up to recommendations from United Nations human rights mechanisms planned to launch more formalised and frequent engagement with indigenous peoples and other stakeholders regarding the implementation of these recommendations. A national database tracking the implementation of these recommendations was being piloted.  Women and Gender Equality Canada was working to implement the Committee’s recommendations and reported on efforts to promote gender equality annually.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, asked if there was a protocol for integrating inputs from civil society into policy planning and if there was media coverage of the Government’s interaction with stakeholders.

    Another Committee Expert said the childcare programme was very effective in increasing women’s labour participation, but there were shortages in places and staff in some childcare centres.  How was the Government addressing this?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Government engaged broadly with civil society when conducting surveys.  Depending on the topic, there was more or less engagement with the media.

    In the 2021 federal budget, the Government had devoted 9.2 billion dollars into ongoing investment into early learning and childcare.  This funding promoted access, affordability and inclusion in childcare.  A national advisory council on early learning was also established.  The Government aimed to create 22,000 new places in childcare by 2026.  Fees had already been reduced by around 50 per cent on average across the country.  Work was ongoing to address shortcomings in places and staff, and the Government was monitoring the situation in collaboration with civil society.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    One Committee Expert asked how the work of Canada’s various bodies promoting gender equality was coordinated? Did these bodies have a sufficient budget and a national presence?  What communication did they have with women’s organizations?

    Another Committee Expert noted the State party’s efforts to achieve gender equality.  Significant challenges remained, however.  Marginalised women continued to experience significant barriers to public participation.  In 2024, temporary special measures were issued to increase women’s representation in politics and science, technology, engineering and maths fields.  Were these measures effective?  Was their implementation being independently reviewed? How had the State party modernised the Employment Equity Act?  How did the State party ensure that temporary special measures were inclusive of marginalised women?

    The Committee appreciated the State party’s ratification of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.  To what extent were indigenous peoples involved in deciding their future?

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, said that the Gender-Based Analysis Plus Initiative reportedly remained insufficient.  Were there plans to improve it?  What were the barriers to engaging with civil society?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Gender Results Framework included key actions to end gender-based violence, reduce poverty and promote gender equality.  It was underpinned by data collection.  The Government was engaging regularly with stakeholders, including civil society organizations, which it supported with funding to implement projects as part of the framework.

    Over 30 per cent of representatives in Canada’s Government were women.  Women held prominent positions in the Government, including Deputy Prime Minister.  The Supreme Court had five women judges and four male judges.  Around 47 per cent of judges in the judiciary were women, and women represented 47 per cent of Canada’s heads of missions in its foreign service.

    A taskforce had been set up to review the Employment Equity Act, which had produced a report with recommendations to modernise the Act in 2023.  The recommendations included measures to make terminology and definitions in the Act more inclusive.  Consultations were currently being held on proposed revisions.

    The Government had several mechanisms to engage with indigenous partners.  There were legally established mechanisms for engagement with these partners on specific topics, such as missing and murdered indigenous women and girls.  The Government had met with over 100 civil society organizations to discuss this topic. There were multiple sources of funding for building indigenous capacity.

    The Government had been working with various stakeholders to strengthen the Gender-Based Analysis Plus Initiative. Engagement with civil society on different issues was ongoing at all levels of Government; the Government was working to address gaps in this engagement.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    One Committee Expert said Canada had implemented several positive measures to address gender-based violence. However, the media continued to portray women in stereotyped manners.  Was the State party considering mechanisms for holding media accountable for harmful stereotypes?  There had been an alarming increase in hate speech against indigenous and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons.  There was also reportedly a culture of misogyny within the mounted police. Were there plans to address these issues? 

    Women continued to experience intimate partner violence at rates three times higher than men.  Did the State party plan to expand the Criminal Code’s definition of domestic violence to include psychological abuse and coercive control?  What measures were in place to ensure that survivors received effective remedies? The national action plan on missing and murdered indigenous women and girls was commendable, but more than 50 per cent of the plan’s measures were yet to be fully implemented.  How would the Government speed up these efforts? How would the Government tackle the continued practice of female genital cutting and ensure that medical practitioners were aware of regulations concerning free, prior and informed consent?

    Another Committee Expert said that between 2018 and 2022, the majority of trafficking victims in Canada were young women.  Disaggregated data on trafficking for all regions of Canada was still not available. In some regions, police did not have sufficient resources to address trafficking.  How did the national action plan on trafficking address these challenges? How did the Government ensure compensation for victims, including by seizing traffickers’ assets? 

    Legislation from 2014 prohibited the purchase of sex and defined prostitution as a form of exploitation. The act was in line with the Committee’s general recommendation 36.  The Government needed to continue with the implementation of the act.  What had been done to protect women in prostitution and ensure that marginalised women had means of obtaining livelihood other than prostitution?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Canada had implemented initiatives to make it easier for women to participate in the workforce, including measures supporting access to childcare, parental benefits, and legislation ensuring equal pay for equal work.  The Media Code prevented the broadcasting of material that was stigmatising on the basis of gender.  Data collected under the Gender Equality Framework included indicators on efforts to address gender stereotypes.

    Several institutional reforms had been made to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, including the establishment of a harassment resolution body.  Work was underway to ensure a safe workplace for employees.  The police had also taken steps to enhance the Gender-Based Analysis Plus Initiative.

    Hate crimes had increased dramatically over the past few years, disproportionately targeting marginalised groups.  The Government had launched an anti-hate action plan recently, which aimed to empower communities to identify and prevent violence, promote a sense of trust within communities, provide support for victims of hate-motivated crimes, and improve the availability of data on hate crimes.

    Canada was committed to addressing gaps in the Criminal Code related to gender-based violence.  The Government supported a bill proposing the creation of a new offence of coercive control.  The bill was currently before the Senate and would facilitate investigation and prosecution of the offence.  The Government had implemented reforms to the Criminal Code to better protect women and girls from gender-based violence.  Victims and survivors of crime now had the right to information and to seek restitution.  Canada had also made funding available to support victims to access the justice system. Free legal advice was provided to survivors of sexual assault.

    The Government of Quebec had made considerable efforts to address gender-based violence.  In 2021, it established a specialised tribunal for gender-based violence and established training for members of the judiciary on the subject.  An electronic bracelet was used to ensure that perpetrators of violence could not approach their victims.

    Annual reports were being produced on the implementation of the federal pathway on missing and murdered indigenous women and girls.  Most of the goals of the pathway were being advanced and two of them had been completed. A ministerial representative had engaged with over 600 civil society organizations and with governments on the proposal to establish an indigenous rights ombudsperson, and consideration of this proposal was ongoing.

    Canada’s foreign assistance included measures to address sexual and gender-based violence and harmful practices such as female genital mutilation and cutting.  Informed consent policies were administered at the local level.

    The national strategy to combat human trafficking was funded by an investment of over 52 million dollars over five years.  Federal and provincial tables were in place to assess the implementation of the plan. A national awareness raising campaign on trafficking was also in place.  The Government was working on the next iteration of the strategy, which would be informed by recent evaluations and consultations with domestic and international stakeholders, including victims.

    Canada was very concerned about the safety of persons engaged in the sex trade.  New offences were added in 2019 that criminalised the procurement of others to provide sexual services.  The Government continued to protect persons who provided sexual services, providing them with services suited to their diverse needs.  It was providing funding to prevent gender-based violence against women in the sex trade and to end stigmatisation of these women.  Canada’s model aimed to reduce demand for the sex trade while ensuring protection for women involved in sex work. 

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    A Committee Expert said the most recent federal budget did not commit specific funding to improve indigenous women’s safety; would this be addressed?  There was a lack of research on femicide, which was not recognised as a distinct crime.  Were there plans to do this?

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, asked if the Government ensured that persons who fled domestic violence and gender-based violence had access to shelter. How many journalists and media workers had been trained related to gender stereotyping?  Had there been a decline in gender stereotyping in the media?

