Category: CTF

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Lamont Announces Final Approval of His Plan To Provide Wage Increases for the Connecticut State Police

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    (HARTFORD, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont is applauding the Connecticut State Senate for voting this afternoon in favor of approving an agreement he negotiated with the Connecticut State Police Union that will enact pay increases for the Connecticut State Police.

    The governor and the union reached the agreement in April, and then the governor presented the agreement to the legislature for its approval. Today’s vote by the Senate was the final step necessary in the process of ratifying it.

    “Our Connecticut State Police deserve salaries that reflect the essential work they provide, and I am glad that we were able to reach this agreement to provide these pay increases for our state troopers,” Governor Lamont said. “This wage re-opener follows the pattern established by SEBAC as the final contract to be ratified under this pattern. I want to thank the members of the General Assembly who voted in favor of supporting our state troopers, as well as those who helped negotiate this agreement.”

    The legislation that was approved by the Senate today is Senate Resolution 16. It was approved in that chamber by a vote of 36 to 0. The House of Representatives approved the agreement earlier this week through House Resolution 17 by a vote of 134 to 12.

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: PHILADELPHIA – Governor Shapiro to Highlight Positive Results of Historic Investments in K-12 Public Education, Importance of Continuing to Deliver for PA Students

    Source: US State of Pennsylvania

    May 23, 2025Philadelphia

    ADVISORY – PHILADELPHIA – Governor Shapiro to Highlight Positive Results of Historic Investments in K-12 Public Education, Importance of Continuing to Deliver for PA Students

    Governor Josh Shapiro will visit A. Philip Randolph Career and Technical High School to meet with students, teachers, and legislators and highlight how the historic funding he secured for public K-12 education is leading to positive results in schools across the Commonwealth. In his first two budgets, Governor Shapiro secured historic investments in our public schools, students, and teachers, delivering the largest increase in K-12 education funding in Pennsylvania history – and schools are now putting those investments to work.

    Governor Shapiro’s 2025-26 budget proposal builds on that foundation by proposing new funding for K-12 public education, with a focus on driving more dollars to the schools that need them most. It also continues our progress to build strong and safe school communities, hire and support our teachers, and expand mental health resources. The Governor’s budget creates more opportunity for our students and builds on our progress to bring vo-tech back into the classroom with a $5.5 million increase for Career and Technical Education (CTE).

    WHO:
    Governor Josh Shapiro
    Acting Secretary Carrie Rowe, Department of Education
    Dr. Tony Watlington, School District of Philadelphia Superintendent
    Arthur Steinberg, AFTPA President

    WHEN:
    Friday, May 23, 2025, at 10:00AM

    WHERE:
    A. Philip Randolph Career and Technical High School
    3101 Henry Avenue,
    Philadelphia, PA 19129

    LIVE STREAM:
    pacast.com/live/gov
    governor.pa.gov/live/

    RSVP:
    Press who are interested in attending must RSVP with the names and phone numbers for each member of their team to ra-gvgovpress@pa.gov.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: California Department of Justice Investigating El Centro Police Department Officer-Involved Shooting Under AB 1506

    Source: US State of California

    Thursday, May 22, 2025

    Contact: (916) 210-6000, agpressoffice@doj.ca.gov

     **The information provided below is based on preliminary details regarding an ongoing investigation, which may continue to evolve**

    OAKLAND – California Attorney General Rob Bonta today announced that the California Department of Justice (DOJ), pursuant to Assembly Bill 1506 (AB 1506), is investigating and will independently review an officer-involved shooting (OIS) that occurred in El Centro, California on Wednesday, May 21, 2025 at approximately 8:10 p.m. The OIS incident resulted in the death of one individual and involved personnel from the El Centro Police Department. 

    Following notification by local authorities, DOJ’s California Police Shooting Investigation Team initiated an investigation in accordance with AB 1506 mandates. Upon completion of the investigation, it will be turned over to DOJ’s Special Prosecutions Section within the Criminal Law Division for independent review. Anyone who has information related to this officer-involved shooting incident and wishes to report it may do so by calling (916) 210-2871. 

    More information on the California Department of Justice’s role and responsibilities under AB 1506 is available here: https://oag.ca.gov/ois-incidents.

    # # #

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – The case of Azerbaijani political prisoner Tofig Yagublu – E-001955/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001955/2025
    to the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
    Rule 144
    Francisco Assis (S&D)

    Tofig Yagublu, an Azerbaijani political opposition leader, was wrongfully detained in December 2023. In March 2025, he was sentenced to nine years in prison on fabricated charges. On 1 April 2025, Mr Yagublu began a hunger strike, which he pledged to continue until his release. He ended his hunger strike after 40 days at the urging of his family, but it has severely affected his health.

    A long-time critic of Azerbaijan’s Government, Mr Yagublu has repeatedly been persecuted, jailed and subjected to ill-treatment for his political activism. He is one of more than 350 arbitrarily detained individuals in Azerbaijan.

    His health is still in critical condition, and he remains unjustly detained.

    • 1.What steps is the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy (VP/HR), Kaja Kallas, taking to raise this case with the Azerbaijani Government, so that Mr Yagublu has continuous access to adequate medical care and is immediately released from detention?
    • 2.How does the VP/HR intend to ensure that progress on the new Partnership and Cooperation Agreement between the EU and Azerbaijan depends on the Azerbaijani Government taking concrete steps to demonstrate its commitment to protecting human rights, including by releasing all arbitrarily detained political prisoners?

    Submitted: 15.5.2025

    Last updated: 22 May 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Israel’s demolitions in Masafer Yatta – E-001952/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001952/2025
    to the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
    Rule 144
    Hana Jalloul Muro (S&D), Benedetta Scuderi (Verts/ALE), Rasmus Nordqvist (Verts/ALE), Villy Søvndal (Verts/ALE), César Luena (S&D), Lynn Boylan (The Left), Bruno Gonçalves (S&D), André Rodrigues (S&D), Oihane Agirregoitia Martínez (Renew), Rudi Kennes (The Left), Rima Hassan (The Left), Vicent Marzà Ibáñez (Verts/ALE), Maria Walsh (PPE), Anthony Smith (The Left), Sandra Gómez López (S&D), Alex Agius Saliba (S&D), Tineke Strik (Verts/ALE), Estelle Ceulemans (S&D), Barry Andrews (Renew), Branislav Ondruš (NI), Matjaž Nemec (S&D), Lina Gálvez (S&D), Mounir Satouri (Verts/ALE), Saskia Bricmont (Verts/ALE), Nikos Pappas (The Left), Catarina Vieira (Verts/ALE), Marta Temido (S&D), Reinier Van Lanschot (Verts/ALE), Leire Pajín (S&D)

    On 5 May 2025, Israeli forces carried out the largest demolition to date in the West Bank’s Masafer Yatta region, razing most of the Palestinian village of Khallet al-Daba. Dozens of residents were left homeless, as 25 structures were destroyed, including six cave dwellings, 10 water tanks, and seven wells. These demolitions are part of a systematic policy targeting Palestinian communities located in areas unilaterally designated by Israel as military training zones.

    Since October 2023, escalating settler violence and the expansion of illegal Israeli outposts have intensified, resulting in the death of 968 Palestinians, over 8 500 wounded, 9 900 imprisoned, and 46 000 displaced. Just last week, the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem experienced 373 Israeli military assaults, 57 shooting incidents by Israeli forces and 67 settler attacks.

    The EU has repeatedly condemned the demolitions taking place in Masafer Yatta, including the destruction of EU-funded infrastructure, but this has had no tangible effect.

    • 1.What actions will the Vice President / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy (VP/HR) undertake to effectively oppose the destruction of Palestinian communities and ensure their protection?
    • 2.Will the VP/HR propose sanctions on those responsible in line with the International Court of Justice’s advisory opinion?
    • 3.How does the VP/HR intend to uphold the two-state solution while the occupation continues in violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 (1967)?

    Submitted: 14.5.2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Follow-up question on self-selection bias in connection with Citizens’ Panels and Youth Policy Dialogues – E-001800/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001800/2025/rev.1
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Marieke Ehlers (PfE)

    In its answer to question E-002913/2024[1] the Commission goes into the participant selection process, establishing that there is no selection bias. My question is about the people who respond to invitations following the selection process, i.e. self-selection bias. For instance, people with positive views on the EU would be more likely to respond to your randomised invitation to participate in Citizens’ Panels and Youth Policy Dialogues than people with less positive views.

    • 1.How does the Commission verify that the actual group of participants is as randomised as the candidate participants selected by the Commission?
    • 2.Can the Commission explain the role of experts and stakeholders in connection with Citizens’ Panels?
    • 3.Who are those experts and stakeholders?

    Submitted: 3.5.2025

    • [1] https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/E-10-2024-002913-ASW_EN.html.
    Last updated: 22 May 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Press release – Court of Auditors: MEPs back Croatian candidate Ivana Maletić

    Source: European Parliament

    On Thursday, Parliament endorsed Ivana Maletić for a second term as Croatia’s Member of the European Court of Auditors.

    Maletić, whose appointment was endorsed by the Committee on Budgetary Control on 14 May 2025, has been serving on the European Court of Auditors since 2019. Prior to that, she served as an MEP from 2013 to 2019, following a career in Croatia’s Ministry of Finance. Maletić holds a master’s degree in accounting, auditing and finance from the University of Zagreb, and is currently working on a PhD with the University of Rijeka.

    MEPs backed Maletić’s nomination in a secret ballot, by 460 votes in favour and 72 against, and with 59 abstentions.

    Next steps

    The final decision will be taken by EU member states in the Council.

    Background

    As stipulated in the EU Treaty, each member state proposes one candidate to serve on the European Court of Auditors. The Council of the EU, after consulting the European Parliament, adopts the list of members for a six-year term.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Security: L3 Technologies Inc. Agrees to Pay $62,000,000 to Resolve False Claims Act Allegations arising from Submission of False Cost or Pricing Data on Defense Contracts

    Source: United States Attorneys General 7

    L3 Technologies Inc., a corporation doing business in Utah, has agreed to pay the United States $62 million to settle allegations that its division, Communications System West, violated the False Claims Act and the Truth In Negotiations Act by knowingly making false statements and submitting and causing the submission of false claims by failing to disclose accurate, current, and complete cost or pricing data for communications equipment sold to various Department of Defense agencies, including the Air Force, Army, and Navy, and other government agencies.

    L3 manufactures communications equipment to operate unmanned vehicles and retrieve data and visuals for military operations and intelligence. The devices are known as remote operations video enhanced receivers (ROVER), Video-Oriented Transceivers for Exchange of Information (VORTEX), and Soldier Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (SIR) receivers.  The United States has purchased ROVER, VORTEX, and SIR products through sole source, fixed price contracts, and L3 also has supplied these products under subcontracts with other prime contractors who manufacture unmanned vehicles.

