Category: China

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The number of online literature readers in China has reached 575 million, and a quarter of them are zoomers

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    BEIJING, June 17 (Xinhua) — China’s online literature audience has grown to 575 million, underscoring the growing dominance of digital storytelling in the country’s cultural landscape.

    Of the total online literature audience, about half are readers aged 26 to 45, with the growth of this figure largely driven by those born after 2000, who make up almost a quarter of all online literature readers in the country.

    This is stated in the Blue Book on China Online Literature 2024, published on Tuesday by the China Writers Association. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China’s Prosecutor’s Office Warns of Rise in Online Crimes Against Minors

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    BEIJING, June 17 (Xinhua) — Crimes committed by adults against minors using information and telecommunications networks are on the rise in China, calling for further strengthening of protection and law enforcement measures, according to a white paper released by the Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP) on Monday.

    In 2024, Chinese prosecutors charged 3,347 people with such crimes, up 14.1 percent year-on-year and accounting for 7.3 percent of all crimes committed by adults against minors in 2024, compared with 6.9 percent in 2023, according to data provided in the document.

    As the white paper highlights, Chinese prosecutors are working closely with cyber regulators and the police to combat crimes targeting minors, such as cyberbullying and sexual harassment. Greater efforts are also being made to punish fraudsters who exploit children in their criminal schemes.

    At the same time, legal protection for minors is being expanded, the White Paper says. This includes providing legal advice, influencing guardians so that they fulfill their duties, providing support to minors in civil proceedings, etc.

    The White Paper calls for further improvements to the overall digital environment for younger generations. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China and Kazakhstan: A story about how friendship has cemented the hearts of two people and continues to unite the peoples of the two countries

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    ALMATY, June 17 (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping has repeatedly told a touching story of friendship between China and Kazakhstan: “More than 80 years ago, Chinese and Kazakh composers Xian Xinghai and Bakhytzhan Baikadamov met and became friends in Almaty, and their brotherly friendship transcended the borders of their countries… In difficult times, when Xian Xinghai was alone, sick and poor, Kazakh composer Bakhytzhan Baikadamov provided him with shelter.”

    This year marks the 120th anniversary of Xian Xinghai’s birth. B. Baikadamov’s nearly 80-year-old daughter, Baldyrgan Baikadamova, who recently recovered from a serious illness, gave an interview to Xinhua at her home in Almaty.

    She says that Xian Xinghai often repeated two cherished wishes: first, to find his family and tell them about his life in Almaty; second, to take his latest works to China. “Stories about these two cherished wishes are still told today, and this proves that true friendship can transcend time and space,” she says.

    “KAZAKHSTAN-CHINESE FAMILY”

    In May 1940, Xian Xinghai left Yan’an for the Soviet Union to work on the documentary film “Yan’an and the Eighth Army”. In 1941, due to the war, the film’s production was suspended, and Xian Xinghai was unable to return to his homeland. At the end of 1942, he reached Almaty, but still could not find a way to leave for China. B. Baikadamov, whom he had never met before, extended a helping hand to him.

    B. Baikadamov, meeting Xian Xinghai on the street, saw a thin, poorly dressed young man sitting on a suitcase with a violin in his hands. Despite the language barrier, he realized that this man needed help and brought him to his home. The two composers supported each other in difficult times, inspiring the people with their music in the fight against fascism. The story of their friendship, which went through trials, still remains in the memory of the peoples of the two countries.

    “Over the years, my father’s stories and the memories of relatives made me feel like I was a witness to this history,” says B. Baikadamova. Before retiring, she held the position of vice-rector of the Almaty Conservatory. On the walls of her office, you can see many folk instruments, and in the bookcase by the wall, there is a photograph of her father.

    B. Baikadamova says that the days when Xian Xinghai and B. Baikadamova’s family lived together were difficult. Food was rationed, and there was very little of it. “/We/ planted potatoes, beets, carrots, and that’s how we survived… Grandma could exchange potatoes, for example, for butter. She always worried about Xian Xinghai, saying: “He’s too thin.” In the cold winter, Xian Xinghai didn’t have warm clothes, and Grandma remade an old coat for him,” she says.

    After the death of composer B. Baikadamov, his family continued to remember Xian Xinghai’s wishes. In 1986, after numerous efforts, B. Baikadamova managed to contact Xian Xinghai’s daughter, Xian Ning. “When Xian Ning first came to Kazakhstan, we had a long conversation about her father’s life here. This was the beginning of our friendship, and one could say that our two families became one Kazakh-Chinese family,” she says.

    B. Baikadamova believes that the history of “brotherly friendship that transcended the borders of countries,” which Chairman Xi Jinping spoke about, is a symbol of friendship between Kazakhstan and China and “an ideal example of people’s diplomacy.”

    As the keeper of this friendship, she often interacts with the Chinese and feels part of this country. She has witnessed how the story of her father’s friendship with a Chinese composer continues to promote cultural exchanges between Kazakhstan and China, and is pleased to see the blossoming of practical cooperation between the two countries in various fields. “And the more people know about this story and the details of this story, the closer our peoples will become,” says our interlocutor.

    “HIS WORKS HAVE RETURNED INSTEAD OF HIM”

    Music always sounded in B. Baikadamov’s house. Music was the most important language in the communication between the two composers.

    During the war years, Xian Xinghai never stopped yearning for his homeland and loved ones. Symphony No. 1 “National Liberation”, Symphony No. 2 “Holy War”, Suite “The Whole River is Red” /”Manjianghong”/… Each piece, each manuscript carried a piece of the composer’s soul.

    On the advice of B. Baikadamov, Xian Xinghai took on the task of creating a symphonic poem about the hero of the Kazakh people, Amangeldy. Based on the folk songs collected by the Kazakh composer, Xian Xinghai created the poem “Amangeldy”, which inspired local residents. In Kazakhstan, Xian Xinghai also taught music theory, taught how to play musical instruments, and held concerts, receiving wide recognition.

    In early 1944, on the advice of B. Baikadamov, Xian Xinghai went to Kostanay to work in a local musical ensemble as an accompanist. In 1945, while touring in a remote village, he fell ill with pneumonia and soon died in Moscow.

    According to B. Baikadamova, Xian Xinhai wanted to bring the works written in Kazakhstan to China. “There is nothing more important and valuable for a composer than his work, it is his brainchild. /He wanted/ the Chinese people to know, hear and understand what he was thinking about in his last years,” she says, adding that the last works mean a lot to a musician, “like his last breath, like his last exhalation.”

    “My grandmother, father and aunt were gone, and fulfilling Xian Xinghai’s wishes, returning his last works to his homeland – this mission fell on me, and I had to fulfill it,” she adds.

    Due to the limited conditions, “Amangeldy” was originally written as a piano duet. Many years later, B. Baikadamova commissioned the Kazakh composer Bakir Bayakhunov to create an orchestral arrangement of the work and actively contributed to the poem’s return to China.

    Xian Xinghai was born in Panyu City, Guangdong Province. In December 2023, the Xian Xinghai Concert Hall in Guangzhou hosted the “Musical Evening in Honor of the Friendship of Chinese Composer Xian Xinghai and Kazakh Composer B. Baikadamov”. The orchestral arrangement of “Amangeldy” was performed for the first time in the homeland of the Chinese composer.

    “It was a great happiness, I said to myself: “You finally did it!” — recalling that moment, B. Baikadamova is very excited. “He did not return /to his homeland/, but let his music return,” she adds.

    “SPREADING A COMMON VOICE AGAINST OPPRESSIVENESS AND AGGRESSION”

    “To survive, we must join forces and protect our homeland, which is more precious to us than our mother,” Xian Xinghai wrote in one of his letters to his mother.

    Xian Xinghai was born into a poor family of boatmen and raised listening to his mother’s folk songs and his grandfather’s flute. In 1929, the 24-year-old went to Paris to study and work, pursuing his musical dreams. He wrote an article expressing his aspirations: “a person who studies music” should “assume the heavy responsibility of saving China in decline.”

