Category: Business

  • APEC highlights ‘fundamental challenges’ in global trade as tariffs overshadow meeting

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation group adopted a statement on Friday that cited “fundamental challenges” facing the global trading system, but stopped short of discussing a joint response to U.S. tariffs looming large over its meeting.

    The annual gathering is the first major multilateral trade gathering since U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of sweeping tariffs that hit more than half of the 21 members of the bloc with U.S. import duties in excess of the 10% minimum.

    “We are concerned with the fundamental challenges faced by the global trading system,” APEC members said in the joint statement.

    They also said they remained committed to APEC as the main forum for regional economic cooperation and addressing the economic challenges facing the Asia-Pacific region.

    The statement expressed support for the continued role of the World Trade Organization, while noting its shortcomings.

    “We recognise the importance of the WTO to advance trade issues, and acknowledge the agreed-upon rules in the WTO as an integral part of the global trading system.”

    The statement also said that “the WTO has challenges and needs meaningful, necessary, and comprehensive reform to improve all its functions, through innovative approaches, to be more relevant and responsive in light of today’s realities”.

    The Trump administration views the WTO as a body that has enabled China to gain an unfair export advantage and has recently moved to suspend U.S. funding to the institution.

    Kim Yong Jin, a management professor at Sogang University in Seoul, said the joint statement reflected U.S. claims “they are at a disadvantage under WTO, and that needs to be fixed.”

    APEC warned at the start of the meeting that exports from a region that accounts for around half of world trade would slow sharply this year as a result of the U.S. tariffs.

    Earlier on Friday, some diplomats from member countries had expressed doubts the group would even be able to adopt a joint statement, although they said South Korea Minister for Trade, Cheong In-kyo, had pushed hard for some consensus.

    “There was new momentum created through these meetings to overcome a difficult situation … as APEC urged a trans-regional effort to break through uncertainties engulfing the global economy,” Cheong told a briefing.

    In February, a Group of 20 meeting of finance ministers and central bankers in Cape Town failed to agree a joint communique after top officials from several countries, including the United States, skipped it.

    Cheong said there was no “official” discussion about a joint response to U.S. tariffs, despite pressure from some members for such talks.

    “From our standpoint, it is difficult to jointly respond because each country is in a completely different situation,” he said.

    APEC is a non-binding regional economic forum established in 1989 to facilitate deepening ties in the Asia-Pacific region, with the United States, China, countries in Latin America and Southeast Asia, as well as Hong Kong and Taiwan among its member economies.

    BILATERAL MEETINGS

    For many of the member economies, the attendance of U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer raised the stakes of the conference held on South Korea’s Jeju Island, ahead of a leaders’ summit scheduled later in the year.

    On the first day, many, if not all, of the representatives had or sought a meeting with Greer, according to host country officials.

    Greer met China’s Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang on Thursday, less than a week after their first face-to-face talks in Geneva on May 10-11, where they agreed to significantly lower tariffs for 90 days.

    Beijing’s commerce ministry spokesperson, He Yongqian, told a press conference that China was always open to discussing economic and trade relations with the United States through offline communication, but gave no details on the substance of the latest talks.

    According to a statement from the ministry, China’s Li said at the APEC meeting that in recent years individual economies had implemented so-called reciprocal tariffs, which provoked global trade frictions and strong dissatisfaction and opposition from many trading partners.

    Greer also spoke with South Korea’s Industry Minister Ahn Duk-geun, three weeks after Seoul and Washington held their opening round of trade talks, and ministers from Malaysia and Taiwan, yielding optimism that further talks would lead to reduced tariffs.

    (Reuters)

  • IIFT sets up first overseas campus in Dubai, marking historic step in global expansion

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    In a major stride towards internationalising Indian higher education, the Indian Institute of Foreign Trade (IIFT) has announced the establishment of its first overseas campus in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The move marks a significant milestone in IIFT’s 62-year history and underscores India’s growing presence in the global education landscape.

    The announcement was made by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry on Friday. The new campus has received the necessary approvals from the Ministry of Education, along with No Objection Certificates from the Ministry of External Affairs, Ministry of Home Affairs, and the University Grants Commission (UGC).

    Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal hailed the development as a reflection of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020’s vision of making India a global hub for education. “This truly reflects the spirit of NEP 2020, marking a new chapter in the internationalisation of Indian education and its growing role in shaping global thought leadership. It is also a testament to the strengthening India-UAE partnership,” he said.

    Commerce Secretary Sunil Barthwal described the Dubai campus as a turning point in IIFT’s journey. “This represents India’s emergence as a provider of world-class education, especially in the field of international trade,” he noted, while applauding the institute’s continued focus on aligning academic and research efforts with national priorities.

    Prof. Rakesh Mohan Joshi, Vice Chancellor of IIFT, expressed his gratitude to all stakeholders who supported the initiative. Reaffirming the institute’s commitment to excellence, he said, “We aim to transform IIFT into a world-class institution through our Dubai campus by excelling in education, training, and research in international trade.”

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: HK seeking sustainable trade: SCED

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for Commerce & Economic Development Algernon Yau gave a speech today at a session of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Ministers Responsible for Trade (MRT) Meeting in Jeju, South Korea.

    At a session themed “Prosperity through Sustainable Trade”, Mr Yau said that supply chains are the driving force of today’s global economy but are also highly sensitive and vulnerable to external shocks.

    He outlined that Hong Kong, as an international shipping and logistics hub, has been implementing various measures to support sustainable supply chains, including “Hong Kong’s Climate Action Plan 2050” and a roadmap for sustainability disclosure.

    “In parallel, enabling initiatives have been rolled out to equip micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) with the means to manage their environmental footprint and encourage market participants to improve sustainable business practices,” he said. “Funding schemes and capacity-building programmes have also been put in place to encourage the adoption of digital technologies by MSMEs to facilitate the digital transformation of supply chains.”

    The commerce chief stressed that the issue of supply chains has always been an integral part of APEC discussions, adding that APEC’s role is even more important now than ever as cross-boundary trade and investments and supply chains face uncertainty and unprecedented challenges.

    Mr Yau said he believes the collective goal of strengthening sustainable supply chains should never be a trade-off between sustainability and trade, but rather a synergy between the two. He emphasised that Hong Kong is committed to working with all member economies to drive progress towards shared prosperity through sustainable trade.

    On the sidelines of the MRT Meeting, Mr Yau held a bilateral meeting with Japanese State Minister of Economy, Trade & Industry Ogushi Masaki to discuss various trade and economic issues.

    Mr Yau will return to Hong Kong tomorrow morning.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: MEXC Announces Einstein (EIN) Listing in July, 50 Million EIN Rewards Event Launches Now

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — MEXC, a leading global cryptocurrency exchange, has announced that it will list Einstein (EIN) on July 20, 2025 (UTC). Ahead of the listing, MEXC will launch two exclusive events this May with a total reward pool of 50,000,000 EIN, offering users the opportunity to discover promising projects and earn attractive rewards.

    Einstein is an innovative social experiment combining scientific knowledge with the Web3 ecosystem. The project invites participants to explore the intersection of cryptocurrency, blockchain, decentralized science (DeSci), cosmology, and physics. By fostering a spirit of intellectual curiosity and discovery, Einstein aims to reveal the potential synergies between scientific inquiry and blockchain technology.

    The EIN token serves as the governance and fee token within the Einstein Protocol. It is utilized for synthesizing, upgrading, downgrading, and decomposing element tokens. All protocol fees are burned, giving EIN a deflationary utility.

    MEXC will launch two exclusive events from May 18, 10:00 to July 17, 10:00 (UTC), with the following key details:

    Event 1: Einstein (EIN) Launchpool – Stake USDT & MX to Share 42,500,000 EIN

    Users can stake USDT or MX tokens via MEXC Launchpool to earn EIN tokens. The staking mechanism is straightforward: the more users stake, the more they earn. In addition, users who stake MX tokens will also qualify for parallel participation in Kickstarter airdrop events, allowing users to earn double rewards.

    Event 2: Invite New Users & Share 7,500,000 EIN

    Users can earn 400 EIN for each friend who registers using their referral code, deposits a minimum of 100 USDT, and joins the Launchpool event. Each user can invite up to 20 new users for a maximum reward of 8,000 EIN. Rewards will be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis.

    MEXC has established itself as an industry leader by consistently providing users with early access to promising projects. According to the latest TokenInsight report, MEXC led the industry with an impressive 461 spot listings. During each bi-weekly period, MEXC maintained a high listing frequency, consistently ranking among the top six exchanges and demonstrating its ability to capture market trends quickly. To date, the exchange has listed more than 3,000 digital assets. MEXC will continue to maintain its industry-leading listing efficiency, innovate, and expand its offerings, ensuring users have access to the best opportunities in the ever-evolving crypto landscape.

    For full event details and participation rules, please visit here.

    About MEXC
    Founded in 2018, MEXC is committed to being “Your Easiest Way to Crypto.” Serving over 40 million users across 170+ countries, MEXC is known for its broad selection of trending tokens, everyday airdrop opportunities, and low trading fees. Our user-friendly platform is designed to support both new traders and experienced investors, offering secure and efficient access to digital assets. MEXC prioritizes simplicity and innovation, making crypto trading more accessible and rewarding.
    MEXC Official WebsiteXTelegramHow to Sign Up on MEXC

    Risk Disclaimer:
    The information provided in this article regarding cryptocurrencies does not constitute investment advice. Given the highly volatile nature of the cryptocurrency market, investors are encouraged to carefully assess market fluctuations, the fundamentals of projects, and potential financial risks before making any trading decisions.

    Source

    Contact:
    Lucia Hu: lucia.hu@mexc.com

    Disclaimer: This is a paid post and is provided by MEXC. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. We do not guarantee any claims, statements, or promises made in this article. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice.Investing in crypto and mining-related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone, and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent advice if necessary. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector—including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining—complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed.

    Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility. Globenewswire does not endorse any content on this page.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We assume no responsibility for any inaccuracies, errors, or omissions. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/11995afc-9c4f-4095-b7b7-6f2aab73ca56

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Gains Market Share in April 2025 Monthly Report Highlights

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget, the leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company, released its April 2025 Transparency Report, highlighting a month of growth, regulatory milestones, and continued momentum despite broader market uncertainties through consistent innovation and strong execution.

    In a month marked by market correction and investor caution, Bitget recorded a futures trading volume of $757.6 billion, representing 17.3% growth month-on-month. Spot trading volume also rose to $68.6 billion, defying the broader industry downturn. These gains contributed to Bitget’s rise as the 3rd largest crypto exchange by trading volume, with a market share of 7.2%, reflecting strong performance and continued momentum in a competitive market environment. According to Coingecko and WuBlockchain, Bitget defied broader exchange trends, gaining market share while others contracted. Bitget also surpassed 120 million users, signaling strong platform engagement and trust in its products and services.

    In April, Bitget made a major regulatory leap by securing both DASP and BSP licenses in El Salvador, allowing it to offer full crypto services—spot, derivatives, staking, and yield—under one of the world’s most forward-thinking digital asset frameworks.

    The month also marked the launch of Bitget Onchain, a feature that lets users trade on-chain assets directly through the Bitget app using USDT or USDC. This bridges the gap between centralized UX and decentralized access, making Web3 more approachable.