    The settlement resolves allegations that, between October 2006 and February 2014, L3 failed to disclose accurate, complete, and current cost or pricing data relating to the labor, material, and other costs for manufacturing the ROVER, VORTEX, and SIR products, and each of their versions and kits, and falsely certified that it had done so in dozens of government contract proposals.  The United States alleged that this conduct violated the Truth in Negotiations Act, which requires a contractor to provide to the government at the time of an agreement on price the most current, complete, and accurate facts that could reasonably be expected to affect price negotiations significantly.  The United States further alleged that, by failing to disclose accurate, complete, and current cost or pricing data, L3 knowingly submitted or caused the submission of false claims in connection with the ROVER, VORTEX, and SIR contracts and subcontracts in violation of the False Claims Act.

    “The Department will vigorously pursue federal contractors who fail to provide truthful information during contract negotiations to ensure federal agencies do not overpay for products and services.” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Yaakov M. Roth of the Justice Department’s Civil Division.

    “Taking advantage of the resources that support the armed forces of the United States and other government agencies will not be tolerated,” said Acting United States Attorney Felice John Viti of the District of Utah. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to investigate and hold accountable individuals and contractors who defraud the government.”

    “This $62 million settlement underscores the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (OSI) commitment to protecting national security and ensuring the integrity of Department of Defense acquisitions.,” stated OSI Special Agent Jeffery T.E. Herrin. “L3’s defective pricing in contract proposals for critical systems like ROVER, VORTEX, and SIR erodes public trust, and OSI, through robust law enforcement partnerships, will continue to uphold law and order within the defense industry.”

    “This settlement is the result of a collaborative effort to guard against fraud, waste, and abuse, demonstrating the commitment of the Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) and our partner agencies to safeguard public funds,” said Special Agent in Charge Olga Morales of the Department of the Army CID Southwest Field Office. “Investigating companies that defraud the Army is crucial to maintaining the trust of the American public and upholding the integrity of government contracting.”

    The settlement resulted from a coordinated effort among the Civil Division’s Fraud Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Utah with assistance from the Defense Contract Management Agency, the Department of the Air Force, the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Special Operations Command.  Senior Trial Counsel A. Thomas Morris and former Senior Trial Counsel Russell Kinner of the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch, Fraud Section, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Carra Cadman for the District of Utah handled the matter.

    The claims resolved by the settlement are allegations only and there has been no determination of liability.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Africa: International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC) Concludes Successful Participation at the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) Group Annual Meetings with Nearly US$ 2.6 Billion in Signed Agreements

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

    ALGIERS, Algeria, May 22, 2025/APO Group/ —

    The International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC) (www.ITFC-IDB.org), a member of the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) Group, concluded its participation at the 2025 IsDB Group Annual Meetings in Algiers with a series of impactful achievements that underscore its role as a leading catalyst for trade and economic development in the OIC Member Countries and with the rest of the world. With a total of US$2.6 billion of agreements signed, the Corporation reaffirmed its strong commitment to supporting the socio-economic and development priorities of its member countries. These included sovereign and private sector-focused facilities, new partnerships, and strategic engagements designed to enhance trade resilience, food and energy security, and SME growth. 

    During the meetings, ITFC signed a landmark five-year framework agreement with the Republic of Senegal with total envelope amount of EUR 2 billion to support key sectors such as energy, agriculture, healthcare, and the development of small and medium-sized enterprises. Another key sovereign financing was announced with the Republic of Guinea, to provide a Murabaha trade finance facility through the Central Bank of Guinea to support the import of petroleum products and essential commodities. ITFC signed a US$100 million Murabaha facility with EBID to facilitate imports of essential commodities for private sector clients across Member Countries. Meanwhile, ITFC also renewed its strategic partnership with Afreximbank through a US$300 million Murabaha financing agreement, aimed at securing food and energy supplies and enhancing intra-African trade flows. 

    A strong focus was placed on supporting the private sector and expanding Islamic trade finance tools. ITFC signed US$10 million in Mudaraba financing with Uzbekistan’s Smartbank and signed another agreement with Agrobank to increase the total financing amount to US$ 25 million aimed at providing Shariah-compliant financing to the country’s growing private sector. Furthermore, a EUR 20 million Murabaha facility was signed with Albaraka Türk to boost access to finance for SMEs and private sector clients in Turkiye.  

    Another milestone signing was in favor of Algeria where ITFC signed a US$100 million syndicated LC confirmation facility with Crédit Populaire d’Algérie (CPA) Bank to support trade transactions of both public and private sector clients, with a special emphasis on SME development. Additionally, ITFC inked a EUR 10 million facility with Crédit Communautaire d’Afrique (CCA) Bank in Cameroon, a EUR 10 million facility with Commercial Bank Cameroon, and a US$15 million Murabaha agreement with The Alternative Bank  in Nigeria to support agricultural pre-exports and essential equipment imports. 

    The meetings with Officials and Stakeholders also provided an opportunity to strengthen regional trade development platforms. A grant agreement under the AfTIAS 2.0 program was signed with the government of Algeria to enhance cross-border trade with Tunisia. These partnerships were complemented by ITFC’s hosting of high-level dialogues during the Private Sector Forum, including a panel on trade facilitation and regional integration and a knowledge-sharing event exploring complementarities in trade and economic diversification across the OIC region. 

    The successful conclusion of the 2025 Annual Meetings reflects ITFC’s steadfast commitment to delivering integrated trade solutions that are both impactful and inclusive. By signing close to US$2.6 billion in new financing and partnership agreements, ITFC continues to strengthen its interventions that boost supply chains, promote Islamic finance, unlock new opportunities for sustainable development and improve the wellbeing of the people across its member countries.  

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI: Commercial National Financial Corporation Announces Share Repurchase Program & Quarterly Dividend

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Share Repurchase Program
    ITHACA, Mich., May 22, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Commercial National Financial Corporation (Pink Sheets: CEFC) announced today that their Board of Directors had approved a resolution to establish a share repurchase program.  The resolution authorized the repurchase of up to AN AGGREGATE purchase amount of $1,000,000.

    The authorization remains in effect indefinitely. CEFC may repurchase shares under the program at its discretion, taking into account factors such as the share price, market conditions, share availability, and other relevant considerations.  There is no guarantee that any specific number of shares will be repurchased, and CEFC may modify, renew, suspend, or terminate the program at any time without prior notice.

    For further information, please contact our primary market maker:
    Nick Bicking at D.A. Davidson & Co.
    Office: (614) 710-7060
    Cell: (614) 638-4584

    Quarterly Dividend
    Commercial National Financial Corporation announced that their Board of Directors declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of 14 cents per share. The dividend is payable July 1, 2025 to shareholders of record on June 13, 2025. Based on a recent closing price of $10.45 per share, the annualized dividend yield is 5.36%.

    About CEFC
    Commercial National Financial Corporation (Pink Sheets: CEFC) is the holding company of Commercial Bank, a state-chartered community bank headquartered in Ithaca, Michigan. Commercial Bank was established in 1893 and has been dedicated to meeting the banking needs of the communities it serves for over 130 years. The Bank has locations throughout five Michigan counties: Gratiot, Ingham, Montcalm, Barry, and Ottawa.

    Visit https://www.commercial-bank.com/about-us/investor-information.html to view the latest news releases and other information about CEFC.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Clear Street Investment Banking Expands Blockchain and Digital Assets Franchise

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Managing Directors Mehta and Finnerty to Lead Dedicated Team

    Proud Sponsor of Nakamoto’s Bitcoin 2025, Next Week in Las Vegas

    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., May 22, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Clear Street Investment Banking (“Clear Street” or “the Company”), an investment banking firm providing a full suite of strategic advisory, transaction and creative capital solutions to companies and investors across high-growth sectors such as technology, healthcare, energy and beyond, today announced the expansion of its Blockchain and Digital Assets Investment Banking Franchise, anchored by new senior hires. The initiative underscores the firm’s commitment to providing institutional-grade advisory solutions at the intersection of traditional finance, blockchain and digital assets. The initiative also complements Clear Street’s equity research platform, which includes coverage of companies across the disruptive technology space.

    John D’Agostini and Nicholas Hemmerly, Co-Heads of Clear Street Investment Banking said, “The digital asset landscape is entering a new phase of institutional adoption, where this asset class and its underlying blockchain technology are no longer experimental, but increasingly essential to corporate strategy. As companies in this sector continue to scale and navigate global capital markets, and as more and more corporates integrate Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies into their treasury plans, it’s critical to have the best advisors who understand both the promise of this technology and the complexity of operating across legacy and emerging financial ecosystems. Nakul and Collin bring the deep expertise needed to guide clients through this evolution.”

    Joining the firm as Managing Directors are Nakul Mehta and Collin Finnerty, who will lead the division’s coverage across cryptocurrency, blockchain, crypto infrastructure, Web3 and digital asset platforms. Both bring a decade of experience advising high-growth companies and investors across capital markets and M&A transactions. Prior to joining Clear Street, Mehta and Finnerty were leaders at MJC Partners and BTIG, focused on fintech and digital assets.

    Select services the Clear Street Investment Banking team will advise on in the blockchain and digital assets space include:

    • Go-Public Strategy & Capital Raising: Initial Public Offerings, primary and secondary equity offerings, private placements, venture funding and debt advisory for digital asset companies scaling in highly regulated environments.
    • Cryptocurrency Treasury Strategy: Helping clients initiate and properly structure their digital treasury strategy.
    • Mergers & Acquisitions: Strategic M&A, divestitures and cross-border transactions involving digital asset infrastructure and cryptocurrency products.
    • Strategic Partnerships & Corporate Development: Advisory for traditional financial institutions and corporates seeking entry into digital markets through joint ventures or investment.

    Ed Tilly, Chief Executive Officer of Clear Street said, “The investment bank’s expansion across sectors like tech, healthcare and now, blockchain and digital assets, nicely complements our global brokerage platform providing financing, derivatives products and sales & trading, enabled by our cloud-native, next-gen financial technology stack. With a foundational emphasis on a world-class client experience, Clear Street is empowering market participants across geographies and asset classes, and today’s announcement is yet another exciting client solution.”

    Clear Street’s Investment Banking division has advised on more than $2.35 billion in transactions year-to-date, including IPOs of Renatus Tactical Acquisition Corp and Digital Asset Acquisition Corp. and a series of IPOs, capital raises and strategic advisory roles across technology, healthcare and other sectors.

    Clear Street is sponsoring Bitcoin 2025, presented by Nakamoto taking place from May 27-29, 2025 at the Venetian in Las Vegas. Please click here to be in touch with the team during the event.

    About Clear Street:
    Clear Street is modernizing the brokerage ecosystem with financial technology and services that empower market participants with real-time data and best-in-class products, tools and teams, to navigate capital markets around the world. Complemented by white-glove service, Clear Street’s cloud-native, proprietary product suite delivers financing, derivatives, execution and more to power client success, adding efficiency to the market and enabling clients to minimize risk, redundancy and cost. Clear Street’s goal is to create a single platform for every asset class, in every country and in any currency. For more information, visit https://clearstreet.io.

    Media Contact:
    press@clearstreet.io

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Matador Technologies Inc. Announces Additional Non-Brokered Private Placement

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, May 22, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Matador Technologies Inc. (“Matador” or the “Company”) (TSXV: MATA, OTCQB: MATAF), a Bitcoin-focused company, is pleased to announce a non-brokered private placement offering of up to 6,451,613 units (the “Units”) at a price of $0.62 per Unit, for aggregate gross proceeds of up to C$4,000,000 (the “Offering”), with an option to increase the Offering by up to 15% (the “Over-Allotment Option”).