    “Saving China in Decline” — this phrase became the main idea of Xian Xinghai’s life and work. In 1935, he returned from Paris after completing his studies and actively joined the work of creating and distributing songs about resistance to Japanese aggression and saving the country. In 1938, he came to Yan’an and began teaching at the music department of the Yan’an Lu Xun Institute of Arts.

    It was very cold in the cave house in the winter, but Xian Xinghai’s enthusiasm for creating songs about saving the country was hotter than fire. In an old photo, the composer, wrapped in a cotton coat, sits at a small table, his brows slightly furrowed, and ponders something with a pen in his hand. It was here that he worked for six days and nights on the cantata “Yellow River.”

    In April 1939, the premiere of the work took place in the hall of the North Shaanxi Public School in Yan’an, and it was a huge success. “Defend the Motherland! Defend the Yellow River! Defend North China! Defend all of China!” These words, coming from the depths of the soul, were a fierce call to fight against the Japanese invaders, a melody written in defense of justice. From there, they spread throughout China, throughout the world, and can still be heard today.

    “The Yellow River Cantata embodies Xian Xinghai’s twenty years of experience and efforts in the field of musical creativity. At the decisive moment of the World Anti-Fascist War, Xian Xinghai used music to convey the great fortitude of the Chinese nation and convey the common voice of the people of the world against oppression and aggression,” said Liu Ni, director of the Yan’an Revolutionary Memorial Museum.

    At that time, Yan’an was short of material resources and lacked instruments for performing symphonic music. Therefore, the original version of “Yellow River” was written in simplified musical notation. After arriving in the Soviet Union to work, Xian Xinghai completed the overture and orchestral accompaniment score for the cantata.

    In 2005, the musical notation of the cantata “Yellow River” was published, on the systematization of which his daughter Xian Ning worked for eight years. It includes the “Yan’an version” and the “Soviet version”. Thus, Xian Ning “did what her father could not”.

    “PRECIOUS MEMORIES ARE PASSED DOWN FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION”

    “We have performed the Yellow River cantata on stage many times. In my opinion, it is one of the most outstanding and touching works of China. Everyone, from musicians to ordinary people, can appreciate it, understand it and draw strength from it,” Beimbet Demeuov, chief conductor of the B. Baikadamov Kazakh State Choir, told Xinhua.

    In 2024, it was 85 years since the premiere of the cantata “Yellow River”. In October of the same year, B. Demeuov headed the Kazakh State Choir named after B. Baikadamov, which gave a concert in Wuhan. When the inspiring melody sounded and the Kazakhs sang in Chinese, the hall burst into prolonged applause.

    “In recent years, relations between the two countries have become increasingly close, from close high-level contacts to rich cultural exchanges,” Demeuov said, expressing hope that President Xi Jinping’s visit to Kazakhstan to attend the second China-Central Asia Summit will contribute to “further deepening cooperation between the two sides in all areas.”

    Roza Bakbergenova, soloist of the B. Baikadamov Choir, said that the brotherly friendship between Xian Xinghai and B. Baikadamov is a valuable memory of the friendly relations between the peoples of the two countries, and expressed hope for deeper cultural exchanges between the two countries in the future.

    According to B. Demeuov, Xian Xinghai’s “Amangeldy” and “Yellow River” have amazing power, reflect the composer’s deep study of the Kazakh people, culture and history, and are very popular with the local population. “Many thanks to Xian Xinghai for writing such works for us,” said B. Demeuov.

    Like Xian Xinghai, the famous Kazakh composer B. Baikadamov was also a patriot, inspired people to resist oppression with music, and dedicated his entire life to collecting, recording, and preserving Kazakh folk music. His works, such as “Dombyra” and “Su tasushi kyz” /“Water Carrier Girl”/ are still widely known.

    Yu Yafei, a teacher at the music department of the Xinghai Conservatory of Music in Guangzhou, noted that awakening the spirit of resistance, unyielding will and confidence in victory in the people through national music was the common goal of Xian Xinghai and B. Baikadamov, as well as the spiritual force that allowed the cantata “Yellow River” and the poem “Amangeldy” to overcome space and time. “This is the true meaning of why we still remember them, remember history and maintain friendship,” he added.

    In Almaty, Xian Xinghai Street is located next to Baikadamov Street and there is a monument on it with an inscription in Chinese, Kazakh and Russian: “The street is named in honor of the outstanding Chinese composer, an ambassador of friendship and culture between the peoples of Kazakhstan and China.”

    “The younger generation of Kazakhstan should know and continue this beautiful friendship, and I believe that in the future there will be even more beautiful stories about the friendship between Kazakhstan and China,” says local resident Ulan Bekmukhanbetova.

    Old age and illness do not prevent B. Baikadamova from traveling to promote friendship. The elderly woman plans to visit Guangzhou again this August to donate several valuable items that belonged to Xian Xinghai, as well as historical materials related to him. She also plans to take her granddaughter with her to see Xian Xinghai’s hometown. “I hope that this familial friendship between our fathers and the precious memories between our countries will be passed on from generation to generation,” says B. Baikadamova. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Breaking News: China-Kyrgyzstan Cooperation Has Great Potential – Xi Jinping

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    ASTANA, June 17 (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday said cooperation between China and Kyrgyzstan has great potential, calling on the two countries to increase trade and investment and expand cooperation in developing sectors.

    Xi Jinping made the statement at a meeting with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov on the sidelines of the second China-Central Asia summit in the Kazakh capital Astana.

    Xi Jinping called on the two sides to advance the high-quality construction of the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway and stimulate new growth factors in clean energy, green minerals and AI.

    China is ready to firmly support each other with Kyrgyzstan on issues concerning the fundamental interests and key concerns of the two countries, the Chinese President added. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Breaking: Xi Jinping Calls on China, Tajikistan to Expand Bilateral Trade, Investment

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    ASTANA, June 17 (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday called on China and Tajikistan to expand the scope of bilateral trade and investment.

    Xi Jinping made the statement at a meeting with Tajik President Emomali Rahmon on the sidelines of the second China-Central Asia summit in the Kazakh capital Astana.

    The Chinese President noted that China firmly supports Tajikistan in protecting its national independence, sovereignty and security. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese referees Ma, Fu debut at 2025 Club World Cup

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

    Chinese referees Ma Ning and Fu Ming made their debut at the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup on Monday, officiating in Flamengo’s 2-0 victory over Tunisia’s Esperance de Tunis.

    In the Group D opener, Dutch referee Danny Makkelie served as the match referee, with Rob Dieperink acting as the Video Assistant Referee (VAR). Ma was assigned as the fourth official, while Fu took on the role of Assistant VAR (AVAR).

    The tournament features 35 referees, 58 assistant referees, and 24 VAR officials representing 41 FIFA member associations.

    Notably, no Chinese assistant referees were included in this year’s roster. Given FIFA’s usual practice of assigning referee teams from the same country or region, Ma’s opportunities to serve as a main referee may be limited.

    At the 2022 FIFA Club World Cup in Morocco, Ma made history by officiating the opening match between Egypt’s Al Ahly and New Zealand’s Auckland City. In that game, Zhou Fei and Zhang Cheng served as assistant referees, while Fu was also AVAR – marking the first time a Chinese referee team had officiated at FIFA’s premier club tournament.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Xi meets Turkmen President Serdar Berdimuhamedov

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

    Xi meets Turkmen President Serdar Berdimuhamedov

    Xinhua | June 17, 2025

    Chinese President Xi Jinping met Tuesday with Turkmen President Serdar Berdimuhamedov.

    Xi arrived in the Kazakh capital of Astana on Monday to attend the second China-Central Asia Summit.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Xi meets Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev

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

    Xi meets Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev

    Xinhua | June 17, 2025

    Chinese President Xi Jinping met Tuesday with Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev.

