Category: Crime

  • MIL-OSI Security: Romanian Police Serve Dozens of Warrants Following Parallel Investigation with the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime Alerts (b)

    Romanian law enforcement officials conducted dozens of warrants this week in the Romanian counties of Brasov and Mures, following a parallel investigation with the FBI.

    The search warrants targeted locations suspected to have ties to an organized crime group engaged in ATM skimming in the United States and money laundering.

    During the operation, Romanian officials also detained several individuals for questioning and seized large amounts of cash, several vehicles, as well as skimming devices and associated instruments.

    “This group profited handsomely by targeting vulnerable EBT recipients who rely on funds to support their families and callously deprived victims of their basic needs,” said Akil Davis, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “This investigation is yet another example of FBI Agents working closely with our foreign partners to identify, disrupt and dismantle transnational criminal enterprises who enter the United States illegally for the sole purpose of conducting criminal activity.”

    Today’s operation is the culmination of a two-year investigation conducted by the FBI and Romanian authorities to dismantle the command and control of the Dorneanu Organized Crime Group: a transnational criminal organization whose members conduct ATM skimming operations in the United States and then launder the profits back to Romania.

    “These individuals targeted and stole from our community’s most vulnerable citizens,” said Acting United States Attorney Joseph T. McNally. “Working together with our local, federal, and international partners, we can and will continue to root out and punish transnational criminal organizations and protect the less fortunate and American taxpayers.”

    The subjects targeted in this investigation worked directly for, or were associated with, Mihai Dorneanu—the alleged leader of the Dorneanu Organized Crime Group. Five members of this organization were arrested by the FBI and convicted in the Central District of California with violations including conspiracy, bank fraud, aggravated identity theft, and visa fraud. Four others were arrested for state violations by local authorities in Ventura and San Bernardino Counties. As a result of ongoing efforts in this case to disrupt ATM skimmers in Southern California, law enforcement recovered over 8,500 stolen credit card numbers belonging to victims in the United States.

    The five federal defendants include the following:

    • Marius Oprea was sentenced to six years and three months in federal prison. U.S. Attorney Press Release
    • Dan Eugen Boar was sentenced to four years in federal prison.
    • Radu-Marian Moldovan was sentenced to time served in federal prison.
    • Attila Ravasz was sentenced to one year and three months in federal prison.
    • Andrei-Raul Cirilescu was sentenced to two years and four months in federal prison.

    A statement announcing the operation was also issued by Romanian authorities (translation available upon visiting page).

    The domestic investigation was conducted jointly by the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office; the San Bernardino County Human Services Fraud Investigation Unit; the Diplomatic Security Service; the Los Angeles Police Department; and the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department. The federal defendants were prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles.

    The FBI’s foreign partners include the Brașov Brigade for Combatting Organized Crime; prosecutors with the Directorate for the Investigation of Organized Crime and Terrorism—Brașov Territorial Service; and Europol.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Cochrane — Cochrane RCMP arrest and charge two prolific offenders

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    During Dec. of 2024, the Cochrane RCMP Crime Reduction Unit with assistance from the Southern Alberta General Investigation Section, monitored the release of two prolific offenders. Within just a few days after release, both offenders committed an Armed Robbery and stole a motor vehicle. RCMP soon located one offender in a stolen vehicle on Stoney Nakoda who then dangerously fled from Police. Police tracked the offender to a residence in Calgary and with assistance from Calgary Police Service, the offender was successfully arrested without incident.

    Later in the same month, Canmore RCMP responded to a break and enter where the second offender fled from police in a stolen vehicle. The police later located the offender on foot but he fled. The offender deployed bear spray at the officer but with assistance from the RCMP Police Dog Services, the offender was quickly apprehended. The officer was not injured.

    As a result of the investigation, the RCMP recovered a stolen shotgun and four stolen vehicles. The two offenders were charged with a combined total of 27 Criminal Code offences.

    A 26-year-old individual, a resident of Stoney Nakoda First Nation, was charged with:

    • Robbery with a Firearm;
    • Flight from Police;
    • Dangerous Operation of a Motor Vehicle;
    • Theft of a Motor Vehicle;
    • Possession of Property Obtained by Crime over $5000;
    • Three counts of Uttering Threats; and
    • Five Counts of Failing to Comply with a Probation Order.

    A 28-year-old individual, a resident of Stoney Nakoda First Nation, was charged with:

    • Robbery with a Firearm;
    • Pointing a Firearm;
    • Flight from Police;
    • Assault with a Weapon;
    • Assault on a Police Officer;
    • Possession of Property Obtained by Crime over $5000;
    • Theft of a Motor Vehicle;
    • Three counts of Uttering Threats
    • Two counts of Unauthorized Possession of a Firearm; and
    • Two counts of Possession of a Firearm Contrary to an Order.

    Inspector Dave Brunner of the Cochrane RCMP said “We not only patrol the streets, but also patrol the patterns. We are here to identify, monitor, arrest and break the cycle of prolific offenders.” Both offenders have been remanded into custody and await court appearances.

    If you have any information regarding a crime, please contact Cochrane RCMP at 403-851-8000 or your area of jurisdiction. If you wish to remain anonymous, you can contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS), online at www.P3Tips.com or by using the “P3 Tips” app available through the Apple App or Google Play Store. To report crime online, or for access to RCMP news and information, download the Alberta RCMP app through Apple or Google Play.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Consultation for Central Lancashire Local Plan Live on Monday 24 February

    Source: City of Preston

    Following the release of the Publication version of the Central Lancashire Local Plan (CLLP) in January, consultation will go live on Monday, 24 February from 2pm concluding on Monday, 14 April at 11.59pm. The consultation will provide stakeholders and the public to provide feedback on the new local plan, before it’s submitted to the Secretary of State in Summer 2025.

    The CLLP is a strategic plan for the area of Chorley, South Ribble and Preston and sets out the three councils’ approach to managing and delivering development (residential, employment and other infrastructure) and protecting the environment for the three districts between 2023 and 2041.

    It is an important strategy which supports delivery of corporate ambitions and objectives, such as provision of affordable housing, tackling health and social inequalities and tackling the climate emergency.

    The consultation will include a series of in-person events across Preston, Chorley, and South Ribble, along with the option to complete the online survey Citizen Space – Central Lancashire Local Plan. The events start on Monday 24 February and are being held across each Borough, with anyone welcome to attend whichever is most convenient to them.

    Councillor Amber Afzal, Cabinet Member for Planning and Regulation, said:

    “This phase of the Central Lancashire Local Plan is crucial in shaping Preston’s future, aligning with the City Council’s vision for a growing, thriving community.

    “Our focus is on delivering the right types of homes, including more affordable housing, to help tackle health and social inequalities.

    “We encourage residents, businesses, and stakeholders to get involved and share their feedback through the consultation.”

    Face-to-face events in Preston

    • Wednesday 26 February, Preston Markets, 11am to 2pm
    • Wednesday 5 March, UCLan Cottam Campus, 3pm to 6om
    • Thursday 6 March, Grimsargh Village Hall, 3.30pm to 6.30pm
    • Thursday 13 March, Preston Town Hall, 3pm to 7pm
    • Thursday 20 March, Fulwood Methodist Church, 3pm to 7pm

    Map address for face to face events

    Preston Markets, Earl Street, Preston, PR1 2JA.
    UCLan Sports Arena, Tom Benson Way, Cottam, Preston, PR2 1SG.
    Grimsargh Village Hall, Preston Road, Grimsargh, Preston PR2 5JS.
    Preston Town Hall, Lancaster Road, PR1 2RL.
    Fulwood Methodist Church, Watling Street Road, Fulwood, Preston PR2 8EA.

    More information

    Central Lancashire Local Plan

    For full details of the plan see Frequently Asked Questions: FAQs – Central Lancashire Local Plan.

    Preston City Council actively applies and prioritises the principles of Community Wealth Building wherever applicable and appropriate. Community Wealth Building is an approach which aims to ensure the economic system builds wealth and prosperity for everyone.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Airdrie — Airdrie RCMP successful in crime reduction operation

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Between the dates of Oct. 1, 2024 and Oct. 11, 2024, the Airdrie RCMP Crime Reduction Unit, with the assistance of the Airdrie General Investigations Section and Special Investigations Units, conducted an enhanced crime reduction operation. Strategies included targeting high crime hot spots, as well as individuals remaining on outstanding arrest warrants in the city of Airdrie and Rocky View County.

    As a result of this proactive operation, the following actions were completed:

    • 30 warrants were executed
    • 39 criminal code charges laid
    • 6 firearms and 1 military ordinance were seized
    • 2 stolen vehicles were recovered
    • 4 oz of a controlled substance, Cocaine, was seized

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Elk Point — Alberta RCMP arrest repeat offender in possession of stolen vehicle and firearms

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    On Jan. 8, 2025, units from the Alberta RCMP were attempting to locate a suspect wanted for a series of serious charges out of Cold Lake, Alta. when they located him at a rural residence near Elk Point, Alta. Prior to RCMP intervention, the suspect and two other individuals were observed departing in a motor vehicle. Several units, including the Alberta RCMP Emergency Response Team, monitored the suspect unit his vehicle was safely disabled.