    Each Unit will consist of one common share and one-half of one common share purchase warrant (each whole warrant, a “Warrant”). Each Warrant will entitle the holder to acquire one additional common share of the Company at a price of $0.77 for a period of twelve (12) months from the date of issuance.

    The Warrants will be subject to an acceleration clause: in the event that the closing price of the Company’s common shares on the TSX Venture Exchange (the “TSXV”) is equal to or exceeds $1.15 for five (5) consecutive trading days at any time following the date which is four months and one day after the closing date, the Company may accelerate the expiry date of the Warrants to the date that is thirty (30) days following the dissemination of a press release announcing such acceleration.

    The securities issued in connection with the Offering will be subject to a statutory hold period of four months and one day from the date of issuance, in accordance with applicable Canadian securities laws.

    The Offering is being conducted pursuant to available exemptions from prospectus requirements and will be made to “accredited investors” in all provinces of Canada and in such other jurisdictions as the Company may determine, in accordance with applicable securities laws.

    The net proceeds of the Offering are expected to be allocated approximately one-third to each of the following: (i) the purchase of Bitcoin; (ii) advancing the Company’s gold acquisition and Grammies business initiatives; and (iii) general corporate purposes.

    The Offering is subject to customary closing conditions, including the receipt of all necessary regulatory approvals, including that of the TSX Venture Exchange.

    For additional information, please contact:

    Media Contact:
    Sunny Ray
    President
    Email: sunny@matador.network
    Phone: 647-932-2668

    About Matador Technologies Inc.
    Matador Technologies Inc. is a publicly traded Bitcoin ecosystem company that holds Bitcoin as its primary treasury asset and builds products to enhance the Bitcoin network. Through a self-reinforcing model that combines strategic Bitcoin accumulation, Bitcoin-native product development, and participation in digital asset infrastructure, Matador aims to grow long-term shareholder value without dilution.

    The Company’s flagship offering, the Digital Gold Platform, allows users to buy, sell, and trade 1-gram gold units inscribed as Bitcoin Ordinals—bridging traditional value with decentralized technology. With a Bitcoin-first strategy, a debt-free balance sheet, and a clear focus on innovation, Matador is helping shape the future of financial infrastructure on Bitcoin.

    Learn more at www.matador.network.

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information

    NEITHER THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATION SERVICES PROVIDER (AS THAT TERM IS DEFINED IN THE POLICIES OF THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE) ACCEPTS RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS RELEASE.

    This news release does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities in any jurisdiction.

    Forward-Looking Statements – Certain information set forth in this news release may contain forward-looking statements that involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties, including risks associated with the implementation of the Company’s treasury management strategy and the launch of its mobile application as currently proposed or at all. These forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyond the control of the Company, including with respect to the potential acquisition of Bitcoin and/or US dollars, the pricing of such acquisitions and the timing of future operations. Readers are cautioned that the assumptions used in the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: 05.22.2025 Sens. Cruz, Luján Introduce Bill to Streamline International Bridge Permits

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Texas Ted Cruz
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) introduced the International Bridge and Port of Entry Modernization Act. This legislation expedites the presidential permitting process for all international bridges and land ports of entry. It expands on legislation written and passed into law Senator Cruz’s that streamlined permits for international bridges in Eagle Pass, Laredo, and Brownsville.  
    Sen. Cruz said, “Streamlining the permitting process for bridge infrastructure between Texas and Mexico has been a top priority of mine. This bill builds on and expands our success in securing presidential permits for four major international bridge projects in South Texas by streamlining the approval process for all future international bridges along the Texas–Mexico border. I strongly urge my colleagues to pass this bill so it can be sent to the President for signature.”
    Sen. Luján said, “Ports of entry and international bridges are vital to the economic success of our border communities, supporting trade, business, and tourism. Yet, new border crossings are too often held up by the presidential permit process. I’m proud to introduce bipartisan legislation that will help streamline this process and deliver real investments to Santa Teresa and Sunland Park in New Mexico.”
    This bill was endorsed by the City of Laredo and Texas Association of Business.
    Dr. Victor Treviño, Mayor for the City of Laredo said, “I want to thank Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) for introducing the International Bridge and Port of Entry Modernization Act and Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-NM) for co-leading this legislation. Their bipartisan partnership reflects a strong commitment to strengthening trade along both our southern and northern borders. This bill marks a critical step toward modernizing the development and expansion of cross-border infrastructure by bringing much-needed efficiency and predictability to the presidential permitting process—an essential reform for communities like Laredo, which continues to be on the front lines of international commerce as the #1 Port of Entry in the United States. I urge Congress to pass this legislation and send it to the President for his signature.”
    Glenn Hamer, President and CEO of Texas Association of Business said, “No state is more impacted by international trade than Texas, and our entire business community relies on robust, efficient cross-border commerce to maintain access to global markets – particularly with our top trade partners Mexico and Canada. By making permanent and enhancing the critical, bipartisan reforms to the cross-border infrastructure permitting process that were implemented last year, Senators Cruz and Luján are solidifying the most important trade policy since the negotiation of USMCA. This legislation will be a major win for Texas and the entire country, and we applaud Senator Cruz for his leadership in ensuring the federal government moves at the speed of business to keep the Texas and U.S. economies strong.”
    Read the full text of the bill here.
    BACKGROUND
    Sen. Cruz was the first elected Republican member to be awarded the Key to the City of Laredo for his leadership in streamlining the presidential permitting process and securing permits to build and expand four major international bridges in South Texas, including two in Laredo.
    In October 2024, Sens. Cruz and Cornyn secured a presidential permit for the Laredo 4/5 International Bridge (Bridge 4/5) in Webb County.
    The International Bridge and Port of Entry Modernization Act would:
    Expand the scope to include all international land ports of entry along the U.S.-Mexico and U.S.-Canada borders, rather than being limited to bridges in the original three counties in Texas;
    Add the word “sole” before “basis” to clarify that the State Department should not consider other factors besides America’s foreign policy interest;
    Include language to bar future administrations from considering environmental documents (NEPA) during their decision making.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Warner and Kaine Statement on the House GOP Bill to Gut Medicaid to Pay for Tax Cuts for Ultra-wealthy

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Virginia Tim Kaine
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Mark R. Warner and Tim Kaine (both D-VA) issued the following statement after Republicans in the House of Representatives voted in the dead of night to approve legislation to cut taxes for the ultra-wealthy while slashing Medicaid and nutrition assistance, raising taxes on working families, and exploding the national debt:  
    “This bill would do real harm to Virginia families, workers, and communities. It would raise taxes on working families and rip health care away from more than 262,000 people in Virginia in order to give tax breaks to Donald Trump and his billionaire friends. Virginians deserve better, and we will oppose this bill with everything we’ve got as it comes to the Senate. “
    Warner and Kaine have been sounding the alarm about the effects of the GOP plan on Virginia if Republicans in Congress continue to insist on gutting vital programs in order to pay for tax breaks for the richest Americans, noting that the GOP bill would strip health insurance from more than 262,000 Virginians; rip nutrition assistance away from at least 204,000 Virginians, including children; raiseenergy costs for Virginia households; jeopardize more than 20,000 Virginia jobs; and raise taxes on minimum wage workers while giving the richest 0.1% a $188,000 tax cut.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Murkowski Highlights Opportunities, Challenges with Interior Budget Request

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Alaska Lisa Murkowski
    05.22.25
    Washington, DC – Yesterday, U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Chair of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, hosted the Secretary of the Interior in subcommittee to discuss the Department’s budget request. The Senator reinforced her appreciation for the administration’s approach to resource development in Alaska, while also addressing staffing concerns, public land sales, and other avenues of potential for the department.
    Watch the Senator’s opening statement here.
    Read the Senator’s full opening statement below.
    FULL TRANSCRIPT
    Senator Murkowski: Good to have you here to discuss the President’s Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Request for the Department of the Interior. I’m pleased to have the opportunity today to talk about the important work that the Department does, including its leading role in supporting America’s energy agenda, empowering Indian country and Tribal nations, providing recreational opportunities to tens of millions of Americans, and generating billions of dollars in economic output.
    It’s been a real pleasure, I have appreciated the meetings that we’ve had, the conversations that we’ve had by phone, and it’s been great to meet the various Assistant Secretary nominees from the Department. I’ve enjoyed our conversations there. I’m impressed by their understanding of the issues that they focus on, and their commitment to public service.
    You’re building out quite the team. It was great to be able to talk to Kate MacGregor. She has a little bit of history with the Department, and comes with a lot of knowledge and understanding, certainly on Alaska–related issues, so we were glad to get her confirmed and to work as well as some of the other nominees. As the Chairman of the Indian Affairs Committee, we’re anxious to have a nominee for the [Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs] as well.
    So, I want to thank you, I want to thank President Trump for recognizing Alaska’s amazing natural resource potential. This was very significant in the day-one executive order: everything from the Ambler Road to the NPR-A, to non-wilderness Coastal Plain, Alaska
    LNG. There’s been very swift, very early, and decisive action in this space. It’s welcome both here in Washington, DC, and certainly in my state. So, I’m looking forward to working with you to further facilitate the development of Alaska’s resources.
    I know you are looking forward to going to Alaska in just a couple weeks. Hopefully, it’s going to be a great trip, lots of good information, good feedback, and good weather. I’m hopeful that Denali will be out in all of its majesty and splendor and you’ll be reminded why Alaskans prefer the Koyukon-Athabascan name, “Denali,” meaning ‘the Great One.’
    The President and you have set out an ambitious agenda, particularly with respect to the focus on energy and economic development. I’m very supportive of this endeavor, and know that I want to be your partner in achieving so many of the goals.
    Beyond resource development, the Department of the Interior can be an economic force for good in many different ways. One of the most important economic drivers that we see up in Alaska, aside from the resource end of things, within the Department is the National Parks System. The National Parks in the home states of the members on this subcommittee generate a collective $7.4 billion of economic output annually. That’s more than the gross domestic product of 40 different countries. But it’s not just the economic output that makes parks so important, it’s the experiences of traveling to parks, seeing the wildlife, having an adventure that creates a lifetime of memories. And, we’ve had discussions about some of your early years and the significance of that.
    Back home in Alaska, we’ve already had about 150,000 people come through on cruise ships this year. That might not surprise other people, but this is early for us. We estimate a total of 1.65 million visitors for the tourism season – that’s about double the population of our state. So, when we see a skinny budget that proposes to cut $1.2 billion or 35% from the Park Service, it’s hard to square it with the claims that DOI is focused on fostering the American economy, again recognizing that our economy is more than just our natural resource development.
    Another area of concern that I will address in my questions within the National Park Service budget proposal is the concept of turning over management of National Parks to the states. I’m trying to figure out exactly how this would work, and I’m kind of thinking it’s like me putting my kids in charge of the upkeep for the house that I own. In some instances, it might make good sense, but as a wholesale best practice I worry about how that might impact the parks or our people. So, should this concept be included in the full budget request, I’d hope that we have a really thorough conversation with you to better understand the justification for the proposal.
    I am concerned about what the skinny budget proposes for the BIA and the BIE. Cutting nearly $1 billion from Indian Affairs would hurt the federal government’s ability to meet its trust responsibility to Native people. In some of our conversations, I’ve shared some of the areas where I think the Department has failed Indian Country, and this is in areas like probate, where we have an extraordinary backlog, public safety and justice, missing and murdered indigenous people, as well as the education of Native American children.
    While I appreciate that the skinny budget alleges that proposed cuts would enable Tribes to focus on law enforcement, I’m not sure how reducing BIA law enforcement funding by $107 million is treating the program as a core priority of Tribes. I know, because I hear Tribes have been requesting more support for this program to address a serious lack of policing, so I worry that cuts of this magnitude can’t be made up for by directing Tribes to apply for grants at DOJ as the skinny budget suggests.
    I want to end my opening comments this morning by talking about what I consider to be, and I know that you put equal priority to, and that’s the men and women of the Department. The people who actually make things happen.
    We’ve talked about a lot of good ideas for using new systems, IT systems, artificial intelligence, how we can make the Department more efficient. These are good goals, worthy goals, and I hope to see that detailed more in the budget. But I think we know when we’re talking about management of our public lands, if you don’t have the necessary staff, whether out in the field or in the headquarters, all the investments that we want to make become less efficient.
    When I think about the Executive Order as it relates specifically to Alaska, we’ve got some good things that we want to do up north when it comes to resource development, but scientific and ecological assessments that are provided by USGS are relied upon by not just federal land management agencies, but by the industry as well. USGS science helps avoid polar bear dens, identify permafrost, map caribou migration patterns. So, when we see cuts to USGS, but also BLM, BOEM, BSSE, and OSMRE, it causes me to wonder, are we going to be able to accomplish what we’re all seeking to accomplish together?
    I think it’s important also that people have expertise and knowledge about the places that they serve. I had this conversation with folks in the Forest Service. You just can’t take somebody who maybe comes from Indianapolis, a good Forest Service person, but you put them out at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitors Center where their job is bear management and they don’t have a clue about bear management.
    We want to make sure that we’re making good and smart decisions. I know you’re probably going to get a lot of questions today about staffing cuts, and how that is going to impact the operations of the Department not just here in Washington, but around the country. I do wish that the Acting Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget, Mr. Hassan, [was] here today to answer some of these questions because he seems to be in charge of making a lot of the decisions about the staffing and the [reorganization]. I’m hoping that he is going to be in a position to be more responsive to my staff about some of the questions that we have raised. But ultimately, and you know, you’ve been a governor you know the buck stops with you. He can be responsible for certain things, but ultimately it is you that is accountable.
    So, getting the answers to questions about the reorganizations, the impacts of RIFs, how the Department will operate National Parks, protect reserves, and implement the President’s energy agenda. Getting this channel of communication going back and forth in a good and a constructive way, I think is going to be important. But, my bottom line to you this morning is [that] I’m I pleased with your nomination, I’m excited that you are there at the Department.
    I’m really excited about the shift that we’re seeing in Alaska where the Department has really gone from being a problem to being a partner in so many different areas. So, [I’m] looking forward to what we’re going to be able to do together.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Warner and Kaine on House GOP Bill to Gut Medicaid to Pay for Tax Cuts for the Ultra-Wealthy