    Xi arrived in the Kazakh capital of Astana on Monday to attend the second China-Central Asia Summit.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Decoding PNG leader Marape’s talks with French President Macron

    ANALYSIS: By Scott Waide, RNZ Pacific PNG correspondent

    The recent series of high-level agreements between Papua New Guinea and France marks a significant development in PNG’s geopolitical relationships, driven by what appears to be a convergence of national interests.

    The “deepening relationship” is less about a single personality and more about a calculated alignment of economic, security, and diplomatic priorities with PNG, taking full advantage of its position as the biggest, most strategically placed island player in the Pacific.

    An examination of the key outcomes reveals a partnership of mutual benefit, reflecting both PNG’s strategic diversification and France’s own long-term ambitions as a Pacific power.

    A primary driver is the shared economic rationale. From Port Moresby’s perspective, the partnership offers a clear path to economic diversification and resilience.

    But many in PNG have been watching with keen interest and asking: how badly does PNG want this?

    While Prime Minister James Marape offered France a Special Economic Zone in Port Moresby (SEZ) for French businesses, he also named the lookout at Port Moresby’s Variarata National Park after President Emmanuel Macron drawing the ire of many in the country.

    The proposal to establish a SEZ specifically for French industries is a notable attempt to attract capital from beyond PNG’s traditional partners.

    Strategically coupled
    This is strategically coupled with securing the future of the multi-billion-dollar Papua LNG project.

    Macron’s personal undertaking to work with TotalEnergies to keep the project on schedule provides crucial stability for one of PNG’s most significant economic ventures.

    For France, these arrangements secure a major energy investment for its national corporate champion and establish a stronger economic foothold in a strategically vital region between Asia and the Pacific.

    In the area of security, the relationship addresses tangible needs for both nations.

    PNG is faced with the immense challenge of monitoring a 2.4 million sq km Exclusive Economic Zone, making it vulnerable to illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing.

    The finalisation of a Shiprider Agreement with France provides a practical force-multiplier, leveraging French naval assets to enhance PNG’s maritime surveillance capabilities. This move, along with planned defence talks on air and maritime cooperation, allows PNG to diversify its security architecture.

    For France, a resident power with Pacific territories like New Caledonia and French Polynesia, participating in regional security operations reinforces its role and commitment to stability in the Indo-Pacific.

    Elevating diplomatic influence
    The partnership is also a vehicle for elevating diplomatic influence.

    Port Moresby has noted the significance of engaging with a partner that holds permanent membership on the UN Security Council and seats at the G7 and G20.

    This alignment provides PNG with a powerful channel to global decision-making forums. The reciprocal move to establish a PNG embassy in Paris further cements the relationship on a mature footing.

    The diplomatic synergy is perhaps best illustrated by France’s full endorsement of PNG’s bid to host a future UN Ocean Conference. This support provides PNG with a major opportunity to lead on the world stage, while allowing France to demonstrate its credentials as a key partner to the Pacific Islands.

    This deepening PNG-France partnership does not exist in a vacuum.

    It is unfolding within a broader context of heightened geopolitical competition across the Pacific.

    The West’s view of China’s rapid emergence as a dominant economic and military force in the region has reshaped the strategic landscape, prompting traditional powers to re-engage with renewed urgency.

    increased diplomatic footprint
    The United States has responded by significantly increasing its diplomatic and security footprint, a move marked by Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Port Moresby to sign the Defence Cooperation Agreement.

    Similarly, Australia, PNG’s traditional security partner, is working to reinforce its long-standing influence through initiatives like the multi-million-dollar deal to establish a PNG team in its National Rugby League (NRL), a soft-power exercise reportedly linked to security outcomes.

    This competitive environment has, in turn, created greater agency for Pacific nations, allowing them to diversify their partnerships beyond old allies and providing a fertile ground for European powers like France to assert their own strategic interests.

    A strong foundation for the relationship is a shared public stance on environmental stewardship. The agreement on the need for rigorous scientific studies before any deep-sea mining occurs aligns PNG’s national policy with a position of environmental caution.

    This common ground extends to broader climate action, where France’s commitment to conservation in the Pacific resonates with PNG’s status as a frontline nation vulnerable to climate change.

    This alignment on values provides a durable and politically important basis for cooperation, allowing both nations to jointly advocate for climate justice and ocean protection.

    For the Papua New Guinea economy, this deepening partnership with France is critically important as it provides high-level stability for the multi-billion-dollar Papua LNG project and creates a direct pathway for new investment through a proposed SEZ for French businesses.

    Vital economic resource
    Furthermore, by moving to finalise a Shiprider Agreement to combat illegal fishing, the government is actively protecting a vital economic resource.

    For Marape’s credibility in local politics, these outcomes are tangible successes he can present to the nation as he battles a massive credibility dip in recent years.

    Securing a personal undertaking from the leader of a G7 nation, gaining support for PNG to host a future UN Ocean Conference, and enhancing national security demonstrates effective leadership on the world stage.

    This allows him to build a narrative of a competent statesman who, through “warm, personal relationships”, can deliver on promises of economic opportunity and national security while strengthening his political standing at home.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Decoding PNG leader Marape’s talks with French President Macron

    ANALYSIS: By Scott Waide, RNZ Pacific PNG correspondent

    The recent series of high-level agreements between Papua New Guinea and France marks a significant development in PNG’s geopolitical relationships, driven by what appears to be a convergence of national interests.

    The “deepening relationship” is less about a single personality and more about a calculated alignment of economic, security, and diplomatic priorities with PNG, taking full advantage of its position as the biggest, most strategically placed island player in the Pacific.

    An examination of the key outcomes reveals a partnership of mutual benefit, reflecting both PNG’s strategic diversification and France’s own long-term ambitions as a Pacific power.

    A primary driver is the shared economic rationale. From Port Moresby’s perspective, the partnership offers a clear path to economic diversification and resilience.

    But many in PNG have been watching with keen interest and asking: how badly does PNG want this?

    While Prime Minister James Marape offered France a Special Economic Zone in Port Moresby (SEZ) for French businesses, he also named the lookout at Port Moresby’s Variarata National Park after President Emmanuel Macron drawing the ire of many in the country.

    The proposal to establish a SEZ specifically for French industries is a notable attempt to attract capital from beyond PNG’s traditional partners.

    Strategically coupled
    This is strategically coupled with securing the future of the multi-billion-dollar Papua LNG project.

    Macron’s personal undertaking to work with TotalEnergies to keep the project on schedule provides crucial stability for one of PNG’s most significant economic ventures.

    For France, these arrangements secure a major energy investment for its national corporate champion and establish a stronger economic foothold in a strategically vital region between Asia and the Pacific.

    In the area of security, the relationship addresses tangible needs for both nations.

    PNG is faced with the immense challenge of monitoring a 2.4 million sq km Exclusive Economic Zone, making it vulnerable to illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing.

    The finalisation of a Shiprider Agreement with France provides a practical force-multiplier, leveraging French naval assets to enhance PNG’s maritime surveillance capabilities. This move, along with planned defence talks on air and maritime cooperation, allows PNG to diversify its security architecture.

    For France, a resident power with Pacific territories like New Caledonia and French Polynesia, participating in regional security operations reinforces its role and commitment to stability in the Indo-Pacific.

    Elevating diplomatic influence
    The partnership is also a vehicle for elevating diplomatic influence.

    Port Moresby has noted the significance of engaging with a partner that holds permanent membership on the UN Security Council and seats at the G7 and G20.

    This alignment provides PNG with a powerful channel to global decision-making forums. The reciprocal move to establish a PNG embassy in Paris further cements the relationship on a mature footing.

    The diplomatic synergy is perhaps best illustrated by France’s full endorsement of PNG’s bid to host a future UN Ocean Conference. This support provides PNG with a major opportunity to lead on the world stage, while allowing France to demonstrate its credentials as a key partner to the Pacific Islands.

    This deepening PNG-France partnership does not exist in a vacuum.