    Checks on the vehicle the suspect was operating revealed that it was stolen. A search of the vehicle revealed several firearms recently stolen out of Vermillion, Alta. Additionally, a second stolen vehicle and two stolen trailers were located at the property that the suspect was observed leaving.

    RCMP have charged a 41-year-old individual, a resident of Cold Lake, with:

    • Flight from police;
    • Possession of firearm in motor vehicle (x6);
    • Unauthorized possession of a firearm;
    • Possession of property obtained by crime over $5000.

    The 41-year-old individual was taken before a justice of the peace and remanded into custody with his next court date set for Jan. 21, 2025, at the Alberta Court of Justice in Bonnyville, Alta.

    RCMP have charged a 33-year-old individual, a resident of MD of Bonnyville, with:

    • Possession of firearm in motor vehicle (x6);
    • Unauthorized possession of a firearm;
    • Possession of property obtained by crime over $5000;
    • Fail to comply with release conditions (x4);
    • Possession of a firearm contrary to order (x3).

    The 33-year-old individual was taken before a justice of the peace and remanded into custody with his next court date set for Jan. 13, 2025, at the Albert Court of Justice in Lac la Biche, Alta.

    A youth was also charged with multiple offences and released for a future court date.

    “This complex investigation saw the close coordination of multiple RCMP Units in Eastern Alberta including Bonnyville, Elk Point, Cold Lake, and our District GIS and Crime Reduction Teams. “says Sarah Parke Detachment Commander Bonnyville RCMP,” Ultimately with the close coordination of these Units our Emergency Response Team was able to safety disable the vehicle driven by this potentially dangerous suspect minimizing his risk to the public.”

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Calgary — Alberta RCMP and provincial partners track down top offenders

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    As part of a new RCMP-led data sharing initiative, Alberta RCMP, Calgary Police Service, and Alberta Sheriffs worked together in a Joint Forces Operation (JFO), targeting the top priority offenders in the province, through a warrant roundup.

    The decisions to implement the initiative came following the recognition by Alberta RCMP that all law enforcement agencies in Alberta were ranking priority offenders in different ways. Understanding that criminals operate in various jurisdictions, it was determined that a province wide-model to identify and prioritize offenders was required.

    Through the Alberta Association of Chiefs of Police, all police forces in Alberta have entered into an information sharing agreement that will allow for intelligence and statistical data to be routinely shared. This sharing enables police agencies in Alberta to have a true understanding of the priority offenders that are causing the most harm, not only within individual policing jurisdictions, but across the province. This shared data allows police agencies to properly prioritize and take enforcement action on the most harmful offenders, ensuring the safety of all Albertans.

    Alberta RCMP ranks the tens of thousands of unique offenders in Alberta based on the harm they cause in individual communities. To determine the harm caused by these individuals, the Alberta RCMP Strategic Analysis and Research Unit developed a matrix to determine which offenders were causing the most harm in Alberta. This determination is done using the uniform Crime Severity Index scoring that is typically applied to communities by Statistics Canada and applying it to individual’s offenders.

    Alberta RCMP, with the assistance of Calgary Police Service Business Analytics, Intelligence & Reporting Section, and policing partners across the province, are now able to collect, translate, and disseminate the offender data of all police agencies in the province to form a clear province-wide priority offender list.

    From Nov. 17 to Nov. 30, 2024, the Joint Forces warrant apprehension team hit the streets of Calgary and Southern Alberta, which resulted in the following:

    • 88 arrests
    • 177 warrants executed; 44 for Provincial offences and 133 For Criminal Code offences, representing a total of 306 charges.

    RCMP Province wide executed 1005 warrants associated to 948 different offenders. The individuals arrested during the JFO had warrants from all types of crime, ranging from repeat petty thefts, to arsons, drug trafficking, robbery, and sexual offenses.

    To highlight some of the offenders who were arrested:

    • A 55-year-old male resident of Calgary, who had four warrants for his arrest with over 42 charges associated mostly related to property crime, was arrested. In the previous 18 months he has been linked to a number of offences such as robbery, drug possession and theft of motor vehicle.
    • A 42-year-old male resident of Airdrie, who had seven warrants for his arrest with a total of 27 charges for property crime and fail to comply with court ordered conditions, was arrested. In the previous 18 months he has been associated to files related to sexual interference, sexual assault, and a variety of property crime and drug trafficking offences.
    • A 34-year-old male resident of Calgary, who had five warrants for his arrest with a total of 32 charges for failing to comply with court orders, was arrested. He has a history of being involved in trafficking drugs, assault with a weapon, as well as a variety of property crime offences.
    • A 28-year-old female resident of Cold Lake had one warrant for her arrest for driving offences. She has had 50 interactions with police in the past 18 months, including for robbery, assault with a weapon, drug trafficking and firearms possession investigations.

    “Law Enforcement needs to work together to ensure that jurisdictional borders do not impede our ability to catch the criminals causing the most harm across Alberta,” said Supt. Mike McCauley of the Alberta RCMP. “A small percentage of criminals cause a significant amount of harm across the province, and by using data to drive our work like we do in operations like these, the impact is incredible. “

    “Thanks to strong interagency collaboration and information sharing, there are now fewer dangerous offenders on Alberta’s streets and in our communities,” said Supt. Mike Letourneau of the Alberta Sheriffs. “The Alberta Sheriffs are proud to work alongside our law enforcement partners as we pursue our shared objective of keeping Albertans safe.”

    “We are committed to working collaboratively with our law enforcement partners across the province to keep Calgarians safe,” says Superintendent Jeff Bell of the CPS Criminal Operations & Intelligence Division. “Apprehending offenders that have committed crimes across our province is a critical step in maintaining public safety and preventing further victimization. We are proud to have been a partner in this important initiative.”

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: United States Attorney Gary M. Restaino Completes His Service to the Department of Justice

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    PHOENIX, Ariz. – The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona announced that United States Attorney Gary M. Restaino has completed his service to the Department, effective yesterday.

    Mr. Restaino was informed of his termination in a communication from the White House.  As a Presidential appointee, Mr. Restaino is subject to removal from office in the discretion of the sitting President.  The White House thanked him for his service to the United States.

    “Getting the opportunity to lead an Office in which I have worked for many years has been energizing,” said U.S. Attorney Restaino. “I am grateful to President Biden for the appointment, to Senators Kelly and Sinema for their support of my nomination, and to Attorney General Garland for his stewardship of the Department of Justice. And most of all I am thankful for our people here in Arizona – the dedicated prosecutors, victim advocates and administrative professionals at the United States Attorney’s Office, as well as the agents, analysts, and accountants at our federal law enforcement agencies – who work collaboratively and collegially with state and local partners and leaders of underserved communities to make Arizona a better and safer place.”

    Since 2021 the Office has continued its strong efforts at border security, enhanced violent crime prosecutions and increased civil rights prosecutions and interventions.

    Border Security

    Violent Crime Prosecutions

    Civil Rights

    Mr. Restaino became United States Attorney in November 2021 after 20 years of service as a federal employee, including two years in the Peace Corps in Paraguay and 18 years as an Assistant United States Attorney here in Arizona. During his tenure, Mr. Restaino served on the Attorney General’s Advisory Committee, advising Attorney General Garland on matters of policy, procedure, and management, and also elevating the voices of the U.S. Attorney community in Washington. In addition, for nearly 90 days in the spring and summer of 2022, and at the direction of President Biden, Mr. Restaino served the women and men of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives as their Acting Director, pending the confirmation of the agency’s nominee.

    Pursuant to the Vacancy Reform Act, career prosecutor and First Assistant United States Attorney Rachel C. Hernandez currently serves as the Acting United States Attorney for the District.

    The United States Attorney’s Office represents the interests of the United States in criminal and civil cases in federal court in Arizona, coordinates the efforts of its federal law enforcement partners, advocates for the rights of victims, and enhances and strengthens communities through dialogue, outreach, and engagement. The Office currently has approximately 180 Assistant United States Attorneys and approximately 160 additional administrative professionals spread between two large offices in Phoenix and Tucson, and two smaller branch offices in Yuma and Flagstaff.
     

    RELEASE NUMBER:    2025-018_Departure of United States Attorney Gary M. Restaino

    # # #

    For more information on the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona, visit http://www.justice.gov/usao/az/
    Follow the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona, on X @USAO_AZ for the latest news.

     

    2025-018_Departure of United States Attorney Gary M. Restaino

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: UN rights office warns of ‘dangerous tipping point’ as abuses surge in Sudan

    Source: United Nations 2

    By Vibhu Mishra

    Human Rights

    The UN human rights office (OHCHR) on Tuesday sounded the alarm over escalating rights abuses in Sudan, warning that impunity is driving violations as fighting spreads and more armed groups become involved.

    In a new report, UN investigators detailed multiple attacks on civilians, healthcare facilities, markets, and schools, as well as ethnically motivated summary executions.