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Commonwealth of Virginia Mark R Warner
    WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Sens. Mark R. Warner and Tim Kaine (D-VA) issued the following statement after Republicans in the House of Representatives voted in the dead of night to approve legislation to cut taxes for the ultra-wealthy while slashing Medicaid and nutrition assistance, raising taxes on working families, and exploding the national debt:  
    “This bill would do real harm to Virginia families, workers, and communities. It would raise taxes on working families and rip health care away from more than 262,000 people in Virginia in order to give tax breaks to Donald Trump and his billionaire friends. Virginians deserve better, and we will oppose this bill with everything we’ve got as it comes to the Senate. “
    Warner and Kaine have been sounding the alarm about the effects of the GOP plan on Virginia if Republicans in Congress continue to insist on gutting vital programs in order to pay for tax breaks for the richest Americans, noting that the GOP bill would strip health insurance from more than 262,000 Virginians; rip nutrition assistance away from at least 204,000 Virginians, including children; raise energy costs for Virginia households; jeopardize more than 20,000 Virginia jobs; and raise taxes on minimum wage workers while giving the richest 0.1% a $188,000 tax cut.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Video: President Trump Participates in a MAHA Commission Event

    Source: United States of America – The White House (video statements)

    The White House

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDkYJxE9WTc

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: National Maritime Day Observance with Secretary Duffy | U.S. Department of Transportation

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

    Join the U.S. Department of Transportation for our National Maritime Day 2025 Observance, honoring the vital contributions of America’s maritime industry and those who serve at sea.
    This year’s theme—Restoring America’s Maritime Dominance—reflects the nation’s renewed commitment to shipbuilding, supply chain resilience, and the future of the U.S. maritime workforce.

    Remarks by:
    – The Honorable Sean P. Duffy, U.S. Secretary of Transportation
    – LTG Jered P. Helwig, U.S. Transportation Command
    – Mark Barker, President, Interlake Steamship Company
    – Elizabeth O’Connor, Chief Counsel, Maritime Administration (in lieu of the Administrator)

    U.S. Department of Transportation Headquarters, Washington, DC
    May 22, 2025 | 10:00 AM ET

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rinLTj8e0pQ

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: Kean Applauds Passage of the House Reconciliation Package

    Source: US Representative Tom Kean, Jr. (NJ-07)

    (May 22, 2025) WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Congressman Tom Kean, Jr. (NJ-07) released the following statement after the House passed its reconciliation package, a historic piece of legislation that delivers middle-class tax relief, unleashes American energy and innovation, and roots out waste, fraud, and abuse.

    Kean said, “We did it. The House just passed the Reconciliation package, a major step forward that delivers important wins for New Jerseyans and all Americans. I stood up for New Jersey every step of the way, even when it meant standing alone or standing against my own party’s leadership. I led the fight to restore our property tax deduction, and we won. The House bill restores the full SALT deduction for middle-class families, providing up to $40,000 in deductibility.

    “On healthcare, we protected Medicaid for every intended beneficiary in New Jersey and across the country and stopped illegal immigrants from stealing taxpayer-funded benefits. By rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse, we can ensure that this vital program is there for current and future generations of Americans. We also boosted the Child Tax Credit to $2,500, giving young families a much-needed return at a time when they need it most. We secured critical relief for Somerset and Morris Counties and the whole state of New Jersey by providing tens of millions of dollars for local and state law enforcement, ensuring they are supported while protecting President Trump over the next four years. We continued delivering for the American people by voting to secure our borders, unleash American energy and innovation, and invest in national security, all while cutting wasteful spending and making the federal government more efficient, accountable, and effective.

    “This bill lays the foundation for a stronger, more affordable America for middle-class families in the Seventh District, but the fight doesn’t stop here. I will continue advocating for the hardworking taxpayers in New Jersey until this bill reaches the President’s desk.”

     

    Key Wins in the House Reconciliation Package for New Jersey and the Nation:

    • SALT Deduction Raised: Raises the cap on the State and Local Tax deduction to $40,000, providing major relief for all middle-class families.

     

    • Medicaid Integrity Restored: Ensures benefits go only to eligible recipients and that those who are able to contribute to their community are doing so in order to receive Medicaid benefits. Preserves funding for New Jersey’s hospitals, nursing homes, and other providers.

     

    • Secret Service Reimbursement Secured: Secures vital federal support for local and state law-enforcement who provide protection when President Trump is at his home in Bedminster.

     

    • Border Security Strengthened: Provides resources to support border patrol agents, detect illegal drug smuggling, and secure our southern border.

     

    • American Energy Independence Advanced: Unleashes American energy production to help us meet our growing energy needs.

     

    • Child Tax Credit Boosted: Increased to $2,500, offering direct support for families after years of rising costs.

     

    • PBM Reform Achieved: Cracks down on abusive middlemen in the prescription drug market to lower costs for Medicare and consumers.

     

    • “Doc Fix” Enacted: Addresses long-standing Medicare physician payment issues to ensure that New Jersey’s doctors receive fair reimbursement for their important services.

     

    • Orphan Cures Act Passed: Eliminates a misguided law that slowed the development of drugs for patients with rare diseases. Many of these treatments are developed by New Jersey’s unparalleled biotech innovation industry.

     

    • Air Traffic Control Modernized: Delivers a $12.5 billion investment to overhaul, modernize, and staff our air traffic control system.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Experts of the Committee on the Rights of the Child Praise Qatar’s Investments in Child Health and Education, Ask about the Age of Criminal Responsibility and Penalties for Child Offenders

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee on the Rights of the Child today concluded its consideration of the fifth and sixth combined periodic reports of Qatar under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, with Committee Experts praising the State’s investments in child health and education, and raising questions about its efforts to raise the minimum age of criminal responsibility and prohibit the imposition of harsh penalties, including the death penalty and flagellation, on child offenders aged 16 years and over.

    Aissatou Alassane Sidikou, Committee Expert and Taskforce Coordinator for Qatar, commended Qatar’s efforts to invest in children’s health and education; implement its national development programme, which promoted sustainable development; establish its Ministry of Social Development and Family; and implement the Committee’s recommendations.

    Ms. Sidikou asked whether Qatar’s draft bill on children’s rights would increase the minimum age of criminal responsibility of children, which was currently one of the lowest in the world at seven years, and prohibit imprisonment, flagellation and forced labour for children, which was currently allowed from 16 years of age.  In Qatar, children could be sentenced to death. What measures were in place to strictly prohibit the application of the death penalty on children?

    Rosaria Correa, Committee Expert and Country Taskforce Member, said that despite the recommendations of various human rights mechanisms, the new nationality law did not allow Qatari women married to foreign citizens to pass on their nationality to their children. What steps had been taken to amend this law and other laws to allow Qatari women to pass on their nationality to their children?

    Introducing the report, Ahmad bin Hassan Al-Hammadi, Secretary-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Qatar and head of the delegation, said that, over the reporting period, Qatar had worked to strengthen legislative and institutional measures to protect children’s rights in the fields of education, health, social protection and criminal justice. The Qatar National Vision 2030 and the State’s third national development strategy 2024-2030 included key measures addressing children’s rights, and promoted equality and non-discrimination of children.

    The delegation said Qatar had reduced sentences for cases where perpetrators of crimes were children.  Sanctions for children under 16 years did not include corporal punishment or flagellation.  The draft law on the rights of the child would increase the minimum age of criminal liability and define all persons less than 18 years old as children.  It would be adopted and published soon.

    The delegation also said the death penalty could be imposed on children aged 16 to 18, who were more aware of their actions, but judges could commute the sentence, considering the age of the child when the crime was committed.  No one aged 16 to 18 had been sentenced to death in Qatar.

    The Qatari Nationality Code addressed the issue of kinship, the delegation said.  Children of non-Qatari fathers were given the nationality of their father, but such children also had the ability to access Qatari nationality if they had permanent residence.  The State had made great strides in reducing statelessness.