    It is unfolding within a broader context of heightened geopolitical competition across the Pacific.

    The West’s view of China’s rapid emergence as a dominant economic and military force in the region has reshaped the strategic landscape, prompting traditional powers to re-engage with renewed urgency.

    increased diplomatic footprint
    The United States has responded by significantly increasing its diplomatic and security footprint, a move marked by Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Port Moresby to sign the Defence Cooperation Agreement.

    Similarly, Australia, PNG’s traditional security partner, is working to reinforce its long-standing influence through initiatives like the multi-million-dollar deal to establish a PNG team in its National Rugby League (NRL), a soft-power exercise reportedly linked to security outcomes.

    This competitive environment has, in turn, created greater agency for Pacific nations, allowing them to diversify their partnerships beyond old allies and providing a fertile ground for European powers like France to assert their own strategic interests.

    A strong foundation for the relationship is a shared public stance on environmental stewardship. The agreement on the need for rigorous scientific studies before any deep-sea mining occurs aligns PNG’s national policy with a position of environmental caution.

    This common ground extends to broader climate action, where France’s commitment to conservation in the Pacific resonates with PNG’s status as a frontline nation vulnerable to climate change.

    This alignment on values provides a durable and politically important basis for cooperation, allowing both nations to jointly advocate for climate justice and ocean protection.

    For the Papua New Guinea economy, this deepening partnership with France is critically important as it provides high-level stability for the multi-billion-dollar Papua LNG project and creates a direct pathway for new investment through a proposed SEZ for French businesses.

    Vital economic resource
    Furthermore, by moving to finalise a Shiprider Agreement to combat illegal fishing, the government is actively protecting a vital economic resource.

    For Marape’s credibility in local politics, these outcomes are tangible successes he can present to the nation as he battles a massive credibility dip in recent years.

    Securing a personal undertaking from the leader of a G7 nation, gaining support for PNG to host a future UN Ocean Conference, and enhancing national security demonstrates effective leadership on the world stage.

    This allows him to build a narrative of a competent statesman who, through “warm, personal relationships”, can deliver on promises of economic opportunity and national security while strengthening his political standing at home.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The UN General Assembly declared December 4 as the day of struggle against unilateral sanctions

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    UNITED NATIONS, June 17 (Xinhua) — The United Nations General Assembly on Monday declared December 4 as the International Day against Unilateral Coercive Measures.

    The adopted resolution calls on States to refrain from adopting, enacting or applying any unilateral economic, financial or trade measures that are not in accordance with international law and the UN Charter and that impede or undermine the full achievement of socio-economic development, particularly in developing countries.

    The document notes that the establishment of the International Day will complement ongoing efforts to raise global awareness of the negative consequences of unilateral coercive measures and will contribute to strengthening international cooperation and solidarity between countries in eliminating the consequences of such sanctions.

    The resolution was supported by 116 delegations, 51 countries voted against, and six abstained. The countries of the Global North voted against, including the EU, Australia, the UK, Canada, Japan and the US. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s online literature draws 575M readers, fueled by post-2000 fans

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

    China’s online literature readership has swelled to 575 million, underscoring the growing dominance of digital storytelling in the country’s cultural landscape.

    The 2024 China Online Literature Blue Book found that readers aged 26 to 45 make up about half of the total audience.

    But those born after 2000 are fueling much of the recent growth, accounting for nearly a quarter of all readers, according to a report released Tuesday by the China Writers Association.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese prosecutors warn of rising online crimes targeting minors

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

    Online crimes committed by adults against minors are on the rise in China, prompting calls for stronger safeguards and stricter enforcement, according to a white paper released by the country’s top procuratorate.

    More adults are using telecommunications and online platforms to cause harm to minors, said the white paper released Monday by the Supreme People’s Procuratorate. In 2024, prosecutors across China filed charges against 3,347 individuals for such crimes — a 14.1 percent increase from the previous year.

    These offenses accounted for 7.3 percent of all adult-perpetrated crimes against minors in 2024, up from 6.9 percent in 2023, the white paper notes.

    As underscored in the white paper, Chinese prosecutors have worked closely with cyberspace regulators and police to crack down on crimes that target minors such as cyberbullying and online sexual harassment. Efforts have also been intensified to punish those exploiting minors in telecom and internet-based fraud schemes.

    Authorities have expanded legal protections for minors, the white paper says. That includes providing legal consultations, pressuring guardians to fulfill their responsibilities, and offering civil litigation support to help minors defend their rights.

    The white paper calls for broader efforts to improve the overall digital environment for young people. Prosecutors have assisted in enforcing national regulations on the protection of minors and have pushed internet platforms to take more responsibility.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Xi meets Tajik President Emomali Rahmon

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

    Xi meets Tajik President Emomali Rahmon

    Xinhua | June 17, 2025

    Chinese President Xi Jinping met Tuesday with Tajik President Emomali Rahmon.

    Xi arrived in the Kazakh capital of Astana on Monday to attend the second China-Central Asia Summit.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Xi meets Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov

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

    Xi meets Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov

    Xinhua | June 17, 2025

    Chinese President Xi Jinping met Tuesday with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov.

    Xi arrived in the Kazakh capital of Astana on Monday to attend the second China-Central Asia Summit.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Bamboo boom: Anji’s bamboo industry drives green development

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

    China SCIO | June 17, 2025

    Photo taken on June 12, 2025 shows the view of Yucun village of Anji county, eastern China’s Zhejiang province. Anji county has made great efforts to promote the green development in rural areas. [Photo by Cui Can/China SCIO]

    In the lush hills of Anji county, eastern China’s Zhejiang province, summer comes with the dense, whispering green of bamboo forests. Here, a single stalk of bamboo, humble and fast-growing, can find its way into upscale European restaurants as sleek dinnerware, or appear as a minimalist bamboo lamp on the shelves of MUJI and IKEA stores worldwide.

    With about 720 square kilometers of bamboo groves, Anji has embraced bamboo as both a cultural symbol and an economic resource. Today, it is emerging as a pioneer in developing bamboo industry to drive green development. 

    “Bamboo is not only tough and durable, but also renewable,” said Liu Yu, chief expert of the Zhejiang Provincial Department of Ecology and Environment. “Compared to wood, which can take over a decade to mature, bamboo is harvest-ready in just four to six years and can regrow without replanting.”

    Liu also noted that responsible harvesting benefits the ecosystem. “If left uncut, bamboo becomes prone to disease and pests. Its aggressive root system can also outcompete other plant life, reducing biodiversity.”

    A worker processes bamboo at a company in Anji county of Huzhou city, Zhejiang province, June 13, 2025. [Photo by Cui Can/China SCIO]

    To harness bamboo’s environmental potential, China in 2022 launched a “Bamboo as a Substitute for Plastic” initiative in collaboration with the International Bamboo and Rattan Organization. A year later, the National Development and Reform Commission and several other government departments introduced a three-year action plan to accelerate initiative. Anji was named one of the program’s first demonstration bases.

    Currently, more than 1,000 enterprises in Anji are involved in the bamboo industry, over 40 of which are large-scale operations. Around 70% of their products are exported to markets like the U.S., Europe, Japan, and South Korea, said Zhou Jihui, who oversees the “Bamboo for Plastic” project at Anji Development and Reform Bureau.

    Photo taken on June 13, 2025 shows the bamboo packaging, lighting, and tableware produced by a company in Anji county of Huzhou city, Zhejiang province. [Photo by Cui Can/China SCIO]

    Zhejiang Fenghui Bamboo and Wooden Products Co. Ltd., founded in 1990, is one of Anji’s largest bamboo manufacturers and exporters. When General Manager Liang Fenghui took over the business from his father in 2014, the company focused on low-value raw products like bamboo poles and fences. “The profit margins were slim, and environmental standards were rising. Many companies shut down, and some bamboo forests were abandoned,” he recalled. “We had to transform.”