    “The continued and deliberate attacks on civilians and civilian objects, as well as summary executions, sexual violence and other violations and abuses, underscore the utter failure by both parties to respect the rules and principles of international humanitarian and human rights law,” said Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.

    Some of these acts may amount to war crimes. They must be investigated promptly and independently, with a view to bringing those responsible to justice,” he added.

    Among its key recommendations, the report called for expanding the arms embargo and the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to cover the whole of Sudan – not just the region of Darfur, where atrocities raged unchecked 20 years ago.

    Twenty-two months of brutal war

    More than 22 months of brutal fighting between Government forces and their former allied militia, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has left more than 30 million people across Sudan in need of assistance and protection.

    The fighting has precipitated the world’s worst displacement crisis, with over 12 million displaced from their homes, of whom 3.3 million have fled across the border.

    Food security and healthcare are also in freefall, with less than a quarter of Sudan’s health facilities functioning in areas worst hit by fighting. Nearly 25 million people are suffering from “acute” levels of hunger.

    © WFP

    Workers offload sacks of food aid from a barge in Sudan.

    Sexual violence a weapon of war

    The report highlighted the widespread use of sexual violence as a weapon of war, with 120 documented incidents affecting at least 203 victims. Cases are likely vastly underreported due to fear, stigma, and the collapse of medical and judicial institutions.

    All sides involved in the fighting have been responsible for violations, according to report, including widespread sexual violence.

    The persistent use of sexual violence as a weapon of war in Sudan is deeply shocking,” High Commissioner Türk said.

    “Urgent steps must be taken by the parties to put an end to it, to hold those responsible to account and provide redress for survivors,” he stressed.

    Crackdown on civic space

    The report also detailed widespread disappearances and a generalised crackdown on civic space, including killings of journalists and attacks on human rights defenders.

    At least 12 journalists were killed, two of them while in detention, and 31 were arbitrarily detained, including four women.

    In all, throughout 2024, OHCHR documented more than 4,200 civilian killings in the context of hostilities though the real number is likely much higher.

    © UNFPA Sudan

    Reamins of a health clinic that was attacked and looted, leaving thousands of women and girls without access to critical care.

    A dangerous tipping point

    Li Fung, the head of the OHCHR office in Sudan, described the dire situation in Sudan as a “dangerous tipping point”.

    Speaking to journalists at the UN Office at Geneva (UNOG) via video link from Port Sudan, she underscored the need for the international community to renew the focus on human rights.

    “[The international community] must take all necessary measures to protect civilians and prevent further violations and abuses. It remains urgent to ensure critical humanitarian assistance can reach those in need,” she said.

    Together, we must stand with the people of Sudan.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Millbrook — Millbrook RCMP charge man after stabbing

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Millbrook RCMP has charged a man with Attempt to Commit Murder and Assault with a Weapon after a stabbing in Millbrook.

    On February 16 at approximately 1:45 am, RCMP and EHS responded to a 911 call from a residence on Birch Bark Rd. Responding officers located a 31-year-old man with multiple injuries inside the home, and learned that he had been stabbed by another man, who was known to him. The injured man was transported to hospital.

    Officers safely arrested the suspect who was located in another room in the home.

    A search warrant was executed at this residence to locate and seize further evidence. RCMP Forensic Identification Section is supporting the ongoing investigation.

    Brenton Joseph Arsenault, 29, of Brookfield, has been charged with:

    • Attempt to Commit Murder
    • Assault with a Weapon

    Arsenault was held in custody and will have a first court appearance at Truro Provincial Court on February 18, 2025.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: Ukraine peace talks: Trump is bringing Russia back in from the cold and ticking off items on Putin’s wish list

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By James Rodgers, Reader in International Journalism, City St George’s, University of London

    The meeting now underway in Saudi Arabia between senior delegations from the United States and Russia could be the first step towards an end to the war in Ukraine – and not just an end to the war. The New York Times has reported that the talks may cover issues beyond the battlefield, with the resumption of US-Russia business ties on the table, too.

    Whatever is discussed, Ukraine seems set to lose out.

    The same cannot be said of the long-term occupant of the Kremlin. For 20 years, Vladimir Putin has been working towards what Donald Trump has now given him. Ever since Putin bemoaned the collapse of the Soviet Union as “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe” of the 20th century, his foreign policy has been about getting back at least some of the superpower status the Soviet Union enjoyed.

    In one sense, the US president’s overture to Putin to discuss peace in Ukraine has given the Russian president exactly what he wanted: for Washington to treat Moscow with the respect – and perhaps even fear – that the Soviet Union once commanded from the west.

    And in that sense, Trump’s telephone call with the Kremlin represented a huge triumph for Putin. Putin now has a pending invitation back to the top table of world affairs. He has conceded not an inch of occupied Ukrainian territory to get there. Nor has he even undertaken to give back any of what Russian forces have seized since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine three years ago.

    Now his foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, is talking to the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio. Meanwhile the annexation of Crimea in 2014 – which is when Russia’s war on Ukraine actually began – seems increasingly likely to be overlooked. The suggestion from the US defence secretary, Pete Hesgeth, last week that a return to Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders was “unrealistic” has made clear Washington’s current view on that.

    So far, so good for Putin, who sees the western alliance that has been ranged against him – albeit with varying degrees of enthusiasm and commitment – for the past three years beginning to crack.

    Under Trump, Washington’s policy on Ukraine is showing signs of significant divergence from that of the EU or UK. Putin no doubt sees his determination not to be cowed by western pressure as starting now to lead to longer-term success.




    Read more:
    Europe left scrambling in face of wavering US security guarantees


    Now the two leaders have agreed to meet – a complete reversal of the three years of increasing isolation during Joe Biden’s presidency. And, as we know, the first time the two leaders met for a summit, in Helsinki in 2018, Putin was widely seen as having outwitted Trump. As Trump’s then senior director for European and Russian Affairs, Fiona Hill, recalled in her memoir: “As Trump responded that he believed Putin over his own intelligence analysts, I wanted to end the whole thing.”

    Putin will hardly feel he enters any future negotiation as an underdog. Just by being there, to discuss the most pressing matter for the future of European security with the US president, Putin has achieved part of his long-term goal. Just as in the days of the Soviet Union, leaders from the Kremlin and the White House will meet to discuss European affairs as the preeminent powers on the continent.

    The views of Europeans themselves, especially Ukrainians, are secondary.

    Back to the top table

    If Putin’s 2005 lament for a lost superpower gave a clue to the course his time at the summit of Russian power would take, then he gave yet more clues on the eve of the full-scale invasion. In December 2021, Putin regretted the collapse of the Soviet Union once again.

    This time he said it had a significance far beyond the century in which it happened, saying: “We turned into a completely different country. And what had been built up over 1,000 years was largely lost.”

    Days later, with expectation growing that Russia was planning to invade Ukraine, the foreign ministry in Moscow published a document it called Treaty between The United States of America and the Russian Federation on security guarantees.

    The language chosen is striking today for the references it makes to the Soviet Union, as in article 4: “The United States of America shall undertake to prevent further eastward expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and deny accession to the Alliance to the States of the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.”

    The Biden administration dismissed the treaty as the trolling it represented. But Hegseth’s recent remark, “The United States does not believe that Nato membership for Ukraine is a realistic outcome of a negotiated settlement,” fits right in with Putin’s wish list.

    This is about Russia becoming the international heavyweight the Soviet Union once was. It is also about a turn of events that greatly favours Putin.

    For three years, I have been working on a book, The Return of Russia: From Yeltsin to Putin, the Story of a Vengeful Kremlin. My research included interviews with leading policymakers, among them Jens Stoltenberg, who served as secretary general of Nato between 2014 and 2024. When we spoke in September 2023, I took the opportunity to ask him how he saw the coming months in the war in Ukraine. He told me:

    Only the Ukrainians that can decide what is an acceptable solution. But the stronger they are on the battlefield, the stronger they will be on the negotiating table and therefore our responsibility is to support them … but it’s for Ukrainian to make the hard decisions on the battlefield. And of course at the end at the negotiating table.

    Trump’s démarche towards a deal appears to ignore that logic, and strengthens Putin’s hand before negotiations have even started.

    If it does lead to an end to the war now, there is nothing to say that Putin’s long view of history won’t encourage him to go to war again in a few years. And he’ll be better prepared to capture more territory than he has already in the last three blood-soaked years.

    James Rodgers 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. Ukraine peace talks: Trump is bringing Russia back in from the cold and ticking off items on Putin’s wish list – https://theconversation.com/ukraine-peace-talks-trump-is-bringing-russia-back-in-from-the-cold-and-ticking-off-items-on-putins-wish-list-249982

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: DHS Announces Ad Campaign Warning Illegal Aliens to Self-Deport and Stay Out

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: DHS Announces Ad Campaign Warning Illegal Aliens to Self-Deport and Stay Out

    WASHINGTON – Today, Secretary Kristi Noem announced a nationwide and international multimillion-dollar ad campaign warning illegal aliens to leave our country now or face deportation with the inability to return to the United States. The international ads warn criminal illegal aliens not to come to America and break its laws or they will be hunted down and deported.  