    To support institutional growth, Bitget upgraded its Liquidity Incentive Program with better maker-taker rates and faster onboarding, boosting liquidity across spot and derivatives markets.

    On the marketing front, Bitget teamed up with FC Barcelona star Raphinha in a global campaign spotlighting smart trading tools like Copy Trading, Launchpool, and Pre-market. This was paired with the “Your Team, Your Skin” initiative with LALIGA, letting users personalize their trading interface with team branding.

    Bitget Research Employment Report estimates blockchain could create 500,000 jobs by 2028, echoing the growth path of the AI sector and highlighting blockchain’s expanding impact.

    Finally, Bitget reinforced its global presence with immersive activations at TOKEN2049 Dubai and Paris Blockchain Week, including side events like Cryptoverse Dream Night, underscoring its commitment to community and innovation.

    Between regulatory wins, rapid user growth, and focus on accessibility and security, Bitget leads as one of the top players in the crypto industry’s evolution. As market sentiment begins to shift, Bitget is geared up to lead the next phase of crypto adoption and WEB3 integration.

    For the full transparency report, visit here.

    About Bitget

    Established in 2018, Bitget is the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company. Serving over 120 million users in 150+ countries and regions, the Bitget exchange is committed to helping users trade smarter with its pioneering copy trading feature and other trading solutions, while offering real-time access to Bitcoin price, Ethereum price, and other cryptocurrency prices. Formerly known as BitKeep, Bitget Wallet is a world-class multi-chain crypto wallet that offers an array of comprehensive Web3 solutions and features including wallet functionality, token swap, NFT Marketplace, DApp browser, and more.

    Bitget is at the forefront of driving crypto adoption through strategic partnerships, such as its role as the Official Crypto Partner of the World’s Top Football League, LALIGA, in EASTERN, SEA and LATAM markets, as well as a global partner of Turkish National athletes Buse Tosun Çavuşoğlu (Wrestling world champion), Samet Gümüş (Boxing gold medalist) and İlkin Aydın (Volleyball national team), to inspire the global community to embrace the future of cryptocurrency.

    For more information, visit: Website | Twitter | Telegram | LinkedIn | Discord | Bitget Wallet

    For media inquiries, please contact: media@bitget.com

    Risk Warning: Digital asset prices are subject to fluctuation and may experience significant volatility. Investors are advised to only allocate funds they can afford to lose. The value of any investment may be impacted, and there is a possibility that financial objectives may not be met, nor the principal investment recovered. Independent financial advice should always be sought, and personal financial experience and standing carefully considered. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Bitget accepts no liability for any potential losses incurred. Nothing contained herein should be construed as financial advice. For further information, please refer to our Terms of Use.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/5bf1a171-5c5d-4536-b7ba-529f3be725b6

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: Giant: John Lithgow’s masterful turn explores Roald Dahl’s antisemitism – and wider questions about children’s literature

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Kristina West, Lecturer in Children’s Literature, Royal Holloway University of London

    Back in 2023, a bitter debate erupted over the editing of Roald Dahl’s children’s books. His publishers, Puffin Books, had worked with Dahl’s estate (now owned by Netflix) to remove references to violence, body size, mental health, gender and skin colour. Now, a new play about an incident in Dahl’s later life is focusing on another controversy.

    Giant (written by Mark Rosenblatt) is playing at London’s Harold Pinter Theatre until August 2. It features a masterly performance by John Lithgow in the role of Dahl. The play tracks the fallout from his 1983 review of God Cried, a photographic book by Catherine Leroy and Tony Clifton about the Israeli army’s siege of west Beirut.

    However, in Rosenblatt’s blend of fact and fiction, the very real controversy arose not from the review, but from an interview Dahl gave that many Jewish and non-Jewish readers objected to as antisemitism (others saw it as a justified critique of Israel’s actions during the Lebanon war). This is melded with an imaginary situation in which Jewish representatives from Dahl’s British and American publishers visit his home to calm the backlash.


    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    Rosenblatt explores the tensions in this response both as it related to Dahl and to conversations across the world on the recent and ongoing attacks in Palestine and Israel.

    Perhaps reflecting the controversy over Dahl’s language in his children’s books, this play, too, is engaged with conversation, language and word choices. The words we use about others, how that language is interpreted and meaning is formed, and discussions about language are all at the centre of the story. As is the discourse between different forms, styles, and times of writing, and the tension between spoken and written language.

    While Rosenblatt’s script is centred on Dahl’s comments on Israel and Jewish people, it also engages with his spoken misogyny. This includes his repeated insulting epithets for American publisher Jessica Stone (Aya Cash) and his hectoring of housekeeper Hallie (Tessa Bonham Jones). It is no coincidence that the play is set right before the release of The Witches (1983), now a centre of complaints about Dahl’s written misogyny.

    The trailer for Giant.

    And while the play begins with some genuinely comic moments, the night I saw it the audience audibly gasped during the scene in which Dahl told The New Statesman that “even a stinker like Hitler didn’t just pick on [the Jews] for no reasons”. It’s a quote taken directly from Dahl’s real interview with journalist Michael Coren in 1983.

    In its engagement with the power of language and the potential effects of a political statement on the sales of Dahl’s books, the play returns viewers to the debate over cancel culture and the place of politics in and around children’s literature.

    Today, such controversy centres on Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling and the impact of her position on transgender rights on her millions of child and adult fans. But such criticisms of children’s authors for being too political have been made for decades.

    Cancel culture

    Lithgow’s performance as Dahl adds another layer of complexity to the debate on age appropriateness and the validity of political comment. He centres his aged Dahl in a time of flux, unsettled and unwell, dealing with the renovation of his house. This is reflected in some clever staging in which the house as a place of sanctuary, work and rest has become a claustrophobic space in which people are on top of each other, nothing is where it belongs, and the only solace to be had is in a decent glass of wine.

    He is also about to marry his long-term mistress, Felicity Crossland (Rachael Stirling), after divorcing his even longer-term wife. You can almost hear the creak of his knees as he moves around and feel the aches in his back as he stretches that gaunt frame.

    Lithgow’s performance of age seems to explain some of Dahl’s crabby responses. As such, perhaps, the audience is tempted to ask questions that have been asked about “classic” literature before: is old age justification for prejudicial viewpoints? Is misogyny acceptable when someone was born in 1916? Is antisemitism excusable if someone is unwell?

    While Rosenblatt and Lithgow may open the door to questions such as these, they close that door pretty firmly by the end of the play. The shock value of Dahl’s phone interview in which he exerts an agency belying his age and clearly demonstrates his antisemitism leaves the audience in little doubt as to the final message.

    But with Dahl damned by his own antisemitism, what next? Is the play calling on cancel culture for Dahl? Is it claiming that his political views and language choices mean that we shouldn’t read The Witches to our children, in edited form or not?

    Perhaps it leaves us rather back where we began: with questions over language, with debate, with more discussion on intent, and meaning, and appropriateness of language. We also need to question the rights of an individual – especially a celebrated children’s author – to express controversial views against the rights of an individual or group, especially when demonstrably abhorrent. And this conversation isn’t going to end any time soon.

    Giant is at London’s Harold Pinter Theatre until August 2 2025.

    Kristina West does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Giant: John Lithgow’s masterful turn explores Roald Dahl’s antisemitism – and wider questions about children’s literature – https://theconversation.com/giant-john-lithgows-masterful-turn-explores-roald-dahls-antisemitism-and-wider-questions-about-childrens-literature-256530

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Building on Operation Vulindlela Phase I success

    Source: South Africa News Agency

    With the successful implementation of Phase I of Operation Vulindlela, government is building on this work and advancing further structural reforms to drive more rapid and inclusive growth.

    Operation Vulindlela is a joint initiative between the Presidency and National Treasury to accelerate the implementation of structural reforms to enable economic growth and job creation. 

    In its first phase, the reform programme focused on five area, namely energy, logistics, water, telecommunications, and the visa system, which were identified as the most important constraints on economic growth. 

    “We have made significant progress in advancing the reform agenda in each of these areas, and almost all of the reforms included in Phase I are either completed or on track,” Deputy Minister of Finance, Dr David Masondo, said on Thursday in Johannesburg the Rand Merchant Bank Think Summit 2025. 

    The next phase of Operation Vulindlela will unleash a second wave of reform targeting new areas of growth.

    These new focus areas include improving the performance of local government, addressing spatial inequality through housing policy and other reforms, and advancing digital transformation.

    “These reforms include establishing ring-fenced and professionally managed utilities to deliver water, electricity and waste services in metros in order to ensure that the revenue earned from those services is reinvested in infrastructure and in the upgrading and maintenance of assets.

    “They also include a radical shift in housing policy, away from a supply-driven model of providing fully constructed houses on the urban periphery and towards a demand-driven model, with subsidies for home ownership and affordable rentals.

    “This will give people more choice and enable them to live closer to areas of economic opportunity, while stimulating investment in property development in our inner cities,” he said.

    It will include a rapid rollout of digital public infrastructure, such as digital identity and payments to enable economic activity and improve access to government services, through the Digital Transformation Roadmap which, the Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies launched earlier this week.

    READ | Digital Transformation Roadmap to make it easier to access government services

    The roadmap sets out a focused plan to modernise the delivery of government services through investment in digital public infrastructure.

    These crucial digital reforms will enable all citizens to access seamless government services through a single trusted platform. This will be driven through improvements in identity verification, real-time payments, and data exchange.

    “We all agree that profound economic reform is required to achieve a higher level of growth and restore confidence in our economy. Operation Vulindlela is the key to delivering on this reform agenda and to achieving a virtuous cycle of confidence, growth and jobs,” the Deputy Minister said.

    Government has built a strong and capable team to drive the reform agenda within the Presidency and National Treasury, and are drawing on the expertise and capability that exists within the private sector. – SAnews.gov.za

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Taxi numbers consultation

    Source: Scotland – City of Perth

    The consultation, which relates to taxis only (vehicles hailed on the street or from a taxi rank), wants to hear what people think about the number of licences issued for taxis in Perth.  

    Currently, there is a limit on the total number of taxi licences issued by the Council, which is set at 80. This limit is only put in place if the Council is satisfied that there is no significant unmet demand for taxis, and the situation is reviewed around every three years. If there is an unmet demand for taxis which is significant, then the Council needs to consider if the limit should be increased or removed. As part of that process, a company which is experienced in this field was hired to complete a survey to see if the public demand for taxis was being met. The results of that survey are available on the online Consultation Hub; the key points of those results are: 

    • The amount of time passengers had to wait for a taxi in 2024 was significantly greater than in 2017 (which was pre-pandemic). 

    • Disabled passengers, especially wheelchair users, continue to face increased difficulties. 

    • There is a significant demand for the services of taxis in Perth that is not met (this is an ‘unmet demand’). 

    • The limit or cap on the number of taxis should be increased by 24 to meet the demand. 

    • If the limit or cap is increased to allow as large a number as 24 new taxi licences to be issued, it is also worth considering whether there is a realistic difference between that and removing the limit or cap altogether (making the number of licences available ‘unlimited’). 

    At a Licensing Committee Meeting held on 25 March 2025, it was agreed that the Council would consult with the public to see what the next steps might be in relation to how the unmet demand should be addressed. 