    The company began to invest in developing a more diversified product line, ranging from bamboo kitchenware and dining items to garden products. It now offers a portfolio of over 1,000 bamboo products.

    And as Anji aligns itself with China’s broader green development strategy, local bamboo manufacturers like Fenghui are making sustainability a priority. “Our production process is now cleaner, and we’ve developed machinery that improves material utilization by at least 20%,” Liang said. 

    Today, Bamboo tableware accounts for 60% of the company’s revenue. It exports bamboo packaging, lighting, and tableware to clients across Japan, France, Spain, and the U.S. In 2024, the company’s export value reached 150 million yuan (about US$21 million), with Japan and France each accounting for 20% of sales, and the U.S. around 10%.

    According to Zhou of Anji Development and Reform Bureau, the county’s bamboo sector has improved incomes for more than 51,000 local farming households. In 2024 alone, bamboo-related income increased each household’s earnings by an average of 6,500 yuan. “And 167 village collectives each saw their revenues grow by more than 1 million yuan,” she said.

    Photo taken on June 13, 2025 shows bamboo tableware at a company in Anji county of Huzhou city, Zhejiang Province. [Photo by Cui Can/China SCIO]

    As Anji accelerates its “Bamboo for Plastic” initiative, the county has been exploring more ways to bring bamboo into everyday life. In hospitality, bamboo toothbrushes, combs, and takeaway cutlery are replacing plastics. In local markets, plastic bags have been gradually phased out in favor of biodegradable ones made from bamboo powder. “They decompose within three months and are stronger than plastics,” Zhou noted.

    And whereas plastic products are generally cheaper than bamboo products of the same kind, Zhou said price isn’t always the key concern. “Consumers, especially in hospitality, often care more about the product’s look and whether it matches their brand image than about the cost. That gives us more room to innovate.”

    To meet this rising demand, Liang is investing in design and branding. “We’re incorporating traditional Chinese cultural elements into packaging and product design to appeal to younger consumers. And with cross-border e-commerce platforms, we’re reaching more global audiences.”

    In 2024, the total output value of Anji’s bamboo industry reached 19.2 billion yuan, up 7% over the previous year, according to Zhou. “That was nearly 2.6 billion yuan more than in 2022. The growth momentum is very strong.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: CE: actions on app protect security

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    (To watch the full media session with sign language interpretation, click here.)

    Chief Executive John Lee said today that actions taken by the Secretary for Security and the Police Force in relation to a mobile application were necessary to safeguard national security.

    In remarks ahead of this morning’s Executive Council meeting, he emphasised that the Government will always take strict enforcement action in accordance with the law with regard to all activities and acts endangering national security.

    “According to the Constitution of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), all citizens have the obligation to uphold national security. So Hong Kong as a Special Administrative Region of the PRC, the residents of Hong Kong have that constitutional obligation.

    “The mobile application in question was released under the guise of a game with the aim of promoting secessionist agendas of ‘Taiwan independence’ and ‘Hong Kong independence’. This endangers national security.

    “The Secretary for Security and the Hong Kong Police have taken action in accordance with the Implementation Rules for Article 43 of the Hong Kong National Security Law, carrying out their responsibilities and duties to safeguard national security – they are doing the right thing.”

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: US Judge Rules Trump’s NIH Funding Cuts Illegal

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    WASHINGTON, June 16 (Xinhua) — A federal judge in the U.S. city of Boston ruled on Monday that the Donald Trump administration’s decision to cut funding for diversity-related research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) was illegal, accusing the administration of discriminating against minority groups.

    The NIH has stopped funding more than $1 billion in research because it was deemed related to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs. Federal District Court Judge William Young said in a non-jury trial that the move violated federal law and was “invalid and illegal.”

    W. Young, a federal judge appointed by Republican President Ronald Reagan, said he would restore funding to Democratic-led organizations and states that sued over the funding cuts.

    W. Young criticized the defunding of research related to minorities, saying: “I have never seen racial discrimination so palpable.”

    “Any discrimination by our government is so wrong that it requires a court decision, and at the appropriate time I intend to do so,” said W. Young.

    The NIH is the world’s largest federally funded biomedical research organization, awarding about 60,000 grants each year to nearly 3,000 universities and hospitals. Under the Trump administration, it has become a key target for funding cuts and federal spending cuts.

    Since Trump took office for a second term in January, the NIH has terminated 2,100 research grants worth about $9.5 billion and additional contracts worth $2.6 billion, according to media reports. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Algernon Yau to visit France

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for Commerce & Economic Development Algernon Yau will depart this evening for France, where he will visit Toulouse, Bordeaux, Cognac and Paris to promote Hong Kong’s favourable business environment and its advantages as a wine and liquor trading hub. 

    During the trip, the commerce chief will meet representatives of the French business sector and attend business roundtables to exchange views with local wine and liquor producers.

    He will also attend the China Forum 2025, organised by Business France, to promote Hong Kong’s unique role as a gateway to the Mainland market.

    Mr Yau will return to Hong Kong on the morning of June 26. During his absence, Under Secretary for Commerce & Economic Development Bernard Chan will be Acting Secretary.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: IT chief tours Dutch startup incubator

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for Innovation, Technology & Industry Prof Sun Dong toured a startup incubator and community workspace and met local officials during a visit to the Netherlands earlier this week.

    Prof Sun paid a visit to the Amsterdam Venture Studios Startup Village. Using converted containers as offices, the village currently comprises 35 startups focused on artificial intelligence (AI) and quantum technology, and aims to promote interaction, collaboration and knowledge sharing among them.

    At the village, Prof Sun visited Omni Wind Tech BV, a Dutch startup that is developing compact wind turbines for commercial and community settings. He was briefed on its strategies and core technologies, and learned about its efforts to promote sustainable development through green innovation.

    Prof Sun also visited Nearfield Instruments, a supplier of advanced metrology solutions for the semiconductor industry. The company focuses on high-precision measurement technology to support manufacturing in the high-end nano-electronics industry.

    Later on, Prof Sun met Deputy Director-General for Foreign Economic Relations in the Netherlands’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs Yvette Van Eechoud to exchange views on promoting innovation and technology (I&T) collaboration.

    Prof Sun said that the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government attaches great importance to maintaining relations with European countries, including the Netherlands.

    He emphasised that as an international city, Hong Kong has long played the role of a super connector and super value-adder. He added that the current-term Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government is committed to developing the city as an international I&T centre and that there is therefore broad scope for collaboration between Hong Kong and the Netherlands on I&T.

    The technology chief also called on Charge d’affaires of the Chinese Embassy in the Netherlands He Shiqing and briefed him on Hong Kong’s efforts to deepen international exchanges and co-operation and achieve better integration into China’s national development.

    Prof Sun thanked the embassy for supporting enhanced co-operation between Hong Kong and the Netherlands in I&T development and for helping to attract enterprises and investment.

