Category: Entertainment

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Joins UNICEF Game Changers Coalition to Provide Blockchain Education to 300K People in 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles and LUXEMBOURG, June 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget, the leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company, has entered a three-year partnership with UNICEF Luxembourg to advance digital skills and blockchain literacy among young people.

    The partnership enrolls Bitget into the Game Changers Coalition (GCC) led by UNICEF Office of Innovation (OOI). Support from Bitget will help reach 300,000 people – including adolescent girls, parents, mentors and teachers with blockchain skills – across eight countries; Armenia, Brazil, Cambodia, India, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Morocco, and South Africa.

    Photo from Press Conference (from left to right): Paul Heber, Chief Communications Officer, UNICEF Luxembourg; Gracy Chen, CEO, Bitget; Yannick Naud, Innovative Finance, UNICEF Luxembourg

    Through the partnership, Bitget Academy, the educational arm of Bitget, will help develop UNICEF’s first interactive, online and in-person blockchain training module based on video games creation skills development for teachers and young people. This is a welcome inclusion to a curriculum already reaching hundreds of thousands of people. Support from Bitget will also help expand the Coalition’s reach to a ninth country.

    “This partnership reflects our shared belief that digital skills are a powerful driver of opportunity and inclusion,” said Sandra Visscher, Executive Director of UNICEF Luxembourg. “By collaborating with Bitget, we want to provide adolescents and young people with the tools, knowledge, and confidence to shape their own futures. Innovation should be a force for inclusion, opening doors, broadening horizons, and ensuring that technology works for everyone, everywhere.”

    In a move to extend the ecosystem’s reach, Bitget will also aim to introduce UNICEF to leading blockchain protocols and developers from across the Web3 landscape to participate in the educational initiative. These contributors could serve as mentors and partners, offering diverse perspectives and possibilities for blockchain technologies.

    “Emerging technologies should not be reserved for the privileged few—they must be introduced early and equitably. Blockchain, with its real-world use case and potential for social good, is one of the most powerful tools we can give to our younger generation to build products that change the way we look at modern society. With Blockchain4Her, what began as a mission to empower hundreds of women has scaled into a global movement to educate thousands of girls. This is the kind of scale and impact blockchain was built for,” said Gracy Chen, CEO at Bitget.

    Every year, adolescent girls and young women in low and middle-income countries miss out on USD 15 billion in economic opportunities due to a gap in internet access and digital skills relative to their male peers. With 90 per cent of jobs today requiring digital competencies, the Game Changers Coalition responds to the urgency of closing the gender digital skills gap.

    Together, Bitget and UNICEF are working to build a scalable, inclusive model that equips young women with the tools to navigate and shape the digital economy of tomorrow.

    As part of the Game Changers Coalition, Bitget joins the Global Video Game Coalition, Micron Foundation and ecosystem builders – Women in Games in a shared ambition to reach 1.1 million girls by 2027, with learning and skills-building opportunities.

    With the help of Bitget Academy, and support from the $10M initiative Blockchain4Her, Bitget plans to enhance digital literacy and financial independence among women taught to them at a young age.

    Bitget’s Blockchain4Her initiative has previously supported women through mentorship programs, funding opportunities, and educational resources.

    Together, Bitget and UNICEF Luxembourg aim to empower a new generation of girls with the knowledge and skills they need to participate actively in the evolving crypto economy.

    About Bitget

    Established in 2018, Bitget is the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company. Serving over 120 million users in 150+ countries and regions, the Bitget exchange is committed to helping users trade smarter with its pioneering copy trading feature and other trading solutions, while offering real-time access to Bitcoin priceEthereum price, and other cryptocurrency prices. Formerly known as BitKeep, Bitget Wallet is a leading non-custodial crypto wallet supporting 130+ blockchains and millions of tokens. It offers multi-chain trading, staking, payments, and direct access to 20,000+ DApps, with advanced swaps and market insights built into a single platform.

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

    For more information, visit: WebsiteTwitterTelegramLinkedInDiscordBitget Wallet
    For media inquiries, please contact: media@bitget.com

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

    Bitget

    This is not the first time Bitget has worked with an UN agency. Gracy Chen, is a UN women delegate. During last Ramadan, Bitget partnered up with world-renowned humanitarian organizations, including the UN Refugee Agency, UN World Food Programme, ShareTheMeal, and the One Billion Meals Endowment to donate thousands of meals. Under $10M Blockchain4Her, promising projects led by women were supported and awards were rewarded for the inspiring contributions of more. Hosting over 10 meetups globally, more than a thousand women participated in networking, learning, and driving innovation in the blockchain space.

    About UNICEF

    UNICEF works in over 190 countries and territories to reach the most disadvantaged children and build a better world for every child.
    UNICEF Luxembourg supports this global mission by mobilizing private sector partnerships and voluntary contributions. It also advocates nationally to uphold children’s rights—focusing on reducing inequalities, promoting gender equality, tackling child poverty, supporting mental well-being, and improving access to justice for every child.

    Disclaimer: UNICEF does not endorse any company, brand, product or service. This partnership is focused solely on supporting education outcomes for children.

    For more information, visit: WebsiteFacebookInstagramx.comLinkedIn
    For media inquiries, please contact: UNICEF Luxembourg, Paul Heber, Chief Communication | T (+352) 448715 | M (+352)691198105 | pheber@unicef.lu

    About the Game Changers Coalition
    Building on UNICEF’s existing work of providing girls with digital and 21st-century skills through the Skills4Girls portfolio, spanning 22 countries and reaching close to 6 million girls, the Game Changers Coalition is UNICEF’s platform to convene the video gaming sector and tech industry with the aim to equip this and coming generation of girls with the skills they need and want in Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math (STEAM) to become coders, designers, and leaders of a more inclusive, diverse, and safer digital future.

    Find out more here.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0daf6ba6-21cd-44dc-a7f0-fee2a8efbf28
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d0a53fb7-9043-4464-af17-4ac1043cd304

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Wallet Launches LINE NEXT’s Mini Dapp Ecosystem Month with TGE Viral Campaign

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, June 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget Wallet, one of the world’s largest self-custodial crypto wallets, has launched LINE NEXT’s Mini Dapp Ecosystem Month in collaboration with LINE NEXT and its Kaia blockchain. This strategic initiative integrates tokenized assets into messaging superapps, offering users access to Web3 games through seamless, gas-free interactions.

    LINE NEXT’s Mini Dapp Ecosystem Month begins June 16, featuring a $500,000 prize pool and participation from leading Kaia-based games including Bombie, Fate War, TOFU Story, StarAI, and DarkStar. New games and missions will rotate every two weeks, all delivered gas-free and integrated into Bitget Wallet.

    The campaign also features Bombie, a social mini-game developed by the team behind Catizen. With over 12 million users across LINE’s Mini Dapp and Telegram, Bombie is the highest-earning title on LINE’s Mini Dapp platform and the first to debut its own token. Bitget Wallet exclusively supports the token generation event (TGE), enabling users to claim $BOMB tokens directly in-app with zero gas fees and a 100% bonus for early participants. The launch sets a precedent for self-custodial wallets supporting token distribution within mainstream app environments.

    An additional key component of the initiative is the TGE Viral campaign, which features Fate War, LARVA Survival, and Slime Miner. Hosted through a dedicated Mini Dapp campaign page powered by Bitget Wallet, the campaign provides token-related missions, exclusive item discounts, and bonus rewards. It is designed to drive engagement by lowering the barrier to entry and providing developers scalable community activation tools.

    By embedding token generation, rewards, and transactions into the app environment, Bitget Wallet and LINE NEXT are advancing a model for consumer-grade blockchain adoption.

    “Web3 needs to meet users where they already are,” said Jamie Elkaleh, CMO of Bitget Wallet. “By embedding self-custody and rewards into LINE, we’re removing friction and setting a model for how wallets and superapps can scale the next wave of digital interaction.”

    For more details on the campaign, visit LINE’s Mini Dapp Portal and BItget Wallet official channels.

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

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

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

    About LINE NEXT Inc.
    LINE NEXT Inc., LINE’s venture dedicated to developing and expanding the Web3 ecosystem, providing new digital experiences, and leading Web3 innovation.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/7602694d-7c51-4032-a83d-e7e4b636ea32

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-Evening Report: The 2025 Sydney Film Festival reminded me: there is nothing like a bunch of strangers assembling in the dark

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ari Mattes, Lecturer in Communications and Media, University of Notre Dame Australia

    Redux Redux. Sydney Film Festival

    In an era of the atomisation of viewing practices through streaming, increasingly short, self-produced videos for TikTok and YouTube, and the reduction of all audiovisual material to “content” for various “platforms”, there is something refreshing about a bunch of strangers assembling in a dark room to collectively watch a giant screen with massive sound.

    In other words, going to the movies.

    And there’s no better place to see films limited in mainstream release than at film festivals. The standard of the films screening at this year’s Sydney Film Festival was exceptional, and it is difficult to select a top five out of the 40 or so I managed to see. But here goes!

    Sirât

    Produced by Pedro Almodovar, writer-director Oliver Laxe’s Sirât, which recently won the Jury Prize at Cannes, follows middle-aged Luis (Sergi López) as he travels with his son Esteban (Bruno Núñez Arjona) and their dog Pipa looking for his estranged daughter in the desert rave scene. They team up with a group of ravers and set off across Southern Morocco towards the next party.

    Early on, there are some hints that things are awry on a broader scale – the military break up the opening doof, and we hear, at one point, World War III has broken out.

    And as the film unfolds, things take a turn for the worse, with a litany of tragedies – increasingly absurd – afflicting the members of the group. The vaguely futuristic world of the opening crystallises into something much more terrifying than the kind of shrill cinematic post-apocalypticism we’ve become used to through films like Fury Road.