    The consultation survey is open online at our Consultation Hub until 16 June 2025. Anyone requiring a paper copy or requiring special assistance to complete the consultation can contact the Council’s Civic Licensing team on 01738 475180 or email civiclicensing@pkc.gov.uk

    Feedback from this consultation will be used, along with other information collected, to prepare a report to the Licensing Committee. It is the Licensing Committee that make decisions on how many additional taxi licences will be made available, as well any other restrictions on vehicle types. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rosneft computer competitions brought together more than 1,000 participants

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Rosneft – Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Rosneft’s Ufa and Tyumen research institutes held a large-scale tournament in computer sports, in which more than 1,100 representatives of 50 of the Company’s enterprises from all over Russia from Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk to Krasnodar took part. This is an absolute record for all six years of the cyber tournament.

    Over the course of five days, 8 competitions were held online, including chess, naval battle and Russian checkers. Depending on the discipline, both individual players and teams were allowed to participate.

    The winners were representatives of the companies Sibintek (checkers), TNNC (sea battle) and RN-Uvatneftegaz (chess).

    The cyber festival is held to popularize sports and intellectual games and develop skills for effective teamwork among employees.

    Rosneft develops a healthy lifestyle culture and comprehensively supports sports. The corporate program “Energy of Life” unites more than 111 thousand employees of the Company. More than 60 thousand employees take part in competitions in various sports.

    Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft May 16, 2025

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Acute food insecurity and malnutrition rise for sixth consecutive year in world’s most fragile regions

    Source: World Food Programme

    In 2024, over 295 million people across 53 countries and territories faced acute hunger—an increase of almost 14 million people compared to 2023— while the number of people facing catastrophic levels of hunger reached a record high

    Geneva/New York/Rome/Washington – Acute food insecurity and child malnutrition rose for the sixth consecutive year in 2024, pushing millions of people to the brink, in some of the world’s most vulnerable regions, according to the Global Report on Food Crises (GRFC), released today. 

    The report shows conflict, economic shocks, climate extremes, and forced displacement continued to drive food insecurity and malnutrition around the world, with catastrophic impacts on many already fragile regions.

    In 2024, more than 295 million people across 53 countries and territories experienced acute levels of hunger– an increase of 13.7 million from 2023. Of great concern is the worsening prevalence of acute food insecurity, which now stands at 22.6 percent of the population assessed. This marks the fifth consecutive year in which this figure has remained above 20 percent. 

    The number of people facing catastrophic hunger (IPC/CH Phase 5) more than doubled over the same period to reach 1.9 million – the highest on record since the GRFC began tracking in 2016. 

    Malnutrition, particularly among children, reached extremely high levels, including in the Gaza Strip, Mali, Sudan, and Yemen. Nearly 38 million children under five were acutely malnourished across 26 nutrition crises.

    The report also highlights a sharp increase in hunger driven by forced displacement, with nearly 95 million forcibly displaced peopleincluding internally displaced persons (IDPs), asylum seekers and refugeesliving in countries facing food crises such as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Colombia, Sudan, and Syria, out of a global total of 128 million forcibly displaced people.

    “This Global Report on Food Crises is another unflinching indictment of a world dangerously off course,”said United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres. “Long-standing crises are now being compounded by another, more recent one: the dramatic reduction in lifesaving humanitarian funding to respond to these needs. This is more than a failure of systems – it is a failure of humanity. Hunger in the 21st century is indefensible. We cannot respond to empty stomachs with empty hands and turned backs.”   

    Key drivers of acute food insecurity and malnutrition: 

    • Conflict remained the top driver of acute food insecurity, affecting around 140 million people in 20 countries and territories. Famine has been confirmed in Sudan, while other hotspots with people experiencing Catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity include the Gaza Strip, South Sudan, Haiti, and Mali.
    • Economic shocks including inflation and currency devaluation, drove hunger in 15 countries affecting 59.4 million people – still nearly double pre-COVID 19 levels despite a modest decline from 2023. Some of the largest and most protracted food crises were primarily driven by economic shocks, including in Afghanistan, South Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, and Yemen.
    • Weather extremes particularly El Niño-induced droughts and floods, pushed 18 countries into food crises affecting over 96 million people, with significant impacts in Southern Africa, Southern Asia and the Horn of Africa.

    According to the GRFC outlook, hunger shocks will likely persist into 2025, as the Global Network anticipates the most significant reduction in humanitarian funding for food and nutrition crises in the report’s history. 

    Call for bold reset to break cycle of food crises  

    Acute food insecurity and malnutrition have increased to record levels, yet global funding is experiencing its fastest decline in years, and political momentum is weakening. 

    Breaking the cycle of rising hunger and malnutrition requires a bold reset – one that prioritizes evidence-driven and impact-focused action. This means pooling resources, scaling what works, and putting the needs and voices of affected communities at the heart of every response.

    Beyond emergency aid, the Global Network Against Food Crises recommends investing in local food systems and integrated nutrition services to address long-term vulnerabilities and build resilience to shocks – especially in crisis-prone regions where 70 percent of rural households rely on agriculture for sustenance and livelihood.

    # # #

    Leadership quotes: 

    Hadja Lahbib, EU Commissioner for Equality, Preparedness and Crisis Management:

    “This year’s Global Report on Food Crises paints yet another stark and unacceptable picture of rising hunger. This is not merely a call to action — it is a moral imperative. At a time when funding cuts are straining the humanitarian system, we reaffirm our commitment to fight global hunger. We will not abandon the most vulnerable, especially in fragile and conflict-affected countries. We will continue to champion and defend International Humanitarian Law. Today’s challenges are greater than ever — but so is our solidarity. Now is the time to act with unity and resolve, and to prove that even in the hardest times, humanity can and will rise to the challenge.”

    QU Dongyu, Director-General, FAO: “As we launch the 2025 Global Report on Food Crises, we are cognizant that acute food insecurity is not just a crisis – it is a constant reality for millions of people, most of whom live in rural areas. The path forward is clear: investment in emergency agriculture is critical, not just as a response, but as the most cost-effective solution to deliver significant long-lasting impact.”

    Alvaro Lario, President, IFAD: “The report makes clear that humanitarian responses must go hand-in hand with investments in rural development and resilience building to create long-term stability that lasts beyond emergency interventions. Rural communities – especially smallholder farmers – are central to food security, resilience, and growth. This is even more true in fragile settings.”

    Raouf Mazou, Assistant High Commissioner for Operations, UNHCR: “People who have been displaced show remarkable strength, but resilience alone can’t end hunger. As food insecurity worsens and humanitarian crises become more prolonged, we need to shift from emergency aid to sustainable responses. That means creating real opportunities—access to land, livelihoods, markets and services—so people can feed themselves and their families, not just today, but well into the future.”

    Catherine Russell, Executive Director, UNICEF:  “In a world of plenty, there is no excuse for children to go hungry or die of malnutrition. Hunger gnaws at the stomach of a child. It gnaws, too, at their dignity, their sense of safety, and their future. How can we continue to stand by when there is more than enough food to feed every hungry child in the world? How can we ignore what is happening in front of our eyes?  Millions of children’s lives hang in the balance as funding is slashed to critical nutrition services.”

    Axel van Trotsenburg, Senior Managing Director for Development Policy and Partnerships, World Bank: “The global hunger crisis threatens not just lives, but the stability and potential of entire societies. What is needed now is collective action so we can build a future free of hunger.” 

    Cindy McCain, Executive Director, WFP: “Like every other humanitarian organization, WFP is facing deep budget shortfalls which have forced drastic cuts to our food assistance programs. Millions of hungry people have lost, or will soon lose, the critical lifeline we provide. We have tried and tested solutions to hunger and food insecurity. But we need the support of our donors and partners to implement them.”

    Note to Editor

    Download the GFRC here  

    Broadcast quality B-Roll here 

    The Global Report on Food Crises (GRFC) is published  annually by the Global Network Against Food Crises (GNAFC) with analysis from the Food Security Information Network (FSIN).

    About the GNAFC

    The Global Network Against Food Crises (GNAFC) is an international alliance of the United Nations, the European Union, governmental and non-governmental agencies working together to address food crises. a unique platform of key operational agencies, international financial institutions, member states and organisations jointly seeking to reduce and end hunger with evidence-based actions proven to deliver impact. 

    For more information please contact: 

    European Union  

    Eva Hrncirova 

    Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations 

    eva.hrncirova@ec.europa.eu

    FAO 

    Irina Utkina 

    News and Media 

    irina.utkina@fao.org

     

    IFAD

    Caroline Chaumont

    c.chaumont@ifad.org 

    UNHCR

    William Spindler 

    Senior Communications Officer 

    spindler@unhcr.org 

     

    UNICEF

    Nadia Samie-Jacobs

    Communication Specialist (Media) 

    nsamie@unicef.org

    Tel: +1 845 760 2615

     

    World Bank

    Nicolas Douillet

    Communications Lead, Food & Agriculture 

    ndouillet@worldbankgroup.org 

    Tel: +1 202 378 7468 

    WFP

    Machrine Birungi

    Media Relations Specialist 

    machrine.birungi@wfp.org

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Migrant smugglers arrested during cross-border operation

    Source: Eurojust

    16 May 2025|

    Belgian, German and Polish authorities, supported by Eurojust and Europol, have dismantled a criminal group suspected of smuggling up to 300 migrants into the European Union. During a joint operation in Belgium and Germany on 13 May, seven suspected members of the smuggling network were arrested. An operation earlier this month in Poland led to the arrest of 10 suspected members.

    German investigations into the network began during a routine immigration check in September 2024. Irregularities in the driver’s documentation raised suspicions of attempted illegal entry. Evidence soon emerged that the driver had possibly already smuggled and dropped off illegal migrants that same day. Ongoing investigations revealed that the driver was part of a network responsible for smuggling up to 300 illegal migrants. Most of the members of the criminal group were based in Belgium and acted as a link between the suspects in Germany and a related criminal group in Poland, which was also smuggling migrants from Middle Eastern countries into the EU.

    The network organised the illegal transport of up to 12 people at a time along the Balkan route. A legitimate Polish transport company was used to conceal their activities.

    During three action days spread out over several months, 10 suspects were arrested in Belgium, Germany and Poland, and several criminal assets were seized.

    Eurojust and Europol supported the cross-border investigation from the outset. Eurojust ensured that judicial authorities were able to exchange information and develop a joint judicial strategy. On the action days, Europol facilitated the deployment of investigators between the countries. In addition, Europol sent experts into the field to help national authorities cross-check operational information in real time against Europol’s databases.

    The following authorities carried out the operations:

    • Germany: Traunstein Public Prosecutor’s Office; Freilassing Federal Police Inspectorate Bundespolizeiinspektion Freilassing
    • Belgium: Investigating judge of the Court of First Instance of West Flanders – PPO West Flanders- Federal Judicial Police West Flanders
    • Poland: Silesian Subdivision of the Department for Organized Crime and Corruption of National Prosecutor’s Office in Katowice; Karpacki Border Guard Unit in Nowy Sącz; Voivodeship Police Headquarter in Katowice

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Empowering Africa’s Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM) Sector: Key Reforms and Strategies to Take Center Stage at African Mining Week 2025

    Source: Africa Press Organisation – English (2) – Report:

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa, May 16, 2025/APO Group/ —

    The upcoming African Mining Week (AMW) – Africa’s premier gathering for mining stakeholders, taking place on October 1 – 3, 2025 in Cape Town – will feature a key session on the strategies and policies adopted by Africa’s mineral-rich nations to formalize and empower small-scale mining operations.