    Prof Sun’s visit to the Netherland has concluded and he will return to Hong Kong tomorrow morning.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Ambassador Douglas Yu-Tien Hsu and Director General David Cheng-Wei Wu Attend ATBC Australia–Taiwan Young Business Leaders (YBL) Program Successful Candidates Announcement Ceremony

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    Taiwan in Australia Ambassador Douglas Yu-Tien Hsu and Taiwan in Sydney Director General David Cheng-Wei Wu were pleased to attend the announcement ceremony for the successful candidates of the Australia–Taiwan Young Business Leaders (YBL) Program, hosted by the Australia-Taiwan Business Council (ATBC) and the Chinese International Economic Cooperation Association (CIECA), with the Australian Office in Taipei joining virtually.
    Ambassador Hsu noted that the YBL Program, supported by the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations, reflects the shared commitment of Taiwan and Australia to deepening economic cooperation, fostering talent, and pursuing a sustainable and innovative future. He thanked ATBC CEO Ching-Mei Maddock for uniting key partners and encouraged participants to lead boldly and collaborate openly in shaping a resilient, inclusive future。
    Robert Fergusson, Representative of the Australian Office in Taipei, highlighted that while Taiwan and Australia maintain strong cooperation in traditional sectors such as energy, natural resources, and agriculture, the program showcases growing potential in forward-looking fields including renewable energy, biotech, semiconductors, and AI.
    ATBC Chairman John Toigo emphasized that this initiative builds on the success of the 2022 pilot “Australia-Taiwan Emerging Business Leaders Program “, and reminded young leaders that sincere trust remains the foundation of lasting business relationships.
    CIECA Secretary-General Frank Wu encouraged the selected youth leaders to leverage this platform to broaden their global outlook, deepen cross-border partnerships, and become new drivers of Taiwan–Australia cooperation and regional sustainability.
    Sincere appreciation to ATBC and CIECA for leading this important initiative. May the program empower every participant to forge meaningful partnerships and drive new momentum in Australia–Taiwan collaboration.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Director General David Cheng-Wei Wu Attend the Dragon Boat Festival and Birthday Celebration Hosted by the ROC Veterans Association in Sydney

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    Director General David Cheng-Wei Wu was pleased to attend the Dragon Boat Festival and Birthday Celebration hosted by the ROC Veterans Association in Sydney. The event brought together Willoughby Councillor Michelle Chuang and leaders from the Taiwanese community to share in the joyful occasion.
    The celebration opened with a solemn Flag Entrance Ceremony, featuring the national flags of the Republic of China (Taiwan) and Australia, along with the Association’s flag. Led by Chairman Samuel Yu, the ceremony honoured the veterans’ unwavering spirit and loyalty to their country.
    In his remarks, DG Wu conveyed President Lai Ching-te’s warm greetings and shared two key messages:
    *Safeguard national sovereignty and liberal democracy
    *Stand united in the face of authoritarian expansionism
    President Lai affirmed that overseas Taiwanese are vital bridges for Taiwan’s diplomacy, trade, and economy, and expressed confidence that their unity will continue to shape a strong and resilient future for Taiwan.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • Indian stock market opens lower amid weak Asian cues

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Indian benchmark indices opened in the red on Tuesday, tracking weak cues from Asian markets, with early trade witnessing selling pressure in auto, IT, and pharma sectors.

    At around 9:28 a.m., the BSE Sensex was down 186.35 points or 0.23 per cent at 81,609.80, while the NSE Nifty fell 68.20 points or 0.27 per cent to trade at 24,878.30.

    The Nifty Bank index slipped 30.10 points or 0.05 per cent to 55,914.80. The Nifty Midcap 100 index was trading lower by 36.40 points or 0.06 per cent at 58,732.10, while the Nifty Smallcap 100 declined 66.30 points or 0.36 per cent to 18,482.90.

    Market sentiment remained cautious as investors reacted to geopolitical tensions and global cues. Analysts noted that former US President Donald Trump’s latest comments on Iran have raised concerns about the broader geopolitical outlook.

    Despite escalating tensions between Iran and Israel, global markets have shown resilience. The decline in the US volatility index (CBOE VIX) suggests that sharp corrections are unlikely unless the conflict escalates further, market experts said.

    “The key reason for the market’s resilience is the participation of retail investors, who continue to see every market dip as a buying opportunity. Elevated valuations are not discouraging retail flows,” said Dr. V.K. Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services.

    Among the Sensex constituents, Axis Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, NTPC, PowerGrid, Adani Ports, ICICI Bank, SBI, TCS, and HCL Tech were the top gainers in early trade. On the flip side, Tata Motors, Sun Pharma, IndusInd Bank, UltraTech Cement, Titan, and Bajaj Finance were among the top losers.

    On the institutional side, foreign institutional investors (FIIs) offloaded equities worth ₹2,287.69 crore on June 16, while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) remained net buyers with purchases worth ₹5,607.64 crore.

    In Asian markets, indices in Bangkok, Jakarta, Japan, and Seoul were trading in the green, while those in Hong Kong and China witnessed losses.

    In the previous trading session, US markets ended higher. The Dow Jones closed at 42,515.09, up 317.30 points or 0.75 per cent. The S&P 500 gained 56.14 points or 0.94 per cent to end at 6,033.11, and the Nasdaq rose 294.39 points or 1.52 per cent to 19,701.21.

    Attention now turns to the US Federal Reserve, which begins its two-day policy meeting on Tuesday. The central bank is widely expected to keep interest rates unchanged.

    “Comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell will be closely watched, especially in the context of easing inflation and continued economic strength,” said Devarsh Vakil, Head of Prime Research at HDFC Securities.

    — IANS

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Shipping Restores in Qiongzhou Strait

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    HAIKOU, June 16 (Xinhua) — Shipping was resumed in the Qiongzhou Strait separating Hainan Island from the Chinese mainland on Sunday as the impact of Typhoon Wutip eased.

    HAIKOU, June 16 (Xinhua) — Shipping was resumed in the Qiongzhou Strait separating Hainan Island from the Chinese mainland on Sunday as the impact of Typhoon Wutip eased.

    HAIKOU, June 16 (Xinhua) — Shipping was resumed in the Qiongzhou Strait separating Hainan Island from the Chinese mainland on Sunday as the impact of Typhoon Wutip eased.

    HAIKOU, June 16 (Xinhua) — Shipping was resumed in the Qiongzhou Strait separating Hainan Island from the Chinese mainland on Sunday as the impact of Typhoon Wutip eased.

    HAIKOU, June 16 (Xinhua) — Shipping was resumed in the Qiongzhou Strait separating Hainan Island from the Chinese mainland on Sunday as the impact of Typhoon Wutip eased.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Chinese-Uzbek joint archaeological team makes significant progress in excavations

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    BEIJING, June 17 (Xinhua) — A Chinese-Uzbek joint archaeological team has made significant progress in excavations at the Chinartepa site in the upper reaches of the Surkhandarya River, uncovering numerous residential structures and unearthing a large number of cultural relics, CCTV reported on June 15, citing the Silk Road Joint Archaeological Research Center of Northwest China University (NWCU), northwest China’s Shaanxi Province.

    The Chinartepa settlement, located on the edge of the third terrace of the eastern bank of the upper reaches of the Surkhandarya River, occupies an area of 350 thousand square meters and consists of a central settlement and adjacent burials. During the current excavations in the key area of the settlement, multi-layered housing structures of different periods were uncovered, which is important for constructing the chronological sequence of the Kushan culture, rethinking the architectural forms of the Kushan period and clarifying the archaeological characteristics of this culture.

    Wang Jianxin, head of the Central Asian Archaeological Team of Northwest University of China and head of the Chinese-Uzbek joint archaeological team on the Chinese side, said that more than 30 dwellings located in at least 6 cultural layers were discovered at the site. Rich ruins including wall foundations, fireplaces, post holes were excavated, and numerous artifacts were recovered: painted clay figurines of people and animals, clay spindle whorls, stone millstones, coins and other items. The clear stratigraphy of the dwelling foundations makes it possible to clearly trace the processes of rebuilding, reconstruction and abandonment of houses in different periods.

    Currently, the archaeological team has strengthened and preserved the discovered foundations of the dwellings and is carrying out systematic work to restore the extracted cultural relics.

    From 2019 to the present, the Chinese-Uzbek joint archaeological team has conducted 7 archaeological surveys and excavations in the upper reaches of the Surkhandarya River, confirming the existence of a chain of equidistant Kushan settlements on the eastern bank of the river. Excavations at the Chinartepa settlement, which is the largest and best-preserved settlement of the Kushan period in the area, are ongoing. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Guinea-Bissau President Inaugurates China-Funded Highway

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    BISSAU, June 17 (Xinhua) — Guinea-Bissau President Oumarou Sisoko Embalo on Monday attended the opening ceremony of an 8.2-km expressway connecting the capital Bissau with its suburb of Safim.

    The highway was built by the Chinese company Longjian Road

    “This is a symbol of the strong friendship, solidarity and continuous cooperation between Guinea-Bissau and China,” said U.S. Embalo during the inauguration of the infrastructure.