    What begins as a kind of paean to raving – replete with bass-thumping speakers (cranked in theatres to eardrum pounding loudness), a “cool” crew of trippers, and an emphasis on the free lives of the ravers (played by real-life party-goers) – rapidly descends into a wild existential nightmare. And the idea that life is a kind of free consumerist party for westerners is viciously dismembered in the second half: we are all refugees in this era.

    Sirât is a masterpiece. Its stunning 16mm film images (courtesy of cinematographer Mauro Herve) are complemented by exceptional sound design by Laia Casanova, a majesty of image and sound demanding to be experienced in a cinema.

    Somebody

    Written and directed by Lee Jung-chan and Kim Yeo-jung, the South Korean film Somebody is a puzzling, intense psycho drama about precociously evil child So-hyun (Gi So-yoo) and the pressures this places on her single mother Yeong-eun (Kwak Sun-young).

    An unsettling horror thriller, the film also plays like a study of the evil child archetype. It works through the genre’s cliches, unpicking them while eschewing the usual evil-kid scares in favour of looking at the complex interplay between and ambiguity around the image of child as brat/evil and mother as caring/enabler.

    In the first half, the point of view oscillates between an image of the child as evil and the child as scared. In the second half, the evil child has grown up, and we follow her towards the film’s brutal (and unexpected) ending.

    And this is where Somebody excels. It taps into the fear of parents that their children are alien parasites – who is this stranger now living off me? – but also the difficulties for children in feeling isolated and scared.

    Somebody is a deeply sad and troubling film, buoyed by excellent performances from adults and children alike. In real life, the idea that a kid would be born evil is preposterous, but it’s a movieland cliché that works. Somebody addresses this idea with a genuinely impressive vision.

    Harvest

    Athina Rachel Tsangari’s Harvest is a melancholic, elegiac film set in a rural community in Scotland in the Middle Ages. When the economic harmony of the village is disrupted by the advent of a new noble, three wandering strangers are mercilessly scapegoated, despite the efforts of villager Walter Thirsk (Caleb Landry Jones, in a beautifully understated performance) to protect them.

    Despite the turmoil it depicts, the film unfolds as gently as the familiar rhythms of the seasons.

    Cinematographer Sean Price Williams’ 16mm images are uncannily beautiful, supported by an astonishing score and sound design from Nicolas Becker.

    This fable about the ravages of modernity (recalling Vincent Ward’s The Navigator) – of the violence of calendar time as it overcomes the time of the harvest – is exceptional in every respect.

    Not much happens. It’s a slow-moving, brooding film, and it would not be nearly as compelling seen on a small screen. But for those of us willing to make a trip to the movies, Harvest is immensely satisfying.

    Redux Redux

    Part of the eternally rousing Freak Me Out strand of the program from film critic Richard Kuipers, Kevin and Matthew McManus’ Redux Redux is the kind of high concept film that could easily depend too much on its ingenious conceit (a woman travels throughout the multiverse repeatedly avenging the murder of her daughter) and forget about the stuff that actually makes films work (coherent, striking visual design, immersive sound and compelling performances).

    But Redux Redux gets everything right, maintaining its iron grip on the viewer from the opening title card to the closing credits. Michaela McManus – sister of the writer-directors – is brilliant as the grieving, vengeful mother, playing the part with a staid intensity that never tips into hysteria or melodrama.

    There are some funny moments – the amusingly lowbrow design of the multiverse machine, for example. But the film never feels like it plays too hard for laughs. Paul Koch’s synth music and sound design are richly atmospheric without coming off as trite, and perfectly support the crisp, economical cinematography of Alan Gwizdowski.

    The most impressive thing about the film is the effortlessness with which the story feels like it develops throughout – even though the plot, on the surface, involves the same thing being repeated ad nauseam.

    Unlike, for example, in the case of the multiverse-themed Everything Everywhere All at Once, Redux Redux never comes across as self-indulgent, clever for its own sake. It never feels like anything other than a compulsively watchable – and immensely pleasurable – revenge thriller.

    Alpha

    Writer-director Jan-Willem van Ewijk’s Alpha begins as a lightly comedic intergenerational social satire.

    Thirty-something Rein (Reinout Scholten van Aschat), a Dutch snowboarder in the Swiss alps, clashes with his movie-star father, Gijs (Gijs Scholten van Aschar), when Gijs visits him. Gijs flirts with Rein’s girlfriend, asks inappropriate questions about race, and parties with his son’s friends, all the time escalating the stakes, becoming increasingly overbearing and competitive.

    It’s funny and familiar fare, treading similar terrain to a Ruben Östland film, and it’s well-done. Pairing a real life father and son is a casting act of genius, adding both pathos and authenticity to their competition.

    Similar to Sirât, Alpha takes a sudden turn at the mid-way point. Father and son are trapped in an avalanche. It becomes a race against time as son tries to rescue father in a gruelling battle for survival.

    Its brutal second half completely detonates the entire scaffold of our pleasure from the first half. Testament to the craft of van Ewijk (and the talent of the stars), this radical change in tone never feels incoherent or contrived.

    By the end of Alpha, the petty dick-swinging of father and son from the first half – and the energetic (and well-shot) skiing footage – becomes nothing before the austere, cold majesty of the mountains looming over and entrapping them.

    Alpha is a masterclass in audience manipulation. A truly devastating experience for the viewer.

    Other notable films – and one dud!

    There were too many excellent films to note them all. Some include master auteur Christian Petzold’s Mirrors No. 3, a film – typical of Petzold – of people haunted by ghosts of lives lost and faded desires, an understated film which – again, customary for Petzold’s work – has an enigmatic air one can’t quite put one’s finger on.

    Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent was another standout: a fun, rollicking romp for cinephiles about political machinations in Brazil in the 1970s.

    Richard Linklater’s Blue Moon, a biopic of American songwriter Lorenz Hart, had a charmingly goofy affect, as did Vie Privée, a breezy French thriller starring Jodie Foster as a psychoanalyst caught up in a mystery.

    Olmo, which could easily have made the top five, is a charming coming of age odyssey about a Mexican-American 14-year-old going to a party with his crush. The Love That Remains is a stunningly shot, surreal comedy about the trials and tribulations of an Icelandic family.

    As per usual, some exceptional documentaries screened. Joh: The Last King of Queensland made by Kriv Stenders (better known for narrative works like Red Dog), is a formally compelling study of the reign of Australia’s longest serving premier.

    The Raftsmen is an uplifting crowd-pleaser about the expedition from Ecuador to Australia that captivated the public’s attention in 1973. The film is built around an exceptional archive of contemporaneous 16mm footage shot by the rafters.

    Lowland Kids, produced by Darren Aronofsky, is a carefully observed documentary about a community in Louisiana forced to relocate because of climate change. This tender film counterpoints the grim reality of global warming with the individual disappointments of the characters’ personal lives.

    The only truly execrable film I saw was Michel Franco’s Dreams, a hokey, profoundly dumb film masquerading as something cutting edge (wow – there’s sex, and the camera doesn’t move much), cashing in on topical problems in the United States. Worst of all – and despite ballet sequences, which are always good to watch – it’s a very ugly film.

    Given the mediocre quality of much contemporary Hollywood cinema, one dud out of 40 isn’t too bad!

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

    ref. The 2025 Sydney Film Festival reminded me: there is nothing like a bunch of strangers assembling in the dark – https://theconversation.com/the-2025-sydney-film-festival-reminded-me-there-is-nothing-like-a-bunch-of-strangers-assembling-in-the-dark-259032

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Revelatory documentary Emily: I Am Kam explores the incredible work of trailblazing Aboriginal artist Emily Kam Kngwarray

    Source: NSW Government puts trust in NAB to transform banking and payments

    12 06 2025 – Media release

    Emily: I Am Kam. Photo Toly Sawenko. 
    A powerful new documentary, Emily: I Am Kam, revealing the work of Australia’s most significant artist, Emily Kam Kngwarray, premieres on National Indigenous Television (NITV) and SBS On Demand on Wednesday 9 July at 8:30pm, with an encore on SBS on Saturday 12 July at 8:30pm.
    Directed by Danielle MacLean, the film delves into Emily Kam Kngwarray’s transformative impact on the international contemporary art world and her enduring legacy. Emily: I Am Kam is a detailed portrait that offers an intimate and profound exploration of Kngwarray, a trailblazing Anmatyerr artist from the Northern Territory. Kngwarray is celebrated as one of Australia’s most significant and prolific artists. Her work is deeply rooted in her connection to Country, culture, and community, Emily: I Am Kam follows the preparations of the National Gallery of Australia’s major 2023 Kngwarray retrospective. It provides a rare opportunity to witness her journey and the profound influence of her art and explores the power of Emily’s work to protect her Country, Alhalker.
    The film has received principal production funding from Screen Australia’s First Nations Department, and features rare archival recordings, audio, and visuals from the mid-1970s onwards, many of which have never been seen or heard before. These materials allow Kngwarray to speak in her own words, offering viewers an authentic and personal insight into her life and artistic process.
    Interviews with Emily’s descendants as they revive the awely (women’s ceremony) and collaborate on a major retrospective exhibition, reaffirms her connection to Country and community and helps audiences gain an understanding of who she was and why she painted. It also reveals her legacy is much more than the 3,000 or so paintings she left behind.
    Emily: I Am Kam is produced by Anna Grieve and Danielle MacLean of Tamarind Tree Pictures, and written and directed by Danielle MacLean.
    Screen Australia First Nations Department Development and Investment Manager Jorjia Gillis said, “Emily: I Am Kam is a powerful documentary that highlights the culturally significant work, life and legacy of Emily Kam Kngwarray. The creative team led by Danielle MacLean and Anna Grieve have expertly captured the impact of Emily’s career as her paintings truly are living histories with intrinsic connection to Country, community and culture.”