    This series of ads will run on radio, broadcast, and digital, in multiple countries and regions in various dialects. Ads will be hyper-targeted, including through social media, text message and digital to reach illegal immigrants in the interior of the United States, as well as internationally. 

    “Thank you, President Donald J. Trump, for securing our border and putting America first. President Trump has a clear message: if you are here illegally, we will find you and deport you. You will never return. But if you leave now, you may have an opportunity to return and enjoy our freedom and live the American Dream,” said Secretary Kristi Noem. “If you are a criminal alien considering entering America illegally: Don’t even think about it.  If you come here and break our laws, we will hunt you down. Criminals are not welcome in the United States.” 

    Watch domestic ad here and international ad here. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Video: Ukraine: Global impact of the war is felt far beyond – DPPA Briefing | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    On the tenth anniversary of the Minsk Agreements, US representative John Kelley told the Security Council that returning to Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders was “an unrealistic objective,” while musician and peace activist Roger Waters welcomed United States President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin talks on Ukraine as “a move in the right direction.”

    Briefing Council members on the situation in Ukraine, Assistant Secretary-General for Europe, Central Asia, and the Americas Miroslav Jenča said the ten-year anniversary of the Minsk Agreements has taught us that “agreeing on the ceasefire or the signing of an agreement alone do not ensure a durable end to the violence,” and “ensuring that the conflict does not reoccur and does not escalate will require genuine, genuine political will and understanding of its multidimensional complexity for Ukraine and for the region.”

    Waters expressed hope that, “maybe there is a glimmer of light at the end of this dark tunnel of war. It’s come three years and hundreds of thousands of priceless lives too late.”

    Russian Ambassador Vasily Nebenzya told the Council that “the Minsk agreements were something which the Western sponsors of the Kiev regime needed purely as a smokescreen to provide armaments to Ukraine and to prepare it for war with Russia.”

    Nebenzya said, “had the Minsk agreements been implemented in good faith by Ukraine and its sponsors, there would have been nothing, nothing of what subsequently transpired would have occurred.”

    The Russian Ambassador said, “diplomacy has finally been actively brought into the game. And opportunities have emerged for the prompt end to the hot phase of the Ukrainian crisis,” and referring to the Minsk Agreements said, “what lessons do the present negotiators need to draw from the process which so abjectly failed three years ago?”

    The US representative, for his part said, “we want a sovereign and prosperous Ukraine, but we must start by recognizing and then returning to Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders is an unrealistic objective. Chasing this illusionary goal will only prolong the war and cause more suffering. A durable peace for Ukraine must include robust security guarantees to ensure the war will not begin again. This must not be Minsk 3.0.”

    UK representative Barbara Woodward said, “the conditions for a just and lasting peace which protects Ukraine’s security, sovereignty and independence” must be create, and stressed that “Ukraine’s voice must be at the heart of any negotiations.”

    Ukraine’s representative Khrystyna Hayovyshyn said, “weak agreements will not bring real peace, they will only lead to the greater war. That is why we are working with our partners to find strong and effective solutions. Peace cannot be bought, especially not at the expense of law and principles, especially principle of territorial integrity and sovereign equality. This cannot be replaced with appeasement. History offers many relevant examples. Our task is to avoid repeating past mistakes, as the cost of those mistakes is more blood, suffering and destruction.”

    Today’s meeting coincided with the tenth anniversary of resolution 2202, which endorsed the now-defunct Minsk agreements of 2015 signed by the representatives of European security pact, the OSCE, Russia, Ukraine and leaders of the pro-Russian separatists in the occupied east of Ukraine following Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

    The unanimously adopted resolution included a package of measures as its annex, including an immediate and comprehensive ceasefire in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine, as well as the withdrawal of all heavy weapons by both sides by equal distances to create a security zone.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5znAbPa7Np4

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: WARNING – International

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

    Secretary Kristi Noem announced a nationwide and international multimillion-dollar ad campaign warning illegal aliens to leave our country now or face deportation with the inability to return to the United States. The international ads warn criminal illegal aliens not to come to America and break its laws or they will be hunted down and deported.

    This series of ads will run on radio, broadcast, and digital, in multiple countries and regions in various dialects. Ads will be hyper-targeted, including through social media, text message and digital to reach illegal immigrants in the interior of the United States, as well as internationally.

    “Thank you, President Donald J. Trump, for securing our border and putting America first. President Trump has a clear message: if you are here illegally, we will find you and deport you. You will never return. But if you leave now, you may have an opportunity to return and enjoy our freedom and live the American Dream,” said Secretary Kristi Noem. “If you are a criminal alien considering entering America illegally: Don’t even think about it. If you come here and break our laws, we will hunt you down. Criminals are not welcome in the United States.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhRt3FKXgGU

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Mayor proposes record-breaking £1.16bn investment in the Metropolitan Police

    Source: Mayor of London

    • In a draft budget published last night the Mayor proposed an additional £83m investment – £10m from City Hall and £73m from central Government – to go into policing
    • The £83m additional builds on the extra £237m already announced for next year to give a record £320m increase
    • In total, this means there will be £1.159 billion Mayoral funding policing in 2025-26. It is the largest figure ever spent on policing in the capital, the biggest year-on-year settlement ever proposed for the Met and more than double the previous Mayor’s final budget for policing
    • It comes as the number of homicides, young people being injured with knives and burglary are all down since Sadiq was first elected in 2016

    The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has today proposed an extra £83m million – £10m from City Hall and £73million from central government – for policing in his final draft budget bringing total Mayoral investment in the Met to an historic £1.159 billion for the next year.

    It means there is an additional £320m funding for the Metropolitan Police compared to the current year’s budget, an unprecedented increase. This additional investment will keep hundreds of Metropolitan Police officer posts and reduce expected cuts to key specialist police units.

    Last November’s budget submission from the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC) assumed that by 31 March 2026, the Met would need to reduce the number of officers by 1,899 to 30,553 due to chronic underfunding by the previous government, which reduced annual core funding for policing in the capital by £1.1 billion in real terms.

    The Mayor has confirmed that some of the cuts the Metropolitan Police had originally proposed in November will be substantially scaled back due to this proposed investment, which will be used to fund additional police officers, key police staff and the equipment they need to carry out their roles.  Final decisions on how to use the extra investment will be considered by MOPAC and the Met, with plans announced next month. It is expected that hundreds of officer posts will be kept in place due to this investment, on top of the 420 officers funded in last month’s Provisional Policing Settlement.

    There is still much more to do to tackle crime in London and this proposed investment by the Mayor and the Government will help the Met to continue to invest in tacking crime locally and build on the progress being made. The number of homicides, young people being injured with knives, and burglary are all down since Sadiq was first elected in 2016. Homicides are also falling – there were fewer homicides of people under-25 in London last year than any year since 2003. The number of teenage homicides in London last year was at its lowest total since 2012.

    In total, Sadiq has earmarked a record £1.159 billion to fund policing in 2025-26 – an increase of nearly 105 per cent in annual funding compared to the previous Mayor’s final budget.  But despite this investment, and the extra support from the new government, the Met is still facing significant financial pressures due to over a decade of real terms cuts by the previous government.  

    The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “No-one should under-estimate the significance of this. It is a record amount of investment.

    “Bearing down on crime and keeping Londoners safe is my top priority as Mayor and I’ll always use all the levers at my disposal to fund the police, investing record sums from City Hall.

    “I am pleased to propose an additional £320 million since last year for the Metropolitan Police, with £83m more since January, thanks to Government support.

    “Despite this record-breaking additional funding, the Met still faces a difficult financial situation due to over a decade of cuts by the previous government. As Mayor, I will continue to work with the new government and the Commissioner ahead of the forthcoming spending review on the funding the Met needs to ensure we can continue building a safer London for everyone.”

    The Mayor’s final draft Budget also confirms £147.5 million of funding to deliver free school meals for all London’s state primary schoolchildren in 2025-26 – the third year of the historic scheme. Delivering free school meals has been one of Sadiq’s proudest moments as Mayor and he has vowed to continue the scheme for as long as he is in office.

    More than 43 million free school meals were funded in the first year of the scheme, with up to 287,000 children benefitting and families saving more than £1,000 per child over the first two years of the scheme.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-Evening Report: Having dense breasts is linked to cancer. But advice about breast density can depend on where you live

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jennifer Stone, Principal Research Fellow, School of Population and Global Health, The University of Western Australia

    Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock

    Having dense breasts is a clear risk factor for breast cancer. It can also make cancers hard to spot on mammograms.

    Yet you might not be aware you have dense breasts, even after mammographic screening.

    In Australia, advice for women with dense breasts and their health-care professionals can be inconsistent and confusing.

    This is because there’s not currently consensus on whether women who have dense breasts, but no symptoms, benefit from further imaging such as ultrasounds. Concerns include potential cost of these tests and the risk they can produce false positives.

    What is breast density?

    Breasts are made up of fatty tissue and fibroglandular tissue (including glands that make milk, held together by fibrous tissue).