    The ASM Regulation: Balancing Formalization and Livelihood Protection panel, will shine a light on regulatory frameworks and initiatives designed to bring artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) into the formal mining value chain. The session will explore how these efforts enhance the sector’s contribution to mineral exploration, production and economic growth.

    In Ghana, small-scale gold mining – which accounts for 40% of the country’s total gold production – supports over one million jobs and generates more than $5 billion in export revenue. To strengthen and formalize the sector, the government has introduced initiatives including the Community Mining Scheme (apo-opa.co/3ZaTxH9), District Mining Committees, the Ghana Land Restoration and Small-Scale Mining Project as well as the Ghana Gold Board. These programs aim to regulate, professionalize and expand the sector as the country seeks to maintain its position as Africa’s top gold producer.

    As part of its broader growth strategy, Zambia – Africa’s largest copper producer – is also driving efforts to strengthen its ASM sector. The country’s Ministry of Mines and Mineral Development (apo-opa.co/3ZimS2a) increased the issuance of artisanal mining rights from 304 in 2023 to 680 in 2024, and small-scale exploration licenses from 399 to 615. With a goal to scale copper production to 3 million tons per annum by 2030, Zambia has also established a dedicated department for ASM mining and is preparing to enact its Local Content Regulation in 2025 to promote domestic participation, job creation and value addition.

    In Zimbabwe, ASM remains a key driver of growth in the gold sector (apo-opa.co/4mnKBIo). According to Fidelity Gold Refineries, small-scale miners were key contributors to the 40.6% increase in gold output in Q1 2025 compared to Q4 2024. Programs including the Gold Mobilization Program and Gold Development Initiative Fund are enabling miners with funding and technical training, thereby boosting output and sectoral sustainability.

    Ethiopia is advancing the formalization of its ASM sector through the National ASM Strategy, designed to promote a responsible, inclusive and productive mining environment. Employing over 1.26 million people and contributing 65% of the country’s foreign exchange earnings, the ASM sector plays a crucial role in supporting Ethiopia’s broader development and economic objectives.

    As the continent’s premier gathering for mining stakeholders, AMW enables ASM mining companies to connect with technology providers, ensuring they are equipped with the tools they need to explore and develop Africa’s rich geological resources. The forum will feature exclusive networking sessions and project showcases, providing a platform for regional and global emerging mining firms to connect with growing and lucrative investment opportunities across the African mining value chain.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI: Best VPN for Mac (2025): IPVanish Recognized as Leading VPN for Apple Devices by Software Experts

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK CITY, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Software Experts has recognized IPVanish a leading virtual private network (VPN) solution for Apple users in 2025, citing the service’s strong macOS and iOS support, privacy-focused infrastructure, and flexible protocol options. This recognition follows a growing demand among Apple users for tools that protect personal data across iPhones, iPads, and Mac computers without sacrificing speed or usability.

    Top VPN for Apple Devices

    • IPVanish – a no-logs VPN service that offers secure, high-speed internet access through a privately owned server network and flexible protocol support

    As a no-logs VPN provider, IPVanish offers a comprehensive set of features designed to work seamlessly across Apple ecosystems, helping users secure their internet traffic while preserving control over their data.

    One of IPVanish’s key advantages is its full infrastructure ownership. Unlike many VPN providers that lease third-party servers, IPVanish operates a global network of over 2,200 servers in more than 75 locations. This server model allows for direct control over both performance and security, which is especially important for Apple users who expect high standards across their devices.

    IPVanish also supports multiple VPN protocols, including WireGuard®, OpenVPN, and IKEv2. WireGuard®, the most recent addition, is optimized for speed and low battery usage – making it particularly well-suited for mobile devices like the iPhone and iPad. Users can easily switch between protocols to balance performance and security needs, and the iOS and macOS apps allow for intuitive configuration.

    Security and privacy are further reinforced by IPVanish’s strict no-logs policy. The company does not collect or store any user activity, connection timestamps, or IP address data. This aligns with the privacy priorities of many Apple users, who are increasingly aware of how personal data is tracked, shared, and monetized online.

    In addition to core privacy functions, IPVanish apps for Apple devices support advanced features such as automatic reconnect, on-demand connection triggers, and support for Siri Shortcuts on iOS. These integrations allow for greater automation and user control while maintaining strong encryption standards.

    As privacy threats continue to evolve, VPNs are becoming a necessary tool for users who want to secure their traffic, especially when using public Wi-Fi or accessing content across borders. IPVanish delivers a combination of transparency, performance, and compatibility that makes it particularly appealing for the Apple community.

    Click here to browse IPVanish’s plans and features. For the full review, please visit the Software Experts website.

    About IPVanish: IPVanish, a Ziff Davis company, is an award-winning cybersecurity provider whose tools and products support internet safety, digital privacy, and online freedom. With a commitment to innovation, transparency, and user-centric solutions, IPVanish is a leading name in the VPN industry.

    About Software Experts: Software Experts provides news and reviews of consumer products and services. As an affiliate, Software Experts may earn commissions from sales generated using links provided. 

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Video: UK Should we ban mobile phones in schools?

    Source: United Kingdom UK House of Lords (video statements)

    Watch members press the government on its plans to ensure mobile phones are kept out of schools.

    Read a transcript of this question https://hansard.parliament.uk/lords/2025-05-12/debates/02FE8999-D6BC-4F83-B61A-C53F71A73330/SchoolsMobilePhones

    Catch-up on House of Lords business:

    Watch live events: https://parliamentlive.tv/Lords
    Read the latest news: https://www.parliament.uk/lords/

    Stay up to date with the House of Lords on social media:

    • X: https://twitter.com/UKHouseofLords
    • Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/houseoflords.parliament.uk
    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/UKHouseofLords/
    • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/UKHouseofLords
    • Flickr: https://flickr.com/photos/ukhouseoflords/albums
    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-house-of-lords
    • Threads: https://www.threads.net/@UKHouseOfLords

    #HouseOfLords #UKParliament

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3ZUkxnOG04

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Competition enforcement – a view from the CMA

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Competition enforcement – a view from the CMA

    Speech by Juliette Enser, Executive Director for Competition Enforcement, delivered at CompLaw: Advanced EU, London.

    Thank you for inviting me to give a view from the CMA today.

    I’m going to focus on competition enforcement work – my area of specialty – because it’s a particularly opportune time to talk about 2 important topics.

    First, I’d like to explain the messages that we think businesses should take away from our spate of recent enforcement activity.

    Secondly, looking to the future, I want to explain how we propose to make sure our competition enforcement work delivers on the UK government’s steer that we should focus on supporting growth across the CMA’s tools.

    The aims of competition enforcement

    Before I get into the detail of these topics, however, I wanted to spend a few moments standing back and thinking about what and how we are trying to achieve with our competition enforcement work.

    Because this ultimately guides our choices about both what work we do – in other words what cases and other interventions we choose to prioritise – and how we go about it.

    At its heart competition enforcement is about safeguarding competitive markets, driving efficiency throughout the supply chain and promoting dynamism, innovation and productivity.

    Competition enforcement can also drive down prices for consumers, for businesses and for taxpayers, as well as keeping markets open and creating a level playing field. And it has an important role in driving trust and confidence in markets, for both consumers and investors.

    That’s why competition enforcement remains at the core of the work of the CMA as we evolve to meet new policy and economic challenges. And this applies whether we are talking about tackling hard-core cartel conduct, abuses of market power or other illegal and harmful arrangements.

    So that is – as most of you in this room will already recognise – what competition law enforcement can achieve. But how, in practice, do we translate this into reality. One important way is by bringing anti-competitive conduct to an end: and that can be through the vehicle of a formal investigation – certainly the aspect of our work that is likely to be most familiar to this audience – but also through other interventions – such as warning or advisory letters that I will talk about later.

    We are in many cases however also focused on deterring those who might be tempted to stray over the line. And indeed this can be a crucially important outcome of our work. We do this primarily by imposing fines on companies – almost £650 million over the last 5 years – but also through holding individuals to account through our powers in relation to director disqualification – at current count 29 individuals have been prevented from acting as directors or being involved in the management of a company under the disqualification regime. More recently, those who are found to have committed breaches of competition law also face an increased risk of being excluded from future public tenders as a result of the Procurement Act that came into force this February.

    Recent enforcement activity

    I’m going to move on to talk about how that aim translates into enforcement activity by reference to 5 recent cases – all of which demonstrate our commitment to deterring conduct that impedes the kind of dynamic, competitive markets that boost our economy.

    A brief tour of our recent enforcement cases will serve to underline the variety of victims we aim to protect – taxpayers, workers, consumers, businesses – as well as how anti-competitive conduct has the potential to reduce economic prosperity through dampening innovation or reducing efficiency.

    So what, more precisely, have we been doing by way of enforcement since the start of this year.

    In February, we fined 4 global investment banks collectively over £100 million for colluding in relation to UK government bonds or gilts (and related products) through bilateral exchanges of information among traders. (The fifth bank involved in the investigation escaped fines because it was the first to self-report the conduct to us under our leniency policy before we’d opened an investigation.) It is, of course, vital that a market of paramount importance to us all – the gilt market – should be able to function freely and fairly and the size of the fine reflects that.

    In March, we concluded our first labour market case concerning exchanges of information among sports broadcasters about the rates of pay for freelancer production staff like sound and camera operators with a view, primarily, to aligning those rates or – as one of those involved described it – presenting a ‘united front’. Labour markets are key to a well-functioning economy and, in taking cases in this area, we aim to ensure that workers are able to obtain a fair value for their work but also that businesses can find and hire workers at the right price.

    In April, we reached a finding of infringement by many of the global car manufactures and the EU and UK trade association that encompassed a long-running agreement not to advertise their performance against certain green parameters – an investigation we started because we were concerned that this type of conduct could undermine incentives to innovate, including when it comes to sustainable growth. The investigation culminated in a settlement which saw the parties collectively agree to pay fines in the region of £77 million.

    I also wanted to highlight a case that is not quite yet concluded which is our investigation into a drug manufacturer who we suspected of spreading misinformation about the safety of a rival drug. To put an end to the investigation, the manufacturer has offered not only to put in place guarantees about how it will interact with healthcare providers going forward – including conducting a communications campaign designed to clarify the position in relation to the relative safety of the rival drug – but also to make a payment of £23 million directly to the NHS. So with this outcome, we would be simultaneously ensuring that a competitor is not wrongly prevented from competing on the merits to grow the sales of its drug, we are protecting the NHS (and ultimately the taxpayer) from the risk of potential financial harm and – perhaps most importantly – making sure healthcare providers have accurate safety information when selecting the right treatment for their patient’s condition.

    And while I’m talking about pharmaceuticals, it is also worth highlighting a judgment handed down last week concerning our investigation about excessive pricing of Liothyronine. This case concerned a particularly egregious infringement that saw the sole supplier of an essential drug increase its price over 1000% in less than 10 years, without any justification – costing the NHS millions of pounds. Given the nature of the conduct at issue here, we were extremely pleased that the Court of Appeal found resoundingly in our favour.