    Another Committee Expert said the Education Act referenced online bullying, but more than four in five students had reported experiencing online violence.  How was the State party responding to this growing pandemic?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Justice Victims Fund provided support for victims of gender-based violence and domestic violence.  The national action plan to end gender-based violence provided funding to over 100 indigenous groups.

    There was no single definition of femicide in domestic legislation, but the conduct that it referred to was covered by the Criminal Code, which took into account aggravating factors, including evidence that the crime was motivated by hate related to gender. Gender-related homicide offenders received longer sentences overall than other homicide offenders.  The rate of gender-related homicides had generally declined since 2001.  A disproportionate percentage of victims were indigenous.

    Nova Scotia provided assistance to victims fleeing violent family situations.  Funding was provided for nine transition houses, crisis lines and housing support payments. 

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    A Committee Expert commended the State party for its strong representation of women in its foreign service, with women making up 53 per cent of this service.  However, women’s representation in other areas remained a concern.  Were there mandatory reporting mechanisms for large private organizations, where women occupied just one-fifth of board positions?  Were there policies for increasing women’s representation in politics? Just six per cent of management roles were held by women of colour.  How was the Government addressing these issues?

    What progress had been made to adopt draft legislation on hate speech?  Would the State party consider adopting legislation that allowed for the removal of online hate speech against women?

    Another Committee Expert congratulated Canada on its numerous legislative reforms and investments related to nationality rights for indigenous women, and its extensive efforts to overcome the legacy of the colonial period.  When would the State’s additional report on the Optional Protocol be submitted?  How had State investments helped to better protect indigenous women and girls from violence and address the root causes of this violence?

    How was the Government working to inform indigenous women and girls on their rights to nationality and indigenous status?  How many indigenous women and girls had benefitted from legal reforms related to this? What measures were in place to eliminate discrimination against women in their ability to transfer indigenous status? How accessible and affordable was the registration process?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said that in 2024, legal amendments were made to require financial institutions and other private employers to disclose statistics on the representation of women and equity-deserving groups.

    The Online Harms Act was currently in its second reading.  This was a priority bill for the Government.  The bill included a duty for social media services to remove sexualised content involving children, and would amend the Human Rights Act to recognise online hate speech as a human rights violation, allowing individuals to file complaints with the Human Rights Commission related to online hate speech.

    The Government hoped to draft a report on the implementation of the murdered and missing indigenous women and girls action plan by December this year.  Indigenous services had launched a collaborative project to assess the second-generation cut-off for indigenous status.  The Government was engaging regularly with indigenous persons who were affected by this cut-off.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, asked about efforts to promote the representation of indigenous women in all areas of public life.  What funding was provided to indigenous organizations? 

    Another Committee Expert praised the ambition of the State party’s third women, peace and security action plan. How was the State party addressing lethal autonomous weapons systems from the perspective of the women, peace and security agenda?  Canada had commendably joined other States to launch action in the International Court of Justice against the Taliban for restricting access to education for women and girls in Afghanistan.  What measures would the State party take to promote gender parity in educational programmes on artificial intelligence?  How would indigenous knowledge be included in policies related to data sovereignty?

    There was a crisis-level gap in education outcomes between indigenous and non-indigenous children; how was this being addressed?  How was the State party supporting access to education for indigenous girls?  There were calls to revise textbooks to strengthen education on indigenous heritage, culture and knowledge.  How would the State party respond to these calls?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Canada was considering amendments to the Elections Act that would require political parties to make diversity regulations public.  The Forum of Ministers on the Status of Women had discussed the importance of supporting women politicians.  The Canadian Apprenticeship Strategy was supporting women to obtain careers in fields that were traditionally male dominated.

    Canada had been actively engaged in discussions at the United Nations considering lethal autonomous weapons systems. States needed to consider algorithmic bias against women in these systems.

    Canada did not recognise the Taliban as a legitimate Government.  It had formally warned the Taliban about its treatment of women and girls.  The Government had offered to resolve this issue through dialogue but would take legal action if necessary.

    There had been a significant increase in Government engagement with partners representing indigenous two spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex peoples.  Canada recognised the impacts of historical sex-based inequities in the registration of indigenous women.  Reparations related to this were currently not being considered.

    The 2021 budget included measures on indigenous data strategies.  There were plans to transfer digital data assets on indigenous peoples to indigenous communities, and efforts were ongoing to advance indigenous data sovereignty.

    Education in Canada was administered by provinces and territories, which had made varied degrees of progress in educational outcomes for indigenous peoples.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, asked about steps taken to encourage men to become teachers.  Was gender equity mainstreamed in schools?  Was the Federal Government holding provinces to account regarding the quality of education they were providing?  What steps had been taken to prevent discrimination of refugee mothers in the provision of places in childcare?

    Another Committee Expert asked about the percentage of indigenous women in academic faculties and the support provided to indigenous women in academia.

    One Committee Expert said there was a 17 per cent difference in annual earnings between women and men employed full-time.  What achievements had the Pay Equity Act made, including for marginalised women? Were there plans to extend the Act to provincially regulated workplaces?  Women spent more time doing unpaid work than men.  What measures were in place to address the care burden and support women to find employment in non-traditional fields? 

    How was Canada addressing employment challenges for indigenous women and women with disabilities?  Was the State party working to ratify International Labour Organization Convention 189 and the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families? How had reporting of workplace harassment incidents changed since the ratification of International Labour Organization Convention 190?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Canada was committed to reducing the gender pay gap and had implemented many measures toward this aim.  The Pay Equity Act sought to provide equal pay for work of equal value.  It required employers with more than 100 employees to publicise data on pay levels for male and female employees.  The Government was also encouraging more men to take paternity leave to support mothers to return to the workplace.  It was further supporting civil society’s work to advance women’s economic participation.  Provincial governments had their own legislation on pay equity.  The amount of time women spent on unpaid work was decreasing. Canadian men contributed more to unpaid work than the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development average.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    A Committee Expert asked whether progress to address the gender pay gap differed between provinces.

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, asked how the State party planned to address the care deficit.  How many fathers took paternity leave and for how many weeks on average?  Were there still employer-specific work permits?

    Another Committee Expert asked about workplace segregation and how it contributed to the pay gap. 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the pay gap was closing across all provinces.

    The care benefit helped Canadian families to provide care for loved ones.  Measures had been taken to help caregivers to balance their responsibilities and to promote more equitable sharing of care responsibilities between men and women.  Around 1.7 billion dollars had been invested in expanding the recruitment of caregivers to alleviate the burden of unpaid care.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    A Committee Expert said the United Nations Committee against Torture had called on Canada to implement legislation on free, prior and informed consent related to sterilisation procedures.  Was this being done?  Indigenous women continued to distrust State-sponsored health care facilities and geographic and financial barriers to health care remained for indigenous communities.  How was the State party addressing this?  Was the State’s legislation on health data gender sensitive?  How was the State party promoting access to menstrual products domestically and abroad?

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, asked about safeguards to support the right to life for women with disabilities who applied for medical assistance in dying. Did the State party plan to expand health coverage for asylum seekers?  How did the State party ensure that health policies that supported access to health for trans women did not threaten safe spaces for cis women?

    Another Committee Expert said Canada’s support of Israeli military forces had indirectly facilitated various violations of the rights of women and children in Gaza.  How did Canada regulate domestic corporations whose actions were contributing to human rights violations in Gaza?  Would the State party stop providing arms to Israel?

    One Committee Expert asked whether migrant women and girls had access to safe abortions in Canada.  What steps had been taken to end forced and involuntary sterilisation of women with disabilities?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Criminal Code stipulated that any procedures performed without the consent of the patient constituted aggravated assault.  The Government was working to address harms caused by forced sterilisation procedures to indigenous women.

    Canada had invested large sums in addressing anti-indigenous racism within the health care system. Indigenous women and girls had the right to access high-quality health care no matter where they lived.  The Federal Government was working with provinces and territories to improve the quality of health care for indigenous women and girls.  It had expanded support for indigenous midwives and prenatal and postpartum care for indigenous mothers, and was funding grassroots organizations that provided culturally safe health services for indigenous peoples.

