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Category: DJF

  • MIL-OSI Economics: China commits USD 600,000 to support WTO accession and least-developed countries

    Source: WTO

    Headline: China commits USD 600,000 to support WTO accession and least-developed countries

    The China Programme — launched in July 2011 under the WTO-led Aid for Trade initiative — aims to enable LDCs to better integrate into the global economy by strengthening their participation in WTO activities and helping those not yet members join the Organization. The signing ceremony was held on the side of a meeting of trade ministers hosted by Australia on the sidelines of the annual Ministerial Council Meeting of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). 
    The China Programme finances activities to support, among others:

    An internship programme at the WTO
    China Round Tables on WTO accessions
    Increasing participation of LDCs in WTO meetings
    South-South dialogue on LDCs and development
    Follow-up workshops to LDCs’ Trade Policy Reviews
    LDCs Experience Sharing Programme

    The Programme has also contributed to financing the participation of LDC government officials in WTO ministerial conferences.
    More information can be found here.
    DG Okonjo-Iweala said: “I warmly welcome the renewal of this programme, which stands as testimony to China’s commitment to facilitating the integration of LDCs into global trade. A substantial part of this programme goes to support LDCs and other economies in the process of acceding to the WTO, an important step in using trade to meet their economic and development objectives. China’s contribution in current challenging times is mostly welcome.”
    Minister Wang said: “In the past years, by continuously funding various activities of the China Programme, China has been taking every solid step to help developing members, especially the LDCs, better integrate into the multilateral trading system. Noticing the technical assistance resource constraints WTO is currently facing, China raises its contribution to the China Programme to USD 600,000, demonstrating its firm support to WTO capacity building activities for developing members especially the LDCs. In the future, China is willing to continue making contributions, better operate the China Programme together with the Secretariat, and implement the Global Development Initiative (GDI) with practical actions.”
    Each year, the WTO Secretariat and the government of China review the contents and consider the renewal of the Memorandum of Understanding on the China Programme.
    Since 2008, China has contributed just around USD 11 million (approximately CHF 9.0 million) to assist developing economy members and observers , especially LDCs, in integrating more fully into the multilateral trade system.

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    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Euro area bank interest rate statistics: April 2025

    Source: European Central Bank

    4 June 2025

    Bank interest rates for corporations

    Chart 1

    Bank interest rates on new loans to, and deposits from, euro area corporations

    (percentages per annum)

    Data for cost of borrowing and deposit interest rates for corporations (Chart 1)

    The composite cost-of-borrowing indicator, which combines interest rates on all loans to corporations, decreased in April 2025. The interest rate on new loans of over €1 million with a floating rate and an initial rate fixation period of up to three months decreased by 13 basis points to 3.54%. The rate on new loans of the same size with an initial rate fixation period of over three months and up to one year fell by 27 basis points to 3.51%. The interest rate on new loans of over €1 million with an initial rate fixation period of over ten years remained broadly unchanged at 3.54%. In the case of new loans of up to €250,000 with a floating rate and an initial rate fixation period of up to three months, the average rate charged fell by 12 basis points to 3.90%.
    As regards new deposit agreements, the interest rate on deposits from corporations with an agreed maturity of up to one year fell by 17 basis points to 2.15% in April 2025. The interest rate on overnight deposits from corporations fell by 7 basis points to 0.60%.
    The interest rate on new loans to sole proprietors and unincorporated partnerships with a floating rate and an initial rate fixation period of up to one year decreased by 5 basis points to 4.31%, driven by both the interest rate and the weight effects.

    Table 1

    Bank interest rates for corporations

    i.r.f. = initial rate fixation
    * For this instrument category, the concept of new business is extended to the whole outstanding amounts and therefore the business volumes are not comparable with those of the other categories. Outstanding amounts data are derived from the ECB’s monetary financial institutions balance sheet statistics.

    Data for bank interest rates for corporations (Table 1)

    Bank interest rates for households

    Chart 2

    Bank interest rates on new loans to, and deposits from, euro area households

    Data for cost of borrowing and deposit interest rate for households (Chart 2)

    The composite cost-of-borrowing indicator, which combines interest rates on all loans to households for house purchase, decreased in April 2025. The interest rate on loans for house purchase with a floating rate and an initial rate fixation period of up to one year decreased by 8 basis points to 3.84%. The rate on housing loans with an initial rate fixation period of over one and up to five years stayed almost constant at 3.48%. The interest rate on loans for house purchase with an initial rate fixation period of over five and up to ten years decreased by 4 basis points to 3.32%, driven by both the interest rate and the weight effects. The rate on housing loans with an initial rate fixation period of over ten years fell by 7 basis points to 3.03%, mainly driven by the weight effect. In the same period the interest rate on new loans to households for consumption showed no change at 7.52%.
    As regards new deposits from households, the interest rate on deposits with an agreed maturity of up to one year decreased by 13 basis points to 1.96%. The rate on deposits redeemable at three months’ notice stayed almost constant at 1.50%. The interest rate on overnight deposits from households remained broadly unchanged at 0.29%.

    Table 2

    Bank interest rates for households

    i.r.f. = initial rate fixation
    * For this instrument category, the concept of new business is extended to the whole outstanding amounts and therefore the business volumes are not comparable with those of the other categories; deposits placed by households and corporations are allocated to the household sector. Outstanding amounts data are derived from the ECB’s monetary financial institutions balance sheet statistics.
    ** For this instrument category, the concept of new business is extended to the whole outstanding amounts and therefore the business volumes are not comparable with those of the other categories. Outstanding amounts data are derived from the ECB’s monetary financial institutions balance sheet statistics.

    Data for bank interest rates for households (Table 2)

    Further information

    The data in Tables 1 and 2 can be visualised for individual euro area countries on the bank interest rate statistics dashboard. Additionally, tables containing further breakdowns of bank interest rate statistics, including the composite cost-of-borrowing indicators for all euro area countries, are available from the ECB Data Portal. The full set of bank interest rate statistics for both the euro area and individual countries can be downloaded from ECB Data Portal. More information, including the release calendar, is available under “Bank interest rates” in the statistics section of the ECB’s website.

    For media queries, please contact Nicos Keranis, tel.: +49 69 1344 7806

    Notes:

    • In this press release “corporations” refers to non-financial corporations (sector S.11 in the European System of Accounts 2010, or ESA 2010), “households” refers to households and non-profit institutions serving households (ESA 2010 sectors S.14 and S.15) and “banks” refers to monetary financial institutions except central banks and money market funds (ESA 2010 sector S.122).
    • The composite cost-of-borrowing indicators are described in the article entitled “Assessing the retail bank interest rate pass-through in the euro area at times of financial fragmentation” in the August 2013 issue of the ECB’s Monthly Bulletin (see Box 1). For these indicators, a weighting scheme based on the 24-month moving averages of new business volumes has been applied, in order to filter out excessive monthly volatility. For this reason the developments in the composite cost of borrowing indicators in both tables cannot be explained by the month-on-month changes in the displayed subcomponents. Furthermore, the table on bank interest rates for corporations presents a subset of the series used in the calculation of the cost of borrowing indicator.
    • Interest rates on new business are weighted by the size of the individual agreements. This is done both by the reporting agents and when the national and euro area averages are computed. Thus changes in average euro area interest rates for new business reflect, in addition to changes in interest rates, changes in the weights of individual countries’ new business for the instrument categories concerned. The “interest rate effect” and the “weight effect” presented in this press release are derived from the Bennet index, which allows month-on-month developments in euro area aggregate rates resulting from changes in individual country rates (the “interest rate effect”) to be disentangled from those caused by changes in the weights of individual countries’ contributions (the “weight effect”). Owing to rounding, the combined “interest rate effect” and the “weight effect” may not add up to the month-on-month developments in euro area aggregate rates.
    • In addition to monthly euro area bank interest rate statistics for April 2025, this press release incorporates revisions to data for previous periods. Hyperlinks in the main body of the press release lead to data that may change with subsequent releases as a result of revisions. Unless otherwise indicated, these euro area statistics cover the EU Member States that had adopted the euro at the time to which the data relate.
    • As of reference period December 2014, the sector classification applied to bank interest rates statistics is based on the European System of Accounts 2010 (ESA 2010). In accordance with the ESA 2010 classification and as opposed to ESA 95, the non-financial corporations sector (S.11) now excludes holding companies not engaged in management and similar captive financial institutions.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: WTO upgrades e-Learning platform to enhance user experience and learning outcomes

    Source: WTO

    Headline: WTO upgrades e-Learning platform to enhance user experience and learning outcomes

    This upgrade marks a major step forward in expanding access to WTO e-Learning courses. Forming part of the technical assistance programmes delivered by the WTO Secretariat to build trade capacity in developing and least-developed members and observers, these courses are also freely accessible to the wider public across all sectors.
    “We are excited to launch the upgraded platform, which reflects our continued commitment to accessible and high-quality trade-related learning,” said Roberto Fiorentino, Head of the WTO e-Learning Unit. “The improvements will enable users to navigate more easily the e-Learning platform, manage their learning more effectively, and engage more deeply with the WTO’s online training.”
    Key upgrades to the platform include:

    A redesigned user interface featuring intuitive navigation, improved accessibility features and simplified access to the course catalogue, certificates and support resources.
    A refined course catalogue with advanced search and filtering options, making it easier to find courses by language, level, topic, training path and duration.
    Greater flexibility in assessments, including extended time limits, retake opportunities for final exams, and enhanced dashboard tools for tracking progress.
    Strengthened community engagement through updated discussion forums and mobile app notifications to foster collaboration among participants.
    Simplified access to learning reports, empowering learners to easily monitor their progress.
    A newly developed Help Centre offering comprehensive guidance on technical requirements, registration, eligibility, certification criteria and more.
    Enhanced data protection through advanced security measures to safeguard user information and ensure a safe digital learning environment.

    The WTO e-Learning platform currently offers 176 free courses covering various WTO agreements and trade-related issues, with additional courses under development. With over 13,000 government officials from developing and least-developed WTO members and observers enrolled in these courses, along with more than 9,000 e-learners from academia, the private sector and other professional communities, the upgraded e-Learning platform is designed to be more user-centric and responsive, ensuring that it meets the evolving needs of its diverse user base.