    Producers Danielle MacLean and Anna Grieve of Tamarind Tree Pictures said, “Emily: I Am Kam is much more than an art documentary, it is a cultural story told while working alongside the Alhalker and Anangker women, Kngwarray’s descendants and cultural successors. These women carry Emily’s legacy in their bodies, their songs, their ceremonies and in their relationship to Country. They welcomed us onto their land, shared their knowledge, and allowed us to witness what cannot be found in archives or galleries – the living continuation of Kngwarray’s culture Emily: I Am Kam is not a Western story of artistic genius or fame. It is a story of deep cultural continuity, told from within the community.”
    Dena Curtis, Head of Indigenous Commissioning and Production at NITV said, “Emily Kam Kngwarray is one of Australia’s most significant artists. Having reshaped the international art world, her work and legacy continues to reverberate globally. Emily: I Am Kam explores the intersection of art, culture and Country, NITV is the home of black excellence, and we are incredibly proud to bring Kngwarray’s story to audiences and highlight the living continuation of her culture and legacy.”
    Dr Nick Mitzevich, Director, National Gallery of Australia said, “Emily Kam Kngwarray was one of the most significant artists of the 20th century. Her original artistic vision and powerful expression of Country, Community, culture and identity has been celebrated globally. As custodians of the largest collection of her art, it is important that the National Gallery shares Kngwarray’s life and art with Australians and the world. It is with great excitement to share her legacy through this captivating documentary.”
    Jennie Hughes, Director at Screen Territory said, “Emily Kam Kngwarray’s story is one of extraordinary cultural and creative significance — not just for the Northern Territory, but for the world. Emily: I Am Kam offers a powerful exploration of her legacy, and Screen Territory is proud to support this remarkable documentary from Tamarind Tree Pictures, skillfully directed by the talented Danielle MacLean. This film not only honours one of Australia’s most celebrated artists, but also deepens our understanding of Indigenous art, culture, and the connection to Country.”
    Emily: I Am Kam is a Tamarind Tree Pictures production for NITV. Principal Production funding from Screen Australia’s First Nations Department in association with National Gallery of Australia. Financed with support from NITV and Screen Territory.
    Watch Emily: I Am Kam on NITV and SBS On Demand on Wednesday 9 July at 8:30pm and on SBS on Saturday 12 July at 8:30pm, as part of the network’s NAIDOC Week celebrations. Subtitles will be available on SBS On Demand in Arabic, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese, with audio description for blind or low vision audiences.
    NITV Media Enquiries:
    Hannah Watkins, Senior Communications Specialist
    0411 362 727 | [email protected]
    Media enquiries
    Maddie Walsh | Publicist
    + 61 2 8113 5915  | [email protected]
    Jessica Parry | Senior Publicist (Mon, Tue, Thu)
    + 61 428 767 836  | [email protected]
    All other general/non-media enquiries
    Sydney + 61 2 8113 5800  |  Melbourne + 61 3 8682 1900 | [email protected]

    MIL OSI News

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

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Dopamine can make it hard to put down our phone or abandon the online shopping cart. Here’s why

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anastasia Hronis, Clinical Psychologist, University of Technology Sydney

    Vardan Papikyan/Unsplash

    Ever find yourself unable to stop scrolling through your phone, chasing that next funny video or interesting post?

    Or maybe you’ve felt a rush of excitement when you achieve a goal, eat a delicious meal, or fill your online shopping cart.

    Why do some experiences feel so rewarding, while others leave us feeling flat? Well, dopamine might be responsible for that. Here’s what it does in our brains and bodies.

    It’s a chemical messenger

    Dopamine is a neurotransmitter – a chemical messenger that facilitates communication between the brain and the central nervous system. It sends messages between different parts of your nervous system, helping your body and brain coordinate everything from your movement to your mood.

    Dopamine is most known for its role in short-term pleasure, and the boost we get from things such as eating tasty foods, drinking alcohol, scrolling social media or falling in love.

    Dopamine also assists with learning, maintaining focus and attention, and helps us store memories.

    It even plays a role in kidney function by regulating the levels of salt and water we excrete.

    Conversely, low levels of dopamine have been linked to neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson’s disease.

    How dopamine motivates us to pursue pleasure

    Dopamine is not just active when we do pleasurable things. It’s active beforehand and it drives us to pursue pleasure.

    Say I go to a cafe and decide to buy a doughnut. When I bite into the doughnut, it tastes fantastic. Dopamine surges and I experience pleasure.

    The next time I walk past the cafe, dopamine is already active. It remembers the doughnut I had last time and how delicious it was. Dopamine drives me to walk back into the cafe, purchase another doughnut and eat it.

    Dopamine drives us to do things that felt good last time.
    Fotios Photos/Pexels

    From an evolutionary perspective, dopamine was incredibly important and it ensured survival of the species. It motivated behaviours such as hunting and foraging for food. It reinforced the pursuit of finding shelter and safety and keeping away from predators. And it motivated people to seek out mates and to reproduce.

    However, modern technology has amplified the effects of dopamine, leading to negative consequences. Activities such as excessive social media use, gambling, consuming alcohol, drug use, sex, pornography and gaming can stimulate dopamine release, creating cycles of addiction and compulsive behaviours.

    Our dopamine levels can vary

    Our brain is constantly releasing small amounts of dopamine at a “baseline” rate. This is because dopamine is crucial to the functioning of our brain and body, irrespective of pleasure.

    Everyone has a different baseline, influenced by genetic factors such as our DRD2 dopamine receptor genes. Some people produce and metabolise dopamine faster than other people. Our baseline levels can also be influenced by sleep, nutrition and stress in our lives.

    Given we all have a baseline of dopamine, our experience of pleasure at any given time is relative to our baseline rate and relative to what has come before.

    If I play games on my phone all morning and get a dopamine release from that, then I eat something tasty for morning tea, I may not experience the same level of fulfilment or enjoyment that I would have had I not played those games.

    The brain works hard to regulate itself and it won’t allow us to be in a constant state of dopamine “highs”. This means we can build a tolerance to certain exciting activities if we seek them out too much, as the brain wants to avoid being in a state of constant dopamine “highs”.

    Healthy ways to get a dopamine boost

    Thankfully, there are healthy, non-addictive ways to boost your dopamine levels.

    Exercise is one of the most effective methods for boosting dopamine naturally. Physical activities such as walking, running, cycling, or even dancing can trigger the release of dopamine, leading to improved mood and greater motivation.

    Running can also give you a dopamine boost.
    Leandro Boogalu/Pexels

    Research has shown listening to music you enjoy makes your brain release more dopamine, giving you a pleasurable experience.

    And of course, spending time with people whose company we enjoy is another great way to activate dopamine.

    Incorporating these habits into daily life can support your brain’s natural dopamine production and help you enjoy lasting improvements in motivation, mood and overall health.

    Anastasia Hronis is the author of The Dopamine Brain: Your Science-Backed Guide to Balancing Pleasure and Purpose, published by Penguin Books Aus & NZ.

    ref. Dopamine can make it hard to put down our phone or abandon the online shopping cart. Here’s why – https://theconversation.com/dopamine-can-make-it-hard-to-put-down-our-phone-or-abandon-the-online-shopping-cart-heres-why-254811

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Banking: RM of BTS Becomes Samsung Art TV Global Ambassador

    Source: Samsung

    ▲ RM, a global icon and a widely respected art connoisseur, has become the official face of Samsung Art TVs. As an ambassador, he will share his commentary on artwork via Samsung Art Store, inviting users and fans to explore the world of art through his unique lens. (Photo courtesy of BIGHIT MUSIC)
     
    Samsung Electronics today announced RM of 21st century pop icons BTS as the official ambassador for Samsung Art TVs.1 The appointment is one of RM’s official activities following his highly anticipated return from mandatory military service in Korea.
     
    As a globally recognized art connoisseur, RM has made headlines for his deep appreciation of the arts, including visits to leading museums and his private collection of contemporary artwork. Now, in his role as Samsung Art TV ambassador, RM will bring his distinctive voice and passion for visual art to Samsung TV users around the world.
     
    “RM’s passion for art and culture deeply resonates with our vision to make art more accessible through technology,” said Hun Lee, Executive Vice President of the Visual Display (VD) Business at Samsung Electronics. “We’re thrilled to welcome him as the ambassador for Samsung Art TVs, and we believe his voice will inspire a new generation to explore the world of art in meaningful, personal ways.”
     

     
    Samsung Art TVs, known for their fusion of advanced display technology and artistic expression, serve as immersive platforms where art comes to life. Through Samsung Art Store2 — a subscription-based service featuring over 3,500 high-resolution artworks in 4K — users can now enjoy curated content with insights from RM himself. His personal reflections and commentary on select works will be accessible directly on Samsung Art Store, providing fans and art enthusiasts with a unique window into his aesthetic sensibilities.
     
    “As someone who finds deep inspiration and comfort in art, I’m honored to partner with Samsung to share my journey and love for visual creativity,” said RM. “Through this collaboration, I hope more people can connect with art in their everyday lives — just like I do.”
     
    As part of his new role, RM will appear at Art Basel, which is one of the world’s premier international art fairs and is held in Basel, Switzerland. There, he will host a special session to share his thoughts on contemporary art, collecting and the cultural significance of visual storytelling. Highlights from this event, including exclusive insights and behind-the-scenes moments, will be published on the Samsung Global Newsroom.
     