    In 2023, the Government launched an initiative with a civil society organization to support access to menstrual products.  It planned to expand this initiative in future.

    Canada supported the right to choose regarding abortions.  No one should be forced to carry an unwanted baby.  Federal and provincial governments were providing health care providers with training to ensure access to safe abortions.  Safe abortion medication had been approved for use.

    There was ongoing debate about circumstances in which medical assistance in dying should be available.  For medical assistance in dying requests where there was no immediate risk of death, patients needed to be informed to alternative treatments such as palliative care.  Assessments needed to be carried out for at least 90 days.  A report on this topic would soon be published.

    Canada had one of the strongest export control regimes in the world.  All exports were assessed against arms trade regulations.  Trade of arms was not permitted if there were suspicions that they would be used in human rights violations.  Since January this year, no arms exports to Israel had been permitted.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    A Committee Expert said that Canada had implemented several initiatives to address poverty and homelessness. Women often survived on lower incomes, and marginalised women in particular experienced greater levels of income inequality.  How was the State party developing a mechanism to eliminate housing insecurity among women in Canada?  What measures were in place to raise social assistance rates for women and girls? Would disability benefits be raised so women with disabilities could get out of poverty?  Had the Government considered the unpaid care work of women in its analysis of gross domestic product?

    There was an increased level of gender-based violence against indigenous women caused by influxes of male extractive industry workers in indigenous communities.  How was the State party ensuring that the free, prior and informed consent of indigenous women was sought regarding extractive activities?

    Canada reportedly engaged in indirect military exports to Israeli operations in Gaza by transferring arms to the United States.  How was it ensuring that arms exports to the United States were not transferred to Israel?

    Another Committee Expert asked about actions being taken by the Government to ensure that disappearances and murders of indigenous women no longer occurred.  Around 42 per cent of imprisoned women in Canada were indigenous, and this population continued to grow.  What were the causes of this phenomenon?

    What was the Government doing to overcome barriers that women with disabilities faced in employment?  What programmes had the State party implemented to support migrant women?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Canada was committed to poverty reduction.  It had launched a poverty reduction strategy in 2018 that established a poverty line. A national advisory council on poverty publicly reported annually on progress toward reaching poverty reduction targets.  The child benefit had been introduced to support families with children under 18 years of age.  Public pensions had helped to reduce poverty amongst senior women.  Employment insurance provided three types of benefits for workers who needed to provide care to critically ill or injured family members.

    Through the National Housing Act and its 2024 “Reaching Homes” strategy, the Government had provided a wide variety of housing supports and services.  There were projects established under the strategy for women leaving domestic violence and for women with disabilities.

    The Government had developed a plan of action to address violence related to the influx of extractive industry workers in indigenous communities.  It provided funding for training for workers on respecting women’s rights, activities to identify risks, and capacity building activities to prepare communities for the arrival of workers.  This work had also been expanded to the shipping industry.

    Canada was providing access to non-judicial dispute resolution and remedy mechanisms related to alleged human rights violations occurring in the context of business activities.  Canadian companies involved in this procedure were expected to participate in good faith; they could be denied trade permits if they did not.

    Compensation was not currently being offered to families of persons who had gone missing or been murdered, but mental health support was being provided.

    Questions by a Committee Expert 

    DAPHNA HACKER, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Canada, said cuts in legal aid had affected women’s access to justice.  How was the State party addressing this issue?  How was it supporting female prisoners to access justice?  What training was provided to members of the judiciary on responding to domestic violence and respecting children’s rights in custody decisions?  Were remedies provided to women and children whose rights were harmed by custody decisions?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Federal Government had increased funding in 2024 for criminal and immigration legal aid, which was expected to increase access to justice in these fields.  A number of provinces had also implemented measures that had improved access to civil legal aid.

    The Government continued to study the effects of family law legislation.  Changes to the Divorce Act ensured that the best interests of the child were the key consideration in custody matters.  Judges had access to contemporary training on intimate partner violence and family violence.

    Concluding Remarks 

    GAIL MITCHELL, Assistant Deputy Minister, Departmental Programmes and Operations, Department of Women and Gender Equality of Canada and head of the delegation, said the dialogue had been rich, with important contributions from Committee Experts and civil society. The Committee had asked many questions that the delegation would do its best to follow up on.

    MARION BETHEL, Committee Rapporteur and Acting Chair, said that the dialogue had provided insight on the situation of women and girls in Canada.  The Committee would develop recommendations that would aim to strengthen the implementation of the Convention for the benefit of all women and girls in the State.

     

     

    Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the media; 
    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Video: Colombia: Progress and Challenges in the Peace Agreement -Security Council Briefing | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    The Head of the United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia (UNVMIC), Carlos Ruiz Massieu, today (15 Oct) told the Security Council that “historic progress has been made” in the implementation of the peace agreement, “but much remains to be done.” He welcomed the rapid response plan, or “Plan de Choque” being developed by the Minister of the Interior and other stakeholders.

    The plan, Ruiz Massieu said, “is a new instrument that should serve to energize implementation.”

    The UNVMIC Chief said, “we remain encouraged by the Government’s commitment to advancing the rural reform chapter of the Agreement – provisions that have a transformative potential, attacking structural causes of the conflict, but which had lagged in their implementation in previous years.”

    He said that as a result, “more land is being distributed and formalized for those in need, bringing the promised benefits of peace to landless peasants and those dispossessed of it during the conflict.”

    Ruiz Massieu said, “in some territories, signatories to the Agreement and social leaders continue to be the target of violence, pressure and threats from armed actors fighting for territorial control and strategic routes linked to illicit economies.”

    He noted that since the beginning of the reintegration process, five former territorial areas for training and reintegration (TATRs) have had to be relocated for these reasons

    Ruiz Massieu said, “the difficult situation in some areas continues to impact the lives of communities that are caught in the crossfire and subjected to condemnable phenomena such as the recruitment of minors, displacement and confinement.”

    Colombia’s Foreign Minister Luis Gilberto Murillo for his part said, “with the firm commitment to fulfil what has been agreed and to territorialize peace, we have developed a new strategic framework for peace, where effective and comprehensive compliance with the 2016 agreement becomes an inescapable requirement, unavoidable for the sustainability of strategic proposals surrounding territorial transformation.”

    On women’s participation in negotiation and peacebuilding, he said it was “not only is a question of justice, but it is crucial to ensure stronger and more durable agreements.”

    For this reason, he continued, “the Colombian government has formulated and is implementing a feminist foreign policy linked to the precepts of the women, peace and security agenda. Included in Security Council Resolution 1325”

    Outside the Council, Switzerland’s representative Riccarda Christiana Chanda read a statement on behalf of Ecuador, France, Guyana, Japan, Malta, the Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States on Women Peace and Security.

    Chanda said, “during a visit of the Security Council to Colombia in February of this year, we were able to engage meaningfully with former combatants, victim representatives, women’s organizations, indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities to discuss the progress made and remaining obstacles in the comprehensive implementation of the peace agreement. And what we have witnessed over and over again, was the urgent call for improved security guarantees, equitable land distribution, and the successful social, political, and economic reintegration of former combatants as well as the crucial implementation of gender provisions and the ethnic chapter of the Peace Agreement.”

    UNVMIC was established by the UN Security Council pursuant to resolution 2366 (2017), adopted unanimously on 10 July 2017. The resolution followed a joint request for UN support from the Government of Colombia and the then Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia–People’s Army (FARC-EP).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaI6rgXNDS4

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Brunei Darussalam

    Source: New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade – Safe Travel

    • Reviewed: 18 November 2022, 09:26 NZDT
    • Still current at: 17 October 2024

    Related news features

    If you are planning international travel at this time, please read our COVID-19 related travel advice here, alongside our destination specific travel advice below.

    Exercise increased caution in Brunei Darussalam (level 2 of 4).

    Brunei Darussalam

    Crime
    Petty crime such as theft and burglary can occur in Brunei Darussalam. We advise New Zealanders to be alert to their surroundings at all times and take steps to safeguard and secure their personal belongings.