    Chinese Ambassador to Bissau Yang Renhuo reaffirmed China’s readiness to continue supporting Guinea-Bissau in its development projects. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: New Zealand’s Foreign Policy Reset: Progress & Reflections

    Source: New Zealand Government

    [Keynote speech to the New Zealand Institute of International Affairs (NZIIA) national conference, Takina Convention Centre, Wellington]

    Good afternoon.

    National Chair of the New Zealand Institute of International Affairs, Dr James Kember, Executive Director Dr Hamish McDougall, members of the Diplomatic Corps, distinguished guests. 

    It is a pleasure to speak here today at the New Zealand Institute of International Affairs’ Annual Conference.

    The NZIIA contributes to, and facilitates, discussion and debate about New Zealand’s foreign policy, and we thank you for hosting us. 

    In May last year, it was the NZIIA that hosted us in Parliament for a speech that addressed the challenges we face in a more fractious world and outlined how the Coalition Government was bringing more energy, more urgency and a sharper focus to our foreign policy.

    Just over a year later, we thought we’d reflect on the Government’s Foreign Policy Reset, where progress has been made, and the foreign policy themes we have accentuated in the year since we last spoke to you.

    This is also the time for a clear-eyed appraisal of New Zealand’s strategic circumstances, and the sharply deteriorating international outlook, as evidenced by the protracted illegal war in Ukraine and in the catastrophic escalation of the conflict in the Middle East. 

    Twenty-five years ago, New Zealand enjoyed a world that was becoming more open, more democratic, and more free. Trade liberalisation was gathering pace. Effective multilateralism helped underpin a liberal- oriented international rules-based system.

    Turning to the world of today – and looking out to tomorrow – the changes are stark. Uncertainty is now pervasive across the globe. We face an international operating environment under serious strain, one that poses complex challenges while exposing structural weaknesses in that operating environment.

    While geography remains a constant, distance is no buffer. There is no opting out from the geopolitical realities we face. So, this is a timely reminder of what is at stake, and why our foreign policy matters for all New Zealanders. 

    Foreign policy can often be perceived as far removed from New Zealanders’ daily lives. But recognising how our foreign and trade policy underpins New Zealanders’ security and prosperity is crucial to the open and mature national conversation we must continue to have in our vibrant democracy.

    While operating for the most part quietly and in the background, our foreign and trade policy helps deliver outcomes that matter for all of us.

    From the export dollars our farmers and manufacturers earn in key markets and helping to remove barriers for our exporters.

    • To new international market opportunities being opened for our innovative services firms.
    • To the international rules that provide us with our Exclusive Economic Zone and its resources, preserve Antarctica as a zone of peace and science, and which govern behaviours in outer space and cyber space.
    • To the international security partnerships that enable us to tackle common threats, such as the flow of illegal drugs into our country, or terrorist threats.
    • To the standards that underpin everyday fundamentals we all rely on, whether international air and sea shipping, our telecommunication devices, or biosecurity measures.
    • And to the opportunities for young New Zealanders to travel and work overseas and return with new skills and experiences.

    So while foreign and trade policy may seem abstract, how we act in the world matters for New Zealanders every day.

    This fundamental link between how we advance our interests abroad, and our security and prosperity at home, is why the Coalition Government prioritises foreign policy as a crucial instrument to achieve both. That, after all, is how we maintain support from the taxpayers who underwrite our efforts.

    This demands being present, engaged, and explaining ourselves. There remains no substitute for in-person diplomacy, relationship building, and educating the public about the choices we face. 

    Now, our critics complain that we are leading a radical repositioning of our foreign policy. But only in one very narrow and important respect are they right. We have radically increased the tempo of our diplomacy, in recognition of our predecessors’ torpor, but also because of the sheer magnitude of the challenges we face. 

    Since being sworn into office in November 2023, we have visited 46 countries, several more than once, met with well over 100 Presidents, Prime Ministers, Deputy Prime Ministers and Foreign Ministers, and had over 400 political engagements. 

    Through this engagement we are better informed about the world around us, as are counterparts about New Zealand’s foreign policy perspectives and the values that underpin them.

    And we continue the important duty of communicating New Zealand’s foreign policy priorities to the public and explaining the nature of our changing strategic circumstances and the choices that flow from them.

    We push ourselves to work harder, and explain ourselves better, because New Zealand has understood these past 80 years, that as a small state geographically isolated from the great landmasses of Asia, Europe and the Americas, only through the conduct of a highly active foreign policy can we advance our national interests, defend our region, and make it more prosperous.

    Foreign Policy Reset: Progress

    Distinguished guests, in our speech to you last year we outlined the six priorities that form the Government’s foreign policy reset. Today’s speech is an opportunity to recap the ambition that Cabinet set out and highlight key areas of effort and progress.

    First, we are significantly increasing our focus and resources applied to South and Southeast Asia. 

    With 34 outward Prime Ministerial and Ministerial visits to the region since February 2024 – advancing new business and investment opportunities, while expanding defence and security cooperation, and upgrading a range of key relationships – we are investing in the wider region, commensurate with its strategic and economic significance.

    In 2025, we have upgraded our Viet Nam relationship to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, and we are working hard to similarly achieve upgrades in our ASEAN and Singapore relationships.

    It was a pleasure to again visit India last month, and to contribute to this important and growing relationship, including welcoming the negotiations underway towards a comprehensive free trade agreement.

    Complementing this investment in South and Southeast Asia, the Government also remains focused on the depth and breadth of our important relationships across North Asia. Our bilateral relationship with China is New Zealand’s largest trade relationship. It’s proven mutually beneficial and significant for both countries.  The relationship is supported by regular people exchange, including political dialogue, business, education and tourism links. And we are pleased that with the Prime Minister visiting China this week we will have completed reciprocal visits between our respective counterparts over the past two years.

    Our long-standing political connections enable frank and comprehensive discussions on areas of disagreement, including those that stem from our different histories and different systems. Indeed, it is a sign of healthy relationships that we can and do express disagreement on important issues. 

    Japan and Korea are two likeminded democracies in the Indo-Pacific, who view the region and the world in the same way we do and are increasingly central to achieving our interests.

    Second, we are renewing and reinvigorating meaningful engagement with traditional and likeminded partners. 

    Our circumstances underscore the importance of an even deeper strategic partnership with Australia as well as other partners with which we share a deep history and enduring interests.

    Consultations with Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong in Adelaide last month highlighted that New Zealand has no closer or more important partner that Australia, our one formal ally, with whom we share interests across the full expanse of regional and international issues.

    We have grown the important partnership with the United Kingdom, including advancing trade opportunities and reiterating our shared commitment to tackling international security challenges. 

    Similarly, enhanced engagement with the European Union and its member states is a significant focus for New Zealand.

    The change in the US Administration in January has inevitably generated changes in the priorities and direction of US foreign policy. But the significance of the US’ continued role in the security and stability in the Indo-Pacific and as an essential economic partner remains, and this continues to be the focus of our engagement, including during discussions with Secretary Rubio in Washington and Admiral Paparo, Commander of US INDOPACOM in Honolulu.

    Third, we are sustaining a deeper focus on the Pacific, working in collaboration with Pacific Leaders to protect and advance our interconnected security, economic, social and environmental interests.

    In a more complex global environment, coming together as a region is even more important.  Which is why Pacific regionalism sits at the core of our Pacific approach, with the Pacific Islands Forum at its centre. 

    We will always be members of the same Pacific family. A series of cross-party Parliamentary delegations into the region, alongside our exhaustive travel around Micronesia, Melanesia, and Polynesia, have demonstrated that New Zealand’s commitment to the region spans the political spectrum and is foundational to who we are as a country.

    Our Pacific-focused International Development Cooperation programme – reshaped to achieve more impact by doing fewer, bigger, projects better – is helping to build climate and economic resilience, strengthen governance and security, and to lift heath, education and connectivity.