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    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with the Minister of Finance of Viet Nam

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, met with the Minister of Finance of Viet Nam, H.E. Nguyen Van Thang, at the OECD Headquarters in Paris, France, on 4 June 2025. They discussed current global economic developments, regional finance cooperation, and the formulation of the forthcoming sectoral plan on finance to support the implementation of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) Strategic Plan 2026–2030—an integral component of the ASEAN Community Vision 2045.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with the Minister of Finance of Viet Nam appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: African values under threat: African Commission must defend them

    Source: Amnesty International –

    By Khanyo Farise

    A poster featuring an all-white male panel of speakers from Europe, the US and other regions circulated online, promoting a pan-African conference on African Family Values. 

    The line-up was a tell-tale sign of yet another event underwritten by Global North actors with a clear anti-rights agenda. The organisers were forced to add African panellists after a backlash but, despite outrage from women’s groups and human rights organisations about its harmful content, the conference went ahead.   

    The main speakers were from organisations such as CitizenGo, Family Watch International, Family Policy Institute and Christian Council International, as well as churches and parliamentarians. These were also among the supporters and sponsors for the event. These organisations are known for conservative family and societal values advocating for what they call “traditional family values”. 

    The event organisers, African Christian Professionals Forum, has deep ties with these organisations including some of its board members associated with various US-based anti-rights groups. 

    At its core the conference promoted opposition to abortion, LGBTI rights, reproductive healthcare and comprehensive sexuality education. Among the organisers’ key issues of concern is that “African nations face pressure to enact policies, sign agreements and treaties that contradict their cultural and religious beliefs”.  The conference was aimed to “promote and protect sanctity of life, family values, religious freedoms and values-based education and good governance”. These aims are similar to US-based anti-rights groups. 

    Event participants not only advocate in their countries on these topics but also at regional forums, including the African Union, and at the international level. Civil society has warned of the potential for increasingly coordinated attacks against the AU by these groups. 

    This conference comes at a time of increasing authoritarianism where opportunistic populists, seeking to score cheap political points, often tout the idea that LGBTI identities are “un-African” and against “African values”. 

    Khanyo Farise

    The 2025 Convention on Eliminating Violence against Women and Girls is thought to be their next advocacy target. They will probably argue that this treaty promotes gender ideology, a similar strategy adopted by anti-rights groups in Europe against the Istanbul Convention, which is also aimed at preventing and combatting violence against women.  

    This conference comes at a time of increasing authoritarianism where opportunistic populists, seeking to score cheap political points, often tout the idea that LGBTI identities are “un-African” and against “African values”. 

    The conference was attended by MPs from Uganda and Malawi and Kenyan lawyers. This is unsurprising since there have long been reports that US groups have financed propaganda about sexual and gender diversity, and have helped shape some of the harshest anti-LGBTI laws in Africa.  

    The language of ‘African values’ emerged at the regional level in 2018 when the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR), the continent’s highest human rights body, at the instruction of the African Union, stripped the Coalition of African Lesbians’ observer status.

    In 2022 the ACHPR, this time on its own accord, then denied observer status to three human rights groups, claiming that LGBTI identities are “contrary to the virtues of African values”. These decisions ran counter to the historic Resolution passed by the ACHPR in 2014 which was clear that LGBTI identities enjoy full protection under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.  

    But what does it mean to be African? What are African values? 

    The African Charter empowers the ACHPR to undertake studies and research to address such questions. The ACHPR then uses these studies as a basis for principles and rules to guide African governments. In this vein, in 2023 the African Commission considered and adopted “a paper on African Values”. This paper is not public, so its contents are unknown, but it is probably aimed at explaining what the ACHPR means by “African values”,  to guide African governments in their human rights legislation. 

    In answering this question, there are three key areas the ACHPR should consider. 

    First is a recognition that African families are incredibly diverse. The drafters of the African Charter acknowledged that African society is far too complex to be neatly compartmentalised. It was for this reason that the charter deliberately fails to define the notion of “peoples”, in clear recognition of the diversity of African families, societies and communities. The ACHPR must likewise not confine African identities to cis-gender and heterosexual, nor restrict the concept of the African family to a nuclear model.

    Second is that the principle of non-discrimination permeates the charter and provides the touchstone of the African concept of human rights. The charter affirms that “every individual shall respect and consider his fellow beings without discrimination and to maintain relations aimed at promoting, safeguarding and reinforcing mutual respect and tolerance”. 

    The charter’s drafters entrenched the idea of non-discrimination because, at the time, African leaders were focused on liberation from colonialism and racism. Indeed, the document broke new ground by prohibiting ethnic discrimination, a prohibition not found in other international agreements at the time. Non-discrimination against LGBTI people is firmly within both the letter and spirit of the African Charter’s values. 

    And finally that LGBTI identities are firmly ensconced in African values historically. Same-sex sexualities and gender diversity were present in pre-colonial Africa. It was not until colonisation that Africa’s European subjugators imposed anti-LGBTI laws as part of their “civilising mission”. After independence, many African countries — Angola, Botswana, Mauritius, Namibia, South Africa, to name a few — dismissed those colonial-era laws and now recognise LGBTI people’s rights. Simply put, LGBTI people are as African as anyone else, and deserve the same protection by the African Charter.

    With anti-rights actors co-opting African values using neo-colonial tactics, there is greater urgency for the ACHPR to reclaim African values and redefine them in accordance with the African Charter. Drawing on the wisdom of our forebears, the ACHPR must affirm that discrimination has no place in African societies. It should root its approach in both our pre-colonial histories and the present reality of millions of LGBTI Africans who are entitled to the same human rights as anyone else, no matter what opportunistic western anti-rights actors might say. African values must be used to advance inclusion, non-discrimination and equality, not exclusion and discrimination.  

    Khanyo Farise is a senior researcher on civic space at Amnesty International, East and Southern Africa.

    This oped first ran in South Africa’s Mail and Guardian

    MIL OSI NGO –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: “Sink or Swim? Youth Advocates Speak Up for the Ocean” | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Young ocean advocates are challenging world leaders at the UN Ocean Conference: choose between sink or swim. With threats like acidification, plastic pollution and species destruction, there’s no time to waste. The crisis facing our ocean demands immediate action and meaningful youth participation. UNOC3 is our crucial moment to save our ocean. Learn more: http://sdgs.un.org/conferences/ocean2025.

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

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: India/Pakistan conflict – Press Conference | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Press Conference by Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, former Foreign Minister of Pakistan, accompanied by a high-level parliamentary delegation, on recent developments in South Asia.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uO87TY8kiq4

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons’ Fox interview attack on jews by illegal alien

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

    Watch ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons discuss immigration enforcement in the wake of the horrific antisemitic attack in Colorado by an Egyptian national who overstayed his U.S. visa.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1ECMJySD5c

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: Time Lapse EMAD exhaust stack reduction

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

    Watch as the EMNV team removes two large stacks from the EMAD main building. Completing this work sets the stage for the team to begin demolition of the 100,000 square foot main building.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2Cx0tJIYps

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: Building 3901 Demo

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

    The Environmental Management (EM) Nevada Program recently completed the demolition of the largest ancillary structure remaining at the Engine Maintenance, Assembly and Disassembly (EMAD) Facility at the Nevada National Security Sites (NNSS). The building brought down in April at the NNSS, was formally known as Building 3901, but more commonly is referred to as the “Train Shed.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQIFfdjQ6Mk

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: Water Tower Demolitions Multi-Camera

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

    Teams have been decommissioning and demolishing old facilities as part of the cleanup mission on the Nevada National Security Site. In this video works tear down a water tower that needed removed before teams can begin on the 100,000 square foot main building.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qdvz8El8drM

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: Sudan, Guatemala  & other topics – Daily Press Briefing (3 June 2025)

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Noon Briefing by Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesperson for the Secretary-General.

    Highlights:
    Sudan
    Commissioner of the International Commission Against Impunity/Guatemala 
    Ninth Austrian World Summit
    Human Rights/Climate Emergency
    Deputy Secretary-General/Travels
    Gaza
    Occupied Palestinian Territory
    Syria
    Ukraine
    South Sudan
    Democratic Republic of the Congo
    Photo Exhibition
    World Bicycle Day
    Financial Contribution
    Briefings – Today

    SUDAN
    You will have seen the horrific developments in Sudan in which five members of a UN humanitarian convoy were killed last night and several more were injured during an attack near Al Koma in North Darfur.
    I can tell you that we condemn in the strongest terms this horrendous act of violence against humanitarian personnel who literally put their lives at risk attempting to reach vulnerable children and families in the famine-impacted areas.
    This joint WFP-UNICEF 15-truck convoy had travelled over 1,800 km (just about 1,118 miles) from Port Sudan, and they were carrying food and nutrition supplies. The Agencies were negotiating access to complete the journey to El Fasher when it was attacked. The route was shared in advance, and parties on the ground were notified and aware of the location of the trucks.
    Multiple trucks were burned in the attack, and critical humanitarian supplies were damaged. It is devastating the supplies have not reached the civilians in need. This is the first UN humanitarian convoy that was going to make it to El Fasher in over a year.
    All attacks on humanitarian personnel, their facilities and vehicles must stop. They are a violation under international humanitarian law. And we call for an urgent investigation and for the perpetrators to be held to account.
    We call for safe, secure operating conditions and for international humanitarian law to be respected by all parties, not just in Sudan, but in all conflict-impacted countries. Under international humanitarian law, aid convoys must be protected, and parties have the obligation to allow and facilitate rapid and unimpeded passage of humanitarian relief for civilians in need.
    And for those who were killed in line of duty in Sudan, we extend our condolences to their families and loved ones, and we wish a speedy recovery for the wounded. Shirin

    COMMISSIONER OF THE INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION AGAINST IMPUNITY/GUATEMALA 
    The Secretary-General is concerned about the announcement by the Public Prosecutor’s Office of Guatemala regarding the issuance of arrest warrants against former Commissioner of the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG), Iván Velásquez, former CICIG Head of Investigations Luz Adriana Camargo — now Colombia’s Attorney General — along with 24 other former CICIG national staff and independent justice officials who collaborated with CICIG.
    The Secretary-General reiterates that the Commission’s international personnel, under the terms of the agreement between the UN and the Government of Guatemala regarding the establishment of the Commission, enjoys immunity from legal process with respect to acts done in the performance of their mission which continues even after the completion of their employment with CICIG. He recalls that under this agreement, the Government of Guatemala agreed to protect the personnel of CICIG – whether international or national – from abuse, threats, reprisals or acts of intimidation in virtue of their work for CICIG. 
    The Secretary-General reiterates his concern at the numerous reports that criminal prosecution is being carried out against those who sought to shed light on cases of corruption and worked to strengthen rule of law and the justice system in Guatemala.