    RM’s partnership with Samsung Art TVs sets the stage for a new dialogue between art, technology and global pop culture. Through this collaboration, Samsung continues to elevate its commitment to making world-class art more accessible and personal — now with RM as the bridge between fans and the art world.
     
    For more information, visit www.samsung.com.
     
     
    About RM of BTS
    RM (Kim, Namjun) is a South Korean rapper, songwriter, music producer and the leader of 21st century pop icons BTS. His discography includes solo mixtapes RM (March 2015) and mono. (October 2018), as well as solo albums Indigo (December 2022) and Right Place, Wrong Person (May 2024), which showcase his remarkable versatility across genres. As a creative powerhouse and avid art enthusiast, RM is renowned for crafting profound lyrics often inspired by various art forms. His flexible and philosophical approach to music and ability to push creative boundaries with cutting-edge collaborations has led him to work with a diverse range of artists, including Erykah Badu, Anderson .Paak, Lil Nas X, HONNE, Mahalia, and more. On May 24, 2024, RM released his critically-acclaimed second solo album Right Place, Wrong Person.
     
     
    1 Samsung Art TVs include MICRO LED, The Frame, The Frame Pro, Neo QLED 8K, Neo QLED and QLED models starting from Q7F and above.
    2 Samsung Art Store is an art subscription service available on Samsung Art TVs, including The Frame, NEO QLEDs and QLEDs. Currently available in 117 countries around the world, Samsung Art Store offers over 70 partners and 3,500 artworks in 4K quality. Through Samsung Art Store, subscribers can enjoy artwork from world-class galleries and masters at home and use it to create new interior designs every day.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI: LeddarTech Announces Intention to File under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act in Canada

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    QUEBEC CITY, Canada, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — LeddarTech® Holdings Inc. (“LeddarTech” or the “Company”) (Nasdaq: LDTC), an AI-powered software company recognized for its innovation in advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous driving (AD), today announces that, further to its press release dated June 11, 2025, it intends on making an assignment into bankruptcy pursuant to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) (the “BIA”).

    After careful consideration of all available alternatives, including undertaking a strategic review which was unsuccessful in identifying a suitable acquirer or commercial partner or raising sufficient capital, as well as further to the Company having received a notice of default under its bridge financing offer entered into with certain bridge lenders, the board of directors of the Company has determined that it was in the best interest of the Company and its stakeholders to make an assignment into bankruptcy under the BIA as soon as reasonably practicable. The Company expects that Raymond Chabot Inc., a licensed insolvency trustee, will be appointed as the trustee under the BIA proceedings.

    In connection with the BIA proceedings, each member of the board of directors of the Company will resign effective upon the assignment under the BIA.

    As was disclosed in its June 11, 2025 press release, the Company does not expect to resume active operations and cautions investors that there is significant risk that holders of our securities will receive little to no value under the BIA proceedings.

    Further announcements regarding the status of the Company’s BIA proceedings will be made as developments warrant. Additional information with respect to the BIA proceedings will be available in due course on Raymond Chabot Inc.’s website.

    The Company expects that its common shares and warrants trading on the Nasdaq will be halted as a result of the BIA proceedings. The Company anticipates that it will ultimately be delisted from the Nasdaq.

    About LeddarTech

    A global software company founded in 2007 and headquartered in Quebec City with additional R&D centers in Montreal and Tel Aviv, Israel, LeddarTech develops and provides comprehensive AI-based low-level sensor fusion and perception software solutions that enable the deployment of ADAS, autonomous driving (AD) and parking applications. LeddarTech’s automotive-grade software applies advanced AI and computer vision algorithms to generate accurate 3D models of the environment to achieve better decision making and safer navigation. This high-performance, scalable, cost-effective technology is available to OEMs and Tier 1-2 suppliers to efficiently implement automotive and off- road vehicle ADAS solutions.

    LeddarTech is responsible for several remote-sensing innovations, with over 190 patent applications (112 granted) that enhance ADAS, AD and parking capabilities. Better awareness around the vehicle is critical in making global mobility safer, more efficient, sustainable and affordable: this is what drives LeddarTech to seek to become the most widely adopted sensor fusion and perception software solution.

    Additional information about LeddarTech is accessible at www.leddartech.com and on LinkedIn, Twitter (X), Facebook and YouTube.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Certain statements contained in this Press Release may be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (which forward-looking statements also include forward-looking statements and forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws). Forward-looking statements generally include statements that are predictive in nature and depend upon or refer to future events or conditions, and include words such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “would,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “plan,” “likely,” “believe,” “estimate,” “project,” “intend” and other similar expressions among others. Forward-looking statements in this press release include, without limitation, statements regarding the issuance of cease trade orders, the BIA proceedings, and the potential for shareholder value recovery. Statements that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on current beliefs and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties, including the risk factors as detailed from time to time in LeddarTech’s reports filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), including the risk factors contained in LeddarTech’s Form 20-F filed with the SEC. The foregoing list of important factors is not exhaustive. Except as required by applicable law, LeddarTech does not undertake any obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statement, or to make any other forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

    Contact:
    Chris Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, LeddarTech Holdings Inc.
    Tel.: + 1-514-427-0858, chris.stewart@leddartech.com

    Leddar, LeddarTech, LeddarVision, LeddarSP, VAYADrive, VayaVision and related logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of LeddarTech Holdings Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other brands, product names and marks are or may be trademarks or registered trademarks used to identify products or services of their respective owners.

    LeddarTech Holdings Inc. is a public company listed on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “LDTC.”

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Rider and witnesses sought following crash on Edmund Road, Rotorua on Sunday

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police are seeking witnesses to the events leading up to a crash on Edmund Road, Rotorua on Sunday 15 June at about 2.15pm at a designated pedestrian crossing.

    Rotorua Police is investigating after a motorcyclist overtook a stationary vehicle waiting for a pedestrian to cross, and then struck the pedestrian who was on the crossing at the time.

    The rider then performed a U-turn, rode back towards the crossing, but did not stop or check on the victim.  The rider then fled the scene.

    The 24-year-old sight and hearing-impaired victim was injured and flown to Waikato Hospital where he remains in a critical condition.

    Acting Detective Senior Sergeant Phil Wilkinson of the Rotorua Police is calling on any witnesses to come forward.

    “Police have a large team who are currently in the early stages of gathering evidence surrounding the circumstances of the crash, and what led to it happening,” he says.

    “Police have obtained CCTV footage of the motorcycle shortly after the crash showing the motorcycle turning left onto Clayton Road and travelling in the direction of Gem Street.

    “We would like the rider to do the right thing – come forward and speak to us about what happened.

    Someone will know who this rider is and police are appealing to those people to act on their conscience and contact us.

    The family of the injured man are understandably upset about this incident and are urging people to come forward.

    Police are wanting to hear from any other witnesses to the crash, and we ask them to contact us as soon as possible,” Detective Senior Sergeant Wilkinson says.

    We are appealing to anyone who recognises the motorcycle and or the rider pictured to come forward to Police online or call 105 using the file reference number 250615/1168.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for June 17, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on June 17, 2025.

    In view of Trump’s review of AUKUS, should Australia cancel the subs deal? We asked 5 experts
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Andrews, Senior Manager, Policy & Engagement, Australian National University Speculation is swirling around the future of the A$368 billion AUKUS agreement, following Washington’s decision to review the nuclear submarine deal to ensure it meets President Donald Trump’s “America first” agenda. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was planning

    Australians in the bush want tougher penalties on crime. Here’s why – and what’s needed now
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Caitlin Davey, Lecturer of Criminology, Griffith University New research has found that while Australians generally support strong punishments, people living in the bush are significantly more likely than city dwellers to want to punish more harshly those who break the law. It means Australians living in rural

    Judy Davis gives a singularly vivid performance in The Spare Room – but the play falls short
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Moya Costello, Adjunct Lecturer in Creative Writing, Southern Cross University Brett Boardman/Belvoir In The Spare Room, Judy Davis lights up the stage with a singularly vivid performance. Adapted by Eamon Flack from Helen Garner’s 2008 novel of the same name, Davis plays sharp-tongued Helen (or Hel) to

    US travel ban on Pacific 3 – countries have right to decide over borders, Peters says
    RNZ Pacific New Zealand’s Foreign Minister Winston Peters says countries have the right to choose who enters their borders in response to reports that the Trump administration is planning to impose travel restrictions on three dozen nations, including three in the Pacific. But opposition Labour’s deputy leader Carmel Sepuloni says the foreign minister should push

    Attack on Iran’s state media – Israel bombs IRIB building in new war crime
    Pacific Media Watch Israel targeted one of the buildings of the state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) in Tehran on the fourth day of attacks on Iran, interrupting a live news broadcast, reports Press TV. The attack, involving at least four bombs, struck the central building housing IRIB’s news department, while a live news

    What is ‘cognitive shuffling’ and does it really help you get to sleep? Two sleep scientists explain
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Melinda Jackson, Associate Professor at Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University Ursula Ferrara/Shutterstock If you’ve been on social media lately – perhaps scrolling in the middle of the night, when you know you shouldn’t but you just can’t sleep –

    New research shows Australians see influencers as major sources of misinformation
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sora Park, Professor of Communication, News & Media Research Centre, University of Canberra As consumption of traditional news continues to fall, audiences are turning to social media personalities and influencers for their information. These figures are increasingly shaping public debates. But Australian news audiences are sceptical. More

    Why does my phone sometimes not ring when people call? A communications expert explains
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jairo Gutierrez, Professor, Department of Computer and Information Sciences, Auckland University of Technology Tada Images There’s a certain feeling I get in the pit of my stomach when I’m waiting for an important call to come through. You know the type – maybe a call from your