    Fourth, we are targeting our multilateral engagement on priority global and transboundary issues, working to defend and preserve core principles of international law that underpin our security and prosperity.

    Respect for the UN Charter principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity, and the prohibition on the use of force is essential to avoid a return to a world where the exercise of hard power reigns supreme.

    Where these principles are flagrantly violated, such as in Russia’s continued illegal invasion of Ukraine, we must stand against such aggression and lend our efforts to achieving a just and sustainable peace.

    New Zealand’s response to the Israel-Hamas conflict is also grounded in upholding international law, including international humanitarian law.

    While the multilateral system has served us all well for many decades, it most certainly is not without flaws. We recognise that defending, strengthening, and modernising the rules-based system also means supporting reform of multilateral institutions. 

    We actively support efforts to make these institutions more responsive, efficient and effective to ensure they are focused on making a difference for our citizens, and we feel an urgency around necessary reform.   

    Fifth, we are supporting new groupings that advance and defend our interests and capabilities. 

    The relationship between the Indo-Pacific Four (IP4) countries – Australia, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand – is an example of this new support. 

    Deeper political-level engagement between NATO and the IP4, begun by predecessor governments, has allowed us to raise the profile of shared strategic challenges in the Euro-Atlantic and Indo-Pacific, and to drive enhanced cooperation on priority areas including cyber, artificial intelligence, and defence capability.

    This effort will be given further momentum next week, when the Prime Minister travels to The Hague for engagements with fellow IP4 partners and NATO countries, during the NATO Summit.

    And sixth, we are working hard to advance the Government’s goal of seriously lifting New Zealand’s export value over the next decade. 

    This means harnessing every potential gain from our trade and economic agenda; promoting New Zealand as a place to do business; and creating opportunities for our world-class exporters. 

    This Government has conducted eleven successful trade missions, as we work towards the target of 20 missions involving New Zealand businesses during this Parliamentary term.

    New trade agreements concluded with the United Arab Emirates and the Gulf Cooperation Council will open doors and provide greater certainty as well as create more chances for our exporters to grow and diversify their businesses. 

    As will our efforts to leverage and expand existing trade agreements – such as through the United Kingdom’s accession last year to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

    Mid-term reflections

    In recent speeches we have outlined that the priorities identified in the foreign policy reset are underpinned by three key concepts:

    • The realism that informs the Government’s foreign policy.
    • Our view of the crucial role that diplomacy needs to play in our troubled world.
    • And our unshakeable belief that small states matter and that all states are equal.

    In fashioning foreign policy responses, the realist tendency is to err on the side of prudence. That is, we are careful in what we say, and when and how we say it. 

    We leave it to the small cabal of ill-informed critics of our foreign policy approach to shout impotently at clouds. They are good at that. Take AUKUS. In our speech to the NZIIA last year we were candid about what AUKUS Pillar 2 was, why the Ardern/Hipkins Governments launched work on it, and we laid out the necessary pre-conditions for participation. 

    A year on, there is nothing new to report, which you might think says something about the current dynamic, but still critics insist dark clouds have formed around our independent foreign policy. Their arguments were ill-informed and rubbish then. They’re ill-informed and rubbish now.

    We said we would update New Zealanders on Pillar 2 when there was something new to say. And we will.       

    In conditions of great uncertainty and disorder, such as we are currently experiencing, prudence is a both a logical and necessary guiding principle for a small state like New Zealand.

    We see our responsibility to the New Zealand people, in conducting foreign policy, as making cool-headed calculations of the country’s own strengths and weaknesses as we fashion our responses to events large or small that impact upon New Zealand’s interests.

    For a small state like New Zealand, the role of diplomacy is a crucial instrument of our foreign policy. In our complex geostrategic environment never has effective diplomacy been more needed. 

    Summing up our wide foreign policy discussions in our National Statement to the United Nations last year, we said it has never been more apparent just how much diplomacy and the tools of statecraft matter in our troubled world. 

    Since war and instability is everyone’s calamity, diplomacy is the business of us all. We have observed that at this moment in time the ability to talk with, rather than at, each other has never been more needed. 

    Those who share our values, and even those who do not, gain from understanding each other’s position, even when we cannot agree. From understanding comes opportunity and from diplomacy comes compromise, the building block of better relations between nations. We said we need more diplomacy, more engagement, more compromise. 

    As Churchill also said in his later years, “meeting jaw-to-jaw is better than war.”

    The inherent tensions and imbalances in the global order – between the desire for a rules-based order that protects small states against aggression, and the unjustified exercise of power by certain Great Powers – have only grown over the last past eight decades. 

    Yet small states matter now as much as they did then. New Zealand holds the foundational belief that all states are equal and that our voices matter as much as more powerful states. Adopting a prudential approach to our diplomacy also means not reacting to everything that happens around us. 

    In closing, it’s fitting to return to the broad theme of the event – New Zealand’s foreign policy in a contested world.

    The outlook is challenging, to say the least, and we – government and public alike – must grapple with the reality of the fraught strategic circumstances that New Zealand faces.

    We have many friends in the world, but no-one owes New Zealand a living. It is incumbent upon us to chart our course, assert our priorities, cultivate our partnerships, and pursue our interests with the vigour we have injected into our diplomatic efforts these past 18 months.

    Amidst serious challenges and risk, there are also opportunities. Realising these means that we must continue to bring energy, urgency and a sharper focus to our foreign policy. 

    Through the Foreign Policy Reset, we are focused on doing exactly that and ensuring that we continue to deliver security and prosperity for all New Zealanders.

    Thank you

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: SCED to visit France

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    SCED to visit France  
         During the trip, Mr Yau will meet with the French business sector and attend business roundtables to exchange views with local wine and liquor producers. He will also attend the China Forum 2025 organised by Business France to promote Hong Kong’s unique role as a gateway to the Mainland market. 
     
         Mr Yau will return to Hong Kong on June 26 morning. The Under Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development, Dr Bernard Chan, will be the Acting Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development during Mr Yau’s absence.
    Issued at HKT 12:29

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China’s cross-border e-commerce volume to hit record 2.71 trillion yuan in 2024

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    SHIJIAZHUANG, June 17 (Xinhua) — China’s cross-border e-commerce volume will reach 2.71 trillion yuan (about 377.5 billion U.S. dollars) in 2024, hitting a new historical high, Cai Junwei, deputy head of the statistical analysis department of the General Administration of Customs, said Monday at the China International Economic and Trade Talks in Langfang, north China’s Hebei Province.

    According to the department, in 2024, China’s cross-border e-commerce export volume exceeded 2 trillion yuan for the first time, reaching 2.15 trillion yuan, up 16.9 percent from the previous year.

    “Since the beginning of this year, there has been a trend of steady recovery and improvement in the Chinese economy. The trade in goods has shown great resilience to external pressure, and China’s foreign trade volume in cross-border e-commerce has maintained a trend of further growth,” Cai Junwei said.

    According to him, more than 70 percent of Chinese companies express confidence that cross-border e-commerce exports and imports will remain stable or will grow further in 2025. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Director of Hong Kong and Macao Work Office of CPC Central Committee and Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of State Council Mr Xia Baolong to attend 5th Anniversary of Promulgation & Implementation of Hong Kong National Security Law Forum in Hong Kong

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Director of the Hong Kong and Macao Work Office of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council, Mr Xia Baolong, will visit Hong Kong from June 18 to 22. He will attend the 5th Anniversary of Promulgation & Implementation of Hong Kong National Security Law Forum organised by the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) Government. He will also take the opportunity to inspect the latest economic and social development of Hong Kong.
    ​
         The Chief Executive, Mr John Lee, expressed gratitude to Mr Xia for his continued concern and support for Hong Kong. He also extended his warmest welcome to Mr Xia for visiting Hong Kong for the Forum and inspection. The HKSAR Government endeavours to support and facilitate the inspection, ensuring the smooth conduct of the visit.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News