    NINTH AUSTRIAN WORLD SUMMIT
    Today, the Secretary-General addressed the Ninth Austrian World Summit via a video message. He pointed out that we face a triple-whammy of woe, with pollution clogging rivers, contaminating land, and poisoning our ocean, the biodiversity being destroyed at record pace and record levels of greenhouse gases catastrophically disrupting our climate.
    The Secretary-General warned that no country, whether rich or poor, can escape these crises, and no country can solve them alone. But together, he said, we can reap the rewards of action, from cheap, secure power, to better health.

    Full highlights: https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/ossg/noon-briefing-highlight?date%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=03+June+2025

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dfQFjOD3ATM

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 4, 2025
  • PM Modi to lead tree plantation drive, flag off 200 electric buses in Delhi on World Environment Day

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi will mark World Environment Day on June 5 by leading a special tree plantation drive at Bhagwan Mahavir Vanasthali Park, New Delhi, as part of the ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ initiative. The drive forms a crucial component of the ambitious ‘Aravalli Green Wall Project’ aimed at reforesting the 700-km-long Aravalli range.

    The Prime Minister will plant a Banyan sapling to symbolise India’s commitment to environmental conservation and afforestation efforts. The Aravalli Green Wall Project targets a 5-km buffer zone around the Aravalli Hills across 29 districts in Delhi, Rajasthan, Haryana, and Gujarat. It focuses on increasing green cover, restoring biodiversity, improving soil fertility, conserving water bodies, and enhancing climate resilience in the region.

    Besides ecological benefits, the project is expected to generate employment and provide livelihood opportunities for local communities through afforestation and restoration activities.

    In a parallel move to promote sustainable urban mobility, PM Modi will also flag off 200 electric buses under the Delhi government’s clean transport initiative. The introduction of these electric buses aims to reduce air pollution and boost the adoption of green transportation in the national capital.

    June 4, 2025
  • Piyush Goyal begins official visit to Italy to strengthen bilateral economic ties

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal began his official visit to Italy on Wednesday, marking a key step in strengthening India’s economic and strategic ties with one of its important European partners. The two-day visit, scheduled for June 4–5, follows Minister Goyal’s engagements in France aimed at enhancing India–France trade and investment relations.

    During his stay, Goyal will co-chair the 22nd Session of the India–Italy Joint Commission for Economic Cooperation (JCEC) alongside Antonio Tajani, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation of Italy. The JCEC serves as a critical bilateral platform for shaping economic collaboration between the two nations.

    This year’s session is set against the backdrop of the India–Italy Joint Strategic Action Plan (JSAP) 2025–2029, which was launched following a meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Rio de Janeiro in November 2024. The JSAP outlines ten key thematic pillars for cooperation, with economic engagement and innovation as central priorities.

    The Rome meeting will focus on assessing progress and expanding bilateral cooperation in pivotal sectors such as Industry 4.0, agritech, digital transformation, clean energy, sustainable mobility, and infrastructure development under the India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC). These discussions are expected to open new doors for strategic industrial partnerships and strengthen economic connectivity between the two nations.

    Goyal will lead a high-level Indian business delegation to the India–Italy Growth Forum in Brescia, a leading industrial and innovation hub in northern Italy. The forum is designed to foster dialogue between key businesses, promote investment flows, and boost B2B collaborations in areas such as sustainable manufacturing, circular economy, and advanced engineering.

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: From heatwaves to cyber threats: a comprehensive new guide to today’s hazards

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    UNDRR and ISC release an updated overview of hazards to help governments, researchers, and responders to better understand and act on interconnected risks.

    Geneva / Paris – 4 June 2025 – The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) and the International Science Council (ISC) have released an updated edition of their comprehensive hazard guide, offering clear, standardized information on 282 hazards – from wildfires and earthquakes to cyberattacks and pandemics.

    The new edition reflects the complex and interconnected nature of today’s global risk landscape. Hazards increasingly occur together, cascade across systems, and amplify one another. In response, the updated profiles emphasize a multi-hazard approach-critical for effective early warning systems, emergency planning, and disaster resilience. Originally launched in 2021 as the first resource of its kind, the hazard definitions and classification provide an authoritative technical foundation for disaster risk reduction efforts worldwide. This updated edition builds on that foundation with:

    • 282 reviewed hazards across 8 types and 39 clusters
    • Improved, machine-readable format to support their use across digital tools and systems. E.g. the updated hazard taxonomy with standard definitions enables the new generation UNDRR-UNDP-WMO disaster tracking system.
    • Clearer articulation of hazard interactions and multi-hazard scenarios
    • User-informed revisions and new content to support real-world planning and response

    “From local governments to humanitarian agencies, the need for consistent, science-based hazard information is universal. These profiles reflect the best available scientific understanding of hazards and offer a foundation for evidence-based policies that reduce risk and build resilience,” said Salvatore Aricò, CEO, International Science Council.

    “Reliable and standardized hazard data are essential for informing disaster risk reduction strategies. This update helps countries implement the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction to reduce losses by 2030,” said Kamal Kishore, the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction.

    “This updated edition reflects what we’ve learned: hazards are not standalone events. They are part of a complex web of risk. By bringing together diverse expert and user input, we’ve made these profiles more actionable, more interconnected, and more immediately useful,” said Professor Virginia Murray, Chair of the Hazard Information Profiles Steering Group.

    The revision process engaged over 270 experts, reviewers, and users from across sectors and regions. A dedicated User Group, Multi-Hazard Group, and Machine Actionability Group ensured the profiles remain practical, future-ready, and inclusive of diverse perspectives and needs.

    Since the initial release, the hazard profiles have been widely used by national disaster management agencies, UN bodies, researchers, and humanitarian organizations for planning, monitoring, risk assessments, and training. This success has prompted the current update to ensure that they remain relevant and up to date.

    Explore the updated hazard profile


    Contacts

    Zhenya Tsoy, Head of Communications, International Science Council 

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: The 2025 update of the UNDRR-ISC Hazard Information Profiles (HIPs)

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    The HIPs serve as a trusted source of scientifically grounded, standardized hazard information used by governments, agencies, researchers and educators worldwide. They support risk assessment, disaster preparedness, loss tracking and multi-sectoral planning. Above all, they are a practical resource – valued because they are usable, useful and used.

    In 2023, UNDRR and the ISC launched a revision of the HIPs, involving experts from organizations including United Nations agencies, scientific disciplinary unions, academia, the private sector and the humanitarian sector. In the end, 330 authors and reviewers from across more than 150 organizations participated. The result is a revised list of 282 hazards grouped into eight hazard types: 

    1. Hydrological and Meteorological
    2. Extraterrestrial
    3. Geological
    4. Environmental
    5. Chemical
    6. Biological
    7. Technological
    8. Societal

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Issue brief: Reducing risk to enable Sustainable Development Goals acceleration

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    This Issue Brief highlights how risk reduction can help to make critical shifts to accelerate progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals and beyond: from short-term reactive responses and to long-term resilience pathways, and from siloed approaches to systems thinking and systems change. It highlights risk reduction opportunities across food systems, education, jobs and social protection, digital systems, energy systems, and nature and climate change. 

    The Issue Brief also highlights the importance of enablers such as multidimensional risk assessment,  integrated and inclusive risk governance, adaptive management and learning, and risk-informed financing for SDGs. It was developed by UNDRR with inputs from 18 UN entities under the UN DRR Focal Points Group, and informed by a call for good practices on risk-informed SDG transitions in December 2024.

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: United to enhance disaster preparedness: Announcing the launch of the Priority Actions to Enhance Readiness for Resilient Recovery

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    On 3 June 2025, global leaders gathered at the World Resilient Recovery Conference (WRRC) to launch the Priority Actions to Enhance Readiness for Resilient Recovery – an initiative aimed at accelerating the implementation of Priority Action 4 of the Sendai Framework: Enhancing disaster preparedness for effective response and to “Build Back Better” in recovery, rehabilitation and reconstruction. 

    The ten actions, pictured and described in further detail below, are important for several reasons. 

    First, the consultative process to get there was comprehensive and all-inclusive. A total of 130 countries participated across four distinct regions (Africa, Europe and Central Asia, Americas and the Caribbean and Arab States), bringing a diverse set of opinions, needs and expectations. In the end, more than 4,000 individual participants shared their knowledge and expertise. 

    The agreed-upon actions are representative of this crucial and comprehensive consultation process, with a particular focus on people. For example, Priority Action 9 aims to “Localize recovery through community leadership and empowerment.” Key methods to achieve this goal include strengthening the role of local governments and rural and urban governance in recovery readiness, ensuring they have the authority, resources, and capacity to act effectively as they are in the first line of response.

    In addition, creating flexible financing mechanisms that channel funds directly to local actors and frontline responders is also crucial. These tenets of governance and financing were previously discussed in two key webinars in the build-up to WRRC. Finally, the global DRR community must also institutionalize inclusive consultation processes with native and indigenous communities, marginalized and high-risk populations in recovery planning.

    A renewed focus on people and human recovery 

    Similarly, Priority Action 2 emphasizes strengthening the international community’s capacity to “Build and sustain institutional and human capacity for recovery.” In his remarks at the Opening Ceremony for this year’s WRRC, Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) for Disaster Risk Reduction and Head of UNDRR Kamal Kishore highlighted that the change in name from World Reconstruction Conference (WRC) to World Resilient Recovery Conference (WRRC) is a part of an intentional “shift in focus from reconstructing physical assets to ensuring human recovery.” He further added that, “It is not just important to reconstruct schools and houses and hospitals that have been damaged in an earthquake or a cyclone, but it is even more important that children have access to safe learning spaces, hospitals provide services [and] infrastructure is built to better standards so that it continues to facilitate livelihoods of communities that it seeks to serve.” 

    SRSG Kishore also emphasized the importance of Priority 4 of the Sendai Framework and its emphasis on “Build Back Better”, which was echoed by Mr. Hiroaki Hara, Vice Minister for Policy Coordination of the Cabinet Office in Japan, and co-chair of the International Recovery Platform (IRP). In his remarks, Vice Minister Hara noted that this year marks the 30th anniversary of the Great Hanshin Earthquake in Japan, and that “the recovery from this earthquake generated the initial concept of ‘Build Back Better’ for a disaster-resilient society.” He went on to say that “Today’s conference will set an important milestone by focusing particularly on strengthening recovery readiness at national and local levels.”