    Wetland restoration is seen as sunk cost – but new research shows why it should be considered an investment
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Wei Yang, Senior Scientist in Environmental Economics, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University Shutterstock/Wirestock Creators As extreme weather intensifies globally, governments are seeking nature-based solutions that deliver both climate and economic benefits. The restoration of wetlands is an often overlooked opportunity. As our recent study shows,

    Jaws at 50: a cinematic masterpiece – and an incredible piece of propaganda
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Colin Alexander, Senior Lecturer in Political Communications, Nottingham Trent University Jaws turns 50 on June 20. Last year, Quentin Tarantino called Stephen Spielberg’s film “possibly the greatest movie ever made”. Though he was quick to add that it isn’t the best film in terms of script, cinematography

    Ancient termite poo reveals 120 million-year-old secrets of Australia’s polar forests
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alistair Evans, Professor, School of Biological Sciences, Monash University Witsawat.S/Shutterstock Imagine a lush forest with tree-ferns, their trunks capped by ribbon-like fronds. Conifers tower overhead, bearing triangular leaves almost sharp enough to pierce skin. Flowering plants are both small and rare. You’re standing in what is now

    When new dads struggle, their kids’ health can suffer. Tackling mental distress early can help
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Delyse Hutchinson, Associate Professor, Clinical Psychologist, and NHMRC Leadership Fellow, SEED Centre for Lifespan Research, School of Psychology, Deakin University D-BASE/Getty In Australia, an estimated one in ten men experience mental health issues such as anxiety and depression before and after their child is born (the perinatal

    A weird group of boronias puzzled botanists for decades. Now we’ve solved the pollination mystery
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Douglas Hilton, Chief Executive, CSIRO Andy Young Boronias, known for their showy flowers and strong scent, are a quintessential part of the Australian bush. They led Traditional Owners to the best water sources and inspired Australian children’s author and illustrator May Gibbs to pen one of her

    Some students learning English can take at least 6 years to catch up to their peers. How can we support them better?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lucy Lu, Adjunct Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney Rawpixel/ Getty Images About one quarter of Australian school students are learning English as an additional language or dialect. This means their first language or dialect is something other than English and they

    Ice Age shelter high up in the Blue Mountains reveals Aboriginal heritage from 20,000 years ago
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Erin Wilkins, Aboriginal Cultural Educator, Trainer and Facilitator, Indigenous Knowledge Artist’s impression of Dargan Shelter as it would have looked during the last Ice Age. Painting by Leanne Watson Redpath Travel back 20,000 years into the last Ice Age, to a time when the upper reaches of

    ‘Be brave’ warning to nations against deepsea mining from UNOC
    By Laura Bergamo in Nice, France The UN Ocean Conference (UNOC) concluded today with significant progress made towards the ratification of the High Seas Treaty and a strong statement on a new plastics treaty signed by 95 governments. Once ratified, it will be the only legal tool that can create protected areas in international waters,

    Samoan fashion designer fatally shot at Salt Lake City ‘no kings’ protest
    RNZ Pacific A renowned Samoan fashion designer was fatally shot at the “No Kings” protest in Salt Lake City on Saturday, the Salt Lake City Police Department (SLCPD) has confirmed. Arthur Folasa Ah Loo, known as Afa Ah Loo, an “innocent bystander” at the protest, died despite efforts by paramedics to save his life, police

    Israelis ‘now realise’ what Palestinians and Lebanese have been suffering, says analyst
    Asia Pacific Report A Paris-based military and political analyst, Elijah Magnier, says he believes the hostilities between Israel and Iran will only get worse, but that Israeli support for the war may wane if the destruction continues. “I think it’s going to continue escalating because we are just in the first days of the war

    What is uranium enrichment and how is it used for nuclear bombs? A scientist explains
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kaitlin Cook, DECRA Fellow, Department of Nuclear Physics and Accelerator Applications, Australian National University Uranium ore. RHJPhtotos/Shutterstock Late last week, Israel targeted three of Iran’s key nuclear facilities – Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow, killing several Iranian nuclear scientists. The facilities are heavily fortified and largely underground, and

    Issa Amro: Youth Against Settlements – ‘life is very hard, the Israeli soldiers act like militia’
    RNZ News Palestinian advocate Issa Amro has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize this year for his decades of work advocating for peaceful resistance against Israel’s illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank. The settlements are illegal under international law — and a record 45 were established last year under cover of the war

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Arrests – Aggravated burglary – Alice Springs

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    NT Police have arrested two males in relation to an aggravated burglary and property damage incident that occurred in Alice Springs this morning.

    Around 5:30am, the Joint Emergency Services Communication Centre (JESCC) received reports that a licensed premises on Todd Street had been broken into. Unknown offenders had allegedly gained entry by prying off a security screen and breaking a window, before stealing alcohol and fleeing the scene.

    CCTV was obtained and active patrols of the CBD were conducted by members from Strike Force Viper and general duties officers. At 7:20am, Strike Force Viper members located and arrested a 21-year-old male on Stuart Terrace, and a short time later at 7:23am, general duties members located and arrested a 14-year-male near Sturt Terrace in East Side.

    The 14-year-old was dealt with under the provisions of the Youth Justice Act 2005.

    The 21-year-old has been charged with Aggravated burglary, Damage to property, Theft, and Recruiting child to engage in criminal activity. He was remanded in custody to appear in court on 18 June.

    Police continue to urge anyone who witnesses crime or antisocial behaviour to contact police on 131 444. In an emergency dial 000. Anonymous reports can be made through Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or online via https://crimestoppersnt.com.au/.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Attack on Iran’s state media – Israel bombs IRIB building in new war crime

    Pacific Media Watch

    Israel targeted one of the buildings of the state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) in Tehran on the fourth day of attacks on Iran, interrupting a live news broadcast, reports Press TV.

    The attack, involving at least four bombs, struck the central building housing IRIB’s news department, while a live news broadcast was underway.

    The transmission was briefly interrupted before Hassan Abedini, IRIB’s news director and deputy for political affairs, appeared on air to condemn the “terrorist crime”.

    At the time of the attack, news anchor Sahar Emami was presenting the news. Despite the building trembling under the first strike, she stood her ground and continued the broadcast.

    “Allah o Akbar” (God is Great), she proclaimed, drawing global attention to the war crime committed by Israel against Iran’s national broadcaster.

    Moments later, another blast filled the studio with smoke and dust, forcing her to evacuate. She returned shortly after to join Abedini and share her harrowing experience.

    “If I die, others will take my place and expose your crimes to the world,” she declared, looking straight into the camera with courage and composure.

    Casualties unconfirmed
    While the number of casualties remains unconfirmed, insiders reported that several journalists inside the building had been injured in the bombing.

    Israel’s war ministry promptly claimed responsibility for the attack.

    Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the aggression on the state broadcaster as a “war crime” and called on the United Nations to take immediate action against the regime.

    . . . But after a brief interruption on screen as debris fell from a bomb strike, Sahar Emami was back courageously presenting the news and denouncing the attack. Image: AJ screenshot APR

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei denounced the attack and urged the international community to hold the regime accountable for its assault on the media.

    “The world is watching: targeting Iran’s news agency #IRIB’s office during a live broadcast is a wicked act of war crime,” Baghaei wrote on X.

    The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) also condemned the bombing of the IRIB news building, labeling it an “inhuman, criminal, and a terrorist act.”

    CPJ ‘appalled’ by Israeli attack
    The Committee to Protect Journalists said it was “appalled by Israel’s bombing of Iran’s state TV channel while live on air.”

    “Israel’s killing, with impunity, of almost 200 journalists in Gaza has emboldened it to target media elsewhere in the region,” Sara Qudah, the West Asia representative for CPJ, said in a statement after the attack on an IRIB building.

    The Israeli regime has a documented history of targeting journalists globally. Since October 2023, it has killed more than 250 Palestinian journalists in the besieged Gaza Strip.

    The regime launched its aggression against the Islamic Republic, including Tehran, early on Friday, leading to the assassination of several high-ranking military officials, nuclear scientists, and civilians, including women and children.

    In response, Iran launched a barrage of missiles and drones late Friday night, followed by more retaliatory operations on Saturday and Sunday as part of Operation True Promise III.

    In Israel, 24 people have been killed and hundreds wounded since hostilities began. In Iran, 224 people have been killed.

    Plumes of black smoke billowing after an Israeli attack against Iran’s state broadcaster yesterday. Image: PressTV

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Judy Davis gives a singularly vivid performance in The Spare Room – but the play falls short

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Moya Costello, Adjunct Lecturer in Creative Writing, Southern Cross University

    Brett Boardman/Belvoir

    In The Spare Room, Judy Davis lights up the stage with a singularly vivid performance.

    Adapted by Eamon Flack from Helen Garner’s 2008 novel of the same name, Davis plays sharp-tongued Helen (or Hel) to the irrational Nicola (Elizabeth Alexander), who visits seeking alternative treatments for her cancer-ridden body.

    But unfortunately, the production does not match Davis’ star performance.

    A shaky reality

    Set and costume, by Mel Page, echo Garner tropes: bed linen, windows, back door onto shared backyard with family as neighbours, curtains, lounge, kitchen, vodka, music, bicycle and miniature pink backpack.

    But I’m increasingly unable to suspend belief in stage designs whose purpose is to mimic reality. A curtain is used inconsistently to indicate a change of space. The kitchen table is appropriated for medical professionals’ desks and magician’s table without any change of lighting or further demarcation of space and time.

    Kitchens and cooking are important to Garner’s domestic settings. There’s a brief smashing of apricot kernels. Bananas, licorice bullets and lemonade get a mention. But Hel’s chopping of a limp celery comes out of nowhere, and means very little.