    Civil unrest
    Civil unrest is extremely rare in Brunei Darussalam, but protests and demonstrations could have the potential to result in violence. We advise monitoring local media and following any instructions from local authorities.

    General travel advice
    New Zealanders in Brunei Darussalam are strongly advised to familiarise themselves with and observe local laws and customs, which can be very different to New Zealand. This includes in relation to alcohol and tobacco, and public expression of political views.

    Brunei Darussalam has a dual legal system with both civil law and syariah (sharia) law. Both laws include provisions for corporal and capital punishments. Penalties for possession, use or trafficking of illegal drugs are severe and can include the death penalty, physical punishment, and lengthy imprisonment.

    Further information about the Syariah Penal Code can be found on Brunei Darussalam’s Attorney General’s Chambers website. A non-exhaustive list of illegal activities under syariah law includes blasphemy, sodomy, and adultery. Syariah law applies to Muslims, non-Muslims, and foreigners.

    New Zealanders are advised to respect religious, social and cultural traditions in Brunei Darussalam to avoid offending local sensitivities (including around members of the Royal Family and during religious occasions). Modesty and discretion should be exercised in both dress and behaviour.

    New Zealanders travelling or living in Brunei Darussalam should have a comprehensive travel insurance policy in place that includes provision for medical evacuation by air.

    New Zealanders in Brunei Darussalam are encouraged to register their details with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.


    The New Zealand High Commission Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia is accredited to Brunei Darussalam

    Street Address Level 21, Menara IMC, 8 Jalan Sultan Ismail, Kuala Lumpur 50250 Telephone +60 3 2078 2533 Fax +60 3 2078 0387 Email klinfo@mfat.govt.nz Web Site http://www.mfat.govt.nz/malaysia Hours Mon-Fri 0830am to 1230 hrs (reception); Mon-Thurs 0800-1630 hrs, Fri 0800-1600 hrs (telephone enquiries and pre-arranged appointments)

    See our regional advice for South East Asia

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Members explore ways of boosting developing economies’ integration into global trade

    Source: WTO

    Headline: Members explore ways of boosting developing economies’ integration into global trade

    This was the first meeting of the Committee’s negotiating session since the 13th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC13), at which ministers adopted a Declaration on Special and Differential Treatment that seeks to ensure that developing economies — including LDCs — receive timely training and technical assistance to help them implement standards or technical regulations. The Declaration also provides guidance for members to continue working towards enhancing the implementation of special and differential treatments in the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures and the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, and instructs them to report on any progress by December 2024. The Declaration also instructs WTO members to continue to work on improving the application of special and differential treatment provisions, and to report on progress to the General Council before the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14).
    There are currently three facilitators working with members on the Agreement-specific proposals on special and differential treatment tabled by the G90 group, covering sanitary and phytosanitary measures and technical barriers to trade, technology transfer for LDCs and trade-related investment measures, respectively.
    On sanitary and phytosanitary measures (SPS) and technical barriers to trade (TBT), the facilitator from Singapore updated the Committee on recent informal discussions. Members explored synergies between the work in the Special Session and in the two Committees respectively overseeing these issues. The chairpersons of the SPS and TBT Committees — Cecilia Risolo from Argentina and Daniela García from Ecuador, respectively — provided updates on their work to fulfil the MC13 mandate for a precise, effective and operational implementation of special and differential treatment provisions of the SPS and TBT Agreements.
    The facilitators for technology transfer to LDCs (Saint Vincent and the Grenadines) and for trade-related investment measures (Brazil) also provided updates on their consultations to advance the work in their respective areas.
    The three facilitators suggested holding thematic sessions with a view to achieving a shared understanding of the challenges faced by developing economies, including LDCs, and the solutions suggested by the G90. Members are considering these suggestions.
    Ambassador Kadra Ahmed Hassan of Djibouti, Chair of the Committee on Trade and Development in Special Session, encouraged the facilitators to continue engaging with members. “If we are to deliver on development at MC14, we need to keep moving forward,” she said.
    Developing economies and LDCsreceive special and differential treatment provisions according to over 150 provisions of the WTO agreements. These include access to technical assistance activities and longer transition periods to implement agreements and decisions. The negotiations taking place in the Special Session of the Committee on Trade and Development are mandated by Paragraph 44 of the 2001 Doha Ministerial Declaration.
    More information on special and differential treatment is available here.

    Share

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: The Marshall Star for October 16, 2024

    Source: NASA

    NASA’s Europa Clipper has embarked on its long voyage to Jupiter, where it will investigate Europa, a moon with an enormous subsurface ocean that may have conditions to support life. The spacecraft launched at 11:06 a.m. CDT on Oct. 14 aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket from Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center.

    The largest spacecraft NASA ever built for a mission headed to another planet, Europa Clipper also is the first NASA mission dedicated to studying an ocean world beyond Earth. The spacecraft will travel 1.8 billion miles on a trajectory that will leverage the power of gravity assists, first to Mars in four months and then back to Earth for another gravity assist flyby in 2026. After it begins orbiting Jupiter in April 2030, the spacecraft will fly past Europa 49 times.
    “Congratulations to our Europa Clipper team for beginning the first journey to an ocean world beyond Earth,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “NASA leads the world in exploration and discovery, and the Europa Clipper mission is no different. By exploring the unknown, Europa Clipper will help us better understand whether there is the potential for life not just within our solar system, but among the billions of moons and planets beyond our Sun.”
    Approximately five minutes after liftoff, the rocket’s second stage fired up and the payload fairing, or the rocket’s nose cone, opened to reveal Europa Clipper. About an hour after launch, the spacecraft separated from the rocket. Ground controllers received a signal soon after, and two-way communication was established at 12:13 p.m. with NASA’s Deep Space Network facility in Canberra, Australia. Mission teams celebrated as initial telemetry reports showed Europa Clipper is in good health and operating as expected.
    “We could not be more excited for the incredible and unprecedented science NASA’s Europa Clipper mission will deliver in the generations to come,” said Nicky Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters. “Everything in NASA science is interconnected, and Europa Clipper’s scientific discoveries will build upon the legacy that our other missions exploring Jupiter – including Juno, Galileo, and Voyager – created in our search for habitable worlds beyond our home planet.”
    The main goal of the mission is to determine whether Europa has conditions that could support life. Europa is about the size of our own Moon, but its interior is different. Information from NASA’s Galileo mission in the 1990s showed strong evidence that under Europa’s ice lies an enormous, salty ocean with more water than all of Earth’s oceans combined. Scientists also have found evidence that Europa may host organic compounds and energy sources under its surface.
    If the mission determines Europa is habitable, it may mean there are more habitable worlds in our solar system and beyond than imagined.
    “We’re ecstatic to send Europa Clipper on its way to explore a potentially habitable ocean world, thanks to our colleagues and partners who’ve worked so hard to get us to this day,” said Laurie Leshin, director, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). “Europa Clipper will undoubtedly deliver mind-blowing science. While always bittersweet to send something we’ve labored over for years off on its long journey, we know this remarkable team and spacecraft will expand our knowledge of our solar system and inspire future exploration.”
    In 2031, the spacecraft will begin conducting its science-dedicated flybys of Europa. Coming as close as 16 miles to the surface, Europa Clipper is equipped with nine science instruments and a gravity experiment, including an ice-penetrating radar, cameras, and a thermal instrument to look for areas of warmer ice and any recent eruptions of water. As the most sophisticated suite of science instruments NASA has ever sent to Jupiter, they will work in concert to learn more about the moon’s icy shell, thin atmosphere, and deep interior.
    To power those instruments in the faint sunlight that reaches Jupiter, Europa Clipper also carries the largest solar arrays NASA has ever used for an interplanetary mission. With arrays extended, the spacecraft spans 100 feet from end to end. With propellant loaded, it weighs about 13,000 pounds.
    In all, more than 4,000 people have contributed to Europa Clipper mission since it was formally approved in 2015.
    “As Europa Clipper embarks on its journey, I’ll be thinking about the countless hours of dedication, innovation, and teamwork that made this moment possible,” said Jordan Evans, project manager, JPL. “This launch isn’t just the next chapter in our exploration of the solar system; it’s a leap toward uncovering the mysteries of another ocean world, driven by our shared curiosity and continued search to answer the question, ‘are we alone?’”
    Europa Clipper’s three main science objectives are to determine the thickness of the moon’s icy shell and its interactions with the ocean below, to investigate its composition, and to characterize its geology. The mission’s detailed exploration of Europa will help scientists better understand the astrobiological potential for habitable worlds beyond our planet.
    Managed by Caltech in Pasadena, California, JPL leads the development of the Europa Clipper mission in partnership with the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. The main spacecraft body was designed by APL in collaboration with JPL and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, and Langley Research Center. The Planetary Missions Program Office at Marshall executes program management of the Europa Clipper mission.
    NASA’s Launch Services Program, based at NASA Kennedy, managed the launch service for the Europa Clipper spacecraft.
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    [embedded content]