    Emphasizing implementation and the way forward 

    Beyond the launch itself, the emphasis now shifts to implementation of the Priority Actions. Several key events in the coming months will offer the DRR community opportunities to track progress. These include the High-level Policy Forum on Recovery in September 2025, Regional Dialogues on Resilient Recovery, and the roll-out of the IRP Recovery Readiness Assessment Framework. 

    During the closing ceremony of the WRRC, Ms. Paola Albrito, Director of UNDRR, emphasized this way forward when she said that, “The International Recovery Platform will move ahead with implementation in close coordination with member states and other relevant partners. This includes convening a high-level political forum on recovery in September of this year to scale our commitment. At the regional level, we will use the regional dialogues on resilient recovery to ensure the regional perspectives and needs are fully integrated. And at the national level…a top priority will be the roll-out of the recovery readiness assessment to support countries in evaluating and strengthening their preparedness for resilient recovery. Let’s move forward, united in purpose and bold in action.”

    UNDRR Director Paola Albrito presents the first five Priority Actions 

    Ambassador Christian Frutiger, Assistant Director General and Head of the Global Cooperation Domain said, “[I am] very proud to launch the Priority Actions to Enhance Readiness for Resilient Recovery. These are not just technical recommendations. They are a call to action for national and local governments and partners to join hands in enhancing readiness for resilient recovery. It is important to emphasize that the 10 priority actions are not stand-alone measures. They are interconnected pieces of a larger puzzle.” A short intermission between the presentation of the first five and second five priorities featured a performance by the percussion band KomandoBidon, to spur attendees onwards. “Let’s follow the drumbeat to action”, Ambassador Fruitger said. “We leave here with a clear set of priority actions; concrete steps we can put into practice. Now is the moment to invest, in readiness, in partnerships and in people. Let us carry this momentum into the 8th session of the Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction. Let us stay connected…and commit to turn our priorities into lasting impact.”

    As part of the Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction (GP2025), WRRC plays a key role in shaping global recovery dialogue. Organized under the umbrella of the International Recovery Platform (IRP), with support from key stakeholders, the conference featured technical sessions, masterclasses and regional consultations – all focused on strengthening readiness for resilient recovery. We invite you to explore the session recordings here.

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: GPDRR 2025 highlights: Tuesday 3 June 2025

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    The human cost of disasters includes lost livelihoods, homes, and cultural ties to landscapes. Where livelihoods are already fragile and being eroded, a disaster-induced displacement of even a few days can damage economic opportunities for years to come. So, the human dimension of recovery remains central to discussions as delegates convened for a second day in several preparatory events for the 8th Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction (GPDRR), namely: the World Resilient Recovery Conference, the Third Stakeholder Forum on DRR, and the Global Early Warning for All Multistakeholder Forum (EW4All).

    The GPDRR official programme was launched with a high-level roundtable event at lunchtime and a formal opening ceremony in the afternoon, followed by an official reception.

    Official programme

    Opening

    Kamal Kishore, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction, and head of UNDRR, opened the event highlighting the exceptional urgency and importance of delivering on the Sendai Framework. He underscored how communities were coming together and the need to learn from their initiatives, imagination, and resourcefulness, and called for commitment from all actors.

    Recalling the recent loss of a Swiss village to a glacier landslide, Amina J. Mohammed, United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, commented that “early warning saves lives but cannot save glaciers from disappearing.” She stressed that disasters and their cascading effects annually cost up to USD 3.2 trillion and noted that record-breaking disasters make entire regions uninsurable. She called for risk-informed development across all sectors; scaled-up public and private investments in resilience; and national financial frameworks that align with adaptation needs.

    Ignazio Cassis, Minister, Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, Switzerland, observed that, “Risk today is everywhere. Fires are where wetlands were centuries ago.” Noting that the GPDRR2025 is the last Global Platform before the 2030 deadline, he urged that countries deliver on the Sendai Framework, apply science and artificial intelligence, and adopt risk mitigation metrics to mobilize and foster resources.

    Amina J. Mohammed, UN Deputy Secretary-General.

    After a musical performance on the Hang Drum and a choreographed presentation by Sendai4Youth, Patricia Danzi, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, opened the Eighth Session of the GPDRR.

    Enhancing national DRR governance by 2030—A dialogue among national platforms for DRR

    In opening remarks to this high-level event, Kishore observed that the risk landscape platform is becoming increasingly complex. He recommended strengthening national DRR platforms and embedding risk reduction into national policies and frameworks; ensuring sustainable and predictable finance with policies matching sustainable long-term plans; and having a common risk assessment framework to support national entities with proper data and analytics.

    Speaking on behalf of the host country, Franziska Schmid, Swiss National Platform for Natural Hazards (PLANAT), described the work of PLANAT and highlighted challenges, including overlapping reporting mechanisms and strategies among national government entities focused on resilience. She stressed the importance of addressing duplication, developing appropriate tools, such as hazard maps and building permits, and ensuring crisis management provisions are actually functional.

    Discussions then followed in a roundtable format, moderated by Paola Albrito, UNDRR. Albrito invited delegates to: describe the demonstrated impact of their National Platforms for DRR, share lessons learned, identify remaining gaps in DRR governance, and highlight ways and opportunities to boost Sendai Framework implementation by 2030.

    View of the room during the Dialogue Among National Platforms for DRR.

    In their interventions, many called for collaboration among regional and country partners. Speakers included the Deputy Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Tajikistan, as well as many ministers and high-level government representatives. They highlighted lessons and challenges, including: enhancing preparedness through strengthening and modernizing approaches; improving planning and promoting concrete analyses from real-life situations at the grassroots; and mobilizing adequate financing and developing technical expertise to adequately prepare communities.

    All interventions are recorded here.

    Third Stakeholder Forum on DRR

    The Stakeholder Forum continued its deliberations throughout the day, concluding in the afternoon with reflections by supporters and participants of the Stakeholder Engagement Mechanism.

    Spotlight session—Early warning for all

    Moderator Rebecca Murphy, Global Network of Civil Society Organisations for Disaster Reduction (GNDR), invited the UNDRR Stakeholder Forum and the Multi-Stakeholder EW4All communities to combine efforts in crafting action points for the 2025 Global Platform on DRR.

    In the keynote, Gavin White, Risk-informed Early Action Partnership (REAP), summarized common themes in Early Warning, noting that: preparing for disasters is about inclusiveness, honest communication and trusting the person who is providing the guidance; and early warning systems (EWS) can act as a bridge overcoming the silo approaches among different DRR stakeholders. Panelists suggested that: while no system can predict with 100% certainty what shape hazards will take, it is crucial to build trust and understand local contexts; response planners should establish appropriate actions to follow early warnings; emergency systems must be tailored to communities’ experiences so that people can distinguish between different disasters and respond uniquely to each threat; both elderly and youth can inform EWS and response planning; and conflict zones require unique solutions that consider the fragility and power dynamics within communities.

    Bridging the gap: Critical media’s role in strengthening alerts and enhancing disaster preparedness

    Giacomo Mazzone, Media Saving Lives, moderated the session. Matthieu Rawolle, EBU Media Intelligence Service, shared examples of how terrestrial radio networks remained uninterrupted and accessible during disasters, and are used to inform the public and facilitate emergency response, especially when mobile phone and internet services are interrupted. He concluded that radio is an essential communication medium in times of crisis and requires investment.

    Raditya Jati, Deputy Minister of System and Strategy, National Disaster Management Authority, Indonesia, emphasized the need for media to go beyond reporting on casualties and housing collapse, and to incorporate education for people to prepare for disasters.

    Event rooms remained full throughout the day.

    Noting that UNDRR is the first UN agency that recognized media’s role in crises, Natalia Ilieva, Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union, described the Media Saving Lives collaboration between the World Broadcasting Unions and UNDRR that focuses on shifting media perspectives from reactive to proactive reporting, showing the real causes for disasters and instructing people on how to avoid harm. Grégoire Ndjaka, African Broadcasting Union, highlighted the reach of radio in Africa extending to places without electricity supply. Orengiye Fyneface, African Broadcasting Union, discussed trust challenges with journalism as a disaster information source in Africa, pointing to bureaucratic hurdles that prevent journalists from reaching scientists.

    Shaping a sustainable tomorrow: Aligning the Sendai Midterm Review with the Pact for the Future

    Abraham Bugre, University of Regina, moderated this session. In her opening remarks, Toni-Shae Freckleton, UNDRR, called for transitioning from short-term responses to long-term prevention. She stated that the Pact for the Future embeds DRR and resilience building.

    Juan Carlos Uribe Vega, United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) highlighted gaps in understanding localization and the importance of local-level governance. Jekulin Lipi Saikia, GNDR, called for a focus on listening to and working with communities, improving financial access, and increasing citizen science. Amber Fletcher, University of Regina, emphasized the role of community-driven actions, citizen science, and community engagement in reaching the diverse range of local voices. In the ensuing discussion, attendees identified communication disconnection, lack of funding, and localization among the persistent gaps between global networks and local realities.

    Closing session

    Tanjir Hossain, UNDRR Stakeholder Engagement Mechanism (SEM), moderated the closing session. Jamie Cummings, SEM, recalled her own experience of disaster when Hurricane Helene struck her hometown of Asheville, North Carolina. Describing how volunteers had operated a traditional Appalachian mule brigade to transport life-saving medications to mountain communities after roads were destroyed, she reflected that, “communities who know the land most, hold the solutions.” Martin Schuldes, German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), stressed that “the substance and spirit” of the conference must translate into concrete action.

    Jilhane El Gaouzi, African Union Commission, urged all concerned to “be realistic and speed up implementation,” given that only five years remain until the Sendai Framework deadline.

    View of the panel during the Closing Session of the Stakeholder Forum.

    World Resilient Recovery Conference

    At the opening of this one-day event, Mutale Nalumongo, Vice-President, Zambia, highlighted Zambia’s promotion of climate-resilient agriculture through promotion of drought-tolerant crop varieties, access to weather-based insurance and investment in EWS, including advisories to farmers. Following further opening remarks by speakers, two plenaries and several thematic sessions took place during the day.

    Plenary 1—Taking stock of current recovery practices

    Carolina Fuentes Castellanos, Director, Santiago Network Secretariat, moderated the session.