    Garner’s writing captures the minutiae of the home. This is echoed on stage.
    Brett Boardman/Belvoir

    If the adaptation is going to use food, meal preparation and cooking, then use it substantially as a motif.

    For time changes, Hel yells out the day. The pace is speedy, with Davis firing off dialogue and scampering across stage. We get no sense of the dragging time that Hel experiences as carer.

    The same actors playing multiple characters without much change of physical appearance lacks credulity. Nicola, in particular, is presented as a cliché of an older, suburban woman – not Garner’s wealthy bohemian. Nicola is based on Jenya Osborne – a friend of Garner and her third husband, Murray Bail, who described Osborne as “alternative virtually everything”.

    Garner is the queen of sustained metaphor. In the novel, a broken mirror and a creature scuttling in dried leaves are early images of death.

    In Flack’s adaptation, the mirror is only spoken of, accompanied by a strum across the cello by Anthea Cottee (music composed by Steve Francis).

    A live cello, played by Anthea Cottee, accompanies the play.
    Brett Boardman/Belvoir

    There may have been a flourish of flamenco on the cello as Hel prances in imitation of the liveliness of her granddaughter, Bess (who is only referred to once), but it is too unimpactful to recall.

    At one point, Hel plays on a toy piano accompanying the cello, a comedic reference to Garner’s most acclaimed novel The Children’s Bach (1984).

    On death and dying

    The clearest image of dying and death is central in the play: a magician’s show that Hel has to review. “The most beautiful things happen secretly and privately”, the magician (Alan Dukes) says, as he whisks away then recovers various objects.

    A failure of both Garner’s book and the stage adaptation is that Hel complains of exhaustion after only a few weeks caring for Nicola. But many people spend years caring for a sick loved one, giving up another possible trajectory of their own lives.

    Hel complains of exhaustion after only a few weeks caring for Nicola.
    Brett Boardman/Belvoir

    The balance is wrong, too, between the humanity of Hel and Nicola: the audience guffawed at Hel’s exasperated wit and Nicola’s investment in fraudulent therapies. This, perhaps, is a feature of Garner’s work. While Garner is self-critical in her writing, she also consistently exposes others.

    Bail is critical of Garner’s use of their friend’s life as fodder for a novel. He writes:

    [Osbourne] was all kindness and consideration, which was rewarded as she was dying by being portrayed in [Garner’s book], where her harmless foolishness was pitied and scorned.

    In Garner’s novel, Nicola and Hel “[dissect] with cheerful meanness the latest escapades” of her ex-husband. But in the play, Hel recounts her acts of revenge against him in their Sydney flat, drawing on Garner’s third diary, How to End a Story: Diaries 1995–1998, published in 2021. Bail is not named in either play or novel, but fans of Garner’s work know of whom she speaks.

    The play is part monologue by Davis. Monologues and choruses effectively give oversight and insight to the narrative, but here it only further spotlights Hel’s story, not Nicola’s who is the one dying in pain.

    With some details in the dialogue of Nicola’s dying processes – and with her plan to take an entourage for residency in an expensive hotel – Hel then “handed her over”.

    As the play opens with a reference to the life-filled antics of Hel’s granddaughter, we know that the granddaughter, now assumed to be recovered from a cold, can be handed over to her. It is a rational ending, but lacking vitality.

    The Spare Room is at Belvoir, Sydney, until July 13.

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

    ref. Judy Davis gives a singularly vivid performance in The Spare Room – but the play falls short – https://theconversation.com/judy-davis-gives-a-singularly-vivid-performance-in-the-spare-room-but-the-play-falls-short-257244

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Marshall Op-Ed: The U.S. Army’s 250th Birthday: A Personal and National Triumph

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Kansas Roger Marshall

    Washington – On Monday, U.S. Senator Roger Marshall, M.D. (R-Kansas) published an op-ed in The Washington Times, marking the celebration of the 250th Birthday of the United States Army, and reflecting on how these celebrations can restore pride in America again.
    Read the full op-ed HERE or below:
    The Army’s 250th Birthday: A Personal and National Triumph
    Senator Roger Marshall
    The Washington Times
    June 16, 2024
    Standing in a quiet room at Gettysburg last month, I read about Lincoln’s Address—many headlines from 1863 called it “silly,” others “a perfected gem.” That’s the America I love: where we speak freely, protest boldly, and debate fiercely. Yet, as I scanned coverage of the U.S. Army’s 250th birthday celebration on June 14, 2025, one truth was missing: 1.3 million soldiers gave their lives to protect those freedoms. The grand parade and festival on the National Mall weren’t just a showcase of strength; it was a rebirth of patriotism, a moment that hit me personally and resonated for our nation.
    My family’s story is woven into the Army’s 250 years. Every generation has served. Three ancestors fell in the Civil War’s brutal fields. A great-uncle, along with many other brave soldiers, suffocated from nerve gas in the Argonne Forest during World War I, the “war to end all wars.” Two other great-uncles stormed Normandy’s beaches; later in the Second World War, my wife lost an uncle. My dad served, my brother served, I served, and my son serves today. I’ve always believed every American should serve, not just for duty, but to feel the weight of sacrifice. At this great celebration, watching my grandsons’ eyes light up as tanks rumbled by on the Mall, I saw history spark their young hearts. This celebration wasn’t just about the past; it was about inspiring the future.
    I’ve lived through patriotism’s highs and lows. The Korean War, before my time, sparked questions about America’s global role. Vietnam, which I watched as a kid, left us confused—protests clashed with America First pride. The Gulf Wars came, and as 9/11’s memory faded, we debated how far was too far. Over the last four years, an open border signaled a nation adrift, with our military and law enforcement wondering if their commander-in-chief had their backs. Patriotism seemed shattered. But June 14 was a new day. The first-ever Army birthday celebration on the National Mall, with 6,600 soldiers marching, felt like a reset—a bold reclaiming of national pride.
    My daughter and niece, there with their young kids, saw it too. They said the parade taught their children military history, American pride, and gratitude for freedoms won through sacrifice. Veterans at home, glued to their TVs, felt seen—many watched every moment, marveling at “cool weapons,” tanks, and drones. Nearby us was a mom whose son re-enlisted, sworn in by President Trump. Tears streamed down her face as she waved her flag, her Army shirt emblazoned with her son’s regiment. “This is for all who served,” she said. I wish every veteran could’ve been flown to D.C. to feel that joy.
    The celebration’s significance ran deeper. It honored a legacy: the Army, born a year before the Declaration of Independence, secured our freedom in the Revolutionary War and defended us through the Civil War, World Wars, and modern conflicts. It showcased unity, with events like the wreath-laying at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier echoing the Army’s motto, “This We’ll Defend.” It highlighted innovation—radar, the internet, wireless tech—all rooted in Army ingenuity that shaped global progress. It inspired, with the “Be All You Can Be” campaign driving recruitment to 85% of 2025’s target, promising the strongest class in years. And as a prelude to America’s 250th anniversary in 2026, it set the stage for national reflection.
    While too much of the media focused on other issues, no one can doubt that this celebration restored pride, boosted military morale, and sent a message to the world. As my grandson exclaimed, “America’s Army is undefeated,” rolling through 250 years of victories. To those burning flags or kneeling during the anthem, it’s a gut punch—a pain that breaks the hearts of those who served. I wish they’d served, felt the cost of freedom, had held a dying soldier in their arms as they said their last words, or joined a Chaplain as they delivered the news of a lost loved one to a young wife and children.  As riots flare, let’s remember: millions died so we can stand, debate, and rebuild.
    Regardless, when the President calls, the Army is rolling along!

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Arrest – Aggravated robbery – Alice Springs

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    A 31-year-old man has been arrested after allegedly threatening staff at a convenience store in Alice Springs in the early hours of this morning.

    Around 2:50am, the Joint Emergency Services Communication Centre (JESCC) received a report of an aggravated robbery at a convenience store on Todd Street. The offender had allegedly entered the store armed with a knife, threatened a staff member, and stolen items before leaving the store.

    The offender was tracked by police CCTV operators, resulting in his arrest by police within 3 minutes of the alleged offending. CCTV operators were also able to assist police in locating the discarded knife, which was seized.

    He was charged with Going armed in public and Aggravated Robbery, and was remanded in custody to appear in court on 18 June.

    Detective Acting Senior Sergeant Michael Curtiss said, “I want to acknowledge the excellent police work by our CCTV operators, alongside members on the ground, which resulted in the swift arrest of the offender.”

    Police continue to urge anyone who witnesses crime or antisocial behaviour to contact police on 131 444. In an emergency dial 000. Anonymous reports can be made through Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or online via https://crimestoppersnt.com.au/.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI China: What the Shenzhou-20 astronauts are doing after over 50 days in space

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

    This video screenshot taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on May 22, 2025 shows Shenzhou-20 astronaut Chen Dong leaving China’s orbiting space station for extravehicular activities. (Xinhua/Li Yanchen)

    Imagine living and working hundreds of miles above Earth for over 50 days. This sci-fi scene has been a reality for China’s Shenzhou-20 crew — Chen Dong, Chen Zhongrui, and Wang Jie — aboard the Tiangong Space Station.

    Far from a quiet getaway, a short video released by China’s state television broadcaster CCTV on Monday showed their “space business trip,” which is packed with vital scientific work, health checks, and station upkeep, all of which are crucial for future space exploration.

    The astronaut trio are in good condition and the multi-disciplinary space science experiments are advancing smoothly, according to the CCTV report.

    The crew, commanded by veteran astronaut Chen Dong, was launched into orbit on April 24 for a six-month mission.