    In closing remarks, Ms. Sidikou said many efforts had been made by the State for children, but challenges remained.  The Committee hoped that the dialogue would help to improve protections for children in Qatar.

    Mr. Al-Hammadi, in concluding remarks, thanked the Committee and all persons who contributed to the constructive dialogue.  Qatar was committed to cooperating with the Committee and to addressing the challenges and risks it faced concerning the rights of the child.  It had achieved great progress in human rights over the years through cooperation with human rights mechanisms.

    Sophie Kiladze, Committee Chair, said in concluding remarks that the information provided by the State party would help the Committee to assess the achievements made by Qatar and the challenges it faced.  The Committee would do its best to develop concluding observations that would strengthen the rights of children in Qatar to the extent possible.

    The delegation of Qatar consisted of representatives from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Ministry of Interior; Ministry of Public Health; Ministry of Social Development and Family; Ministry of Education and Higher Education; Ministry of Justice; Supreme Judiciary Council; Public Prosecution; National Group for Protection of Children from Abuse and Violence; and the Permanent Mission of Qatar to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Committee will issue the concluding observations on the report of Qatar at the end of its ninety-ninth session on 30 May. Those, and other documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, will be available on the session’s webpage.  Summaries of the public meetings of the Committee can be found here, while webcasts of the public meetings can be found here.

    The Committee will next meet in public this afternoon at 3 p.m. to consider the combined fifth to seventh periodic reports of Brazil (CRC/C/BRA/5-7).

    Report

    The Committee has before it the fifth and sixth combined periodic reports of Qatar (CRC/C/QAT/5-6).

    Presentation of Report

    AHMAD BIN HASSAN AL-HAMMADI, Secretary-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Qatar and head of the delegation, said that Qatar was firmly and permanently committed to the principles of the Convention. Articles 21 and 22 of the Constitution emphasised the role of the family in protecting children from exploitation and neglect, and supporting their development.  The State had worked to strengthen legislative and institutional measures to protect children’s rights in the fields of education, health, social protection and criminal justice.

    The national report was the result of consultation and cooperation between the various national authorities, civil society and children.  The State had made great efforts to address and implement most of the previous recommendations made by the Committee, contributing to tangible progress in ensuring the rights of children.

    The Qatar National Vision 2030 and the State’s third national development strategy 2024-2030 included key measures addressing human rights issues in various fields, including children’s rights, and promoted equality and non-discrimination of children.  Over the reporting period, there had been extensive legislative amendments regarding the protection and promotion of children’s rights, most notably law 22 of 2021 regulating health care services, which included provisions promoting access to health care for all children, and the anti-cybercrime law, which criminalised sexual exploitation.  A draft law on children’s rights was also currently under review; it established effective mechanisms for the protection and development of children’s capacities and promoted the best interests of the child.

    The Ministry of Social Development and Family, established in 2021, was responsible for following up on childhood issues through specialised departments on family development, community welfare, and social protection.  The Qatar Foundation for Social Work had mechanisms for monitoring, follow-up and reporting on protection measures for child victims of violence, as well as awareness campaigns informing children of their rights and methods of reporting and seeking assistance.  The State had also established the National Planning Council, which was responsible for planning and implementing public policies related to children.  The Council of Ministers approved in April 2025 the establishment of the Digital Safety Committee for Children and Young People, and an awareness campaign on the safe use of technology would also be launched in June 2025.

    Efforts had continued to increase the enrolment rates of children, including children with disabilities, in compulsory education.  The overall enrolment rate was more than 97.5 per cent.  The State was encouraging girls to enrol in scientific disciplines; the percentage of girls in these disciplines had reached about 54 per cent at the secondary level.  New schools had also been established to provide technical and specialised education for both boys and girls.  The national education strategy 2024-2030 focused on improving the quality and inclusiveness of education, ensuring equal opportunities and enhancing governance. Five “peace schools” that received children of various nationalities, especially from countries in crisis, including children with disabilities, had been established.

    In the health sector, the national health strategy 2024-2030 was launched, which aimed to promote children’s health by preventing chronic diseases such as obesity and diabetes, and paying attention to oral health.  The State had established a system of child-friendly hospitals and general paediatric clinics.  The national team for child protection from violence and neglect received approximately 500 cases annually of suspected cases of child abuse and implemented preventive measures in response.  Effective countermeasures adopted during the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to Qatar having one of the lowest child mortality rates globally.

    Qatar’s Labour Code protected children from exploitation, prohibited their employment before reaching the legal age, and regulated the types of work that children could not do.  Moreover, the consumer protection law and the food control law promoted children’s rights as vulnerable consumers, while the Ministries of Health and Commerce were closely monitoring to ensure safe and healthy food for children.  The State had also launched plans to reduce and assess environmental pollution, especially in areas near schools and residential areas.

    The State had also paid attention to building the capacity of professionals working with children, such as judges, teachers, doctors and media professionals, through training programmes on the Convention delivered in cooperation with civil society.  Qatar was also studying the possibility of establishing a national children’s parliament and had established interactive platforms that allowed children to express their opinions and suggestions, especially when discussing policies that directly affected their lives.

    To protect children’s rights, Qatar was cooperating with United Nations agencies, including the United Nations Children’s Fund, which opened an office at the United Nations House in Doha in 2022. It was working to protect children in conflict areas in countries such as Syria, Palestine, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, Russia and Ukraine.  The Qatari Education Above All initiative had reached over 17 million children in more than 65 countries.  Qatar had provided humanitarian assistance, including food and health care, to children in Gaza.

    Qatar was fully committed to the implementation of the Convention and its two Optional Protocols, and the protection of children’s rights.  Achieving this goal required continuous reform efforts through measures that kept pace with emerging changes and challenges.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    AISSATOU ALASSANE SIDIKOU, Committee Expert and Taskforce Coordinator for Qatar, commended Qatar’s efforts to invest in children’s health and education; implement its national development programme, which promoted sustainable development; establish its Ministry on the Rights of Children and Families; and implement the Committee’s recommendations. Why had the State party maintained its reservations to articles two and 14 of the Convention?  The provisions in article two of the Convention were much broader than those of articles 34 and 35 of the Constitution. 

    Why was there was no schedule for adoption of the draft bill on children’s rights, which had been considered by the State for over 15 years?  Would the bill increase the minimum age of criminal responsibility of children, which was currently at seven years, and prohibit imprisonment, flagellation and forced labour for children, which was currently allowed from 16 years of age?  Did the National Human Rights Commission and the National Planning Council have sufficient resources?  How did they coordinate to protect child rights?

    Qatar’s investments in health and education had increased in 2022 and 2024, but these amounts were still below global standards.  Would this be addressed?  Were funds allocated for children in the budget clearly outlined?  How did the State party ensure that resources were equitably assigned?  A national survey conducted in 2023 contained very little information on vulnerable children. What was being done to strengthen data collection on such children?

    Did migrant children have access to mechanisms to report violations of their rights?  How did the State party support access to remedies for child victims? Were there capacity building and awareness raising mechanisms on child rights for State officials, civil society, the media and the public?  Did the National Human Rights Commission’s monitoring mechanism follow up on the implementation of the Convention and receive complaints on violations of the rights of children, including from migrant children?  How did the State party monitor policies and programmes on children’s rights?  Were there regulations that promoted compliance with international standards on children’s rights in the private sector?

    Girls in Qatar continued to face multiple forms of discrimination due to traditional beliefs.  What actions had been taken to change these negative social norms?  Children with disabilities, children with unmarried or foreign parents, and the children of migrant workers were subject to widespread discrimination.  How did the State party ensure that all children had access to basic social services?  Was there a general law prohibiting all forms of discrimination?

    There were no guidelines for professionals on determining the best interests of the child.  Would these be developed?  How did the State party ensure that this principle was applied consistently in all legal procedures?  In Qatar, children could be sentenced to death.  What measures were in place to strictly prohibit the application of the death penalty on children?  How did the State party facilitate the participation of children in matters affecting them?

    Despite the recommendations of various human rights mechanisms, the new nationality law did not allow Qatari women married to foreign citizens to pass on their nationality to their children. What steps had been taken to amend this law and other laws to allow Qatari women to pass on their nationality to their children?

    ROSARIA CORREA, Committee Expert and Taskforce Member, welcomed that the State party had taken several measures to address corporal punishment.  Had it assessed the impact that these measures had had on society? There was no law prohibiting corporal punishment.  What legislative efforts had been made to prohibit corporal punishment in all settings? Had studies into violent disciplining been carried out?  What measures had schools adopted to protect children?  How many child victims of violence had received remedies?  How was the State party monitoring child protection measures?  Did the draft bill on child rights address the child protection system?  Who was responsible for representing minors in the courts?

    How was the State party combatting the sale and trafficking of children domestically and internationally?  What was preventing the State from developing a law to ban child marriages?  How did the electronic monitoring system for convicted children work and how effective was it?  What social and psychological programmes were in place to protect the rights of children in conflict with the law and prevent their stigmatisation?

    TIMOTHY P.T. EKESA, Committee Expert and Taskforce Member, welcomed the data on children with disabilities that the State party had collected in 2016.  There were concerns that the State party did not provide access to mainstream education to all children with disabilities, as many were enrolled in special schools.  Only a small percentage of schools had inclusive education programmes, and a medical model was used to determine whether children with disabilities were enrolled in special schools.  Many children with disabilities remained out of school due to denial of admission or the inability of their families to pay school fees.  Could the State party provide data on the number of children with disabilities enrolled in mainstream education?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said its reservations to articles two and 14 of the Convention were consistent with Islamic Sharia and public morals.  The draft law on the rights of the child would increase the minimum age of criminal liability.  It would be adopted and published soon.

    In 2016, a programme was set up to investigate cases of violations of children’s rights and provide protection and remedies to victims.  It dealt with between 500 and 600 cases a year, some 30 per cent of which involved violence and negligence.  The programme included awareness raising campaigns on children’s rights and on reporting mistreatment of children.  A confidential hotline had been set up for reporting violence; it received 300 calls a year, 60 per cent of which came from children.  A register for cases of child abuse had recorded some 3,000 cases in recent years, and the Qatari Care Centre had provided psychological care to more than 4,000 children.  A conference on combatting violence against children held in 2020 in Qatar was attended by around 2,000 people.

    Qatar monitored the impact of business activities on children, guided by the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.  The National Human Rights Committee monitored child labour but had not registered any cases. A regional conference had been held in Qatar that had called on businesses not to violate children’s rights in digital spaces.

    The Ministry of Social Affairs had signed a memorandum of understanding with the National Human Rights Committee on cooperation on protecting children’s rights.  This Committee was made up of eight representatives of civil society and five Government employees.  It reviewed legislation concerning children, visited schools to assess violations of children’s right to education, and conducted yearly awareness raising campaigns on the Convention.

    Qatari law did not permit marriages for boys under the age of 17 and girls under the age of 16.  Marriages under the age of 18 were permitted by judges only when there were exceptional circumstances.  A committee had been set up to review the Family Code; it was considering revising the legal minimum age of marriage.  It was very rare for families to allow their children to marry before the age of 18.