    Sujit Mohanty, UNDRR, noted the high costs of reconstruction and the difficulties of countries that are perpetually in a state of recovery from one disaster after another, pointing to the need to address institutional fragmentation.

    Renato Umali Solidum, Jr., Department of Science and Technology, Philippines, advocated for greater cohesion between DRR and climate action as being “two sides of the same coin.” He called for transparent grant-based governance to reach at-risk commuities and address both slow-onset and sudden disasters.

    Leon Lundy, Minister of State Office, The Bahamas, highlighted the launch of The Bahamas’ National Disaster Risk Management Authority. He drew attention to the 2022 Act mandating public body disaster plans, including continuity plans, restoration timelines, and staff redeployment protocols to ensure essential services can be maintained or rapidly restored after a disaster.

    Krishna Swaroop Vatsa, National Disaster Management Authority, India, highlighted allocation of 30% of the Authority’s funds for recovery and reconstruction, which are released through an assessment-based process.

    Fuentes Castellanos offered countries the Secretariat’s support for structuring technical assistance requests.

    Plenary 2—From commitment to action: Leadership for resilient recovery

    Shivangi Chavda, GNDR, moderated the session.

    Guangzhe Chen, World Bank, described the World Bank’s recent transition to supporting infrastructure resilience efforts. He invited countries to access the Bank’s preparedness and response toolkit to strengthen their disaster reduction policies, citing recent examples from Malawi, Albania, and Madagascar.

    On financial instruments, panelists explored ways to distribute more rapid financial support, including through multi-dimensional approaches.

    On displacement following disasters, Rania Sharshr, International Organization for Migration (IOM), emphasized that one of the greatest needs of governments is access to reliable and accurate data on how displaced people have been impacted, and guidance on how to integrate these people into existing communities.

    The session concluded with the presentation of the Resilient Recovery Framework by Abhilash Panda, UNDRR.

    Thematic sessions

    Further sessions took place through the day. Besides the three sessions reported here, delegates took part in other Stakeholder Forum sessions on governance mechanisms, unlocking financial potential, housing reconstruction, and multi-hazard EWS.

    Restoring livelihood: Solutions for disaster-induced displacement and resilient recovery

    Mona Folkesson, UN Development Coordination Office (DCO), moderated the session.

    Emad Adly, Arab Network for Environment and Development, highlighted water scarcity as a key issue for the region and local-level coordination as a key challenge. Alexandra Bilak, Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), cited experience from the 2015 Gorkha Earthquake in Nepal to show how livelihood erosion influences the severity of displacement.

    Ibrahim Osman Farah, Vice President, Somali Regional State, Ethiopia, described livelihood restoration during return and resettlement of internally displaced persons, through ensuring cultural access to land, water, schools, and income-generating opportunities as long-term resilience-based approaches.

    Tasneem Siddiqui, University of Dhaka, recounted how students were a driving force for the university’s Refugee and Migration Research Unit, which now has formed Adaptation Committees in many local areas and supports implementation of national policies on livelihood diversification and skills training. She urged treating displacement not as a humanitarian issue, but as a human rights one.

    Aslam Perwaiz, Executive Director, Asian Disaster Preparedness Center, emphasized skill development with local communities and SMEs to create livelihood options for displaced communities.

    Driving resilience: The critical role of private sector’s operational readiness for resilient recovery

    Moderator, Cedrick Moriggi, Corporate Chief Resilience Officer Network, emphasized connecting the corporate world with the UNDRR world. Ommid Saberi, International Finance Corporation, recommended investing in the “economics of families,” or small businesses, saying even small government incentives can mobilize large funds from the private sector. Dorothee Baumann-Pauly, University of Geneva, said human rights are the enablers for resilience. Jonathan Rake, Swiss Re Solutions, highlighted the need for the private sector to engage locally and to develop and combine social programmes with parametric solutions. Chris Ulatt, Octopus, said upfront investment to boost resilience is the right move, but observed that few investors will remain for the duration of an investment. Kerry Hinds, Department of Emergency Management, Barbados, described an audit tool to ascertain risks and priorities for public-private partnerships, noting the tool helps standardize and trigger business continuity protocols for disaster risk management.

    Turning experience into action: learning from large-scale disasters

    Dilanthi Amaratunga, Intergovernmental Coordination Group for the Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning and Mitigation System, moderated the session.

    Banak Joshua Dei Wal, South Sudan’s DRR Focal Point, highlighted the need to work together and identify risks for Sendai Framework implementation to be effective.

    Saini Yang, Integrated Research on Disaster Risk (IRDR), emphasized that China’s National Flood Prevention System has proven effective, with more than an 80% decrease in flood mortality rates over the last 20 years.

    Trevor Bhupsingh, Public Safety Canada, highlighted Canada’s Disaster Financial Assistance Arrangements.

    Guy Gryspeert, Honeywell, defined resilience as the capability of preventing a crisis by having awareness and planning in place.

    Ali Hamza Pehlivan, Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), Türkiye, highlighted the usefulness of their National Disaster Response Plan during the 2023 earthquake. Makiko Ohashi, Cabinet Office of Japan, noted the utility of planning on the assumption that a mega-disaster may occur at any time and of reviewing DDR plans in the aftermath of disasters.

    Participants engage in discussions between sessions throughout the day.

    Global Early Warning for All (EW4All) Multistakeholder Forum

    After thematic sessions during the day, EW4All concluded its discussions. Gavin White, Risk-Informed Early Action Partnership, moderated the closing session. Panelists highlighted the importance of focusing on preparedness and developing trust, the need to shift perspectives toward a systemic approach to EWS, and the need to increase private funding.

    In closing remarks, Andrea Hermenejildo, Deputy Secretary General for Risk Management, Ecuador, stressed EWS is not only a technical issue, but also involves social justice. Paola Albrito, Director, UNDRR, emphasized that EW4All is both needed and achievable. Noting the central role of local communities, she underlined that resilience is built with communities.

    Doreen Bogdan-Martin, Secretary-General, International Telecommunication Union, underlined that scaling-up EWS requires partnerships and breaking silos across economic sectors, UN agencies and industries.

    Jagan Chapagain, Secretary-General, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), stressed that inclusive action and investment in EW4All is essential.

    Celeste Saulo, Secretary-General, World Meteorological Organization (WMO), stated that having EWS in just 108 countries is neither sufficient nor acceptable, and called for closing this “justice gap” by providing EWS worldwide and accelerating the transformation needed to protect every person on Earth.

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Priority actions to enhance readiness for resilient recovery

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    The Priority Actions to Enhance Readiness for Resilient Recovery were officially launched at the World Resilient Recovery Conference (WRRC) on 3 June 2025. They are designed to take joined action to accelerate the implementation of Priority Action 4 of the Sendai Framework: Enhancing disaster preparedness for effective response and to “Build Back Better” in recovery, rehabilitation and reconstruction. 

    The ten priority actions are critical steps to build a more resilient future for all: 

    • Action 1: Assess recovery readiness and strengthen governance arrangements
    • Action 2: Build and sustain institutional and human capacity for recovery
    • Action 3: Secure and enable predictable, inclusive preparedness and recovery financing
    • Action 4: Foster multi-stakeholder partnerships and innovation for resilient recovery
    • Action 5: Enhance collaboration with the private sector to bolster resilience and recovery efforts
    • Action 6: Enable rapid livelihood and economic recovery
    • Action 7: Enhance resilient post-disaster housing reconstruction and infrastructure recovery
    • Action 8: Increase public awareness for recovery readiness  
    • Action 9: Localize recovery through community leadership and empowerment
    • Action 10: Establish adaptive monitoring, evaluation, and learning systems for resilient recovery 

    At the global level, the International Recovery Platform will spearhead the implementation, in close coordination with Member States and other relevant partners. This includes convening a High-level Policy Forum on Recovery in September of this year, to scale up commitments. 

    At the regional level, Regional Dialogues on Resilient Recovery will continue to ensure that regional perspectives and needs are fully integrated. 

    At the national level, a top priority will be the rollout of the Recovery Readiness Assessment, to support countries in evaluating and strengthening their prepardness for resilient recovery. This process will not only, help Member States in identifying gaps.

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Voices from South Darfur

    Source: Médecins Sans Frontières –

    Violence, insecurity and hunger are devastating people’s lives in South Darfur, Sudan, according to a new report released today by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

    The report, Voices from South Darfur, illustrates in vivid testimony how the impact of pervasive violence, a healthcare system in ruins and an inadequate international response have all combined to push people’s coping strategies to their limits. 

    Voices from South Darfur pdf — 31.43 MB Download
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    MIL OSI NGO –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: ECB reports on Bulgaria’s progress towards euro adoption

    Source: European Central Bank

    4 June 2025

    • ECB report assesses Bulgaria’s progress towards Economic and Monetary Union
    • Positive assessment with respect to possible euro adoption on 1 January 2026

    Bulgaria has made good progress towards economic convergence with the euro area since 2024, according to the Convergence Report of the European Central Bank (ECB) published today.

    “This positive assessment of convergence paves the way for Bulgaria to introduce the euro as of 1 January 2026 and become the 21st EU Member State to join the euro area,” said Philip R. Lane, Member of the ECB Executive Board. “I wish to congratulate Bulgaria on its tremendous dedication to making the adjustments needed.”

    According to the ECB’s assessment, Bulgaria is within the reference values of the convergence criteria and complies with the legal requirements. Having participated in the exchange rate mechanism (ERM II) and the banking union since 10 July 2020, Bulgaria has made another step towards European integration under challenging economic conditions. Achieving an environment that is conducive to sustainable convergence in Bulgaria requires stability-oriented economic policies and wide-ranging structural reforms. These policies are discussed in more detail in the report.

    As regards the price stability criterion, in April 2025, the 12-month average rate of HICP inflation in Bulgaria stood at 2.7%, i.e. just below the reference value of 2.8% (Chart 1). The reference value is based on the three best performing Member States in terms of price stability, i.e. Ireland (1.2%), Finland (1.3%) and Italy (1.4%), taking their average inflation over the past 12 months and adding 1.5 percentage points.

    Chart 1

    HICP inflation and reference value

    (annual percentage changes)

    Sources: European Commission (Eurostat) and ECB calculations.
    Notes: 12-month moving average rounded to one decimal.