    Over the past week, they devoted substantial time to space medicine research. During their research, they have explored fundamental aspects of cognitive function in microgravity, focusing on teamwork dynamics, self-awareness in isolation and how astronauts perceive motion, depth, and relationships absent Earth’s gravity. These studies are critical for ensuring safe operations during spacewalks and complex tasks.

    In addition, they also conducted routine vascular ultrasound scans tracked changes in cardiovascular function over time and used apparatus to capture subtle changes in control and coordination during precise tasks like equipment operation or sample handling, according to the report.

    On the front of life science, they focused on the “effects and mechanisms of space microgravity on microorganisms” experiment.

    The video showed that in Tiangong’s specialized biotechnology experiment rack, the crew observed the growth, developmental patterns, and bioactive compound synthesis of Streptomyces bacteria in weightlessness.

    This research is expected to reveal new biological adaptations and potential applications for space-based pharmaceutical research.

    The crew carefully sampled liquid cultures, preserving the samples for their eventual journey back to Earth.

    Another highlight of their daily routine, in addition to the meticulous space station upkeep, is their rigorous exercise to counter the physical toll of microgravity. The video captures the astronauts running on a treadmill in the space module.

    Beyond exercise, the crew undergoes regular checkups like detailed heart monitoring and blood pressure tracking. They also participate in unique health assessments based on traditional Chinese medicine principles, according to the report.

    China’s space station has now hosted over 200 scientific projects, with nearly 2 tonnes of scientific materials and applied equipment sent to orbit and nearly 100 experimental samples returned to Earth, according to the China Manned Space Agency.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: How China-Africa industrial chain drives continental growth

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

    China-Africa trade reached a record 295.56 billion U.S. dollars in 2024, up 4.8 percent year-over-year, marking the 16th consecutive year China has remained Africa’s largest trading partner.

    Currently, with the support of the 10 partnership action plans, Chinese and African businesses are enhancing collaboration across the industrial chain, propelling the advancement of relations and providing fresh impetus for sustainable economic growth.

    This photo taken on May 27, 2025 shows workers checking cocoa processing equipment at the cocoa processing complex in the PK24 Industrial Park on the northwestern outskirts of Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire. (Xinhua/Wang Guansen)

    BOOSTING LOCAL PRODUCTION

    In Cote d’Ivoire, the PK24 Industrial Park outside Abidjan, the country’s economic capital, is abuzz with activity. A newly built cocoa processing complex, the country’s first state-owned modern plant, is about to launch.

    Built by China Light Industry Nanning Design Engineering Co., Ltd., the facility can process 50,000 tonnes of cocoa annually and store 140,000 tonnes. It marks a major milestone in the country’s drive to advance up the global value chain.

    “We’re finally processing cocoa on our own land,” said Ettien Kouakou Camille, a local farmer beaming with pride. “In the past, cocoa was exported without being processed. Now, Chinese companies are helping us change that.”

    Kobenan Kouassi Adjoumani, Cote d’Ivoire’s Minister of State and Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, said Chinese companies are not just building factories — they are bringing integrated solutions to help us upgrade our agricultural value chains. “China’s agricultural development experience is a vital reference for African countries,” he said.

    A staff member sorts chili peppers in Nyagatare District, Rwanda, on May 22, 2025. (Xinhua/Ji Li)

    Similar transformations are taking shape across the continent. In Rwanda’s Eastern Province, Gashora Farm PLC is expanding chili production with support from China’s Hunan Modern Agriculture International Development Co., Ltd. The partnership includes infrastructure upgrades, such as cold storage, drying facilities, and expanded farmland.

    “The Chinese market is enormous. We saw strong demand for Rwandan dried chili,” said Dieudonne Twahirwa, managing director of Gashora Farm PLC.

    To date, China has established capacity cooperation with 15 African countries and is involved in over 50 industrial parks across the continent, attracting global investment and strengthening Africa’s industrial base.

    “China has become not only a major trade partner for Africa, but also a key supporter in capacity building and technology transfer,” said Humphrey Moshi, director of the Center for Chinese Studies at the University of Dar es Salaam.

    People work in a workshop of China’s Inner Mongolia King Deer Cashmere Group on the southern outskirts of Madagascar’s capital, Antananarivo, March 28, 2025. (Xinhua/Li Yahui)

    DEVELOPING SKILLED TALENT

    Alongside infrastructure, China-Africa cooperation has emphasized vocational training and talent development.

    On the southern outskirts of Madagascar’s capital Antananarivo, more than 3,000 local workers at a cashmere garment plant owned by China’s Inner Mongolia King Deer Cashmere Group transform high-end yarn into export-ready products.

    “Since the factory’s inception, we have trained over 20,000 textile professionals across various roles,” said Xia Yonghai, general manager of the company. “Many now work in local textile enterprises, holding key technical and managerial positions.”

    For 50-year-old Rivoherimanitra Niaina Rado, who has worked at the factory for nearly two decades, the journey is incredible. “I started as a trainee and now became a foreman … What I’m most proud of is helping bring advanced technology to Madagascar.”

    Chinese companies are also driving demand for vocational skills across Africa. Flagship initiatives like the Luban Workshops promote hands-on, industry-oriented learning in several countries.

    Cavince Adhere, a Kenya-based international relations scholar, said that Chinese investment and long-term engagement in Africa have not only created employment but also significantly raised the technical capacity of the local workforce through systematic training.

    Chinese enterprises have made vital contributions to Africa’s talent development, laying a solid foundation for Africa’s sustainable growth, Adhere added.

    Staff members of Kilimall sort goods at a warehouse in Mlolongo, Kenya, on June 3, 2025. (Xinhua/Li Yahui)

    CONNECTING GLOBAL MARKETS

    China-Africa cooperation is also facilitating the export of African products to global markets through various platforms.

    In Kenya, Chinese-founded e-commerce platform Kilimall has become one of East Africa’s leading online retailers. One of its top merchants, Hoswell Macharia, sells locally produced TVs by Chinese-invested firm Vitron, generating annual sales of 96 million Kenyan shillings (about 745,000 U.S. dollars).

    “Around 40 percent of our components are now locally sourced, and we plan to further increase localization based on market demand,” said Hu Zhaoyang, executive director of Vitron, home to Chinese investment.

    Vice President of Kilimall Wu Mixiang said the growing presence of Chinese manufacturers in Africa means local retailers have access to better-quality and more affordable products, which translates into real benefits for consumers.

    Other Chinese e-commerce giants like Shein and Temu are also expanding in Africa, connecting local businesses to the global digital economy.

    China continues to open its market to African exports. It granted zero-tariff treatment on 100 percent of product categories to all least developed countries with which it has diplomatic relations, including 33 African countries, starting from Dec. 1, 2024. Events like the China International Import Expo, the China-Africa Economic and Trade Expo (CAETE) and the Canton Fair further support African exporters.

    “The Chinese market really has an appetite for Kenyan products … We are working with various stakeholders to consolidate consignments for Hass avocado sourced countrywide,” said avocado exporter Newton Ngure at a Kenya-focused CAETE promotional event in April. “It is an opportune moment for us to venture into the Chinese market.”

    From infrastructure and training to production and global sales, China-Africa industrial cooperation is deepening. As the continent moves from raw material exports to shared value creation, this partnership is helping lay the foundation for long-term, independent growth and a brighter future. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Police seek arson suspects at Solomontown

    Source: New South Wales – News

    Police are investigating an arson at Solomontown and believe the suspects may have been injured during the fire.

    Just after midnight on Monday 16 June, police were called to a report of a car on fire in Young Street, Solomontown.

    When police officers arrived, they discovered a car on fire and a fire burning at the front of a nearby residence, which they extinguished with a fire extinguisher.

    The occupants of the house were not injured during the incident.  The exterior of the house was charred by flames.

    Investigations revealed three male suspects had attended an address in Young Street and doused the front of the residence with accelerant.

    The suspects then entered the vehicle, which became engulfed in flames.  They ran off, abandoning the car in the street.

    It is believed the men may have suffered significant burns or injuries in the fire and police urge them to seek medical attention.

    Anyone with information about the identity or location of anyone involved in this incident is encouraged to contact Crime Stoppers immediately on 1800 333 000 or online at www.crimestopperssa.com.au

    Anyone with CCTV or dashcam footage that may assist the investigation is asked to contact police.

    The vehicle has been seized for forensic examination.  Investigations are continuing.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI: Kyro CFO Launches Flexible Fractional CFO Services to Support Growing Businesses

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Kyro CFO announces the launch of its expanded fractional CFO services, providing strategic financial leadership to small and mid-sized businesses through flexible, cost-effective models. The firm offers outsourced CFO services, part-time CFO services, and virtual CFO services to help organizations optimize performance, manage growth, and navigate complex transitions.

    Kyro CFO

    “The fractional CFO model has evolved from a cost-saving measure to a strategic necessity in today’s business environment,” said Nelis Parts, Founder and CEO of Kyro CFO. “The surge in demand for fractional CFO services reflects businesses recognizing that sophisticated financial leadership is no longer a luxury—it’s essential for survival and growth.”

    The need for high-level financial expertise is increasing as businesses face challenges such as outdated financial reporting, inefficient resource allocation, and operational strain during periods of expansion. Kyro CFO’s services address these gaps by delivering experienced C-suite financial leadership without the overhead of a full-time executive.

    “Having strategic financial leadership shouldn’t be limited to companies that can afford $200,000+ executive salaries,” said Parts. “Our fractional model democratizes access to sophisticated financial expertise, enabling growing businesses to compete with larger organizations through superior financial intelligence and operational efficiency.”