    It is also worth flagging that as part of its judgment, the Court of Appeal considered how the CMA should approach the issue of deterrence when it comes to setting penalties. And given what I’ve already said about the importance of deterrence to our work, it was comforting that in this case the Court of Appeal upheld the CMA’s approach to ‘specific deterrence’ – essentially agreeing that penalties should be set at a level that is sufficient to deter re-offending by the party being fined relative to global turnover (and therefore re-instating in full the original penalty imposed by the CMA on one of the firms involved).

    Before I move on to discuss our future priorities, I did want to highlight that both the vehicle recycling and disparagement cases I mentioned above were also the subject of similar investigations by the European Commission.

    Indeed, in the car recycling case, we opened and concluded the cases on the same day. And particularly in the context of this conference, I wanted to stress how vital international cooperation remains to competition enforcement work; whether that be in sharing expertise and best practice or on specific investigations. Indeed, this was brought home to me last week during the International Competition Network’s annual conference which took place in Edinburgh, and which saw agencies come together and discuss how we continue to evolve our agencies and our laws to meet the challenges we collectively face and to exchange best practices in areas as diverse as dawn raids to advocacy.

    Looking to the future – priorities for intervention

    The government’s strategic steer published today as well as our annual plan highlights the opportunities for our work to continue to drive efficiencies in the provision of public sector services.

    As those of you who are familiar with our work will recognise, the CMA has a strong track record in taking cases that serve to protect the public purse. This includes investigations into pharmaceutical companies under both Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 – seeking to detect and deter practices which ultimately drive up prices for the NHS, an investigation into a supplier of school software that we were concerned was trying to ‘lock in’ schools and preventing them from fully benefiting from price and quality competition, and cartel investigations for example into:

    • concrete drainage products used, among others, in the construction of roads
    • water storage tanks, used by schools and hospitals

    And we intend to build on our track record with a focus on public procurement.

    It is well-known that public procurement is particularly vulnerable to bid-rigging and that bid-rigging, where present, can substantially increase prices: research suggests that this can be by 20% or more. And this accords with evidence from our own cases that bid-rigging can be extremely lucrative – with some of the parties to our Demolition investigation having ‘compensated’ each other for deliberately losing tenders with substantial payments.

    So we intend to intensify our work in this area. For example, by investing further in our detection tools, including – where we can access the right data – using data analytics (including AI) tools to identify suspicious activity. And as I mentioned already there is a new risk facing cartelists arising from the debarment regime introduced by the Procurement Act 2023 which will see them face the possibility of inclusion in a central debarment register and exclusion from future public tenders for a period of up to 5 years.

    While public procurement is certainly a priority, it will not be the only area of work we tackle in the short to medium term. For example, we are currently investigating in the areas of housebuilding and travel – both cross-cutting sectors that are key enablers of growth. And, as I will talk about more below, we are generally keen to hear from businesses facing barriers to entry or expansion that competition law can help them solve, particularly in areas that the government has identified as a focus in its industrial strategy green paper.

    Looking to the future – the 4Ps

    Late last year, the CMA announced a new ‘4Ps’ framework to deliver meaningful changes to how we go about our work, based on clear feedback from businesses and investors. The 4Ps in question are pace, predictability, proportionality and process. This framework is – consistent with the government steer that I’ve already referred to – designed to support growth, investment and business confidence in the UK’s competition and consumer regimes.

    We’ve already set out how we intend to apply the 4Ps to our merger review function, as well as to the new digital markets and consumer protection regimes under the DMCCA. Today, I want to say a few words about how we intend to complete the roll-out of the 4Ps to our competition enforcement work.

    Pace and proportionality

    Of the 4Ps, I would like to start with pace and proportionality and want to take some time to explain:

    • as regards ‘pace’ – how we plan to deliver against the new ‘duty of expedition’ introduced by the DMCCA, including through greater use of technology and rigorous streamlining of investigations and decisions while respecting due process
    • as regards ‘proportionality’ – how we propose to use the full range of our toolkit while at the same time maintain the deterrence impact of our interventions

    Pace

    Since the DMCCA came into force in April of this year, we have a statutory duty of expedition that applies to all of our competition enforcement investigations, a change which we worked closely with the government to bring about.

    So we have been considering carefully how to get to the right outcomes in a more timely manner: for example, we continue to make significant investments in technology to speed up our processes, for example, for evidence review and we have made substantial efforts to streamline our decisions – while still seeking to ensure they are properly reasoned. We have also recently made changes to the guidance covering our procedures intended to help us work at pace, for example, by setting clear expectations about how we will go about identifying legally privileged documents among material acquired during inspections. While none of this may sound particularly exciting, identifying and pursuing these incremental opportunities is vital if we are to achieve our goal – to reach positive outcomes as quickly as we can without compromising on rights of defence.

    And in that context, I firmly believe that this new duty of expedition will help us achieve the right balance between conducting our work at pace and ensuring that we give due consideration to requests we might receive, such as requests from parties – for example, for more time to provide information – or from complainants – for example when they ask for the CMA to conduct further lines of enquiry. Because – and this is worth underlining – our ability to work at pace depends not only on how we conduct ourselves but also on the response of those with an interest in our investigation.

    Proportionality

    As I mentioned already, we have a range of tools at our disposal to bring about behaviour change both by the parties to the investigation and more broadly: this can of course include a fine imposed following a full administrative procedure but need not always do so. In some cases, use of a softer tool or a consensual outcome may be more appropriate provided this can be done without sacrificing the overall deterrent impact of the regime. So we are focused on achieving the right suite of interventions across the regime.

    And that means you can expect 3 things from us going forward.

    First, you should expect us only to open a formal investigation where we consider it is warranted by the expected impact should we conclude that an infringement has taken place – whether the direct impact that might result if we put an end to unlawful conduct and/or through the deterrent message that we would send, whether to a firm, sector or about a practice. This commitment is underpinned by our prioritisation principles, which require us to consider the strategic significance and impact of the outcome that may be achieved and to weigh that up against the risk and resources involved, which we consistently challenge ourselves about whether it’s right to open or continue investigations.

    In practical terms, this means you can also expect that in many cases we will aim to achieve a change in behaviour without carrying out a full (or indeed any) formal investigation. Indeed, between 2018 and 2024 we sent a total of 593 warning and advisory letters. Such letters put the businesses in question on notice of the CMA’s concerns and include recommendations for ensuring compliance with competition law.

    Secondly, we are firmly committed to closing investigations or scoping them more narrowly (for example, reducing the number of parties or the time period of our investigation) where we consider it is proportionate to do so.

    Thirdly, where we can do so without undermining deterrence, we will seek to put an end to the matter by consensus, whether through our settlement or commitments procedures. Indeed, with the exception of the Liothyronine case, each of the recent investigations that I talked about earlier ended (or may end) in settlement or commitments.

    Being able to bring investigations to an end in this way has clear benefits – both for the parties involved and for the CMA, in bringing finality to the proceedings more quickly and avoiding unnecessary litigation. For that reason, we are particularly pleased that the CAT has twice now upheld – most recently last December – the finality of settlements. withdrawing settlement discounts from parties that appeal. Indeed, it is now a feature of our settlement process that parties must expressly agree not to bring an appeal.

    However, it is important to emphasise that, in investigations that are not concluded by way of settlement or commitments, we remain focused on seeing them through where we believe there is significant harm to address or deterrent impact to achieve including, where appropriate, vigorously defending any legal challenges we may face.

    Predictability

    So, moving on to predictability and in particular plans we have to make a more predictable environment for those firms who wish to collaborate for beneficial purposes and who are considering the competition law risks of doing so.

    As competition specialists you will know that we have published a lot of guidance (on both substance and process) as well as full reasoned decisions, so there is transparency of our work and reasoning. Through those publications, we aim to help firms to stay on the right side of the law and also know how to engage with our processes. And we have a wide range of materials intended to help businesses avoid illegal conduct: for example, ‘case studies’ which use ‘stories’ from our work to act as a guide or wider campaign work such as our ‘cheating or competing’ campaign.

    That said, we are aware that competition law can be complex. And it would not be a good outcome for the UK if this complexity resulted in competition law having an unnecessary chilling effect on positive, pro-competitive behaviour that could support, for example, innovation or productivity. If, for example, competitors were to be unduly wary of working together to bring innovative products to market or of using their collective purchasing power to sponsor new production techniques or improve the resilience of the supply chain.

    Indeed, discussions of industrial strategy inevitably raise questions around policy goals like resilience or global competitiveness, which might lead to the consideration of the potential benefits of strategic domestic suppliers or the creation of globally significant companies. And this might give added salience to the question of how competition law and policy can create the right conditions for companies to scale and remain competitive in the global market – including how to create an environment that fosters beneficial collaborations.

    So, turning to what we intend to do in this space. Many of you will likely be familiar with our initiative launched in 2023 on ‘Green Agreements’ which was intended to address exactly the concern I am talking about – in other words fears that businesses were not working together to combat sustainability issues because they were concerned that they might face competition law risks. This initiative has 2 components:

    1. accessible advice – the Green Agreements Guidance – that clearly explains how the competition rules might apply to a variety of types of cooperation that businesses might want to engage in to meet sustainability goals
    2. an open offer to provide tailored advice (that we also publish to further demystify our practice)

    And from our engagement with the business community and other stakeholders – including the number of requests for advice we receive – we are confident this initiative has been successful. (Indeed, the only time as an enforcer I’ve been asked while on stage what prompted the CMA to do something so brilliant was when I was talking about Green Agreements!)

    So, we are now working with the government and business stakeholders to understand whether there are other areas that might benefit from additional intervention from the CMA to support beneficial activity.

    This could potentially include bespoke advice, issuing tailored guidance and also making aspects of our existing guidance more accessible.

    We have already targeted 2 avenues where there may be a need for us to act: first is the cross-economy area of labour markets. Here, we have heard that businesses want to understand from us in more detail how they can stay on the right side of the law when it comes to hiring practices including, for example, how they can legitimately benchmark their salaries against those of other employers. And we therefore intend to supplement our existing advice to employers.

    Secondly, in the key enabling area of skills, we are talking to stakeholders across the 4 nations of the UK to get an understanding of whether competition law concerns are preventing universities from working together in ways that could be good for the economy.

    Now I should underline – particularly for those older members of the audience – that we are not proposing to return to the days before the ‘modernisation regulation’ (of 2003) where even pro-competitive agreements required our blessing. And nor are we suddenly going to turn a blind eye to competitor collaborations which, even while they may have a beneficial objective, leave insufficient room for competition and therefore have the potential for harm. However, we recognise that with the premium we have – to my mind rightly – put in recent years on using our decision-making powers to tackle the most egregious harms, we have been investing less in helping those looking to push forward with beneficial collaborations.

    And in that spirit, we are interested in hearing from sectors – particularly the 8 key industrial strategy sectors – where there is concrete evidence that competition law concerns are chilling beneficial collaborations and where we might be able to help.

    Process

    Moving on to the final of the 4Ps – process. Process is about engagement and we are currently focusing on 2 areas where we are looking to improve how we engage with businesses and other stakeholders: complaints and leniency.