    Regarding the fiscal criterion, Bulgaria has not been subject to an excessive deficit procedure since 2012. The country’s general government budget deficit stood at 3.0% of GDP in 2024, i.e. at the level of the 3% reference value (Chart 2). Its general government gross debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 24.1%, i.e. well below the 60% reference value, and it has been well below 60% of GDP for the past 20 years.

    Chart 2

    General government balance and debt

    (as a percentage of GDP)

    Sources: European System of Central Banks and European Commission (Eurostat).

    As regards the exchange rate criterion, the Bulgarian lev participated in ERM II in the two-year reference period from 20 May 2023 to 19 May 2025. Over the reference period, the lev did not exhibit any deviation from the central rate of 1.95583 levs per euro. Bulgaria has completed almost all of its ERM II post-entry commitments, but further progress is needed to address the outstanding shortcomings in the area of anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism.

    Long-term interest rates in Bulgaria stood at 3.9%, on average, over the reference period from May 2024 to April 2025 and were therefore below the 5.1% reference value for the interest rate convergence criterion.

    As for the compatibility of national legislation, Bulgarian law is compatible with the Treaties and the Statute of the ESCB, as required under Article 131 of the Treaty.

    Today’s report was published following Bulgaria’s request, the next regular Convergence Report of the ECB will be published in 2026.

    For media queries, please contact Benoit Deeg, tel.: +49 172 1683704.

    Notes

    • European Commission Convergence Report 2025
    • Close cooperation established between ECB and Bulgaria
    • The Convergence Report of the ECB reviews the economic and legal convergence of non-euro area EU Member States with a derogation every second year or at the request of a specific country. It assesses the degree of sustainable economic convergence with the euro area, whether the national legislation is compatible with the EU legal framework, and whether the statutory requirements are fulfilled for the respective national central banks. Given its “opt-out” clause, Denmark is not covered by this assessment unless this is specifically requested by the country.
    • The cut-off date for the statistics included in this Convergence Report was 19 May 2025. The reference period for the price stability criterion and the long-term interest rate criterion is from May 2024 to April 2025. Forecasts are based on the European Commission’s Spring 2025 Economic Forecast and other information relevant to a forward-looking assessment of the sustainability of convergence.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Foreign minister Caspar Veldkamp to temporarily take over Foreign Trade and Development portfolio

    Source: Government of the Netherlands

    News item | 04-06-2025 | 13:03

    On June 3, 2025, Prime Minister Dick Schoof tendered the resignation of the members of government belonging to the Freedom Party (PVV) to His Majesty the King. All other ministers and state secretaries will continue in the capacity of a caretaker government. For the time being, Minister of Foreign Affairs Caspar Veldkamp will take over the duties of former foreign trade and development minister Reinette Klever.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Chancellor unveils biggest ever investment in city region local transport

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Chancellor unveils biggest ever investment in city region local transport

    Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves spoke at Mellor Bus Factory in Rochdale on 4 June 2025.

    It’s fantastic to be in Rochdale, at Mellor Bus Factory;  

    Not just a good local business; although it is that 

    But also a key part of the Bee Network supply chain. 

    And good to see so many familiar faces here – including the leaders of some of our local councillors.  

    Eleven months ago today, this government was elected on a promise of change. 

    To deliver security for working people and renewal for our country.  

    To build a stronger, and more resilient Britain; 

    A country built on, and powered through, the contribution of people in all parts of our country. 

    Today, I will set out more of our plans to make that a reality.

    I know how hard the last few years have been for so many people.  

    I have always been clear that the central challenge facing this government is to improve living standards and to renew our public services. 

    And that the only sustainable way to do that is to turn around Britain’s growth performance after fourteen wasted years. 

    To put more money in people’s pockets; 

    To revive our high streets; 

    To give our children the opportunities that they need to succeed. 

    Put simply: to make working people –to make our country – better off.

    The central barrier to economic growth has been underinvestment.  

    For too long, Britain has lagged behind every other G7 economy when it comes to business investment as a share of GDP; 

    One of the consequences was that the last Parliament was the worst on record for living standards.  

    This government’s economic strategy is designed to fix that problem, underpinned by the three pillars that I set out before the election: 

    First, stability – so that investors, businesses and families have the confidence to plan for the future; 

    Second, reform – to remove the barriers that get in the way of so much potential; 

    And third, investment – the lifeblood of growth, and therefore of living standards. 

    My cabinet colleagues and I have wasted no time in pursuing this agenda: 

    Overhauling our planning system – the single greatest barrier that businesses told me was standing in their way… 

    … starting, in our first week in office, with the biggest reforms to our planning system in a generation; 

    Launching Britain’s first National Wealth Fund, to help mobilise more than £70billion of private sector investment into some of the industries of the future like clean energy, defence and tech; 

    Reforming our pensions system, to unlock billions of  pounds of investment in British assets; 

    Forging three new major trade deals to save and create jobs – with India, the United States and the European Union – covering steel, manufacturing, and agriculture 

    And, alongside that, we will be shaping a modern industrial strategy and ten-year infrastructure strategy, bringing together government, business and working people, to focus on the high potential parts of our economy and our future.

    We have already made significant progress:  

    While it is just one quarter, the most recent numbers showed Britain to be the fastest growing economy in the G7;

    And real wages rose by more in less than ten months [redacted political content].

    But we know that not enough people are feeling that yet; 

    That trust remains low, and prosperity is too narrowly shared; 

    I know that we must do more.  

    In a week’s time, I will set out a spending review targeted squarely on the renewal of Britain; 

    Focused on the priorities of working people;  

    By investing in our security, in our health, and in our economic growth. 

    To deliver on the promise of change to make you and your family better off.

    I have long said that the only viable strategy for growth today is one that builds on strong and broad foundations.  

    A Britain that is better off cannot rely on a handful of places forging ahead of the rest; 

    And so we must reject once and for all the exhausted idea that a strong economy can be powered by just a few people, just a few industries, just a few parts of the country.  

    The result of such thinking has been growth created in too few places, and too few people feeling the benefits; 

    Wide gaps between regions, and between our cities and towns; 

    A sense of injustice, as our social contract frays;  

    And diminishing returns for growth and productivity.  

    For every success story, and there are many, there is potential held back:

    By the long legacy of deindustrialisation [redacted political content] that consigned whole industries – and whole communities that depended upon them – to decline;  

    And, yes, by spending decisions made down in London.

    I’ve been a Leeds MP for fifteen years, another great city.  

    Like so many of my colleagues, wherever they represent – and so many of our constituents – I am painfully familiar with big promises that come to nothing.  

    The frustration people feel, as good work and opportunity slip away; 

    While young people are presented with a choice to stay close to home where they want to be, or to move away to find a better job, paying better wages.  

    Families wrenched apart or opportunities missed out on.  

    No one should have to make that choice.  

    So, that is why I and my colleagues are determined to change things.  

    Because I know there is brilliant talent to be found right across our country. 

    I can see the potential in all our towns and our cities; 

    The creativity and scientific rigour in our universities; 

    The leading businesses pushing at the frontier… 

    … in sectors that will be at the core of our modern industrial strategy – in tech, energy, transport, and finance. 

    I see that potential everywhere that I go. 

    I know that a prosperous United Kingdom depends on the economic strength of all its parts. 

    And on the contribution of working people everywhere.   

    And that is why, this autumn, I will be partnering with the Business Secretary, and with the mayor of the West Midlands, Richard Parker, to host a Regional Investment Summit…  

    … to showcase the investment potential that all of our regions have to offer.

    Over the next week, you will hear a lot of debate about my so-called “self-imposed” fiscal rules.  

    Now, contrary to some conventional wisdom, I didn’t come into politics because I care passionately about fiscal rules. 

    I came into politics because I want to make a difference to the lives of working people.  

    Because I believe – [redacted political content] –  that every person should have the same opportunities as others to thrive and succeed… 

    … no matter what their parents do…  

    … no matter where they grow up.  

    And because I know that economic responsibility and social justice go hand in hand. 

    After 2022, no one should need to be told about the dangers of reckless borrowing for the financial security of ordinary families.

    [redacted political content]

    And the results would be the same:  

    Market instability and interest rates rising… 

    … with soaring rents and thousands of pounds extra on families’ mortgages…Businesses would pay more for their borrowing and 

    Pensions that people save hard for would be put in peril, again. 

    I would never take those risks. [redacted political content].

    Strong and transparent fiscal rules are an indispensable safeguard for working people – and that is why my rules are non-negotiable. 

    So let’s be clear:  

    It is not me ‘imposing’ borrowing limits on government… 

    Those limits are the product of economic reality. 

    So fiscal rules do matter.

    [redacted political content]

    At the budget last year, I changed Britain’s fiscal rules to better serve both stability and investment, giving us the strong foundations that we need to renew our country as we promised. 

    The first rule is for stability: 

    That day-to-day government spending should be paid for by tax receipts.  

    That is the sound economic choice; 

    And it is the fair choice – because it is not right to expect future generations to pay for the services we rely on today.

    [redacted political content]

    Instead, we inherited a total mess:  

    A £22 billion black hole in day-to-day spending, and debt at its highest level since the early 1960s…  

    … and yet, at the same time public services at breaking point.  

    Last year, I made the decisions I judged right and necessary to get Britain on a sound financial footing…  

    … and to provide the urgent resource that our public services needed. 

    That is why I made decisions – some of them extremely difficult, and certainly not all of them popular – to raise taxes on business and indeed on the wealthiest in the budget; 

    Enabling a £190 billion real-terms increase over the Spending Review period [redacted political content]…

    … spending for our schools, our hospitals, and our police the services upon which we all rely. 

    Even with those decisions and even with that injection of cash, not every department will get everything that they want next week;  

    And I have had to say no to things that I want to do, too.  

    But that is not because of my fiscal rules; 

    It is the result of [redacted political content].

    It is the stability that my rules supports, and the choices we made as a government in October, that have helped facilitate four cuts to interest rates since the last election – saving £650 a year for a family taking out a new, typical two-year fixed-rate mortgage. 

    My second fiscal rule is what enables us to invest in Britain’s economic renewal – to keep Britain’s public sector debt on a sustainable path, while allowing government to invest in the infrastructure that will provide stronger growth in future.  

    The decisions that we made in October meant that, for the first time, the Treasury takes account of the benefits, and not just the costs, of investment. 

    Together the fiscal rules mean that, unlike our predecessors, we will not be balancing the books by cutting investment.  

    And that is why we can increase investment by over £113 billion more than the last government plans; 

    Meaning public investment will be at its highest sustained level since the 1970s. 