    Some six per cent of the national budget was allocated to education, and some 25 per cent of the Ministry of Social Affairs’ budget was allocated to programmes for children.  The State party had dispersed several million Qatari riyals for supporting vulnerable children and families.  A new centre for orphans was established in 2024.

    The Ministry of Education promoted gender equality at all stages of education.  Enrolment rates for boys and girls were equal at primary and secondary schools, and literacy rates were over 99 per cent in 2023.  The Ministry had launched awareness raising campaigns on human rights and non-discrimination.  Guidance was provided to teachers on preventing discrimination against children.  Qataris and non-Qataris received the same treatment in State schools and hospitals. Employers provided migrant workers with health insurance.

    The Qatari Nationality Code addressed the issue of kinship.  Children of non-Qatari fathers were given the nationality of their father, but such children also had the ability to access Qatari nationality if they had permanent residence.  The State had made great strides in reducing statelessness.

    Qatar had laws that enabled children to receive remedies such as compensation if they were victims of a crime. Specialised courts for crimes committed by children and cases of violence against children had been established, which could conduct hearings online.  There was also a witness protection programme for children. Courts had an interpretation and translation service that supported foreign children.  The State assigned lawyers to persons who could not afford them.

    All schools had student councils that allowed students to express their views on issues such as the environment, culture and education.  Cultural activities were organised for children.  Each school calculated its carbon footprint.

    Articles 21 and 68 of the Constitution incorporated the Convention into the legal order.  The State party had increased penalties for trafficking in persons when the victim was under 18 and reduced sentences for cases where perpetrators of crimes were children.  Sanctions for children under 16 years did not include corporal punishment, flagellation or the death penalty. 

    Articles permitting corporal punishment were removed from legislation after the adoption of the Convention. Persons, including parents, who used corporal punishment were held criminally liable.  Guidelines had been developed for parents on disciplining children without using corporal punishment and a centre that worked to educate parents on protecting children had been set up.  Corporal punishment in schools was banned in the 1990s. Inspectors conducted visits to schools to ensure that the rights of students were not violated. 

    The Prosecutor’s Office stepped in if there were conflicts of interest between parents and children.  Child psychologists were deployed to determine the best interests of the child.  Children’s confidentiality was protected in courts.

    The Ministry of Education attached great importance to inclusive education.  Curricula were adapted for children with disabilities and protocols had been adopted for children with autism.  There were programmes for vocational training for children with disabilities.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    ROSARIA CORREA, Committee Expert and Country Taskforce Member, said that Qatar had a set of measures to combat violence between children in schools.  Were there response measures and a recording mechanism for such violence? Some 83 per cent of children reportedly suffered from some form of harassment in primary school.

    What measures had been taken to ensure children could grow up in a pollution-free environment and access green spaces?  How did education programmes address climate change?  What impact was climate change having on Qatari children and how was the State working to mitigate its effects?  How was the State party encouraging children’s involvement in designing environmental policies?  How did the State party monitor children’s nutrition?

    How did the State party ensure that parents equally shared responsibilities concerning child-rearing? When parents divorced, the mother lost custody of her children in Qatar.  Were women who were victims of sexual exploitation criminalised in the Criminal Code?

    TIMOTHY P.T. EKESA, Committee Expert and Country Taskforce Member, said the national action plan on the inclusion of children with disabilities in schools had commendable objectives, but there was a lack of clarity on measures being implemented to achieve inclusion. Had the plan, which expired in 2023, been renewed?  Were there provisions in draft legislation on persons with disabilities that prohibited discrimination against children with disabilities in education?  The Committee had previously called on the State party to implement a national action plan on human rights education; had this been done?

    The Committee commended the State party’s high quality and widely accessible health care system and the launch of the national health strategy for 2023-2030.  Would children receive targeted attention under the strategy? There were reports of discrimination in access to health centres for non-Qatari citizens.  What measures were in place to address disparities in access to healthcare?  Qatar had one of the highest rates of adolescent obesity in the region.  How was the State party addressing this?  How was it promoting access to mental health for children and adolescents?

    BENOIT VAN KEIRSBILCK, Committee Expert and Country Taskforce Member, said that Qatar had not ratified the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization Convention against Discrimination in Education.  Why was this?  Why did most Qatari families choose private schools, while non-Qataris typically attended public schools?  What was the State party doing to support education costs?  There were schools that supported children who had dropped out of school; how effective were they?  Was there an official sexual and reproductive health education programme in schools? What was being done to promote access to safe and inclusive spaces for play and recreation?

    The Committee was concerned that Qatar continued to detain migrant children and families.  In which detention centres were migrants placed? Were there plans to revise the policy of detaining migrant children?  Most migrant workers in Qatar were men.  Were there plans to revise family reunification rules to make it more accessible for workers with low wages?  Were there plans to regularise the children of migrants born in Qatar?

    Members of the Al-Ghufran clan had been deprived of their nationality many years ago. How many of these people still did not have Qatari nationality, and were there plans to resolve their situation? How did the State party ensure that migrant children could enrol in schools and how did it investigate complaints issued by domestic workers?  How many girls were working as domestic workers?  What programmes were in place that supported children in street situations? What results had been achieved by the law on trafficking in persons?  What measures had been implemented to prevent and prosecute cases of trafficking in children occurring during the 2022 World Cup?

    Qatar had one of the lowest minimum ages of criminal responsibility in the world, at seven years of age, and many legal protections for child offenders only applied for children under age 16.  How many children up to 18 years old were deprived of liberty and in what settings? Were they mixed with adults?  Were children in detention informed about the National Human Rights Committee’s complaints mechanism?  Did the State party intend to ratify the Safe Schools Declaration?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said corporal punishment against all persons was prohibited, including punishment of persons with disabilities.  There was no dedicated legislation on domestic violence, but there were legislative measures that covered domestic violence, and a court had been set up that specialised in domestic violence and temporary shelters, mandated to protect women and children who were victims of domestic violence.  In 2024, the State party organised workshops training for around 5,000 people on issues such as protecting children from violence and intimidation.  There were around 40,000 confirmed cases of domestic violence between 2024 and 2025.

    Initiatives had been adopted to minimise the impact of climate change on children, including adaption of infrastructure and measures to reduce carbon emissions and increase the use of renewable energy.  The State party had constructed 18 square kilometres of green zones in 2023 and an additional eight in 2024.  There was also a course within the school curriculum that focused on protecting the environment and living sustainably.  Schools celebrated a “sustainability week”.  Qatar had also taken measures to ensure the provision of good quality water.  It periodically monitored water and air quality in schools, kindergartens and public hospitals. 

    Qatar promoted children’s health through various measures.  Nine free health check-ups were provided to children up to age five.  The State party encouraged exclusive breastfeeding up to six months; there had been a sharp increase in breastfeeding rates over the past decade.  The State party had developed programmes to tackle the child obesity rate, which aimed to reduce this rate by 30 per cent by 2030.  School nutrition clinics provided specialised services to prevent childhood obesity and nutritional problems.  A 2022 law governed universal healthcare coverage.

    Sexual and reproductive health education and education on drug addiction were provided in schools from primary level, and there was also teaching on the protection of children from neglect, and online and sexual exploitation.  Children were instructed on how to find psychological assistance, and on alerting authorities about threats.

    Qatar promoted access to a healthy environment for children with disabilities.  It had beaches that had been adapted to ensure accessibility.  Various projects were being developed for children with disabilities up to 2030.  A single database covering all children with disabilities in the education system had been set up.  Qatar had over 5,300 pupils with disabilities in public and private schools.  Some 62 per cent of schools were inclusive. There were specialised training programmes for children with disabilities that supported them to become autonomous.

    Children with disabilities had access to specialised healthcare through 10 healthcare centres tailored to their needs, including four centres for children with autism.  The third national strategy 2024-2030 included measures for improving rehabilitation and diagnosis services for persons with disabilities. Social workers, family and community members were trained to care for children with disabilities and support their inclusion in society. 

    Qatari legislators sought to recognise children with disabilities as having legal capacity on par with others, and to promote their access to work, education and other rights.  The draft disability code had been developed and was now being deliberated by the Government.  Measures to exempt persons with disabilities from certain Government fees were being developed.  Legislators sought to promote access to complaints mechanisms for children with disabilities and their families.  The State funded legal aid services to support children in court, including children with disabilities.

    The draft child code defined all persons less than 18 years old as children.

    As part of the 2024-2030 development strategy, the State party had visited schools and engaged in dialogue with students, parents and teachers.  “Sustainability ambassadors” who promoted environmental protection were appointed in schools, and young people could contribute to the Shura Council. Many children had taken part in drafting the State party’s report.

    The State party was promoting awareness of human rights for children through social education courses and campaigns in schools, through which children learned about the Convention, gender equality, democracy, acceptance of others, cybersecurity, and preventing bullying.  Media campaigns on children’s rights were carried out and manuals and training programmes had been developed to inform teachers, social workers and other public officials about children’s rights.  The State party organised annual events to mark Children’s Day.

    Qatar was committed to protecting school establishments from attack.  It had signed the Safe Schools Declaration and participated in the Education for All initiative.  Qatar helped organise events on 9 September each year at United Nations offices in New York and Geneva to mark the International Day to Protect Education from Attack.

    Public schools applied international standards, including the international baccalaureate programme. Migrant parents could choose the school that their children attended and the language of instruction.  The State ensured the provision of free schooling to students coming from regions of armed conflict.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    BENOIT VAN KEIRSBILCK, Committee Expert and Country Taskforce Member, asked whether police provided sexual education in schools?  Was legal aid free for every child and accessible from the first stage of arrest? Did the State party criminally prosecute children who were addicted to drugs?

    TIMOTHY P.T. EKESA, Committee Expert and Country Taskforce Member, said Qatar generally prohibited abortion, only allowing it in three special cases.  There were severe penalties imposed on women who received unauthorised abortions.  How many unauthorised abortions had the State recorded over the reporting period?

    Another Committee Expert asked about the likelihood of approving the children’s act soon.  Would Qatar provide a complete definition of the child in this legislation?

    A Committee Expert asked about awareness raising campaigns in place to reduce the rate of child deaths from road accidents, which remained quite high in Qatar.  How was wastewater treated and what percentage of the population had access to potable water?

    One Committee Expert asked if Qatari children had access to contraception.  Were children who were the product of rape given Qatari nationality? Did national institutions take a gender specific approach?  Was free legal assistance provided to victims of domestic violence?

    A Committee Expert asked about the level of integration that the State party’s hotline had with law enforcement, health services and social services.  What services were provided to children of adults deprived of liberty, including adults on death row?

    SOPHIE KILADZE, Committee Chair, asked whether the State party had measures to reduce children’s screen time and a policy on artificial intelligence and its effects on children.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the 2015 law on the departure of migrants set up a mechanism for entering and exiting Qatar. It regulated the provision of housing, healthcare and education for migrants, as well as the conditions migrants needed to meet to obtain residence permits.  Migrants who did not meet these conditions were deported following the standard procedure.  Persons without identity documents who were accompanied by children, as well as stateless and unaccompanied children, were placed in a shelter while being processed. In 2024, there were 22 such detentions, and thus far there had been six detentions in 2025.  The State party worked with relevant embassies to support processing of these people.