    Get ready, get set, and let’s go take a look back at NASA’s 2024 Human Exploration Rover Challenge! Watch as talented student teams from around the world gather in Huntsville for the 30th annual competition to push the boundaries of innovation and engineering. These student teams piloted their human-powered rovers over simulated lunar and Martian terrain for a chance at winning an award during this Artemis student challenge. From jaw-dropping triumphs to unexpected setbacks, this year’s competition was a thrilling ride from start to finish. Buckle up and enjoy the ride as you witness the future of space exploration unfold!
    The challenge is managed by NASA’s Southeast Regional Office of STEM Engagement at the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center. Learn more about the challenge.
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    NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and other telescopes have identified a supermassive black hole that has torn apart one star and is now using that stellar wreckage to pummel another star or smaller black hole, as described in our latest press release. This research helps connect two cosmic mysteries and provides information about the environment around some of the bigger types of black holes.

    This artist’s illustration shows a disk of material (red, orange, and yellow) that was created after a supermassive black hole (depicted on the right) tore apart a star through intense tidal forces. Over the course of a few years, this disk expanded outward until it intersected with another object – either a star or a small black hole – that is also in orbit around the giant black hole. Each time this object crashes into the disk, it sends out a burst of X-rays detected by Chandra. The inset shows Chandra data (purple) and an optical image of the source from Pan-STARRS (red, green, and blue).
    In 2019, an optical telescope in California noticed a burst of light that astronomers later categorized as a “tidal disruption event”, or TDE. These are cases where black holes tear stars apart if they get too close through their powerful tidal forces. Astronomers gave this TDE the name of AT2019qiz.
    Meanwhile, scientists were also tracking instances of another type of cosmic phenomena occasionally observed across the Universe. These were brief and regular bursts of X-rays that were near supermassive black holes. Astronomers named these events “quasi-periodic eruptions,” or QPEs.
    This latest study gives scientists evidence that TDEs and QPEs are likely connected. The researchers think that QPEs arise when an object smashes into the disk left behind after the TDE. While there may be other explanations, the authors of the study propose this is the source of at least some QPEs.
    In 2023, astronomers used both Chandra and Hubble to simultaneously study the debris left behind after the tidal disruption had ended. The Chandra data were obtained during three different observations, each separated by about 4 to 5 hours. The total exposure of about 14 hours of Chandra time revealed only a weak signal in the first and last chunk, but a very strong signal in the middle observation.
    From there, the researchers used NASA’s Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) to look frequently at AT2019qiz for repeated X-ray bursts. The NICER data showed that AT2019qiz erupts roughly every 48 hours. Observations from NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory and India’s AstroSat telescope cemented the finding.
    The ultraviolet data from Hubble, obtained at the same time as the Chandra observations, allowed the scientists to determine the size of the disk around the supermassive black hole. They found that the disk had become large enough that if any object was orbiting the black hole and took about a week or less to complete an orbit, it would collide with the disk and cause eruptions.
    This result has implications for searching for more quasi-periodic eruptions associated with tidal disruptions. Finding more of these would allow astronomers to measure the prevalence and distances of objects in close orbits around supermassive black holes. Some of these may be excellent targets for the planned future gravitational wave observatories.
    The paper describing these results appears in the Oct. 9 issue of the journal Nature. The first author of the paper is Matt Nicholl of Queen’s University Belfast in Ireland.
    NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.
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    The study of X-ray emission from astronomical objects reveals secrets about the universe at the largest and smallest spatial scales. Celestial X-rays are produced by black holes consuming nearby stars, emitted by the million-degree gas that traces the structure between galaxies, and can be used to predict whether stars may be able to host planets hospitable to life. X-ray observations have shown that most of the visible matter in the universe exists as hot gas between galaxies and have conclusively demonstrated that the presence of “dark matter” is needed to explain galaxy cluster dynamics, that dark matter dominates the mass of galaxy clusters, and that it governs the expansion of the cosmos.

    X-ray observations also enable us to probe mysteries of the universe on the smallest scales. X-ray observations of compact objects such as white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes allow us to use the universe as a physics laboratory to study conditions that are orders of magnitude more extreme in terms of density, pressure, temperature, and magnetic field strength than anything that can be produced on Earth. In this astrophysical laboratory, researchers expect to reveal new physics at the subatomic scale by conducting investigations such as probing the neutron star equation of state and testing quantum electrodynamics with observations of neutron star atmospheres.
    At NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, a team of scientists and engineers is building, testing, and flying innovative optics that bring the universe’s X-ray mysteries into sharper focus.
    Unlike optical telescopes that create images by reflecting or refracting light at near-90-degree angles (normal incidence), focusing X-ray optics must be designed to reflect light at very small angles (grazing incidence). At normal incidence, X-rays are either absorbed by the surface of a mirror or penetrate it entirely. However, at grazing angles of incidence, X-rays reflect very efficiently due to an effect called total external reflection. In grazing incidence, X-rays reflect off the surface of a mirror like rocks skipping on the surface of a pond.
    A classic design for astronomical grazing incidence optics is the Wolter-I prescription, which consists of two reflecting surfaces, a parabola and hyperbola (see figure below). This optical prescription is revolved around the optical axis to produce a full-shell mirror (i.e., the mirror spans the full circumference) that resembles a gently tapered cone. To increase the light collecting area, multiple mirror shells with incrementally larger diameters and a common focus are fabricated and nested concentrically to comprise a mirror module assembly (MMA).
    Focusing optics are critical to studying the X-ray universe because, in contrast to other optical systems like collimators or coded masks, they produce high signal-to-noise images with low background noise. Two key metrics that characterize the performance of X-ray optics are angular resolution, which is the ability of an optical system to discriminate between closely spaced objects, and effective area, which is the light collecting area of the telescope, typically quoted in units of cm2. Angular resolution is typically measured as the half-power diameter (HPD) of a focused spot in units of arcseconds. The HPD encircles half of the incident photons in a focused spot and measures the sharpness of the final image; a smaller number is better. 