    On a mammogram – an x-ray of the breast – fibroglandular tissue appears white and fatty tissue appears dark. The white areas are referred to as breast density.

    Fibroglandular tissue shows up white on a mammogram.
    Nata Sokhrannova/Shutterstock

    A higher proportion of fibroglandular tissue means your breasts are dense.

    There are four categories to classify breast density:

    • A: almost entirely fatty
    • B: scattered areas of fibroglandular density
    • C: heterogeneously or consistently dense
    • D: extremely dense.

    Breast density is very common. Around 40% of women aged 40–74 are estimated to have “dense breasts”, meaning they fall in category C or D.

    What’s the link to cancer?

    Breast density is associated with the risk of breast cancer in two ways.

    First, breast density usually decreases with age. But if a woman has high breast density for her age, it increases her likelihood of breast cancer.

    One study looked at the risk of breast cancer over the age of 50. It found there was a 6.2% risk for the one-third of women with the lowest density. For the 5% with the highest density, the risk was 14.7%.

    Second, breast density “masks” cancers if they develop. Both cancers and breast density appear white on a mammogram, making cancers very hard to see.

    Breast cancer screening saves lives through early detection and improved treatment options. But we don’t yet know if telling women about their breast density leads to earlier cancer detection, or lives saved.

    In Australia, screening mammography is free for all women* aged 40 and older. This is run through BreastScreen Australia, a joint national, state and territory initiative. Those aged 50-74 are invited to have a mammogram, but it’s available for free without a referral from age 40.

    However, the messages Australian women currently receive about breast density – and whether it’s recorded – depends on where they live.

    What does the advice say?

    In 2023, the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists updated its position statement to recommend breast density is recorded during screening and diagnostic tests in Australia and New Zealand.

    Meanwhile BreastScreen Australia says it “should not routinely record breast density or provide supplemental testing for women with dense breasts”. However this position statement is from 2020 and is currently under review.

    Some state and territory BreastScreen programs, including in Western Australia, South Australia and soon Victoria, notify women if they have dense breasts. Victoria is currently at an early stage of its roll-out.

    While the messaging regarding breast density differs by state, none currently recommend further imaging for women with dense breasts without speaking to a doctor about individual risk.

    What are the issues?

    Providing recommendations for women with dense breasts is difficult.

    The European Society of Breast Imaging recommends women with extremely dense breasts aged 50–70 receive an MRI every two to four years, in addition to screening mammography. This is based on a large randomised controlled trial from the Netherlands.

    But the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists describes this recommendation as “aspirational”, acknowledging cost, staffing and accessibility as challenges.

    That is, it is not feasible to provide a supplemental MRI for everyone in the screening population in category D with extremely dense breasts (around 10%).

    Further, there is no consensus on appropriate screening recommendations for women in the category C (heterogeneous density).

    We need a national approach to breast density reporting in Australia and to do better at identifying who is most likely to benefit from further testing.

    BreastScreen Australia is currently undergoing a review of its policy and funding.

    One of its goals is to enable a nationally consistent approach to breast screening practices. Hopefully breast density reporting, including funding to support national implementation, will be a priority.

    *This includes those recorded female at birth and who are gender diverse.

    Jennifer Stone receives funding from Cancer Council Western Australia and the NHMRC. She is affiliated with the University of Western Australia and the University of Melbourne. She is Co-chair of the Australian Breast Density Consumer Advisory Council and member of the InforMD Alliance (www.informd.org.au).

    ref. Having dense breasts is linked to cancer. But advice about breast density can depend on where you live – https://theconversation.com/having-dense-breasts-is-linked-to-cancer-but-advice-about-breast-density-can-depend-on-where-you-live-249863

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Four people charged with aggravated assault following disturbance in Glenorchy

    Source: Tasmania Police

    Four people charged with aggravated assault following disturbance in Glenorchy

    Tuesday, 18 February 2025 – 2:12 pm.

    Police have charged four people in relation to a disturbance in Glenorchy about 7.20pm on Sunday.
    Police will allege the four people attended an address on Chapel Street and threated the occupants.
    No serious injuries were sustained, and the people were known to each other.
    A 19-year-old man and an 18-year-old man, both from Lutana, have been charged with aggravated assault. They were bailed to appear in court at a later date.
    Additionally, two youths have also been charged with aggravated assault. They were bailed to appear in the Youth Justice Court at a later date.
    Police would like to speak to anyone with witness information or CCTV or dash camera footage of the area around the time.
    Information can be provided to police on 131 444 or through Crime Stoppers Tasmania at crimestopperstas.com.au or on 1800 333 000 (info can be provided anonymously). Quote reference OR767019.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Security: DHS Announces Ad Campaign Warning Illegal Aliens to Self-Deport and Stay Out

    Source: US Department of Homeland Security

    “Under President Trump, America’s borders are closed to lawbreakers.” – Secretary Noem  

    WASHINGTON – Today, Secretary Kristi Noem announced a nationwide and international multimillion-dollar ad campaign warning illegal aliens to leave our country now or face deportation with the inability to return to the United States. The international ads warn criminal illegal aliens not to come to America and break its laws or they will be hunted down and deported.  

    This series of ads will run on radio, broadcast, and digital, in multiple countries and regions in various dialects. Ads will be hyper-targeted, including through social media, text message and digital to reach illegal immigrants in the interior of the United States, as well as internationally. 

    “Thank you, President Donald J. Trump, for securing our border and putting America first. President Trump has a clear message: if you are here illegally, we will find you and deport you. You will never return. But if you leave now, you may have an opportunity to return and enjoy our freedom and live the American Dream,” said Secretary Kristi Noem. “If you are a criminal alien considering entering America illegally: Don’t even think about it.  If you come here and break our laws, we will hunt you down. Criminals are not welcome in the United States.” 

    Watch domestic ad here and international ad here

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Gaza – Less than seven percent of pre-conflict water levels available to Rafah and North Gaza, worsening a health catastrophe – Oxfam