    Combined, these changes deliver over £300 billion of extra spending across five years, on our public services and on our economic future. 

    Britain faces a binary choice – investment, or decline.  

    And I choose investment.

    Because I believe in an entrepreneurial, and an active state; 

    And I reject wholeheartedly the old-fashioned, dogmatic view that the only good thing a government can do is to get out of the way. 

    These choices, that I am making, are about realising that entrepreneurial, and active state. 

    At the spending review, I will set out, in detail, the allocation of those additional resources – to power growth and renew our public services. 

    The choice is already clear:

    [redacted political content] we offer change.  

    Change that we can now deliver, because of the choices we have made.

    Today, I can tell you about one part of those investments. 

    They are underpinned by a step change in how government approaches and evaluates the case for investing in all of our regions. 

    The Treasury Green Book sets the guidance for how public servants assess the value for money of government projects. It may sound dry, but it’s one of the reasons why there hasn’t been enough investment in the North and Midlands for decades. 

    I have heard from mayors across the country – from Andy, but also from Steve Rotheram, the mayor of Liverpool– that previous governments have wielded the Green Book against them as an excuse to deny important investment in their areas and their people. 

    That’s why, in January, I ordered a review of the Green Book and how it is being used, to make sure that this government gives every region a fair hearing when it comes to investment. 

    I will publish the full conclusions of that review next week. 

    However, I can tell you now, that it will mark a new approach to decision-making in government; 

    And an end to siloed Whitehall thinking… 

    … making sure that government is taking account of the reinforcing economic effects of infrastructure investments, in housing, in skills and in jobs; 

    To invest in all our nations and regions, not just a few.

    Next week, I will set out our plans in full – for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland; in housing, in energy, in roads and in rail. 

    But today, I want to tell you about just one part of our plan – renewing our transport systems in England’s largest mayoral regions, including here in Greater Manchester and across the North and the Midlands. 

    Because connectivity is an absolutely critical factor in unlocking the potential of towns and cities outside of London; 

    One of the areas in which previous governments have promised most, but delivered least. And that will now change.

    Let me tell you why it matters. 

    Modern growth rests on dynamic, connected city-regions;  

    Creating clusters of activity so that people can get around… 

    … communicate… 

    … share ideas…  

    … commute… 

    … find good work… 

    … and earn wages that flow back into strong local economies. 

    Stronger transport links within cities and the towns around them create opportunity by connecting labour markets… 

    … and making it easier for firms to buy and sell goods and services in different places, to different people.

    [redacted political content] strong investment in the past in strongly integrated transport systems, including in London, helps explain London’s  global success, and also its advantage over other UK cities.   

    We want London to succeed.

    But it is the lack of that infrastructure which puts England’s other great cities – Birmingham, Liverpool, Newcastle – at a disadvantage compared to their European counterparts that have this infrastructure. 

    That helps to explain our underperformance relative to other European economies. 

    If we were to increase the productivity of those second cities in the UK to match the national average, our economy would be £86 billion larger. 

    And so, because this government believes that prosperity must come from the contribution of us all… 

    Because all of the sizeable evidence that public investment can crowd in many times its volume in private investments… 

    And because we know the potential that exists in all of our towns and cities…  

    … I can tell you today that we will be making the biggest ever investment by a British government in transport links within our city regions, and their surrounding towns; 

    £15.6 billion in transport funding settlements, to be delivered by our regional mayors;  

    More than doubling real-terms spending on city-region connectivity.

    [redacted political content]

    Thanks to the changes to our fiscal framework announced in the budget – this government now does have the money to fund it. 

    And that money is going to our mayors, to deliver on the priorities of their communities: 

    New trams, new train stations, and bus routes to link up our towns and cities; 

    Unlocking new homes, new jobs, new investment and leisure opportunities across our regions.  

    Let me take you through those city regional investments in turn. 

    Investment in Greater Manchester… 

    … to help make the Bee Network, that is built here in Rochdale, the UK’s first fully integrated, zero-emission public transport system by 2030… 

    … with new tram stops in Bury, North Manchester and Oldham… 

    … and a new Metrolink extension to Stockport…  

    … meaning shorter commutes into central Manchester… 

    … making sure that ninety percent of Greater Manchester residents will live within a five-minute walk of a bus or tram that comes at least once every half-hour… 

    … and opening up connections for people in Bury, in Heywood, in Rochdale and in Oldham to the tens of thousands of new jobs at the Northern Gateway.  

    Investment in the Liverpool city region…  

    … backing the mayor Steve Rotheram, to deliver three new rapid bus routes… 

    … linking up the city centre, John Lennon Airport, Anfield, the new Everton stadium on Bramley-Moore Dock, and new homes built on the Central Docks redevelopment; 

    Alongside the largest ever investment in Merseyside railway stations, to serve Halton, St Helens, and Woodchurch;  

    Investment in West Yorkshire, so that Tracy Brabin can fulfil her manifesto commitment to the people of West Yorkshire to deliver the Mass Transit system…  

    … with spades in the ground by 2028, unlocking in the process over seven thousand new homes… 

    Improving local transport for 700,000 people… 

    To link up Bradford, Kirklees, Calderdale, Wakefield, Pudsey, and Leeds…  

    … the largest city in western Europe without a light rail or metro system – but not for much longer. 

    Investment in the North East…  

    … to allow our mayor Kim McGuinness to extend the Tyne and Wear Metro…  

    … linking Washington with Newcastle and Sunderland…  

    … and – in line with our industrial strategy priorities – strengthening one of the largest advanced manufacturing zones in Europe, connecting Nissan and the businesses in its supply chain to a wider pool of talent. 

    Investment in South Yorkshire, supporting our mayor Oliver Coppard… 

    … so that, in addition to the reopening of Doncaster Airport…  

    … he can renew the existing, and now publicly controlled, Supertram network… 

    … with track replacements, overhead line maintenance, and rolling stock renewal 

    … with a full fleet of new vehicles by 2032… 

    … a bigger and better integrated transport network… 

    … linking jobs and homes in Sheffield and Rotherham. 

    Investment in the West of England…  

    … backing the mayor Helen Godwin’s plans for mass transit development across the region… 

    … and improved rail infrastructure, to help unlock more services between Brabazon and the city centre… 

    … meaning shorter journey times to Bristol Temple Meads from across the wider area. 

    Investment in the Tees Valley, in Middlesborough station, unblocking local networks and increasing capacity on local lines; 

    Investment in the East Midlands, so that our mayor Claire Ward can forge the Trent Arc – linking Derby and Nottingham to create tens of thousands of new jobs and homes… 

    … connecting Infinity Park Investment Zone and the East Midlands Freeport, with sites including Ratcliffe-on-Soar, clean energy and advanced manufacturing, and East Midlands Intermodal Park, home of Toyota in the region, along the Trent Arc Corridor; 

    And investment in the West Midlands, backing our mayor Richard Parker’s plans for a metro extension from Birmingham city centre to the new Sports Quarter – to unlock more than £3 billion of private investment in an area with some of the lowest levels of economic activity in all of theUK… 

    … with the potential to create more than 8,000 jobs and catalyse the regeneration of East Birmingham and of Solihull.  

    For people living in some of our biggest cities and the towns around them, these measures will mean shorter commute times;  

    They will mean good work, and money flowing back into local economies; 

    They will mean businesses connecting with workers, customers, and supply chains;  

    They will mean the revival of high streets;

    They will mean young people able to stay close to homes and pursue the opportunities that they dream of; 

    It will mean more growth, more parts of our country benefitting, and more people and more places across the UK feeling better off.  

    In short – they will mean the renewal of our cities and our towns all across the UK.

    As we build train stations, tram lines and buses, that will mean orders for steel made here in Britain.  

    Six weeks ago, this government was presented with a choice.  

    To allow British Steel in Scunthorpe to close, or to intervene – in a way that British governments have been too reluctant to do for far too long.  

    In opposition, I promised that our economic policy would be guided by what I call “securonomics”. 

    A belief that an active state should, and would, take the necessary action to provide security for families and resilience for our national economy.  

    That we would end the days when governments turned a blind eye to where things are made and who makes them. 

    And I meant what I said. 

    And so I was not prepared to tolerate a situation in which Britain’s steel capacity was fundamentally undermined; 

    In which our infrastructure, our industries, our security became dependent on foreign imports.  

    And I was not prepared to see another working-class community lose its pride, the prosperity, the dignity that industry provides. 

    So we intervened, to save British steel and the jobs that went with it.  

    And in line with that principle, as we invest in transport for our regions, that investment will support British supply chains. 

    I promised that this [redacted political content] government would buy, make and sell more here in Britain.  

    And I meant it: 

    Growth, made in Britain.  

    Jobs, here in Britain.  

    And a new generation of crucial national infrastructure, built right here in Britain.

    What I have set out today is just one part of our ambitious plan for the renewal of Britain. 

    A plan which marks a decisive break with the days when government stood back and shrugged its shoulders, as jobs, industry and aspiration were drained away from so many of our towns and cities.   

    Steps towards a new economic model – driven by investment in all parts of the country, not just a few. 

    That is how we intend to deliver on that promise of change; 

    To make you and your family better off.  

    Next week, there will be more to come.  

    This government promised change.  

    And we are keeping that promise.  

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Record number of local businesses back Southsea Food Festival

    Source: City of Portsmouth

    The popular Southsea Food Festival returns on 5 and 6 July and is supported by a record number of local businesses.  Over 80 food and drink businesses are taking part of which over half are from the Portsmouth area and backed by regional businesses that have come forward to sponsor the event.

    Celebrating its 17th anniversary, Southsea Food Festival has grown into one of the South Coast’s biggest food festivals. New for 2025 supported by Southsea Deli, Waitrose (Southsea) and Express FM is the Kitchen Stage where chefs and restaurateurs from Portsmouth businesses including The Briny and Natty’s Jerk will showcase their specialities, offering tips and tasty treats. The event is also supported by Victorious Festivals Ltd, Nation Radio, Hovertravel, toob and Portsmouth marketing specialist Evosa.

    Councillor Steve Pitt, Leader of Portsmouth City Council with responsibility for economic development said:

    “I want to thank all the local and regional businesses who have stepped up to support this year’s Southsea Food Festival. Their backing not only helps make the event a success but also supports our local economy. By working together, we can create great events for our communities, support local jobs, and showcase the incredible talent and businesses we have right here in Portsmouth.”