    Marshall has been building and flying lightweight, full-shell, focusing X-ray optics for over three decades, always meeting or exceeding angular resolution and effective area requirements. Marshall utilizes an electroformed nickel replication technique to make these thin full-shell X-ray optics from nickel alloy.
    X-ray optics development at Marshall began in the early 1990s with the fabrication of optics to support NASA’s Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility (AXAF-S) and then continued via the Constellation-X technology development programs. In 2001, Marshall launched a balloon payload that included two modules each with three mirrors, which produced the first focused hard X-ray images of an astrophysical source by imaging Cygnus X-1, GRS 1915, and the Crab Nebula. This initial effort resulted in several follow-up missions over the next 12 years and became known as the High Energy Replicated Optics (HERO) balloon program.
    In 2012, the first of four sounding rocket flights of the Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI) flew with Marshall optics onboard, producing the first focused images of the Sun at energies greater than 5 keV. In 2019 the Astronomical Roentgen Telescope X-ray Concentrator (ART-XC) instrument on the Spectr-Roentgen-Gamma Mission launched with seven Marshall-fabricated X-ray MMAs, each containing 28 mirror shells. ART-XC is currently mapping the sky in the 4-30 keV hard X-ray energy range, studying exotic objects like neutron stars in our own galaxy as well as active galactic nuclei, which are spread across the visible universe. In 2021, the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE), flew and is now performing extraordinary science with a Marshall-led team using three, 24-shell MMAs that were fabricated and calibrated in-house.
    Most recently, in 2024, the fourth FOXSI sounding rocket campaign launched with a high-resolution Marshall MMA. The optics achieved 9.5 arcsecond HPD angular resolution during pre-flight test with an expected 7 arcsecond HPD in gravity-free flight, making this the highest angular resolution flight observation made with a nickel-replicated X-ray optic. Currently Marshall is fabricating an MMA for the Rocket Experiment Demonstration of a Soft X-ray (REDSoX) polarimeter, a sounding rocket mission that will fly a novel soft X-ray polarimeter instrument to observe active galactic nuclei. The REDSoX MMA optic will be 444 mm in diameter, which will make it the largest MMA ever produced by MSFC and the second largest replicated nickel X-ray optic in the world.
    The ultimate performance of an X-ray optic is determined by errors in the shape, position, and roughness of the optical surface. To push the performance of X-ray optics toward even higher angular resolution and achieve more ambitious science goals, Marshall is currently engaged in a fundamental research and development effort to improve all aspects of full-shell optics fabrication.

    Given that these optics are made with the electroformed nickel replication technique, the fabrication process begins with creation of a replication master, called the mandrel, which is a negative of the desired optical surface. First, the mandrel is figured and polished to specification, then a thin layer of nickel alloy is electroformed onto the mandrel surface. Next, the nickel alloy layer is removed to produce a replicated optical shell, and finally the thin shell is attached to a stiff holding structure for use.
    Each step in this process imparts some degree of error into the final replicated shell. Research and development efforts at Marshall are currently concentrating on reducing distortion induced during the electroforming metal deposition and release steps. Electroforming-induced distortion is caused by material stress built into the electroformed material as it deposits onto the mandrel. Decreasing release-induced distortion is a matter of reducing adhesion strength between the shell and mandrel, increasing strength of the shell material to prevent yielding, and reducing point defects in the release layer.
    Additionally, verifying the performance of these advanced optics requires world-class test facilities. The basic premise of testing an optic designed for X-ray astrophysics is to place a small, bright X-ray source far away from the optic. If the angular size of the source, as viewed from the optic, is smaller than the angular resolution of the optic, the source is effectively simulating X-ray starlight. Due to the absorption of X-rays by air, the entire test facility light path must be placed inside a vacuum chamber.
    At the center, a group of scientists and engineers operate the Marshall 100-meter X-ray beamline, a world-class end-to-end test facility for flight and laboratory X-ray optics, instruments, and telescopes. As per the name, it consists of a 100-meter-long vacuum tube with an 8-meter-long, 3-meter-diameter instrument chamber and a variety of X-ray sources ranging from 0.25 – 114 keV. Across the street sits the X-Ray and Cryogenic Facility (XRCF), a 527-meter-long beamline with an 18-meter-long, 6-meter-diameter instrument chamber. These facilities are available for the scientific community to use and highlight the comprehensive optics development and test capability that Marshall is known for.
    Within the X-ray astrophysics community there exist a variety of angular resolution and effective area needs for focusing optics. Given its storied history in X-ray optics, Marshall is uniquely poised to fulfill requirements for large or small, medium- or high-angular-resolution X-ray optics. To help guide technology development, the astrophysics community convenes once per decade to produce a decadal survey. The need for high-angular-resolution and high-throughput X-ray optics is strongly endorsed by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report, Pathways to Discovery in Astronomy and Astrophysics for the 2020s.In pursuit of this goal, Marshall is continuing to advance the state of the art in full-shell optics. This work will enable the extraordinary mysteries of the X-ray universe to be revealed.
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    NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and New Horizons spacecraft simultaneously set their sights on Uranus recently, allowing scientists to make a direct comparison of the planet from two very different viewpoints. The results inform future plans to study like types of planets around other stars.

    Astronomers used Uranus as a proxy for similar planets beyond our solar system, known as exoplanets, comparing high-resolution images from Hubble to the more-distant view from New Horizons. This combined perspective will help scientists learn more about what to expect while imaging planets around other stars with future telescopes.
    “While we expected Uranus to appear differently in each filter of the observations, we found that Uranus was actually dimmer than predicted in the New Horizons data taken from a different viewpoint,” said lead author Samantha Hasler of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge and New Horizons science team collaborator.
    Direct imaging of exoplanets is a key technique for learning about their potential habitability, and offers new clues to the origin and formation of our own solar system. Astronomers use both direct imaging and spectroscopy to collect light from the observed planet and compare its brightness at different wavelengths. However, imaging exoplanets is a notoriously difficult process because they’re so far away. Their images are mere pinpoints and so are not as detailed as the close-up views that we have of worlds orbiting our Sun. Researchers can also only directly image exoplanets at “partial phases,” when only a portion of the planet is illuminated by their star as seen from Earth.
    Uranus was an ideal target as a test for understanding future distant observations of exoplanets by other telescopes for a few reasons. First, many known exoplanets are also gas giants similar in nature. Also, at the time of the observations, New Horizons was on the far side of Uranus, 6.5 billion miles away, allowing its twilight crescent to be studied – something that cannot be done from Earth. At that distance, the New Horizons view of the planet was just several pixels in its color camera, called the Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera.
    On the other hand, Hubble, with its high resolution, and in its low-Earth orbit 1.7 billion miles away from Uranus, was able to see atmospheric features such as clouds and storms on the day side of the gaseous world.
    “Uranus appears as just a small dot on the New Horizons observations, similar to the dots seen of directly imaged exoplanets from observatories like Webb or ground-based observatories,” Hasler said. “Hubble provides context for what the atmosphere is doing when it was observed with New Horizons.”
    The gas giant planets in our solar system have dynamic and variable atmospheres with changing cloud cover. How common is this among exoplanets? By knowing the details of what the clouds on Uranus looked like from Hubble, researchers can verify what is interpreted from the New Horizons data. In the case of Uranus, both Hubble and New Horizons saw that the brightness did not vary as the planet rotated, which indicates that the cloud features were not changing with the planet’s rotation.

    However, the importance of the detection by New Horizons has to do with how the planet reflects light at a different phase than what Hubble, or other observatories on or near Earth, can see. New Horizons showed that exoplanets may be dimmer than predicted at partial and high phase angles, and that the atmosphere reflects light differently at partial phase.
    NASA has two major upcoming observatories in the works to advance studies of exoplanet atmospheres and potential habitability.
    “These landmark New Horizons studies of Uranus from a vantage point unobservable by any other means add to the mission’s treasure trove of new scientific knowledge, and have, like many other datasets obtained in the mission, yielded surprising new insights into the worlds of our solar system,” added New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute.
    NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, set to launch by 2027, will use a coronagraph to block out a star’s light to directly see gas giant exoplanets. NASA’s Habitable Worlds Observatory, in an early planning phase, will be the first telescope designed specifically to search for atmospheric biosignatures on Earth-sized, rocky planets orbiting other stars.
    “Studying how known benchmarks like Uranus appear in distant imaging can help us have more robust expectations when preparing for these future missions,” concluded Hasler. “And that will be critical to our success.”
    Launched in January 2006, New Horizons made the historic flyby of Pluto and its moons in July 2015, before giving humankind its first close-up look at one of these planetary building block and Kuiper Belt object, Arrokoth, in January 2019. New Horizons is now in its second extended mission, studying distant Kuiper Belt objects, characterizing the outer heliosphere of the Sun, and making important astrophysical observations from its unmatched vantage point in distant regions of the solar system.
    The Hubble Space Telescope has been operating for over three decades and continues to make ground-breaking discoveries that shape our fundamental understanding of the universe. Hubble is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center manages the telescope and mission operations. Lockheed Martin Space, based in Denver, Colorado, also supports mission operations at Goddard. The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, conducts Hubble science operations for NASA.
    The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, built and operates the New Horizons spacecraft and manages the mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. Southwest Research Institute, based in San Antonio and Boulder, Colorado, directs the mission via Principal Investigator Alan Stern and leads the science team, payload operations and encounter science planning. New Horizons is part of NASA’s New Frontiers program, managed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center.
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    Four International Space Station crew members continue waiting for their departure date as mission managers monitor weather conditions off the coast of Florida. The rest of the Expedition 72 crew stayed focused Oct. 14 on space biology and lab maintenance aboard the orbital outpost.