    Source: Oxfam Aotearoa

     Nearly 1,700 kilometres of water and sanitation networks have been destroyed
     Big-ticket repairs of networks urgently needed but Israeli government balks in approving supplies
    The resumption of aid into Gaza, including fuel to operate undamaged water and sanitation facilities along with water trucking, has improved the amount of water available to people in some parts of Gaza. But the picture remains extremely bleak and dangerously critical, especially in the North Gaza and Rafah governorates, warned Oxfam today.
    Fifteen months of Israel’s military assault has destroyed 1,675 kilometres of water and sanitation networks. In North Gaza and Rafah governorates, which have suffered the most destruction, less than seven percent of pre-conflict water levels is available to people, heightening the spread of waterborne diseases.
    As fragile ceasefire negotiations hang in the balance, any renewed violence or disruption to fuel and the already inadequate aid would trigger a full-scale public health disaster.
    Carlos Calderon, Oxfam Aotearoa’s Head of Partnerships and Humanitarian said:
    “No human can survive more than a few days without water. In Gaza, over two million people are being forced to drink from unsafe sources, while overflowing sewage networks create a breeding ground for deadly diseases we once conquered. This is a second humanitarian catastrophe in the making. What we do next will define who we are as a society.”
    Clémence Lagouardat, Oxfam’s Humanitarian Coordinator in Gaza said:
    “Now that the bombs have stopped, we have only just begun to grasp the sheer scale of destruction to Gaza’s water and sanitation infrastructure. Most vital water and sanitation networks have been entirely lost or paralyzed, which is creating catastrophic hygiene and health conditions.
    “Our staff and partners have told how people are stopping them in the streets asking for water, and that parents are not drinking to save water for their children. It is heartbreaking to hear about children having to walk for miles for a single jerrycan of water.”
    In the North Gaza governorate, almost all water wells have been destroyed by the Israeli military. Over 700,000 people have returned to find entire neighbourhoods wiped out. For the few whose homes remain standing, water is non-existent due to the destruction of rooftop storage tanks.
    In Rafah, over 90 percent of water wells and reservoirs have been partially or completely damaged, and water production is less than five percent of its capacity before the conflict. Only two out of 35 wells are currently operational.
    Despite efforts to resume water production since the ceasefire, the destruction of Gaza’s water pipelines means that 60 percent of water is leaking into the ground rather than reaching people.
    Oxfam and partners’ initial assessment after the ceasefire found:
    – More than 80 percent of water and sanitation infrastructure across the Gaza Strip has been partially or entirely destroyed, including all six major wastewater treatment plants.
    – 85 percent of the sewage pumping stations (73 out of 84) and networks have been destroyed. Some have been repaired but urgently require fuel to operate.
    – 85 percent of small desalination plants (85 out of 103) have been partially damaged or completely destroyed.
    – 67 percent of the 368 municipal wells have been destroyed. Most of the private small wells cannot function due to lack of fuel or generators.
    The lack of safe water, combined with untreated sewage overflowing in the streets has triggered an explosion of waterborne and infectious diseases. According to the World Health Organisation, 88 percent of environmental samples surveyed across Gaza were found contaminated with polio, signalling an imminent risk of outbreak. Infectious diseases including acute watery diarrhoea and respiratory infections – now the leading causes of death – are also surging, with 46,000 cases, mostly children, being reported each week.
    Chickenpox and skin diseases such as scabies and impetigo are also spreading rapidly, particularly among displaced populations in the Northern Gaza Governorate, where water shortages are most severe.
    Meanwhile, with no waste collection and transport for over 15 months, more than 2,000 tonnes of garbage has been piling up in the streets every day. This toxic combination of open sewage, uncollected waste and contaminated water is creating a perfect storm for a deadly disease outbreak.
    Lagouardat said: “Despite the increase in aid since the ceasefire, Israel continues to severely impair critical items needed to begin repairing the massive structural damage from its airstrikes. This includes desperately needed pipes for repairing water and sanitation networks, equipment like generators to operate wells.”
    Oxfam’s own 85 tonne-shipment of water pipes, fittings and water tanks – worth over $480,000 – had been held up for over six months because it was deemed as dual-use and “oversized” to enter. Israeli authorities only finally approved the shipment this week, although it has yet to enter.
    Lagouardat said: “Hundreds of thousands of displaced people across the Gaza Strip have had to resort to digging makeshift cesspits next to their tents. This daily discharge of approximately 130,000 cubic meters – the equivalent of 52 Olympic pools – of untreated sewage is contaminating the Mediterranean Sea and Gaza’s only aquifer.
    “Rebuilding water and sanitation is vital for Gaza to have a path to normalcy after 15 months of horror. The ceasefire must hold, and fuel and aid must flow so that Palestinians can rebuild their lives. Lasting peace for Palestinians and Israelis can only come through a permanent ceasefire and a just solution.”
    – Oxfam has recent photos and footage of water and sanitation destruction in Gaza and can be downloaded HERE(valid until 14 May 25)
    – According to the Coastal Municipalities Water Utility (CMWU) as of February 2025, a total of 1675 km out of 4,800 km of Gaza’s water and sanitation networks have been partially or entirely destroyed since October 2023. This includes 350km in North Gaza, 495km in Gaza City, 240 Km in the Middle area, 350km in Khan Younis, and 240km in Rafah respectively.
    – Data on water and sanitation destruction is based on the Coastal Municipalities Water Utility (CMWU) Rapid Damage Assessment Report, January 2025.
    – Data on cost of infrastructure repair is based on Gaza Municipality Planning and Investment Unit report of December 31, 2024.
    – According to Oxfam’s Water War Crime s report, the Gaza population had access to 82.7 litres per person per day before 7 October 2023. Currently Rafah has less than five percent of that amount; and North Gaza governorates have less than seven percent of that amount, or 5.7 litres per person per day.
    – According to the 10 Feb 2025 WASH Cluster report: only two (out of 35) wells in Rafah are currently operational.
    – Acute watery diarrhoea (AWD) in children under five years old was reported to be 13,179 cases. This accounts for approximately 54% of the total registered cases of AWD. Also, 21 out of 24 Polio environmental surveyed samples across Gaza (88%) were positive. Source: Polio Global Eradication Initiative (WHO & UN) on 1 Feb 2025
     UNOSAT latest data collected on 1 December 2024 identified 60,368 destroyed structures, 20,050 severely damaged structures, 56,292 moderately damaged structures, and 34,102 possibly damaged structures for a total of 170,812 structures. The governorates of North Gaza and Rafah have experienced the highest rise in damage compared to the 6 September 2024 analysis, with around 3,138 new structures damaged in North Gaza and around 3,054 in Rafah. Within North Gaza, Jabalya municipality had the highest number of newly damaged structures, totalling 1,339. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Whitehorse — Whitehorse RCMP seek the public’s assistance to identify an armed robbery suspect

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    The morning of February 17, 2025, Whitehorse RCMP received a report of an armed robbery at the Edgewater Hotel on Main Street in Whitehorse, Yukon.

    An unknown male suspect wearing a face covering entered the front lobby sometime after 8:15 am. The male displayed a weapon and demanded money. The male suspect is described as Caucasian, 5 foot 8 inches to 6 feet tall, mid to late 30’s, wearing a light blue coat and a dark toque.

    RCMP are asking for assistance to identify this person. If you see this person do not approach and contact police at 867-667-5555. Should you wish to remain anonymous, please contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Australia: New laws make it criminal to incite racial hatred in NSW

    Source: New South Wales Premiere

    Published: 18 February 2025

    Released by: The Premier, Attorney General


    The NSW Government will introduce legislation to Parliament today to confront hate speech and antisemitism by establishing a new criminal offence for intentionally inciting racial hatred.

    The Crimes Amendment (Inciting Racial Hatred) Bill 2025 responds to recent disgusting instances of antisemitic conduct and hate speech, and makes clear that inciting racial hatred has no place in NSW.

    The legislation will make it a crime to intentionally and publicly incite hatred towards another person, or group of people, on the grounds of race. The bill will establish a new section, 93ZAA of the Crimes Act 1900, with a maximum penalty for an individual of two years’ imprisonment, fines of up to $11,000, or both, while corporations can face fines of $55,000.

    The proposed offence will contain the following elements:

    • It must be a public act;
    • The public act must incite hatred;
    • The incitement to hatred must be intentional; and
    • The intentional incitement to hatred must be on the basis of race.

    To ensure the implied freedom of political communication is protected, the new offences have been drafted to apply to specific conduct.

    The new section includes an exception for directly referencing religious texts during religious teachings.

    Criminalising the incitement of racial hatred is the latest measure taken by the NSW Government to respond to acts of racial violence and hatred. Other actions include:

    • Introducing a new offence in the Crimes Act to ensure people of faith can attend their place of worship in safety and provide police with associated move on powers;
    • Introducing a new offence in 93ZA of the Crimes Act directed to the display of a Nazi symbol on or near a synagogue or place of worship, Jewish school or the Sydney Jewish Museum;
    • Amending existing graffiti offences to make it an aggravated offence to graffiti a place of worship; and
    • Ensuring that hatred or prejudice as motive for an offence will be an aggravating factor on sentence regardless of the presence of other motives.

    The Minns Labor Government also increased funding for the NSW Engagement and Hate Crime Unit, the Safe Places for Faith Communities Grants (led by Multicultural NSW), and the NSW Local Government Social Cohesion Grants Program.

    This package of measures helps crack down on the recent escalation of troubling graffiti, racial hatred and antisemitism in the community.

    It also builds on the work of the NSW Police Force, with Operation Shelter conducting more than 300 proactive patrols daily, while Strike Force Pearl has doubled its fulltime dedicated detectives from 20 to 40.

    With these reforms, the NSW Government is sending a clear message about how seriously it takes racial hatred and antisemitism.

    Premier of NSW Chris Minns said:

    “Racial hatred and antisemitism have no place in our society, and we are making it clear with this law.

    “These are strong new laws because this disgraceful behaviour must stop.

    “NSW is a multicultural state. The people of NSW already stand against racial hatred, and we are making it criminal with this law.

    “While this package confronts recent antisemitism, the new laws will apply to anyone, preying on any person.”

    Attorney General Michael Daley said:

    “Racial hatred is unacceptable – and under this new legislation, it will be a crime to publicly and intentionally incite racial hatred.

    “It is important for members of our community to be protected from conduct that causes them to fear for their safety, or to fear harassment, intimidation or violence.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Use Upcoming Tenth Anniversary of Minsk Accord’s Signing to Renew Diplomatic Efforts towards De-escalation in Ukraine, Assistant Secretary-General Urges Security Council

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    The Minsk Agreements show that the signing of a peace pact alone does not ensure a durable end to conflict, the Security Council heard today as it met a decade after the adoption of Council resolution 2202 (2015), which called for the full implementation of those accords.

    The international community must use the 10-year anniversary as an opportunity to “recall past diplomatic efforts towards de-escalation” as well as reflect “on what happens when peacemaking fails”, Miroslav Jenča, Assistant Secretary-General for Europe, Central Asia and Americas in the Departments of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs and Peace Operations, said.  He noted that in one week, it will be “three tragic years” since the Russian Federation’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    Highlighting the crucial role of regional and subregional organizations, he praised the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Special Monitoring Mission for monitoring ceasefire violations and helping to maintain dialogue for “eight difficult years”.  Any peaceful settlement must respect the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Ukraine, he said, welcoming all initiatives with the full participation of Ukraine and the Russian Federation.  Ensuring the conflict does not reoccur or escalate requires genuine political will and understanding of its “multidimensional complexity”, he said.

    Peace Activist Haunted by Dead Ukrainian, Russian Soldiers, Says War Could Have Been Avoided through Diplomacy

    “The people of Ukraine are divided – they are either pro- or anti-Russian,” stated Roger Waters, civil peace activist, who also addressed the Council today.  To those questioning his credentials, he said:  “I’m here to talk about war and peace and love, and my credentials are firmly in place.” “Hundreds of thousands of dead Ukrainian and Russian soldiers […] are in this room with us today [and] they haunt me,” he said. 