    Leniency guidance

    Our leniency programme remains an important – albeit by far not the only – tool for us to detect cartels accounting and indeed our government bonds, sports broadcasting and vehicle recycling cases all resulted from leniency applications.

    At the end of April we launched a public consultation on an updated version of the guidance that underpins that programme. We are aiming to make the guidance easier for firms to use, by bringing it up to date with developments in policy and practice, and by streamlining our procedures; as well as ensuring it continues to have the right balance of incentives for companies and individuals to be the first to apply for leniency. We are looking forward to hearing your feedback on this document.

    Complaints charter

    When it comes to how we engage with businesses who may be victims of anti-competitive conduct, anecdotal evidence suggests that we could improve on the experience of firms. With that in mind, we intend to publish a ‘Complaints Charter’ that is intended to make our complaints process more accessible and predictable: for example, information about how to make a complaint, and what you can expect by way of response, including how quickly complainants should expect to hear back from us.

    I hope that in publishing this charter we not only help firms engage with the CMA but also underline how interested we are in hearing from those businesses that might be suffering as a result of anti-competitive conduct, particularly in the areas we have identified in our Annual Plan as a focus. And we are very happy to engage in discussion at an early stage with those who wish to gauge our appetite to take action on a particular issue. And I would also emphasise that our desire to take action to protect businesses that are doing their very best to grow and to innovate is backed up by strong tools – including interim measures – as well as procedures to protect confidential information.

    For the moment I will leave it there, other than to flag that we are continuing to think more broadly including about further changes to our processes that can help embed the 4P principles so please do watch this space.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Grant Scheme launched to support events and markets

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    Businesses in the city centre are being encouraged to apply for a grant scheme to help support hosting events and markets. 

    The City Centre Events and Markets Scheme encourages and supports businesses to host events that will contribute towards Aberdeen’s vibrancy as well as enhancing community spirit and supporting the local economy. 

    Aberdeen City Council Co-Leader Councillor Ian Yuill said: “Having a wide selection of events will help our city centre to continue to be a fun place for locals and visitors to come together and celebrate local talent. 

    “Any interested businesses should look to see if they are eligible to apply and start their creative journey today.”

    Finance and Resources convener Councillor Alex McLellan said: said: “We are delighted to offer businesses in Aberdeen city centre the opportunity to bring their ideas to life and make a lasting impact on our community through this exciting scheme.”

    Discretionary grants of £1,000 are available to businesses looking to host free-to-attend, community events or markets within Aberdeen city centre. 

    Businesses can apply for funding towards exciting and creative events such as food markets for local producers, craft workshops and fashion shows. 

    This Grant Scheme is funded by the UK Shared Prosperity Fund. 

    To find out more and to apply, visit our website. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Top Prize Awarded in Lunar Autonomy Challenge to Virtually Map Moon’s Surface

    Source: NASA

    NASA named Stanford University of California winner of the Lunar Autonomy Challenge, a six-month competition for U.S. college and university student teams to virtually map and explore using a digital twin of NASA’s In-Situ Resource Utilization Pilot Excavator (IPEx). 
    The winning team successfully demonstrated the design and functionality of their autonomous agent, or software that performs specified actions without human intervention. Their agent autonomously navigated the IPEx digital twin in the virtual lunar environment, while accurately mapping the surface, correctly identifying obstacles, and effectively managing available power.

    Adam dai
    Lunar Autonomy Challenge team lead, Stanford University

    Dai added, “It pushed us to find solutions robust to the harsh conditions of the lunar surface. I learned so much through the challenge, both about new ideas and methods, as well as through deepening my understanding of core methods across the autonomy stack (perception, localization, mapping, planning). I also very much enjoyed working together with my team to brainstorm different approaches and strategies and solve tangible problems observed in the simulation.” 
    The challenge offered 31 teams a valuable opportunity to gain experience in software development, autonomy, and machine learning using cutting-edge NASA lunar technology. Participants also applied essential skills common to nearly every engineering discipline, including technical writing, collaborative teamwork, and project management.
    The Lunar Autonomy Challenge supports NASA’s Lunar Surface Innovation Initiative (LSII), which is part of the Space Technology Mission Directorate. The LSII aims to accelerate technology development and pursue results that will provide essential infrastructure for lunar exploration by collaborating with industry, academia, and other government agencies.

    Niki Werkheiser
    Director of Technology Maturation and LSII lead, NASA Headquarters

    “To succeed, we need input from everyone — every idea counts to propel our goals forward. It is very rewarding to see these students and software developers contributing their skills to future lunar and Mars missions,” Werkheiser added.  
    Through the Lunar Autonomy Challenge, NASA collaborated with the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Caterpillar Inc., and Embodied AI. Each team contributed unique expertise and tools necessary to make the challenge a success.
    The Applied Physics Laboratory managed the challenge for NASA. As a systems integrator for LSII, they provided expertise to streamline rigor and engineering discipline across efforts, ensuring the development of successful, efficient, and cost-effective missions — backed by the world’s largest cohort of lunar scientists. 
    Caterpillar Inc. is known for its construction and excavation equipment and operates a large fleet of autonomous haul trucks. They also have worked with NASA for more than 20 years on a variety of technologies, including autonomy, 3D printing, robotics, and simulators as they continue to collaborate with NASA on technologies that support NASA’s mission objectives and provide value to the mining and construction industries. 
    Embodied AI collaborated with Caterpillar to integrate the simulation into the open-source  driving environment used for the challenge. For the Lunar Autonomy Challenge, the normally available digital assets of the CARLA simulation platform, such as urban layouts, buildings, and vehicles, were replaced by an IPEx “Digital Twin” and lunar environmental models.
    “This collaboration is a great example of how the government, large companies, small businesses, and research institutions can thoughtfully leverage each other’s different, but complementary, strengths,” Werkheiser added. “By substantially modernizing existing tools, we can turn today’s novel technologies into tomorrow’s institutional capabilities for more efficient and effective space exploration, while also stimulating innovation and economic growth on Earth.”
    FINALIST TEAMS
    First PlaceNAV Lab teamStanford University, Stanford, California

    Second PlaceMAPLE (MIT Autonomous Pathfinding for Lunar Exploration) teamMassachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

    Third PlaceMoonlight teamCarnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA

    OTHER COMPETING TEAMS

    Lunar Explorers
    Arizona State University
    Tempe, Arizona

    AIWVU
    West Virginia University
    Morgantown, West Virginia

    Stellar Sparks
    California Polytechnic Institute Pomona
    Pomona, California

    LunatiX
    Johns Hopkins University Whiting School of Engineering
    Baltimore

    CARLA CSU
    California State University, Stanislaus
    Turlock, California

    Rose-Hulman
    Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
    Terre Haute, Indiana

    Lunar Pathfinders
    American Public University System
    Charles Town, West Virginia

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: FDA Advances Robust, Transparent Post-Market Chemical Review Program to Keep Food Supply Safe and Healthy

    Source: US Food and Drug Administration

    For Immediate Release:
    May 15, 2025

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today is taking a major step to increase transparency and ensure the safety of chemicals in our food. The agency is launching a stronger, more systematic review process for food chemicals already on the market—especially those that concern consumers most.
    “No parent should ever worry about what’s in their child’s food,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. “We’re taking decisive action and using every authority we have to clean up the food supply and protect American families.”
    Under the leadership of Secretary Kennedy and FDA Commissioner Martin A. Makary, M.D., M.P.H., the FDA will roll out several key actions over the coming months:

    A modernized, evidence-based prioritization scheme for reviewing existing chemicals. A draft will be released for public comment soon.
    A final, systematic post-market review process shaped by stakeholder input.
    An updated list of chemicals under review, including BHT, BHA, and ADA. The FDA will also take steps to expedite its review of chemicals currently under review like phthalates, propylparaben, and titanium dioxide. FDA will continue to share information about the status of this work on its public website as part the agency’s push for greater transparency.

    Until now, the FDA has conducted post-market reviews on a case-by-case basis, often in response to citizen petitions or new scientific evidence. This new framework will be proactive, science-based, and built for long-term impact. Americans are demanding more transparency and accountability around food safety and the FDA is doing just that.
    “We are prioritizing our resources and leveraging gold standard science to create, for the first time, a systematic post-market review program that consumers can trust and rely on,” said FDA Commissioner Martin A. Makary, M.D., M.P.H. “Only by improving the safety and transparency of the food supply and ensuring consumers can make healthful food choices will we overcome the long-standing trajectory of chronic diseases.”
    This post-market review effort is part of a larger initiative to improve food chemical oversight. Last month, the FDA announced plans to phase out petroleum-based synthetic dyes from the U.S. food supply. Earlier this year, the agency also began exploring rulemaking to eliminate the process that allows companies to self-affirm substances as “generally recognized as safe” (GRAS) without FDA oversight.

    Consumer:888-INFO-FDA

    ###

    Boilerplate

    The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, radiation-emitting electronic products, and for regulating tobacco products.

    Inquiries

    Consumer:
    888-INFO-FDA

    Content current as of:
    05/15/2025

    Regulated Product(s)

    Follow FDA

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Newsom proclaims Small Business Month 2025

    Source: US State of California 2

    May 15, 2025

    Sacramento, California – Governor Gavin Newsom today issued a proclamation declaring May 2025 as “Small Business Month.”

    The text of the proclamation and a copy can be found below:

    PROCLAMATION

    California’s more than 4.2 million small businesses – the most of any state – embody the entrepreneurial spirit that drives the economy of the Golden State. Small businesses and entrepreneurs accelerate economic growth and mobility in California, building wealth, innovating to solve global problems, launching future growth industries, and supporting local communities.

    California’s small businesses account for more than 99.9% of total businesses in the state and employ nearly half of the state’s private sector workforce. Our state leads the nation in business startups, and our businesses received more than 55% of the nation’s venture capital in 2024.

    California businesses produce more patents per capita and conduct more research and development than any other state in the nation. Our state leads the nation in high-tech industries, agriculture, and manufacturing output in the U.S. We exceed the national rate of manufacturing output by 83% since the late 1990s. Our manufacturing firms have created new industries and supply the world with manufactured goods spanning aerospace, computers, electronics, and zero-emission vehicles.

    The state is committed to nurturing small businesses. AB 2019 codified the state’s procurement spending goal of 25% to small businesses, while the Small Business Technical Assistance Program helps businesses and entrepreneurs start, grow, and become more resilient. Through the state’s Accelerate California Inclusive Innovation Hubs, we’re working to expand and diversify the innovation economy by improving access to resources in underserved communities, supporting emerging tech sectors, and catalyzing the creation of high-quality jobs in every corner of the state.

    California’s economy – the fourth largest in the world – is not confined to our borders. More than 60,000 small businesses in California export to countries around the world. For our economy to maintain its strength, we must ensure that all Californians – no matter who they are or where they come from – can pursue their dreams to start, manage, and grow resilient businesses in the Golden State. To protect our small businesses, California is acting to stop unlawful tariffs that are hurting American businesses and families.

    Our small businesses are global leaders in innovation and economic competitiveness and have helped make our economy the envy of the world. This month, we recognize the tremendous contributions of our small businesses, as well as the importance of our ongoing work to support their success and make the California Dream accessible to all.