    NASA and SpaceX mission managers are watching unfavorable weather conditions off the Florida coast right now for the splashdown of the SpaceX Crew-8 mission with NASA astronauts Matthew Dominick, Mike Barratt, and Jeanette Epps, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin. The homebound quartet spent Oct. 14 mostly relaxing while also continuing departure preps. Mission teams are currently targeting Dragon Endeavour’s undocking for no earlier than 2:05 a.m. CDT on Oct. 18. The Crew-8 foursome is in the seventh month of their space research mission that began on March 3.
    The other seven orbital residents will stay aboard the orbital outpost until early 2025. NASA astronaut Don Pettit is scheduled to return to Earth first in February with Roscosmos cosmonauts Alexey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner aboard the Soyuz MS-26 crew ship. Next, station Commander Suni Williams and flight engineer Butch Wilmore are targeted to return home aboard SpaceX Dragon Freedom with SpaceX Crew-9 Commander Nick Hague, all three NASA astronauts, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov.
    Williams had a light duty day Oct. 14 disassembling life support gear before working out for a cardio fitness study. Wilmore installed a new oxygen recharge tank and began transferring oxygen into tanks located in the Quest airlock. Hague collected his blood and saliva samples for incubation and cold stowage to learn how microgravity affects cellular immunity. Pettit also had a light duty day servicing biology hardware including the Cell Biology Experiment Facility, a research incubator with an artificial gravity generator, and the BioLab, which supports observations of microbes, cells, tissue cultures and more.
    The Huntsville Operations Support Center (HOSC) at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center provides engineering and mission operations support for the space station, the CCP, and Artemis missions, as well as science and technology demonstration missions. The Payload Operations Integration Center within HOSC operates, plans, and coordinates the science experiments onboard the space station 365 days a year, 24 hours a day.
    The first flight of Sierra Space’s Dream Chaser to the space station is now scheduled for no earlier than May 2025 to allow for completion of spacecraft testing. Dream Chaser, which will launch atop a ULA (United Launch Alliance) Vulcan rocket and later glide to a runway landing at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, will carry cargo to the orbiting laboratory and stay on board for approximately 45 days on its first mission.
    Learn more about station activities by following the space station blog.
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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: PDF Solutions to Report Third Quarter Fiscal 2024 Financial Results on November 7, 2024

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SANTA CLARA, Calif., Oct. 16, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — PDF Solutions, Inc. (Nasdaq: PDFS), a leading provider of comprehensive data solutions for the semiconductor ecosystem, announced that it will release Third quarter fiscal 2024 financial results after the market close on Thursday, November 7, 2024. John Kibarian, CEO, and Adnan Raza, CFO, will host a live teleconference on Thursday, November 7, 2024, beginning at 2:00 p.m. Pacific Time / 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time to discuss the results.

    To participate on the live call, analysts and investors should pre-register at: https://register.vevent.com/register/BI1b05df01d9534a648d4fd2cd753be31c

    Registrants will receive dial-in information and a unique passcode to access the call. We encourage participants to dial-in into the call ten minutes ahead of scheduled time.

    The teleconference will also be webcast simultaneously on the Company’s website at https://ir.pdf.com/webcasts. A replay of the conference call webcast will be available after the call on the Company’s investor relations website.

    About PDF Solutions
    PDF Solutions (Nasdaq: PDFS) provides comprehensive data solutions designed to empower organizations across the semiconductor and electronics industry ecosystems to improve the yield and quality of their products and operational efficiency for increased profitability. The Company’s products and services are used by Fortune 500 companies across the semiconductor ecosystem to achieve smart manufacturing goals by connecting and controlling equipment, collecting data generated during manufacturing and test operations, and performing advanced analytics and machine learning to enable profitable, high-volume manufacturing.

    Founded in 1991, PDF Solutions is headquartered in Santa Clara, California, with operations across North America, Europe, and Asia. The Company (directly or through one or more subsidiaries) is an active member of SEMI, INEMI, TPCA, IPC, the OPC Foundation, and DMDII. For the latest news and information about PDF Solutions or to find office locations, visit https://www.pdf.com/.

    PDF Solutions and the PDF Solutions logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of PDF Solutions, Inc. or its subsidiaries.

    Company Contacts

    Adnan Raza
    Chief Financial Officer
    (408) 516-0237
    adnan.raza@pdf.com

    Sonia Segovia
    Investor Relations
    (408) 938-6491
    sonia.segovia@pdf.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Translation: 16/10/2024 Euro bond pricing – detailed information

    MIL ASI Translation. Region: Polish/Europe –

    Fuente: Gobierno de Polonia en poleco.

    In reference to the announcement on the valuation made on October 15 of 7-year and 15-year benchmark bonds denominated in euro with maturities of October 22, 2031 and October 22, 2039, respectively, the Ministry of Finance presents additional information on the structure of purchasers. The structure of bond purchasers was diversified. The buyers of 7-year bonds were investors from: Great Britain and Ireland (24%), Germany and Austria (17%), Benelux countries (11%), France (8%), Scandinavian countries (8%), Asia (8%), Southern Europe (7%), Central and Eastern Europe (excluding Poland) (4%), Poland (3%), United States (3%), Switzerland (2%) and other countries (5%). The entity structure of investors of 7-year bonds included: investment funds (47%), banks (22%), central banks and public institutions (18%), hedge funds (9%), insurance institutions and pension funds (3%) and other financial institutions (1%). The buyers of 15-year bonds were investors from: Germany and Austria (27%), Great Britain and Ireland (25%), Southern Europe (14%), France (9%), Central and Eastern Europe (excluding Poland) (6%), Poland (5%), Scandinavian countries (4%), Switzerland (4%), Benelux countries (2%) and others (4%). The entity structure of investors of 15-year bonds included: investment funds (58%), banks (15%), insurance institutions and pension funds (13%), hedge funds (12%), central banks and public institutions (1%) and other financial institutions (1%).

    MILES AXIS

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: California expands access to traditional healing for substance use treatment

    Source: US State of California 2

    Oct 16, 2024

    What you need to know: California is expanding access to culturally-based substance use disorder (SUD) treatment services. Today marks the first time Medi-Cal will cover traditional health care practices that are deeply rooted in cultural practices and have been shown to improve health outcomes, particularly for individuals with SUDs. 

    Sacramento, California – Governor Gavin Newsom announced today that California is expanding access to culturally-based substance use disorder (SUD) treatment services.  

    After years of working toward this milestone, today marks the first time Medi-Cal will cover traditional health care practices in use since time immemorial. These are deeply rooted in cultural practices and have been shown to improve health outcomes, particularly for individuals with SUDs.

    Native Americans continue to be disproportionately impacted by the opioid epidemic, with higher overdose death rates than other racial and ethnic groups in the United States.

    As the home of the largest population of Native Americans in the country, California is committed to helping heal the historical wounds inflicted on tribes – including the glaring health disparities we see between Native communities and other groups. Like many of the issues that plague successive generations of Native people, those inequities can be traced back to the historical atrocities the U.S. inflicted on tribes across the country. By supporting greater access to traditional medicine and healing, we are taking another step toward a healthier, brighter future.

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    “Native American communities have long faced barriers to accessing traditional medicines and healing resources in this State,” said Tribal Affairs Secretary Christina Snider-Ashtari. “Support for these critical practices will again allow the rich and diverse Native populations who have lived here since time immemorial – along with those who now call California home – to access time-honored and tested methods to bolster wellness in Native families, communities, and tribal nations.”