    Recalling the Maidan protests in Kyiv, he stressed that this is one of the problems with regime change — “dead bodies, they are somebody’s loved one”. Immediately after the Government change in 2014, Crimea seceded from Ukraine and joined the Russian Federation. “Did it secede or was it annexed?” he asked, pointing to a referendum held at the time, in which 95 per cent of Ukrainians in Crimea voted to secede. 

    The agreements — Minsk I, signed in September 2014, and Minsk II, in February 2015 — outlined steps for ending the conflict in eastern Ukraine through a political settlement.  The latter accord stipulated a ceasefire in certain areas of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions and the withdrawal of military equipment by both sides.  It also included a commitment by Kyiv to organize local elections and grant special status to the separatist-held areas in eastern Ukraine and the reinstatement of Ukraine’s full control over its border.

    Mr. Waters said that despite campaigning on the promise to resume Minsk II, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who came to power in 2019, did not do so, and in 2022, Russian troops crossed the border to Ukraine. This war could have been avoided through diplomacy, he insisted, adding that President Zelenskyy had started talking to Russian President Vladimir Putin and by the end of April 2014, a ceasefire agreement had been agreed upon in Istanbul.  The war could have been a stillborn, but then United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson arrived in Kyiv with the message that the war should be continued as it “suits the Americans” — “the longer it takes, the better”. 

    Citing the telephone talks between United States President Donald Trump and President Putin as a potential move in the right direction, he concluded:  “Maybe there is a glimmer of light at the end of this dark tunnel of war — it comes three years and hundreds of thousands of priceless lives too late, but maybe it’s a start.”

    United States Committed to Ending Carnage, Restoring Europe’s Stability, its Speaker Says 

    Washington, D.C., is committed to ending the carnage and restoring Europe’s stability, the representative of the United States said, adding:  “We want a sovereign and prosperous Ukraine but we must start by recognizing that returning to Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders is an unrealistic objective.”  Further, he added:  “Chasing this illusionary goal will only prolong the war and cause more suffering.” At the same time, he underscored that the Russian Federation has consistently undermined the Minsk Agreement; therefore, a durable peace for Ukraine must include robust security guarantees to ensure the war will not begin again.  Describing Moscow’s illegal war of conquest as “a strategic error”, he said that “the easy way out is through negotiations”.  If Moscow, instead, “chooses the hard way”, it will incur greater and escalating costs to its economy and losses on the battlefield, he warned. 

    New United States Administration Has Created Space for Diplomacy, Russian Federation’s Representative Says 

    For his part, the Russian Federation’s delegate said that “the entry into office of the Republican United States Administration” has created space for the emergence of diplomacy.  Those who seized power in Ukraine, following the 2014 anti-constitutional coup, had no intention of implementing the Minsk Agreements, he said.  Citing statements by various Ukrainian officials who described the Agreements as “a noose on the neck” and “not binding in nature”, he said the Agreements were “a smokescreen” for Western countries while they provided Ukraine armaments. 

    Outlining lessons to draw from the failure of the Minsk process, he said European Union countries and the United Kingdom are “unfaithful to their word and they cannot be a party to any future agreement”.  Also stressing the need to provide autonomy to the east of Ukraine and guarantees for its Russian language population, he said that President Zelenskyy “is deathly afraid of elections and is doing everything possible to drag them out”.  A future Ukraine needs to be “a demilitarized neutral State, not a part of any blocs or alliances,” he said, adding that it was the prospect of the entry of Ukraine into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) that triggered the crisis.

    Entire History of Minsk Agreement “Long List of Violations’ by Moscow”, Ukraine’s Delegate Says

    However, Ukraine’s delegate countered that the entire history of the Minsk Agreements “was a long list of violations” by Moscow.  In 2022, “on this very day”, “in this very chamber”, when her country expressed concern about the buildup of troops along its border and other developments, the Russian Federation had underscored that there is no alternative to the Minsk Agreements, she recalled.  Four days later, that country recognized the so-called independence of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine.  Among others, it never implemented paragraph 4 of the Minsk Protocol, concerning the establishment of a security area in the border regions of the two countries, she said.

     “It is because people of Ukraine are pro-Ukrainian [that] the Russian Federation has failed,” she added.  Any future arrangement involving the Kremlin must include enforcement mechanisms and preventive measures, she stressed, adding:  “What responsible States see as commitments to be upheld, the Russian Federation treats as a tactical ploy.”  Ukraine is working with its partners to find strong solutions, she said, stressing:  “Weak agreements will not bring real peace; they will only lead to the greater war.” 

    Other Council Members Weigh In

    Denmark’s delegate described the current meeting as “part of an ongoing disinformation campaign” to try and distract the international community from the subjugation of Ukraine.  Welcoming Ukraine’s ratification of the Rome Statute, she expressed support for a special tribunal to investigate crimes conducted in that country.  While “no one wants this war to end more than Ukraine”, the United Kingdom’s delegate said, President Putin’s preconditions for talks have been that Ukraine withdraws from large swathes of its own sovereign territory and abandons its right to choose its alliances.  “No country could accept this,” she said, reaffirming that London will provide concrete support for Ukraine for as long as needed. 

    “The Minsk Agreements were a diplomatic initiative designed to prevent further bloodshed and establish a political pathway to peace in Ukraine,” said Germany’s representative, adding that Moscow obstructed its implementation and chose to pursue expansionist conquest.  “This war should not have been started in the first place,” she stressed, calling on all States to unite behind the draft General Assembly resolution on advancing peace in Ukraine.  Along similar lines, France’s delegate highlighted the tireless mediation by Paris and Berlin, to enable Ukraine and Russian Federation to find common ground. However, Moscow chose war, he said, while Greece’s delegate stressed that “no interpretation of the Minsk Agreements can ever justify the invasion of Ukraine”.

    “We need something more than Minsk III,” Slovenia’s delegate said, adding that the abstract nature of the Agreements allowed for multiple interpretations.  Any future accord must be much be more specific with clear timelines, defined sequencing and a monitoring mechanism, he stressed.  Similarly, Somalia’s delegate underscored the importance of clarity, particularly in diplomatic tools, and said the implementation of ceasefire provisions requires robust and impartial verifying mechanisms.  The Republic of Korea’s delegate stressed that “the entire world is well aware of who is aggressor and who is the victim,” also adding that the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s support of the Russian Federation, with troops and munitions, is a grave violation of the Organization’s resolutions. 

    Several speakers expressed concern about the failure of diplomacy, while others called on the international community to rally behind new diplomatic efforts.  Since the onset of the Ukraine crisis, Beijing has been calling for a political solution through dialogue and has been actively engaged in diplomatic mediations, China’s representative, Council President for the month, said in his national capacity.  The legitimate security concerns of all countries should be taken seriously, he said, welcoming the Washington, D.C.-Moscow agreement to start peace talks. 

    “We have been consistent in our calls for restraint,” said Pakistan’s delegate, as he expressed regret that the Minsk Agreement could not reach just and lasting peace in the region.  “We must learn from the past so we do not commit the same errors,” Panama’s delegate added, stressing that dialogue and diplomacy is the only path to peace. 

    “The failed implementation of the Minsk Agreement cannot be the reason to prolong this war,” said Guyana’s delegate, reiterating calls for an end to the hostilities and for the withdrawal of Russian Federation’s forces from Ukraine’s territory.  “Until this day more and more civilians are losing their lives, including women and children,” pointed out Algeria’s representative, while Sierra Leone’s delegate underscored that “the conflict in Ukraine will not be resolved by military means”.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Security: North Battleford — Saskatchewan RCMP lay 64 charges against 3 in bank robbery and string of ATM thefts

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    North Battleford RCMP’s Provincial General Investigation Section (GIS) have laid 64 charges against three people in connection to a Landis bank robbery on November 22, 2024, as well as a string of ATM thefts, and attempted thefts, that took place across South and Central Saskatchewan between November 22, 2024 and January 1, 2025.

    RCMP Provincial GIS’ investigation included widespread coordination across many front-line detachments, police units and Crime Stoppers, to connect incidents reported in the communities of: Dodsland, Rosetown, Gull Lake, Lemberg, Wolseley, Craven, Neilburg, Marshall, Battleford, Purdue, and Mosquito, Grizzly Bear’s Head, Lean Man First Nation. “Complex investigations like this involve extensive resources and large-scale coordination across multiple detachment areas. The sheer number of crimes solved in this investigation really highlights the successful collaboration between support units of the RCMP and front-line officers,” says Sgt. Adam Buckingham, Officer in Charge, North Battleford Provincial GIS.

    RCMP-coordinated efforts led police to a residence in Biggar, where officers with North Battleford Provincial GIS, Crime Reduction Team (CRT) and Biggar Detachment, executed a search warrant on February 5, 2025. At the residence, officers located and seized items believed to be connected to the ATM occurrences and Landis bank robbery. As a result of investigation 36-year old Sheena Benoit and 33-year old Joshua Meszaros were arrested at the time of the search.