    NOW THEREFORE I, GAVIN NEWSOM, Governor of the State of California, do hereby proclaim May 2025 as “Small Business Month.”

    IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Great Seal of the State of California to be affixed this 15th day of May 2025.

    GAVIN NEWSOM
    Governor of California

    ATTEST:
    SHIRLEY N. WEBER, Ph.D.
    Secretary of State

    Recent news

    News Sacramento, California — Governor Gavin Newsom today condemned U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for calling on the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) to conduct a “complete review” of mifepristone — the safe, effective, and…

    News “We’re done with barriers. Let’s get this built.” What you need to know: Governor Newsom’s proposed budget includes proposals to streamline permitting and accelerate development  —- clearing the path for more housing and economic opportunity.  SACRAMENTO –…

    News Tax cut for military retireesUniversal pre-kindergarten for all Expanded before school, after school, & summer schoolFree school meals for all kids Boosting literacy & readingBuilding more housing, ASAPMore water for CaliforniansLowering drug…

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Wallet Surpasses 80 Million Users Amid Rising Demand for Self-Custody

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget Wallet, the leading non-custodial crypto wallet, has surpassed 80 million users globally, marking a major milestone in its seventh year of operations. The sharp growth reflects a broader shift toward self-custody amid rising demand for mobile-first, multi-functional crypto wallets. As onchain activity continues to accelerate, wallets are emerging as central platforms in the evolving Web3 stack, driven by stablecoin adoption, real-world asset tokenization and regulatory softening.

    Since its founding in 2018, Bitget Wallet has integrated with thousands of dApps and networks, processed over 250 million transactions, and facilitated over $12 billion in cumulative transaction volume. The wallet has evolved from a simple tool into a comprehensive hub for all onchain activities — from trading and earning to spending crypto in daily life. “Our vision has always been to make crypto practical and accessible to everyone,” said Alvin Kan, COO of Bitget Wallet. “We’re building a simple, seamless experience that helps users participate in Web3 on their own terms—from discovering new tokens to making real-world payments.”

    The adoption is being driven by a combination of mobile-first usage patterns, demand for asset sovereignty, and market volatility that is prompting users to seek greater control over their funds. Bitget Wallet’s integrated approach—combining trading, asset management, and payments — has proven especially appealing to retail users navigating fragmented ecosystems. Its growth over the past year has also been fueled by a surge in onchain trading activity, alongside the launch of new payment features and global incentive campaigns. A series of product upgrades have helped users seize fast-moving opportunities, while simplified interfaces to attract new users across both emerging and developed markets.

    Recent upgrades have further positioned Bitget Wallet as a central gateway for onchain engagement. The launch of Super DEX, a next-generation aggregator spanning over 130 chains, improves trade execution by tapping into deeper liquidity across networks. Bitget Wallet Alpha has emerged as a go-to mobile dashboard for real-time token signals and early-stage trading, helping users act quickly on emerging opportunities. On the payment front, the rollout of Shop with Crypto and PayFi integrations allows users to spend assets directly from their wallets, closing the gap between onchain value and everyday use. With growing activity, the wallet has also introduced enhanced security features, including default MEV protection and EIP-7702 detection tools, to ensure safer interactions at scale.

    Now in its seventh year, Bitget Wallet is marking the milestone with a global campaign spotlighting its evolution into a more intuitive and widely used self-custody platform. The company will host community meetups in key regions, stream leadership sessions, and release a year-in-review to deepen engagement and expand its global presence.

    For more information, visit the Bitget Wallet blog.

    About Bitget Wallet
    Bitget Wallet is a non-custodial crypto wallet designed to make crypto simple and secure for everyone. With over 80 million users, it brings together a full suite of crypto services, including swaps, market insights, staking, rewards, DApp exploration, and payment solutions. Supporting 130+ blockchains and millions of tokens, Bitget Wallet enables seamless multi-chain trading across hundreds of DEXs and cross-chain bridges. Backed by a $300+ million user protection fund, it ensures the highest level of security for users’ assets.

    For more information, visit: X | Telegram | Instagram | YouTube | LinkedIn | TikTok | Discord | Facebook

    For media inquiries, please contact media.web3@bitget.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/e407704f-ebae-436e-b5b9-2a90fa66be37

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Europe: Brussels court ruling on tracking-based ads a major win for right to privacy 

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Responding to the Brussels Court of Appeal ruling establishing that the consent model underpinning tracking-based advertising by Big Tech companies such as Google, Microsoft, Amazon and X in Europe is incompatible with EU privacy data law, Hannah Storey, Amnesty International Policy Advisor on Technology and Human Rights said: 

    “This a major win for the right to privacy and a clear message that the tech industry should move away from surveillance-based advertising to a more rights-respecting model. 

    “The practice of harvesting and processing our data using the Transparency and Consent Framework (TCF), currently used for most online advertising, is not compatible with the right the right to privacy. This ruling is a significant turning point in the push against the rights-violating business model.   

    Hannah Storey, Amnesty International Policy Advisor on Technology and Human Rights

    “Advertising online is underpinned by ‘real time bidding’. This system collects personal information about us, such as what we’re reading, listening to, where we are, and can infer personal things about us like beliefs, sexual preferences and health conditions. 

    “Every time you load a website this personal information is shared with thousands of companies who then bid to show you an advert without proper control over your information and that’s a massive privacy breach. 

    “Big Tech companies have tried to argue that they are complying with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), an EU digital privacy law enacted in 2016 to enhance data protection and privacy for individuals, by using the Transparency and Consent Framework – asking for our consent for this privacy invasion through mere popups – but this ruling shows that this model is not sufficient.” 

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI Video: ICE Tampa led worksite enforcement operations at construction sites near Wildwood, Fla.

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    ICE Tampa led worksite enforcement operations at construction sites in a swiftly growing area near Wildwood, Fla.

    So far this week, we’ve made 33 worksite arrests during this specialized op — including four previously deported aliens.

    Worksite enforcement actions aren’t just about illegal workers — they’re also about criminal business owners hiring them. These businesses undercut their competition by exploiting illegal alien labor, making it harder for legitimate businesses to stay afloat.

    Businesses that are part of the IMAGE program are not being visited currently – we trust they’re compliant.

    Join the program at http://ICE.gov/IMAGE

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTYRBiV-ycM

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Global: A trial is testing ways to enforce Australia’s under-16s social media ban. But the tech is flawed

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Alexia Maddox, Senior Lecturer in Pedagogy and Education Futures, La Trobe University

    De Visu/Shutterstock

    Australia’s move to ban under-16s from social media is receiving widespread praise. Other countries, including the United Kingdom, Ireland, Singapore and Japan, are also now reportedly considering similar moves.

    The ban was legislated in November 2024 and is due to take effect in December 2025. The law says social media platforms can’t use official IDs such as passports to check Australian users’ ages, and shouldn’t track Australians. But it doesn’t specify the alternative.

    To test alternative methods, the federal government commissioned a trial of currently available technologies designed to “assure” people’s age online. Run by the Age Check Certification Scheme, a UK-based company specialising in testing and certifying identity verification systems, the trial is in its final stages. Results are expected at the end of June.

    So what are the technologies being trialled? Are they likely to work? And how might they – and the social media ban itself – alter the relationship all of us have with our dominant forms of digital communication?

    Dead ends for age verification

    Age verification confirms a person’s exact age using verified sources such as government-issued IDs. Age assurance is a broader term. It can include estimation techniques such as analysing faces or metadata to determine if users meet age requirements.

    In 2023 the federal government rejected mandating verification technologies for age-gating pornography sites. It found them “immature” with significant limitations. For example, database checks were costly and credit card verification could be easily worked around by minors.

    Nonprofit organisation Digital Rights Watch also pointed out that such systems were easily bypassed using virtual private networks – or VPNs. These are simple tools that hide a user’s location to make it seem like they are from a different country.

    Age assurance technologies bring different problems.

    For example, the latest US National Academies of Sciences report shows that facial recognition systems frequently misidentify children because their facial features are still developing.

    Improving these systems would require massive collections of children’s facial images. But international human rights law protects children’s privacy, making such data collection both legally and ethically problematic.

    Flawed testing of innovative tech?

    The age assurance technology trial currently includes 53 vendors hoping to win a contract for new innovative solutions.

    A range of technology is being trialled. It includes facial recognition offering “selfie-based age checks” and hand movement recognition technologies that claim to calculate age ranges. It also includes bespoke block chains to store sensitive data on.

    There are internal tensions about the trial’s design choices. These tensions centre on a lack of focus on ways to circumvent the technology, privacy implications, and verification of vendors’ efficacy claims.

    While testing innovation is good, the majority of companies and startups such as IDVerse, AgeCheck, and Yoti in the trial, will likely not hold clout over the major tech platforms in focus (Meta, Google and Snap).

    This divide reveals a fundamental problem: the companies building the checking tools aren’t the ones who must use them in the platforms targeted by the law. When tech giants don’t actively participate in developing solutions, they’re more likely to resist implementing them later.

    Google recently proposed storing ID documents in Google Wallet for age verification.
    nitpicker/Shutterstock

    Unresponsive tech companies

    Some major tech companies have shown little interest in engaging with the trial. For example, minutes from the trial’s March advisory board meeting reveal Apple “has been unresponsive, despite multiple outreach attempts”.

    Apple has recently outlined a tool to transmit a declared age range to developers on request. Apple suggests iOS will default the age assurance on Apple devices to under 13 for kids’ accounts. This makes it the responsibility of parents to modify age, the responsibility of developers to recognise age, and the responsibility of governments to legislate when and what to do with an assured age per market.

    Google’s recent Google Wallet proposal for age assurance also misses the mark on privacy concerns and usefulness.

    The proposal would require people over 16 to upload government-issued IDs and link them to a Google account. It would also require people trust Google not track where they go across the internet, via a privacy-preserving technology that remains a promise.

    Crucially, Meta’s social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram also do not let you login with Google credentials. After all, they are competitors. This raises questions about the usefulness of Google’s proposal to assure age across social media platforms as part of the government’s under-16s ban.

    Meanwhile, Google is also suggesting AI chatbots should be directly targeted and available to children under 13, creating something akin to a “social network of one”, which are out of scope of the ban.

    Rather than engage with Australian age verification systems, companies such as Apple and Google are promoting their own solutions which seem to prioritise keeping or adding users to their services, or passing responsibility elsewhere.

    For the targeted platforms that enable online social interactions, delay in engagement fits a broader pattern. For example, in January 2025, Mark Zuckerberg indicated Meta would push back more aggressively against international regulations that threaten its business model.

    A shift in internet regulation

    Australia’s approach to banning under-16s from using social media marks a significant shift in internet regulation. Rather than age-gating specific content such as porn or gambling, Australia is now targeting basic communication infrastructure – which is what social media have become.

    It centres the problem on children being children, rather than on social media business models.

    The result is limiting childrens’ digital rights with experimental technologies while doing little to address the source of perceived harm for all of us. It prioritises protection without considering children’s rights to access information and express themselves. This risks leaving the most vulnerable children being cut off from digital spaces essential to their success.