    Traditional healers and natural helpers

    The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) approval for California, alongside Arizona, New Mexico, and Oregon, allows two new categories of interventions to be covered by Medi-Cal, as developed by the state in partnership with tribal partners:  

    • The first, provided by traditional healers, includes music therapy (i.e., traditional music, songs, dancing, and drumming) and spiritual interventions (i.e., ceremonies, rituals, and herbal remedies). A traditional healer is any person currently recognized as a spiritual leader with at least two years of experience practicing in a setting recognized by a Native American tribe and who is contracted or employed by an Indian Health Care Provider (IHCP).
    • The second, provided through natural helpers, includes navigational support, psychological skill building, self-management, and trauma support. A natural helper is a health advisor who delivers health, recovery, and social supports in the context of tribal cultures. Natural helpers can be spiritual leaders, elected officials, or paraprofessionals who are trusted members of a Native American tribe.

    This marks a significant milestone in the state’s ongoing efforts to recognize the valuable contributions of traditional healing practices within the health care system. Traditional healing services have been trusted and tested methods of care for Native Americans for generations. They are deeply rooted in cultural practices and have been shown to improve health outcomes, particularly for individuals with SUDs.

    Studies have demonstrated that these culturally centered approaches can enhance engagement and recovery outcomes, making them an essential component of holistic care for Native communities. Additionally, the state recognizes that tribal communities understand themselves best – and that each tribe has different needs, traditions, and histories – so each participating IHCP will create its own process to identify and credential its own traditional healers and natural helpers.

    “CMS’ approval is first and foremost the fulfillment of the efforts of our tribal leader and Urban Indian Organization partners whose vision and steadfast advocacy made this a priority,” said State Medicaid Director Tyler Sadwith. “I am immensely proud that California tribal and Urban Indian communities now have access to culturally based traditional healing practices through Medi-Cal, marking a historic step toward health equity and honoring the rich traditions of our diverse Native communities.”

    “It is vital that we honor our traditional ways of healing and understand they are as important and valuable as Western medicine,” said Kiana Maillet, licensed therapist and owner of Hiichido Licensed Clinical Social Worker Professional Corporation. “Traditional healing is deeply engrained in our blood memory, our cultures, and our communities. Without it, we are missing a piece of who we are. As we continue to regain access to traditional ways – ways that our ancestors were punished for in the past – we move forward with healing from historical traumas and improving the health of our future generations.”

    Starting January 1, 2025, IHCPs can request Medi-Cal reimbursement for Traditional Healer and Natural Helper Services provided to residents of qualifying counties. In the coming months, the state will consult with tribes and tribal partners to develop guidance.

    Bigger picture

    In 2019, Governor Newsom apologized on behalf of the State of California to California Native American peoples, and announced the creation of the California Truth and Healing Council. Through collaborative and consultative work of the Council, the Governor’s Office of Tribal Affairs, and tribes across the state, a number of policies and programs have been developed so that the state can better address historical injustices and support tribes and tribal work in everything from health to climate. 

    Medi-Cal coverage for traditional healer and natural helper services strengthens the longstanding investments the state has made to expand SUD prevention, treatment, recovery, and harm reduction resources for California tribal and Urban Indian communities through the Tribal MAT Project

    This work also builds on the state’s broader efforts to address the opioid crisis and overdose epidemic, which is outlined in the Governor’s Master Plan for Tackling the Fentanyl and Opioid Crisis and on opioids.ca.gov, a one-stop tool for Californians seeking resources for prevention and treatment, as well as information on how California is working to hold Big Pharma and drug traffickers accountable in this crisis. More information on the state’s efforts can be found here.

    Press Releases, Recent News

    Recent news

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    News What you need to know: A $3.5 million federal grant will fund cleanup efforts at the recently expanded San Gabriel Mountains National Monument to improve access to the site and enhance water quality on the East Fork of the San Gabriel River, a key Southern…

    News What you need to know: The state today broke ground on a project that expands ongoing restoration work at the Salton Sea to improve conditions for wildlife and surrounding communities. Most recently, $175 million in federal funding was made available to…

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Twelve Additional North Carolina Counties Eligible for FEMA Individual Assistance

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency 2

    strong>RALEIGH, N.C. – Homeowners and renters in Cabarrus, Cherokee, Forsyth, Graham, Iredell, Lee, Nash, Rowan, Stanly, Surry, Union and Yadkin counties who had uninsured damage or losses caused by Tropical Storm Helene are now eligible to apply for FEMA disaster assistance.

    FEMA may be able to help with serious needs, displacement, temporary lodging, basic home repair costs, personal property loss or other disaster-caused needs. Previously, Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Catawba, Clay, Cleveland, Gaston, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Lincoln, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mecklenburg, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, Watauga, Wilkes and Yancey counties and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians were authorized for assistance to households.

    The quickest way to apply is to go online to DisasterAssistance.gov. You can also apply using the FEMA App for mobile devices or calling toll-free 800-621-3362. The telephone line is open every day and help is available in most languages. If you use a relay service, such as Video Relay Service (VRS), captioned telephone or other service, give FEMA your number for that service. To view an accessible video on how to apply visit Three Ways to Apply for FEMA Disaster Assistance – YouTube. 

    What You’ll Need When You Apply

    • A current phone number where you can be contacted.
    • Your address at the time of the disaster and the address where you are now staying.
    • Your Social Security number.
    • A general list of damage and losses.
    • Banking information if you choose direct deposit.
    • If insured, the policy number or the agent and/or the company name.

    If you have homeowners, renters’ or flood insurance, you should file a claim as soon as possible. FEMA cannot duplicate benefits for losses covered by insurance. If your policy does not cover all your disaster expenses, you may be eligible for federal assistance.

    For the latest information about North Carolina recovery, visit Hurricane Helene | NC DPS or fema.gov/disaster/4827. Follow FEMA on X at x.com/femaregion4 or on Facebook at facebook.com/fema.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Department of Labor cites Kumho Tire Georgia $271K in penalties, finds 15 safety violations in wake of 57-year-old worker’s fatal injury

    Source: US Department of Labor

    MACON, GA – Federal safety inspectors found a Macon tire manufacturing facility with a history of safety and health violations could have prevented the fatal injuries sustained by a 57-year-old maintenance worker in April 2024. 

    The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigated the fatal incident at Kumho Tire Georgia Inc., which occurred on April 10, 2024, when a worker was fatally injured after the machine they were working on unexpectedly started. 

    OSHA cited Kumho Tire Georgia after an investigation found the company bypassed safety procedures meant to prevent machinery from accidentally starting during maintenance. The company relied on basic on/off controls and sensors instead of following proper safety measures. As a result, the company was cited for one repeat, 12 serious, and two other-than-serious violations. The company was also cited for repeatedly failing to train authorized employees to safely perform servicing and maintenance activities.

    “Kumho Tire Georgia has repeatedly failed to protect its employees, and this time that negligence resulted in a preventable tragedy,” said OSHA Area Director Joshua Turner in Atlanta. “Every year, thousands of these incidents occur, causing serious and sometimes fatal injuries. There is no excuse for endangering the lives of the employees who keep their operations running.”

    The agency found the employer’s facility lacked sufficient machine guarding, designed to protect workers from caught-in hazards. Investigators also found missing guardrails and uncovered holes, leaving workers exposed to fall hazards. Kumho Tire Georgia Inc. faces a total of $271,930 in penalties.

    Kumho Tire Georgia has a substantial history of non-compliance with safety and health requirements. Since 2015, the facility has been inspected nine times, resulting in 52 violations. 

    Located in Macon, Kumho Tire Georgia is a Chinese and Korean-owned tire manufacturer that employs approximately 560 workers from both Korea and the U.S. The facility has been in operation in the U.S. since 2016. 

    The employer has 15 business days from receipt of the citations and penalties to comply, request an informal conference with OSHA’s area director, or contest the findings before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission.

    Learn more about OSHA.

    MIL OSI USA News