    A directorate had been established that was mandated to prevent road accidents.

    Psychological support was provided to children whose parents had been sentenced to death.  The Criminal Procedural Code provided for two years of reprieve from detention for pregnant women, and when both parents were charged with the same crime, one parent was granted reprieve from detention to care for their children while the other parent was detained.

    The age of criminal liability started from seven years.  From ages seven to 16, judges could only impose sanctions requiring the child’s parents to obey certain commitments or send the child to rehabilitation programmes. The juvenile justice system was based on rehabilitation, not punishment.  Children aged 16 to 18 were more aware of their actions and thus had increased criminal liability.  The death penalty could be used on such children, but judges could commute the sentence, considering the age of the child when the crime was committed.  No one aged 16 to 18 had been sentenced to death in Qatar.

    Qatar had evacuated over 65,000 people from Afghanistan in 2021.  Qatar provided these people with housing and psychological support and facilitated their voluntary travel to other countries.  The State had also evacuated many children from Gaza to Qatar, providing them with free healthcare and education.

    Sexual education was provided by teachers and social workers, not police, in schools.  A national workshop had been set up to develop sexual education; psychologists were involved in this process.

    The State had a legal aid office with attorneys who provided children with free legal assistance and defended them in court.  The office also provided assistance in cases of domestic violence.

    Islamic Sharia was the source of laws in Qatar.  Criminal legislation on abortion was in line with Sharia.  In the State’s view, foetuses had the same rights as adults and benefited from legal protection.  Abortions could only take place if the pregnancy threatened the life of the mother.  Children who were the product of rape could access Qatari nationality.

    Qatar had created legislation combatting cybercrime, which punished all digital intimation and threats.  There were harsher sentences when the victim was a child or had a disability.  The State had also launched a platform that aimed to educate children and families on the safe use of digital technology and build children’s digital skills.  It had a national strategy on artificial intelligence and was committed to developing digital infrastructure that respected human rights. 

    Qatar had acceded to International Labour Organization Conventions 138 and 180 on child labour.  The State’s law on domestic workers protected such workers from exploitation.  The law banned hiring people under 18 years of age for domestic work.  Migrant workers needed to be 18 years of age or older. Domestic workers had the same rights as other workers, including regarding access to healthcare.  There was a Government Department that received complaints from domestic workers, which operated in 11 different languages.

    The State party respected the rights of migrant workers to live with their families.  These workers could bring their children to the State if they fulfilled a strict set of conditions.

    Qatar had criminalised all forms of trafficking of persons, including labour exploitation.  Penalties for trafficking were increased when the victim was a child.  There was a committee within the Ministry of Labour that was responsible for combatting trafficking in persons.  Qatari law was in line with the Optional Protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography.

    The hotline for reporting violations of children’s rights was manned by psychologists, who assessed the urgency of the complaint and referred it to the relevant authorities.

    The Qatar Social Work Foundation worked to enhance family bonds and to prevent domestic violence.  It provided lectures for prospective parents and counselling and mediation services seeking to resolve family problems amicability. The Foundation worked to defend children’s rights in cases of divorce, providing them with psychological counselling. Legislation had been developed that ensured that custody could be provided to mothers in cases of divorce.

    Concluding Remarks 

    AISSATOU ALASSANE SIDIKOU, Committee Expert and Taskforce Coordinator, thanked the delegation for the interesting dialogue.  Many efforts had been made by the State for children, but challenges remained.  The Committee hoped that the dialogue would help to improve protections for children in Qatar.  Ms. Sidikou said she hoped that the members of the State party would carry all children in their hearts in their work.

    AHMAD BIN HASSAN AL-HAMMADI, Secretary-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Qatar and head of the delegation, thanked the Committee and all persons who had contributed to the constructive dialogue, which was an important opportunity to promote the rights of the child and global peace.  The State party would use the Committee’s concluding observations to improve measures for children.  The Committee needed to consider the information provided by the State and its cultural specificities.  Qatar was committed to cooperating with the Committee and to addressing the challenges and risks it faced concerning the rights of the child.  It had achieved great progress in human rights over the years through cooperation with human rights mechanisms.

    SOPHIE KILADZE, Committee Chair, said that the information provided by the State party would help the Committee to assess the achievements made by Qatar and the challenges it faced. The Committee respected States’ cultural specificities, but violations of the Convention could not be justified in any circumstances.  The Committee would do its best to develop concluding observations that would strengthen the rights of children in Qatar to the extent possible.  It hoped that the State party would present further progress for children in its next dialogue with the Committee.

    ___________

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

     

    CRC25.014E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Langley urgent and primary care centre opens at permanent location

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    People living in and around Langley have better access to team-based primary care and medical imaging services as, on May 13, 2025, the permanent location of the Langley Urgent and Primary Care Centre (UPCC) opened.

    “We recognize how important it is that people feel safe and comfortable when accessing the care they need,” said Josie Osborne, Minister of Health. “Transitioning to the permanent Langley UPCC location means consistent care under one roof, for patients and care providers alike. This opening also marks the beginning of extended care hours and medical imaging services for the quickly growing community of Langley.”

    Located at 202 – 20434 64th Ave., the centre includes medical imaging services, such as X-rays and computed tomography (CT) scans. The imaging services operate independently from the care provided by the UPCC. All CT scan services require a referral and appointment. However, general radiography (X-ray) services are available by referral on a walk-in basis. No appointment is needed. Residents in the community can use these services through referral by their primary care provider or through accessing care at the UPCC.

    “Since opening in its temporary location last year, the Langley UPCC has delivered timely urgent and primary care closer to home,” said Dr. Lynn Stevenson, interim president and CEO, Fraser Health. “With the move to its permanent home, the UPCC will be alongside community-based medical imaging services, enhancing access to vital health care outside the hospital for more residents.”

    The UPCC delivers urgent primary care services from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. seven days a week, which is extended from the temporary facility’s schedule of 5-9 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekends and statutory holidays.

    Once fully staffed, the UPCC will have a staffing complement of primary health-care workers including family physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses and allied health providers.

    In the permanent location, the Langley UPCC will continue to provide comprehensive, culturally safe and person-centred primary care through a team-based model of care. The focus of the centre is to provide in-person access to primary care services. However, virtual care will be provided as needed, usually for followup to an in-person visit.

    The UPCC will continue to provide same-day care for people who need support for their health concerns within 12 to 24 hours, but do not require an emergency department. Examples include sprains, cuts, high fevers and minor infections. While the UPCC will offer both longitudinal and urgent, episodic primary care, the priority for initial implementation is the expansion of urgent primary care services.

    The capital cost for the UPCC, including medical imaging, is more than $16 million.

    Quick Facts:

    • The interim location of the Langley UPCC opened March 20, 2024, and provided almost 12,000 patient visits from its opening to March 31, 2025.
    • The medical imaging services will provide an expected 10,000 X-rays and 8,500 CT scans annually.
    • Including Langley UPCC, there are 10 UPCCs delivering care in the Fraser Health region. 
    • To date, including Langley UPCC, 41 UPCCs are delivering urgent and primary care in communities throughout B.C.

    Learn More:

    To access primary care, and other health services, in your community, visit HealthLinkBC: https://www.healthlinkbc.ca/find-care/find-health-services

    To learn more about the Province’s Primary Care Strategy, visit:
    https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2018PREM0034-001010 or https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/health/accessing-health-care/bcs-primary-care-system

    To learn about the Province’s Health Human Resources Strategy, visit:
    https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2022HLTH0059-001464

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Representative Peters Votes NO on GOP Tax Plan

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Scott Peters (52nd District of California)

    Washington, D.C. – Today, Representative Scott Peters (CA-50) voted against the Republican plan to cut healthcare for millions of vulnerable patients under Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act to pay for tax cuts for wealthy individuals and corporations that don’t need them. The Republican plan would kick 13.7 million people off of their healthcare, according to an analysis by the independent Congressional Budget Office. And the non-partisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget has found that the bill could add $37 trillion to the national debt over the next 30 years. After the House voted 215-214 to advance the legislation, Rep. Peters released the following statement:  

    “Not only is the Republican tax plan fiscally irresponsible, it is also unnecessarily cruel. Our country borrows $2 trillion every year just to keep the lights on. That number will only grow and add to our colossal debt under this tax plan. But Republicans aren’t trying to reduce the debt, they are kicking people off their healthcare to lower taxes for the highest earners. If we allowed marginal taxes for people making more than $609,000 to go from 37 to 39.6 percent, where it was in 2017, we could generate up to $402 billion in revenue over 10 years. Those people would pay a bit more in taxes, and we could avoid kicking millions of people off their healthcare. 

    “Irresponsible borrowing like this is why Moody’s, for the first time ever, downgraded our credit rating, why the stock market is falling, why the bond markets are going haywire, and why consumers are worried they won’t be able to keep up with rising prices. It is time to have an honest and tough bipartisan conversation about how we reduce the debt. While today’s vote was disappointing, I will continue to fight this debt-financed plan as it moves through the Senate.” 

    Read about Rep. Peters’ opposition to the tax plan in the Energy and Commerce Committee here.  

    Read about Rep. Peters’ opposition to the tax plan in the Budget Committee here.  

    CA-50 Medicaid Facts: 

    • 156,100 people in the district rely on Medicaid for health coverage—that’s 20 percent of all district residents. 
      • 34,700 children in the district are covered by Medicaid. 
      • 17,700 seniors in the district are covered by Medicaid. 
      • 64,900 adults in the district have Medicaid coverage through Medicaid expansion—that includes pregnant women who are able to access prenatal care sooner because of Medicaid expansion, parents, caretakers, veterans, people with substance use disorder and mental health treatment needs, and people with chronic conditions and disabilities. 
    • At least five hospitals in the district had negative operating margins in 2022. These hospitals would be especially hard-hit by cuts to Medicaid. For example: 
      • Scripps Mercy Hospital had a negative 25.3 percent operating margin—and nearly 22 percent of its revenue came from Medicaid. 
      • Sharp Coronado Hospital had a negative 3.5 percent operating margin—and over 36 percent of its revenue came from Medicaid. 
      • University of California San Diego Medical Center had a negative 2.4 percent operating margin—and nearly 19 percent of its revenue came from Medicaid. 
    • There are 54 health center delivery sites in the district that serve 529,944 patients. 
    • Those health centers and patients rely on Medicaid—statewide, 69 percent of health center patients rely on Medicaid for coverage. 
    • Health centers will not be able to stay open and provide the same care that they do today, with more uninsured and underinsured patients. They are already operating on thin margins—in 2023, nationally, nearly half of health centers had negative operating margins. 
    • Medicaid cuts put health centers at risk, including: 
      • Family Health Centers of San Diego 
      • Neighborhood Healthcare 
      • North County Health Project 
      • San Diego American Indian Health Centers 
      • St. Vincent De Paul Village 

    Representative Peters is the co-author of the Fiscal Commission Act, legislation to create a bicameral and open-door commission to tackle our nation’s long-term debt, help us avoid automatic and across-the-board cuts to Social Security and Medicare, and secure a more prosperous future for our children. 