    Australia’s approach puts paternal politics ahead of technical and social reality. As we get closer to the ban taking effect, we’ll see how this approach to regulate social communication platforms offers young people respite from the platforms their parents fear – yet continue to use everyday for their own basic communication needs.

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

    ref. A trial is testing ways to enforce Australia’s under-16s social media ban. But the tech is flawed – https://theconversation.com/a-trial-is-testing-ways-to-enforce-australias-under-16s-social-media-ban-but-the-tech-is-flawed-256332

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • Two climbers, from India and the Philippines, died on Everest

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    An Indian climber and another from the Philippines became the first mountaineers to die on Mount Everest in the current March-May climbing season of the world’s highest peak, hiking officials said on Friday.

    Subrata Ghosh, 45, from India, died on Thursday below the Hillary Step while returning after reaching the 8,849 metres (29,032 feet) peak.

    “He refused to descend from below the Hillary Step,” said Bodhraj Bhandari of Nepal’s Snowy Horizon Treks and Expedition organising company.

    No other details were available.

    The Hillary Step is located in the ‘death zone’, an area between the 8,000-metre (26,250 ft) high South Col and the summit where the level of natural oxygen is inadequate for survival.

    “Efforts are underway to bring his body down to the base camp. The cause of his death will be known only after post post-mortem,” Bhandari said.

    Philipp II Santiago, 45, from the Philippines, died late on Wednesday at the South Col while he was on his way up, said Himal Gautam, a tourism department official.

    Santiago was tired when he reached the fourth high camp and died while resting in his tent, Gautam added.

    Santiago and Ghose were both members of an international expedition organised by Bhandari.

    Nepal has issued 459 permits to climb Everest during the current season that ends in May. Nearly 100 climbers and their guides have already reached the summit this week.

    Mountain climbing, trekking, and tourism are a source of income and employment for Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world.

    At least 345 people have died on Everest in more than 100 years since summiting expeditions were known to have started, according to the Himalayan Database and hiking officials.

    –Reuters

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Seven-year ban for Suffolk car wash owner who employed illegal workers

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Seven-year ban for Suffolk car wash owner who employed illegal workers

    Four illegal workers were discovered by Immigration Enforcement officers

    • Vittorio Dragoti employed four illegal workers from Romania at his Fiveways Car Wash in Suffolk  

    • The workers were found with no right to work in the UK by Immigration Enforcement last year 

    • Dragoti has been banned as a company director until May 2032

    The owner of a Suffolk hand car wash has been banned as a company director for seven years after employing four illegal workers. 

    Vittorio Dragoti, 28, hired the workers from Romania at the Fiveways Car Wash on the Fiveways Roundabout near Barton Mills. 

    The workers were discovered when Immigration Enforcement officials visited the car wash in 2024.  

    Dave Magrath, Director of Investigation and Enforcement Services at the Insolvency Service, said: 

    Company directors have clear statutory obligations to recruit people who have the right to work in the UK. 

    Consumers deserve to have confidence that workers providing services to them are not working illegally. And the workers themselves deserve to not be put in such a vulnerable position by people who may exploit their immigration status. 

    Vittorio Dragoti’s disqualification as a company director is a result of ongoing close collaboration between the Insolvency Service and our partners at the Home Office to clamp down on rogue directors.

    Dragoti, of Queensway, Mildenhall, was the sole director of Vito’s Car Care Limited since March 2019. 

    Immigration Enforcement officials found the four Romanian men aged between 18 and 49 with no right to work in the UK when they visited the car wash in April last year. 

    Vito’s Car Care was fined £180,000 for the immigration breach. The fine currently remains unpaid. 

    Cheryl Daldry, the Home Office’s East of England Immigration Compliance and Enforcement lead, said: 

    This is a great example of the serious consequences that are in store for business owners who fail to carry out checks on individuals they hire to ensure they have the right to work in the UK. 

    Dragoti flouted our employment and immigration rules by employing multiple people with no right to work in the UK, resulting in long term enforcement action against himself and his business. 

    “I would like to thank our partners at the Insolvency Service for their help to secure these sanctions against this non-compliant employer. 

    The Secretary of State for Business and Trade accepted a disqualification undertaking from Dragoti, and his seven-year ban began on Thursday 15 May. 

    The disqualification prevents him from becoming involved in the promotion, formation or management of a company, without the permission of the court. It does not impact any businesses with similar names or locations.

    Further information

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Singapore ETO promotes Hong Kong in Vietnam through government and business engagements (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Singapore ETO promotes Hong Kong in Vietnam through government and business engagements  
         The luncheon in Da Nang, co-organised for the first time with the Hong Kong Business Association Vietnam (HKBAV), attracted around 60 Vietnamese business leaders and investors. The Singapore ETO’s investment promotion team delivered a presentation on Hong Kong’s latest investment climate and opportunities, as well as the city’s unique position as a gateway to the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, and outlined the range of support services available to Vietnamese enterprises looking to expand into the region.
     
         In his opening remarks, the Director of the Singapore ETO, Mr Owin Fung, highlighted Vietnam’s growing importance as a key economic and strategic partner of Hong Kong. The Singapore ETO’s relentless engagement across various regions of Vietnam underlines its strong commitment to fostering bilateral collaboration through continued government-to-government dialogue, business exchanges, and people-to-people interactions.
     
         On the same day, Mr Fung paid a courtesy call on the Consul General of the People’s Republic of China in Da Nang, Ms Dong Biyou. Mr Fung briefed Ms Dong on the Singapore ETO’s latest outreach initiatives in Vietnam, and both sides exchanged views on how Hong Kong can serve as a gateway between Mainland China and Vietnam, particularly in the context of the 75th anniversary of diplomatic ties between the two countries.
     
         In April and early May, the Singapore ETO conducted two other official visits to further promote Hong Kong and strengthen ties in northern and southern Vietnam. On May 10, Mr Fung attended and delivered remarks at the HKBAV Gala Dinner in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), which was attended by nearly 200 guests. He reiterated Hong Kong’s distinctive advantages under the “one country, two systems” framework, particularly in light of the evolving global trade environment. Other guests included the Deputy Consul-General of the People’s Republic of China in HCMC, Mr Xu Zhou, and the Chairman of the HKBAV, Mr Michael Chiu.
     
         On April 16, the Singapore ETO and Invest Hong Kong cohosted a business seminar and networking event titled “Hong Kong – The Launchpad for Your AI-Driven Success” in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. Supported by the Vietnam Software & IT Services Association (VINASA), the event was attended by founders, owners, and senior executives from over 30 companies from sectors including artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and information and communications technology. Participants were briefed on Hong Kong’s market opportunities, AI funding opportunities, tax incentives, and research and development support measures by Mr Fung and the investment promotion team through presentations and a sharing session.
     
         During the same Hanoi visit, Mr Fung also had separate meetings with the Deputy Director General of the International Market Development Department, Vietnam’s Ministry of Industry and Trade, Mr To Ngoc Son, and the Acting Director General of the Northeast Asia Department, Vietnam’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr Do Nam Trung, on April 16 and 17 respectively. Both sides exchanged views on the regional economic and geopolitical outlook and explored opportunities to enhance collaboration on government and business levels. Mr Fung also sought Vietnam’s continued support for Hong Kong’s accession to the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership.
    Issued at HKT 17:30

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Jiangsu Guofu Hydrogen Energy Equipment Co Ltd to establish international headquarters and R&D centre in Hong Kong to provide hydrogen energy solutions (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    One of the strategic enterprises under the Office for Attracting Strategic Enterprises (OASES), Jiangsu Guofu Hydrogen Energy Equipment Co Ltd, officially inaugurated its Hong Kong office (Guofu Hydrogen Energy (Hong Kong) Development Co Limited) today (May 16). Guofu Hydrogen Energy plans to establish its international headquarters and research and development platform in Hong Kong, leveraging the city’s strengths as an international financial centre and innovation and technology (I&T) hub to expand its hydrogen energy business and related solutions.

    The Deputy Chief Manager (Advanced Manufacturing and New Energy Technology) of OASES, Mr Eric Leung, attended the inauguration ceremony and stated, “As the world transitions to a low-carbon economy, Hong Kong is committed to promoting sustainable development and the application of green energy technologies. Guofu Hydrogen Energy’s decision to establish its international headquarters and R&D platform in Hong Kong not only underscores the city’s dedication to green and new energy technology development but also further affirms its role as a bridge connecting the Mainland and international markets.”
    ​
    The President of Jiangsu Guofu Hydrogen Energy Equipment Co Ltd, Mr Wu Pinfang, said, “Hong Kong boasts a well-established legal system, an excellent business environment, and unique advantages in connecting the Mainland with global markets, making it an ideal choice for our business expansion. At present, Guofu Hydrogen Energy is leveraging Hong Kong’s regional advantages and global industry policies to advance the development of a global supply chain centre for hydrogen energy equipment.”

    Jiangsu Guofu Hydrogen Energy Equipment Co Ltd, established in June 2016 with its headquarters in Zhangjiagang, Jiangsu Province, is a leading hydrogen energy storage and transportation equipment manufacturer and comprehensive industry chain solution provider in China. The company focuses on the research and development and manufacturing of core equipment for the entire hydrogen energy “production, storage, transportation, refuelling, and utilization” industry chain. Its product line covers water electrolysis hydrogen production equipment, vehicle hydrogen supply systems (including high-pressure/liquid hydrogen storage cylinders), complete hydrogen refuelling station equipment, liquid hydrogen storage and transportation containers, and hydrogen liquefaction plant solutions.

    For more information about Guofu Hydrogen Energy, please visit www.guofuhee.com.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: The EBA repeals its Guidelines on the specification of types of exposures to be associated with high risk

    Source: European Banking Authority

    The European Banking Authority (EBA) today repealed its Guidelines on specification of types of exposures to be associated with high risk due to the application of the new capital requirement regulation (CRR 3). The repeal of the Guidelines aims at providing legal certainty to the market. 

    The Guidelines were published on the 15th of March 2019, as mandated per CRR article 128 last sub-paragraph. They clarified which exposures should be considered as “high risk exposures”. Given that this exposure class no longer exists in CRR 3, as Article 128 now only refers to ‘subordinated debt exposures’, the Guidelines are no longer applicable.  

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: EU Fact Sheets – History of the economic and monetary union – 15-05-2025

    Source: European Parliament

    The economic and monetary union (EMU) is the result of economic integration in the EU. A common currency, the euro, has been introduced in the euro area, which currently comprises 20 EU Member States. All EU Member States – with the exception of Denmark – must adopt the euro once they fulfil the convergence criteria. A single monetary policy is set by the Eurosystem, comprising the European Central Bank’s Executive Board and the governors of the central banks of the euro area.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI China: Announcement on Open Market Operations No.92 [2025]

    Source: Peoples Bank of China

    Announcement on Open Market Operations No.92 [2025]

    (Open Market Operations Office, May 16, 2025)

    The People’s Bank of China conducted reverse repo operations in the amount of RMB106.5 billion through quantity bidding at a fixed interest rate on May 16, 2025.

    Details of the Reverse Repo Operations

    Maturity

    Rate

    Bidding Volume

    Winning Bid Volume

    7 days

    1.40%

    RMB106.5 billion

    RMB106.5 billion

    Date of last update Nov. 29 2018

    2025年05月16日

    MIL OSI China News