    As a result of further investigation, Sheena Benoit (AKA: Sheena Harrabek) faces 16 charges including:

    • three counts, break and enter and commit an offence, Section 348(1)(b), Criminal Code;
    • one count, theft over $5000, Section 334(a), Criminal Code;
    • six counts, theft under $5000, Section 334(b), Criminal Code;
    • six counts, mischief damage to property of a value over $5000, Section 430(3), Criminal Code.

    Joshua Meszaros faces 24 charges including:

    • three counts, break and enter and commit an offence, Section 348(1)(b), Criminal Code;
    • one count, break and enter with intent to commit an offence, Section 348(1)(a), Criminal Code;
    • seven counts, disguised with intent to commit an offence, Section 351(2), Criminal Code;
    • one count, theft over $5000, Section 334(a), Criminal Code;
    • six counts, theft under $5000, Section 334(b), Criminal Code;
    • five counts, mischief/damage to property of a value over $5000, Section 430(3), Criminal Code;
    • one count, mischief/damage to property of a value under $5000, Section 430(4), Criminal Code.

    A third suspect, 48-year-old Jeremy Seery of Rosetown was arrested on February 12, 2025 and faces 24 charges including:

    • one count, break and enter and commit an offence, Section 348(1)(b), Criminal Code;
    • two counts, break and enter with intent to commit an offence, Section 348(1)(a);
    • one count, robbery with other offensive weapon, Section 344, Criminal Code;
    • seven counts, disguised with intent to commit an offence, Section 351(2), Criminal Code;
    • one count, theft over $5000, Section 334(a), Criminal Code;
    • six counts, theft under $5000, Section 334(b), Criminal Code;
    • six counts, mischief/damage to property of a value over $5000, Section 430(3), Criminal Code.

    Joshua Meszaros and Sheena Benoit are scheduled to appear in North Battleford Provincial Court on April 7, 2025 at 2:00 p.m.

    Jeremy Seery is scheduled to appear in North Battleford Provincial Court on April 14, 2025 at 9:30 a.m.

    If have information about these or any other crime, contact Saskatchewan RCMP at 310-RCMP. Information can also be submitted anonymously by contacting Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or www.saskcrimestoppers.com.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Stephenville — Bay St. George RCMP investigates vehicle arson in Piccadilly, seeks public’s assistance

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Bay St. George RCMP is investigating an arson that occurred in Piccadilly shorty after midnight today, February 17, 2025.

    Shortly after 12:30 a.m. on Monday, Bay St. George RCMP were called to the parking lot of the Our Lady of Fatima Catholic church on the Main Road in Piccadilly where a truck was on fire. Firefighters attended the scene and extinguished the blaze, which completely destroyed the vehicle. Evidence gathered at the scene suggests that the fire was intentionally set. A set of footprints was observed in the snow that led from the vehicle and continued into a wooded area behind the church. The footprints eventually led back onto the Main Road where it is believed the suspect was picked up by a motorist.

    The investigation is continuing.

    Bay St. George RCMP asks area residents to check for any possible surveillance footage and to report any suspicious activities around the time of the arson. Anyone having knowledge of this crime is asked to contact Bay St. George RCMP at 709-643-2118. To remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers: #SayItHere 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), visit www.nlcrimestoppers.com or use the P3Tips app.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Happy Valley-Goose Bay — Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP investigates two break and enters, seeks public assistance

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP is investigating an attempted break and enter and a successful break and enter that occurred on Thursday, February 6, 2025.

    At approximately 3:40 a.m., an individual attempted to break into a refrigerated Sea-Can that was situated on the property of Terrington COOP on Abbott Drive in Happy Valley-Goose Bay. The suspect, pictured below, broke the pad lock and damaged the latch but did not gain entry.

    Sometime overnight the same night, suspect(s) forced entry into National Safety Equipment on Hamilton River Road, near Terrington COOP. More than 40 pairs of Timberland and Acton work boots of various sizes, with a combined value of approximately $14,000, were stolen from inside.

    The investigations are continuing.

    Anyone having information about either of these crimes, the person(s) responsible or the current location of the stolen property, is asked to contact Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP at 709-896-3383. To remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers: #SayItHere 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), visit www.nlcrimestoppers.com or use the P3Tips app.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine paramount, Security Council hears

    Source: United Nations 2

    Peace and Security

    A senior UN political affairs official on Monday reaffirmed that any peace deal in Ukraine must respect the country’s sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity, in accordance with the UN Charter and international law.

    Briefing ambassadors in the Security Council ahead of the third anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Miroslav Jenča, Assistant Secretary-General for Europe in the political and peacebuilding department (DPPA), stressed diplomatic efforts must focus on securing a just and lasting peace.

    Full participation of Ukraine, Russia

    “The United Nations encourages dialogue among all stakeholders and welcomes all genuine efforts and initiatives, with the full participation of Ukraine and the Russian Federation, that would alleviate the impact of the war on civilians and de-escalate the conflict,” he said.

    He also reiterated Secretary-General António Guterres’ position that “any peaceful settlement must respect the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Ukraine, in line with the UN Charter, international law and resolutions of the General Assembly.”

    The Security Council session coincided with the 10th anniversary of resolution 2202, which endorsed the now-defunct Minsk agreements of 2015 signed by the representatives of European security pact, the OSCE, Russia, Ukraine and leaders of the pro-Russian separatists in the occupied east of Ukraine following Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

    The unanimously adopted resolution included a “package of measures” as its annex, including an immediate and comprehensive ceasefire in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine, as well as the withdrawal of all heavy weapons by both sides by equal distances to create a security zone.

    A stark reminder

    Mr. Jenča noted that the anniversary serves as a stark reminder of past diplomatic efforts to de-escalate tensions and as an opportunity to reflect on the consequences of failing to forge a peace through international diplomacy.

    He commended the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission for its eight years of work in tracking ceasefire violations and facilitating dialogue, noting that the experience offers key lessons for future diplomatic efforts.

    The Minsk agreements have taught us that agreeing on a ceasefire or the signing of an agreement alone do not ensure a durable end to the violence,” Mr. Jenča said.

    “Ensuring that the conflict does not reoccur and does not escalate will require genuine political will and understanding of its multi-dimensional complexity, for Ukraine and for the region.”

    More to follow…

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Man arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following serious assault

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    Officers investigating a serious assault near Archway Station have arrested a man on suspicion of attempted murder, as detectives continue to appeal for witnesses.

    Police were called at 22:28hrs on Saturday, 15 February after a man was admitted to hospital with stab wounds. Enquiries indicated that the assault had occurred in Navigator Square, N19.

    The man, who is in his 20’s remains in hospital in a life-threatening condition.

    Enquiries indicated that the assault occurred in Navigator Square, N19, close to Archway Station. A cordon remains in place.

    A 22-year-old man was arrested on Sunday, 16 February, on suspicion of attempted murder and remains in custody.

    Investigating officers are carrying out multiple enquiries in the local area and appealing to anyone who may have witnessed anything to contact police.

    Detective Inspector Anna Deighton, of Central North Local Investigations said:

    “Our officers worked quickly to establish where this assault occurred, putting a cordon in place and carrying out enquiries in the area. Yesterday evening, a man was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and he remains in custody.

    “Residents and visitors to the area will have noticed an increased police presence whilst this investigation remains ongoing.

    “We have designated officers on reassurance patrols, to answer questions that the public may have.

    “I encourage anyone who has information but may not have contacted police yet to get in touch and assist with this investigation.”

    Anyone with any information is asked to contact police quoting CAD 7159/15FEB.

    Alternatively you can contact the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or visit crimestoppers-uk.org.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02/17/2025, 12:25 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the VTBR (VTB JSC) security were changed.

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02/17/2025

    12:25

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC), on 17.02.2025, 12-25 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 98.77) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 106.120812 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 21.25%) of the VTBR security (VTB JSC) were changed.

    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.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    HTTPS: //VVV. MOEX.K.M.M.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02/17/2025, 12:27 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the security RU000A0ZYJ91 (FSK RS B4) were changed.

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02/17/2025

    12:27

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC) on 17.02.2025, 12-27 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 109.37) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 1174.84 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 7.5%) of the security RU000A0ZYJ91 (FSK RS B4) were changed.

    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.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    HTTPS: //VVV. MEEX.K.M.M.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02/17/2025, 12:34 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the security RU000A100YQ0 (Rosnft2P9) were changed.

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02/17/2025

    12:34

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC), on 17.02.2025, 12-34 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 86.07) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 905.0 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 11.25%) of the RU000A100YQ0 (Rosnft2P9) security were changed.

    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.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    HTTPS: //VVV. MOEX.K.M.M.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 02/17/2025, 13-24 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the GMKN (GMKNorNik) security were changed.

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    02/17/2025

    13:24

    In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of Moscow Exchange PJSC by NCO NCC (JSC), on 17.02.2025, 13-24 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 145.32) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 156.13 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 21.25%) of the GMKN (GMKNorNik) security were changed.

    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.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    HTTPS: //VVV. MEEX.K.M.M.

    MIL OSI Russia News