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: US Department of Labor recovers $207K in back wages, damages for 157 workers after Michigan-based contractor failed to pay correct overtime wages

    Source: US Department of Labor

    LOUISVILLE, KY – The U.S. Department of Labor has recovered more than $207,470 in back wages and damages for 157 workers after finding a Michigan-based electrical services contractor failed to pay proper overtime rates to workers at job sites in Arizona and Kentucky.

    Investigators with the department’s Wage and Hour Division found that M.J. Electric LLC did not include non-discretionary bonuses in employees’ regular rate of pay when calculating overtime pay, a violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act. The investigation initially revealed the overtime violation at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Paradise Simple Cycle Project in Drakesboro, Kentucky. The investigation was expanded after similar violations were found at an M.J. Electric project in Ehrenberg, Arizona.

    In addition to collecting $207,470 in back wages and damages, the division assessed the company a $19,782 civil money penalty for a repeat FLSA violation. In 2018, the department investigated M.J. Electric and found the company violated federal law by not properly paying overtime on non-discretionary bonuses. 

    “The U.S. Department of Labor is committed to holding employers accountable, especially when they deny employees their hard-earned wages,” said Wage and Hour Division Acting District Director Wildali De Jésus in Louisville, Kentucky. “We urge employers who are unsure of their obligations to contact us for assistance to avoid compliance issues.”

    A subsidiary of Quanta Services, M.J. Electric LLC is headquartered in Iron Mountain, Michigan. The contractor provides electrical services such as power line work and power generation throughout the U.S.

    For more information about compliance assistance and employee rights enforced by the division, contact the toll-free helpline at 866-4US-WAGE (487-9243). Learn more about the Wage and Hour Division, including a search tool that workers can use if they think they may be owed back wages collected by the division.

    Download the agency’s free Timesheet App for Android and iPhone devices to ensure hours and pay are accurate.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: CFTC Staff Issues Advisory on Market Volatility Controls

    Source: US Commodity Futures Trading Commission

    CFTC Staff Issues Advisory on Market Volatility Controls | CFTC

    /PressRoom/PressReleases/9078-25
    Skip to main content

    May 22, 2025

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s Division of Clearing and Risk and Division of Market Oversight today issued a staff advisory reminding designated contract markets (DCMs) and derivatives clearing organizations (DCOs) of certain Core Principle and regulatory obligations under the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC regulations related to controls designed to address market volatility.
    Market volatility controls can play an important role in mitigating market disruptions while supporting continued price discovery in stressed or volatile market conditions. Best practices developed by DCMs, industry groups, CFTC advisory committees, and others can help to guide the derivatives industry towards effective volatility controls. In cases where volatility controls may be in effect at times critical to DCO decisions, DCOs should exercise careful discretion and informed judgment in making those decisions in light of the economic factors relevant to the underlying market. DCOs should provide transparency to both clearing members and end users about possible impacts on, e.g., settlement prices.
    Today’s staff advisory addresses a recommendation by the CFTC’s Global Markets Advisory Committee. 

    -CFTC-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Harvard University Loses Student and Exchange Visitor Program Certification for Pro-Terrorist Conduct

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: Harvard University Loses Student and Exchange Visitor Program Certification for Pro-Terrorist Conduct

    lass=”text-align-center”>Harvard is being held accountable for collaboration with the CCP, fostering violence, antisemitism, and pro-terrorist conduct from students on its campus

    WASHINGTON – Today, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem ordered DHS to terminate the Harvard University’s Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) certification

    This means Harvard can no longer enroll foreign students and existing foreign students must transfer or lose their legal status

    Harvard’s leadership has created an unsafe campus environment by permitting anti-American, pro-terrorist agitators to harass and physically assault individuals, including many Jewish students, and otherwise obstruct its once-venerable learning environment

    Many of these agitators are foreign students

    Harvard’s leadership further facilitated, and engaged in coordinated activity with the CCP, including hosting and training members of a CCP paramilitary group complicit in the Uyghur genocide

    “This administration is holding Harvard accountable for fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus,” said Secretary Noem

    “It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enroll foreign students and benefit from their higher tuition payments to help pad their multibillion-dollar endowments

    Harvard had plenty of opportunity to do the right thing

    It refused

    They have lost their Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification as a result of their failure to adhere to the law

    Let this serve as a warning to all universities and academic institutions across the country


    On April 16, 2025, Secretary Noem demanded Harvard provide information about the criminality and misconduct of foreign students on its campus

    Secretary Noem warned refusal to comply with this lawful order would result in SEVP termination

    This action comes after DHS terminated $2

    7 million in DHS grants for Harvard last month

    Harvard University brazenly refused to provide the required information requested and ignored a follow up request from the Department’s Office of General Council

    Secretary Noem is following through on her promise to protect students and prohibit terrorist sympathizers from receiving benefits from the U

    S

    government

    Facts about Harvard’s toxic campus climate:

    A joint-government task force found that Harvard has failed to confront pervasive race discrimination and anti-Semitic harassment plaguing its campus

    Jewish students on campus were subject to pervasive insults, physical assault, and intimidation, with no meaningful response from Harvard’s leadership

    A protester charged for his role in the assault of a Jewish student on campus was chosen by the Harvard Divinity School to be the Class Marshal for commencement

    Harvard’s own 2025 internal study on anti-Semitism revealed that almost 60% of Jewish students reported experiencing “discrimination, stereotyping, or negative bias on campus due to [their] views on current events


    In one instance, a Jewish student speaker at a conference had planned to tell the story of his Holocaust survivor grandfather finding refuge in Israel

    Organizers told the student the story was not “tasteful” and laughed at him when he expressed his confusion

    They said the story would have justified oppression

    Meanwhile, Pro-Hamas student groups that promoted antisemitism after the October 7 attacks remained recognized and funded

    Instead of protecting its students, Harvard has let crime rates skyrocket, enacted racist DEI practices, and accepted boatloads of cash from foreign governments and donors

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA Astronaut to Answer Questions from Students in Washington State

    Source: NASA

    NASA astronaut and Spokane, Washington, native Anne McClain will participate in an event with students from the Mobius Discovery Center located in her hometown. McClain will answer prerecorded questions submitted by students from aboard the International Space Station.
    Watch the 20-minute Earth-to-space call on the NASA STEM YouTube Channel.
    The event will take place at 1:25 p.m. EDT on Tuesday, May 27. Media interested in covering the event must RSVP no later than 5 p.m. EDT on Friday, May 23, to Karen Hudson at 509-321-7125 or via email at: mkhudson@mobiusspokane.org.
    The Mobius Discovery Center will host the event for elementary, middle, and high school students from various schools across the region, nonprofit organizations, and the Kalispel Tribe. This event is designed to foster imagination among students through exploration of hands-on exhibits and science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics learning opportunities while inspiring students to consider McClain’s career path.
    For more than 24 years, astronauts have continuously lived and worked aboard the space station, testing technologies, performing science, and developing skills needed to explore farther from Earth. Astronauts aboard the orbiting laboratory communicate with NASA’s Mission Control Center in Houston 24 hours a day through SCaN’s (Space Communications and Navigation) Near Space Network.
    Important research and technology investigations taking place aboard the space station benefit people on Earth and lays the groundwork for other agency missions. As part of NASA’s Artemis campaign, the agency will send astronauts to the Moon to prepare for future human exploration of Mars, inspiring Artemis Generation explorers, and ensuring the United States continues to lead in space exploration and discovery.
    See videos of astronauts aboard the space station at:
    https://www.nasa.gov/stemonstation
    -end-
    Gerelle DodsonHeadquarters, Washington202-358-1600gerelle.q.dodson@nasa.gov
    Sandra JonesJohnson Space Center, Houston281-483-5111sandra.p.jones@nasa.gov

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Sols 4547-4548: Taking in the View After a Long Drive

    Source: NASA

    Written by Alex Innanen, Atmospheric Scientist at York University
    Earth planning date: Wednesday, May 21, 2025
    Monday’s single-sol plan included a marathon 45-meter drive (about 148 feet), which put us in position for two full sols of imaging. This means both sols have what we call “targeted” science blocks, in which we have images of the workspace down from the last plan and can carefully choose what we want to take a closer look at. This always means a lot of good discussion amongst the geology and mineralogy theme group (GEO) about what deserves this closer look. As an outsider on the environmental theme group (ENV), I don’t always grasp the complexities of these discussions, but it’s always interesting to see what GEO is up to and to learn new things about the geology of Mount Sharp.
    GEO ended up picking “Big Bear Lake” as our contact science target, which is getting its typical treatment from APXS and MAHLI, as well as a LIBS observation from ChemCam. Aside from that there was plenty of room for remote sensing. ChemCam is also taking a LIBS observation of “Volcan Mountains” and a long-distance mosaic of the Texoli butte. Mastcam is also taking mosaics of a nearby trough, as well as two depressions known as “Sulphur Spring,” a more distant boxwork structure, and the very distant Mishe Mokwa butte.
    All of ENV’s activities are remote sensing, and we managed to squeeze in a few of those too. We have a couple dust monitoring observations, looking for dust devils and checking the amount of dust in the atmosphere. And since we’re still in the cloudy season we always try to make room for cloud observations. Today that meant a suraphorizon movie looking for clouds just above the horizon to the south, and a phase function sky survey, which captures clouds all around the rover, to try to understand how these clouds scatter sunlight.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Preflight Flower

    Source: NASA

    A NASA photographer took this picture of a flower called Borshchov’s tulip near the launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on April 7, 2025, ahead of NASA astronaut Jonny Kim and cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey Zubritsky launching to the International Space Station. The flower is unique to Kazakhstan, attracting many to study and appreciate its beauty.
    Image credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Local 778 Volunteers Return to Revitalize Kansas City Park

    Source: US GOIAM Union

    Fifteen dedicated members of IAM Local 778 recently donated their time and effort to support Raytown Parks and Recreation with a major cleanup at Minor Smith Park near Kansas City, Mo.

    This marks the second time Local 778 has volunteered in the park, demonstrating their ongoing commitment to community service. Volunteers focused on clearing heavy overgrowth surrounding a popular leisure path and bridge. Once the area was cleared, the team gave the bridge a fresh coat of paint, dramatically improving both the appearance and accessibility of the park.

    “It’s not just about cleaning up, it’s about making the community better for everyone,” said IAM Midwest Territory General Vice President Sam Cicinelli. “Every time we volunteer, we strengthen our bond, not just with each other, but with the community we serve. It’s rewarding to give back and see the immediate impact.”

    “This is our second time at Minor Smith Park, and it’s easy to see how quickly nature can take over,” said IAM Local 778 Directing Business Representative Scott Brown. “The community always shows their appreciation, and it’s inspiring to see our members along with new faces eager to pitch in and make a difference.”

    IAM Local 778 represents over 3,000 working families in the Kansas City area and continues to uphold its strong tradition of giving back to the communities where its members live and work.

    H.E.L.P.S. stands for Honoring, Engaging, Lifting, Providing and Servicing.

    For more information on IAM H.E.L.P.S. in the Community, click here.

    The post Local 778 Volunteers Return to Revitalize Kansas City Park appeared first on IAM Union.

    MIL OSI USA News