    The two-day event takes place in the heart of Southsea, forming a vibrant hub of activity around Clarendon Road, Palmerston Road, Osborne Road, and Avenue De Caen. Food lovers can try locally produced smokehouse BBQ, macarons, chilli sauces, wines, brewed beers and even Portsmouth’s own award-winning aged rum.  Alongside the local suppliers there are traders showcasing foods from far flung corners of the world plus plenty of options for veggies, vegans and even pet dogs. Plus, many of the hot food traders will be offering smaller “taster” portions to allow visitors to sample a greater variety of dishes.

    Southsea Food Festival is part of a programme of activities to support small businesses in Portsmouth. The event celebrates the thriving and diverse food scene of Portsmouth & Southsea’s independent restaurants, retailers, and communities.

    Find out more at rediscoverportsmouth.co.uk

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: No restrictions on train traffic between Novye Cheryomushki and Oktyabrskaya are planned for June

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Restrictions on the section between the stations “Novye Cheryomushki” and “Oktyabrskaya” of the Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya line are no longer planned in June. They were necessary to create a transition to the future metro station “Akademicheskaya” of the Troitskaya line.

    “To minimize inconvenience to passengers, we introduced restrictions on weekends, when fewer people use transport. In addition, we launched free compensation buses, which transported more than 113 thousand people. Employees of the Passenger Mobility Center were on duty at stations and helped build alternative routes,” said the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Transport and Industry

    Maxim Liksutov.

    The first two sections Troitskaya line opened Sergei Sobyanin last year. The line will connect the ZIL station with Troitsk. By 2030, the length of this line will be more than 43 kilometers. It will become the longest metro line outside the Moscow Ring Road. Now, you can transfer from the Troitskaya Line to Sokolnicheskaya and Bolshaya Koltsevaya, in the future, there will be transfers to Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya and the Moscow Central Circle.

    Quickly find out the main news of the capital inofficial telegram channel the city of Moscow.

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

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

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/154814073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Schools, clinics and sports complexes: what social facilities are being built in the city

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    About 230 social infrastructure facilities are being built in the capital using municipal and extra-budgetary funds. Among them are educational, medical, sports and cultural institutions. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.

    “Currently, 149 educational and 45 sports facilities, more than 20 buildings for medical organizations and 12 for cultural institutions are being built in the capital using all sources of financing. Of the total number of social facilities under construction, 193 are being built by investors. Among them are 128 educational facilities, 42 sports complexes, 15 health and wellness institutions and eight cultural and educational facilities. In particular, in total, more than 78 thousand school and preschool places will be created in the capital at the expense of the city and investors, and clinics and medical centers will be able to accept about four thousand patients per shift,” said Vladimir Efimov.

    Modern buildings appear next to new residential developments and also complement the social infrastructure of historically established areas of the city.

    “Developers are actively involved in creating comfortable and modern social infrastructure: they are building kindergartens, schools, medical centers and sports complexes along with housing. In the future, the educational facilities they build will provide the capital with an additional 68 thousand school and preschool places. For example, in the Yuzhnoye Medvedkovo district, a kindergarten is being built on the territory of a new residential area on Polyarnaya Street. The area of the building will be about 4.4 thousand square meters, it is designed for 220 pupils,” added the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of Urban Development Policy of the City of Moscow

    Vladislav Ovchinsky.

    Permits for the construction of all facilities were issued by the capital’s State Construction Supervision Committee. According to the head of the department Anton Slobodchikova, the committee supervises 209 buildings of various social purposes. As part of control and supervision activities, inspectors check the compliance of the erected structures and materials used with the requirements of the design documentation. Specialists of the subordinate Center for Expertise, Research and Testing in Construction carry out instrumental control, including finishing work. This guarantees the quality and safety of schools and kindergartens during their further operation.

    Investors also pay great attention to the development of sports infrastructure. Thus, in the Severnoye Butovo district, a sports and recreation complex with a football field and tennis courts will appear. Its total area will be more than 10 thousand square meters. The facility will appear near the Butovsky forest park at the address: Sadki communal zone, Polyany street, building 12, plot 2.

    Schools, kindergartens and sports centers: what social infrastructure facilities are being built in the capital

    Earlier, Sergei Sobyanin announced plans for a large-scale renovation district sports facilities.

    The construction of social facilities in Moscow corresponds to the goals and initiatives of the national project “Infrastructure for life”.

    Get the latest news quickly official telegram channelthe city of Moscow.

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

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

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/154791073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Local News – Porirua’s BizFest announces two outstanding speakers

    Source: Porirua City Council

    One of New Zealand’s most iconic athletes will be speaking at Porirua’s BizFest on 1 July, joining the founder of an international dance company who grew up in Cannons Creek.
    BizFest 2025: Kōpū i te pae – Light up the Horizon will take place on 1 July, a day that aims to inspire and connect business people in our city. Topics of discussion on the day will include what’s on the economic horizon, how business leaders are navigating uncertain times in the business world, and what are the key ingredients for innovation and success now and into the future.
    Dame Valerie Adams is recognised worldwide for her feats in shot put and is a leader and role model in the Pacific community for her work outside athletics.
    From 2006 to 2016, Dame Valerie was unbeaten in major championships and won Olympic gold at Beijing 2008 and London 2012. A seven-time Halberg sportswoman of the year, her story is one that inspires – post her shot put career, she works in the community to support a number of causes and with commercial partners, while also being chair of the World Athletics Athletes’ Commission, a World Athletics Council member and on the board of High Performance Sport New Zealand.
    Porirua Mayor Anita Baker says having Dame Valerie speak in Porirua is a coup, bringing value to the event by being able to share her experiences as an athlete at the very highest level, her commitment to her community and health and wellbeing, and her advocacy for athletes, especially among women in sport.
    “Someone like Dame Valerie will add immense value to BizFest – she is someone who has demonstrated perseverance, discipline and an amazing work ethic, prioritising health and wellbeing, and commitment to helping others. I can’t wait to hear what she has to say about pushing through challenges and building resilience,” Mayor Baker says.
    Black Grace’s Neil Ieremia, meanwhile, will add a homegrown flavour to BizFest, with his journey one of inspiration and perspiration.
    Born in Cannons Creek and of Samoan heritage, Ieremia left home and his banking job at 19 and enrolled in a fulltime dance programme.
    Founding dance company Black Grace in 1995, he has enjoyed sell-out performances in the US, Mexico and Canada and won numerous accolades at home and abroad for what Black Grace has achieved across the world.
    Appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2016, Ieremia received the inaugural Moana Creative Enterprise Award at the 2022 Pacific Business Trust Awards and is an honorary member of Dance ICONS, the international organisation of choreographers, along with numerous other honours.
    Mayor Baker says Ieremia’s talk at BizFest should not be missed.
    “Neil was rightly inducted into our Hall of Fame at Te Rauparaha Arena in 2022 – he is a local who has gone on to impressive heights around the world and will have a beautiful and authentic story to tell about seizing opportunities and taking our stories from Porirua to the global stage.” 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Healthline celebrates its 25-year anniversary of trusted service and impact – and launches a GP booking initiative

    Source: Whakarongorau Aotearoa

    An estimated 3.45 million people have contacted Healthline since it launched 25 years ago
    Whether it is for a 2am check on their baby’s continuous crying, a rash on an arm, or information about where to get more help, the people of Aotearoa know they can rely on the free, 24/7, trusted support from Healthline clinicians. They have relied on that for 25 years – a milestone that is being acknowledged this month.
    There are thousands of people across Aotearoa who have a Healthline magnet on their fridge, who have the 0800 611 116 number in their phone, and who rely on unseen Healthline nurses and paramedics. Healthline plays a critical role in improving access to care.
    Hannah Sleeman, lives in a remote area of the Waikato and has used Healthline several times including when her sore ear symptom was quickly identified by a Healthcare clinician as shingles, and she was advised to see a doctor. She was given the costs and locations of local clinics and was able to get the care she needed quickly.
    The Healthline service has grown from an initial 16 nurses managing 20,000 calls in its first year, to over 150 nurses and paramedics managing 400,000 contacts annually – that’s 1,000 every day.
    What started as a phone service in May 2000 has expanded to include online services, with callers able to share videos and photos to help Healthline clinicians provide the most accurate advice. In addition to calling the trusted 0800 611116 number, people now access Healthline’s healthy.org.nz website for reliable health information, and can request a call back from a clinician, if their query isn’t urgent. The service also now includes the option for people to speak with a Māori clinician.
    Healthline is funded by Health New Zealand and since 2015 has been run by Whakarongorau Aotearoa / New Zealand Telehealth Services.
    Whakarongorau CEO Glynis Sandland said “Healthline is a virtual first responder for health queries, across multiple digital channels. It also plays a critical role in health sector – with 84% of Healthline callers managed through self-care at home or directed to community care, significantly reducing strain on our hospital emergency departments. We know that Healthline is considered by many as a taonga / treasure for the people of New Zealand.”
    Elle Edwards is a mother who was unsure what to do when she accidentally took a double dose of medication late in the night. She called Healthline to ask if she could breastfeed her baby. “They were so helpful and patient and reassuring,” said Elle.
    “Our clinicians are all experienced and specifically tele-triage trained experts and are seriously good at what they do. That’s why 98% of people who contact Healthline follow the advice they are given,” said Sandland.
    “Over the last 25 years Healthline clinicians have seen it all and they have supported people through major events including the Canterbury earthquakes, measles outbreaks, and the COVID pandemic.
    “Healthline has a proud and impactful past, and a very important future. That is definitely something to celebrate.”
    Helen Parry was one of the first nurses on the Healthline team in 2000 and her family were surprised when she said she was going to be providing health triage over the phone. “I was really pleased to be part of such an innovative new way to care and a wonderful service,” said Parry.
    The Healthline 25th anniversary was celebrated at an event at parliament 4 June 2025 hosted by Associate Minister of Health Matt Doocey. At the event Whakarongorau – who run Healthline – announced a new booking initiative
    From next month, when a Healthline nurse or paramedic recomm

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    June 4, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Culture and Heritage – Manatū Taonga releases draft report on culture in a digital age

    Source: Ministry for Culture and Heritage

    Manatū Taonga Ministry for Culture and Heritage has released a draft Long-term Insights Briefing – a futures-thinking report – on culture in the digital age.
    A Long-term Insights Briefing (LTIB) provides analysis and information about medium and long-term tr

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    June 4, 2025
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