    Through its fractional CFO Services, Kyro CFO integrates senior financial professionals directly into client operations. These CFOs provide oversight in budgeting, forecasting, strategic planning, and performance analysis. The model offers flexibility in scope and duration, with services customized to each client’s operational stage and financial objectives. More information is available at https://www.kyrocfo.com/cfo-services.

    Kyro CFO also supports clients with M&A Advisory Services, offering end-to-end transaction support for acquisitions, divestitures, and ownership transitions. The firm assists with valuation, due diligence, deal structuring, and integration planning, ensuring transactions align with long-term goals and minimize risk. Learn more at https://www.kyrocfo.com/ma-advisory.

    Additionally, Kyro CFO provides Business Transformation Services that apply data-driven methods and automation to improve business operations. These services leverage artificial intelligence tools, integrated reporting systems, and cloud-based platforms to increase efficiency and create real-time financial visibility. Businesses can explore transformation solutions at https://www.kyrocfo.com/business-transformation.

    “Financial leadership isn’t just about managing numbers—it’s about optimizing the operations that generate those numbers,” said Parts. “We analyze every aspect of our clients’ businesses to identify efficiency opportunities, eliminate waste, and maximize return on investment across all operational areas. Our methodology transforms complex financial data into actionable business intelligence, replacing intuition with insight and assumption with analysis.”

    The firm’s structured five-step engagement process begins with a complimentary consultation, followed by a tailored needs analysis and service proposal. Once onboarded, clients receive immediate support in financial reporting, operational improvement, and strategic planning, with ongoing adjustments based on evolving business needs.

    Kyro CFO’s approach is designed to provide growing businesses with the financial expertise needed to make timely, informed decisions and scale effectively.

    For more information, visit https://www.kyrocfo.com

    Media Contact:

    Nelis Parts
    Kyro CFO
    media@kyrocfo.com
    https://www.kyrocfo.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d553ae56-b4ee-4596-9eb7-7202bdbbb6da

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Classroom creativity inspires

    Source: Reserve Bank of Australia

    12 May 2025

    Challenging classrooms are producing fresh ideas as the new school year gets underway for the four teachers we will follow throughout 2025.


    Lilly Maynard

    Year 5–6 teacher, Ulverstone Primary School, Tasmania

    Year 5–6 teacher
    Ulverstone Primary School, Tasmania

    For Lilly Maynard, now in her second year as a graduate teacher at Ulverstone Primary School on Tasmania’s northwest coast, additional funding would be transformative.

    Teaching a Year 5 to 6 class, Maynard says the school’s resources, particularly in technology, fall short of meeting student needs.

    “We have one device for every two to three students,” she says. “I’d love to see one-to-one devices because, by the time they reach Year 5 or 6, many students still don’t know basic technology skills like saving a document or changing fonts.”

    To bridge this gap, Maynard and other Year 5 and 6 teachers are rolling out a new technology unit in 2025 to cover foundational skills for Microsoft Word, Teams and Canva.

    Funding impacts more than technology. She reflects on the benefits of having extra teacher aides in the classroom.

    “Last year, I had a Year 6 student who struggled academically. With the limited aide time we had, we focused on intensive small-group work, going back to sentence structure and the elements of narrative writing,” she says.

    “Having more support would mean not only helping those who are struggling but also extending students who are ready to be challenged.”

    A legacy of safety

    Maynard was inspired to teach by her kindergarten teacher, whom she describes as creating a caring and safe presence for students: “I’ve always wanted to be that person for others.”

    This aspiration now shapes her classroom priorities, in which building resilience and fostering a safe learning environment are central. “We do a lot of social and emotional learning activities, teaching students how to handle conflicts or deal with challenges,” she says. “It’s amazing to watch them start resolving small issues on their own.”

    A one-year part-time paid teaching internship, which she completed in the last year of her university studies, helped her segue into teaching.

    Learning on Sea Country

    Maynard’s school’s connection to its local environment is a highlight. Late last year, about one third of Ulverstone’s 380 students participated in the education department’s Sea Country program, which integrates Palawa perspectives into learning.

    “We did pre-teaching activities about what Sea Country means and, on the excursion, it was incredible to see students reflecting on the land’s historical and cultural significance.”

    This year, Maynard aims to continue refining her skills and exploring innovative assessment techniques. “I want to build on my trials of formative assessments like exit tickets I had success with last year.”

    “My goal as a teacher is to nurture curiosity, foster creativity, and instil a lifelong love of learning.”

    With additional funding, Maynard says these aspirations could become a reality for every student in her class.12 May 2025

    Challenging classrooms are producing fresh ideas as the new school year gets underway for the four teachers we will follow throughout 2025.


    Bry Knife

    English teacher, Mabel Park State High School, Logan, QLD

    Homeschool to high school

    Bry Knife’s teaching career reflects education’s evolving landscape, where personal experience and advocacy play vital roles in meeting the diverse needs of today’s classrooms.

    Knife’s school days were outside of the mainstream experience. The child of a missionary and pastor, Knife was home-schooled in Ethiopia from Years 3 to 10.

    “Because I didn’t have a traditional education, I feel I can relate to the diversity of students at my school,” says Knife.

    Studying at his own speed through homeschooling taught them that “everyone works at their own pace”. For Knife, that means embracing organisational strategies such as using a bullet journal and medication to manage ADHD.

    Knife identifies as a non-binary, trans-masculine teacher. He prefers to use a combination of pronouns – he/him and they/them – to reflect his identity and experience of gender.

    At university, Knife found themself “figuring out that I was queer in a very conservative space”. He completed an accelerated liberal arts bachelor’s and teaching master’s degrees in four-and-a-half years. After graduating, Knife was guaranteed permanency through the Teacher Education Centre of Excellence Program.

    Embracing diversity

    This year marks Knife’s fifth as a teacher. He joined Mabel Park High just over two years ago. The school has almost 1800 students and can be “complex”, says Knife, particularly with behaviour management issues. In 2025, Knife expects to continue teaching English to students in Years 7 to 12.

    “My identity wasn’t as supported early in my teaching career,” Knife says. “Now, I’m much more myself. I’m supported and even celebrated, such as on Wear It Purple Day. I can project a steadiness to my students, who won’t feel safe or comfortable if the adult in the room is anxious and jittery.”

    Knife credits the Queensland Teachers’ Union with the support provided to facilitate their transfer. Knife now holds multiple union roles, including QTU activist and Pride Committee member, and has helped advocate for solutions to address the teacher shortage.

    “Offering permanency is no longer an incentive because the shortage makes that easy to get,” Knife says.

    Bridging gaps

    Proper funding for resources remains a major challenge, particularly as Mabel Park High works to “close the digital divide”.

    “There are Year 7 students at my school who don’t know how to use computers, research on the internet, or type up an assessment. As we roll out a bring-your-own device program, we’re finding that many parents can’t afford computers and don’t have one at home. More funding would bridge that gap,” he says.


    Lottie Smith

    Year 7–10 teacher, Centre of Deaf Education, Adelaide, SA

    Lottie Smith still feels pride over a student’s achievement in her first year of teaching.

    The Year 8 student, who is deaf and has an intellectual disability, won the speech contest on the theme “black, loud and proud” during Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Reconciliation Week.

    Smith, who teaches a Year 7 to 10 class at Avenues College in Adelaide, thought of the student as soon as she heard about the contest.

    “I sat with him and broke down the question, and we worked out a speech in sign language and practised it,” she says.

    “On the day, I stood in front of him holding big cue cards. He used sign language, and an interpreter voiced his words.”

    Smith grows emotional recalling the moment: “He did this in front of the Aboriginal Youth Commissioner, a panel of Elders, and young people. His competitors, the other contestants, used a microphone.”

    Support that’s needed

    The achievement highlights Smith’s dedication and one-on-one coaching. She teaches four other students who are deaf or hard of hearing and have complex additional needs such as autism or intellectual disabilities. Smith works with the support of one Student Learning Support Officer (SLSO).

    “Extra funding would mean more support staff,” she says. “One-on-one support is critical for meeting the needs of our complex student cohort.”

    Smith also believes in upskilling SLSOs, who often work closely with the students with the highest needs. “SLSOs have limited access to professional training, and that needs to change,” she says.

    Out-of-pocket costs

    Smith is grateful for a partial subsidy she received to pursue Certificates II and III in Auslan, a prerequisite for her master’s degree in teaching hearing-impaired students. However, the financial burden of further qualifications has been significant.

    “The government offers a scholarship for one unit per semester of the Auslan course, which means doing it part-time,” she says. “But I studied my master’s full-time alongside Auslan, so I was automatically out-of-pocket by a few thousand dollars, but only just found out I could have applied for a scholarship.”

    The lack of funding support is unfair and unethical, says Smith.

    “I went out of my way to gain these qualifications, adding to my HECS debt for a hard-to-fill role,” she says.

    Last year Smith was awarded SA Early Career Educator of the Year 2024 on World Teachers Day in recognition of her work with Australian Association of Teachers of the Deaf (SA).

    Smith says developing her students’ Auslan and English language skills drives her.

    “I look forward to continuing celebrating my students’ small wins that contribute to their confidence, skills and independence.”


    Amelia Evans

    Physical education and science teacher, University of Canberra High School Kaleen, ACT

    The opportunity to take on leadership roles and make a positive community impact drew ACT teacher Amelia Evans into teaching.

    Recalling her school days, the sixth-generation teacher says: “I didn’t always love school, but I enjoyed the positive relationships I had with my PE teachers, making school a bit more fun every day.”

    After Year 12, Evans completed a year in the Royal Australian Navy, “squirrelling away my pay” before starting her teaching degree.

    Despite juggling multiple jobs, she finished her degree in three years instead of four, without a scholarship.

    Inclusive PE

    Now in her third year of high-school physical education teaching at the University of Canberra High School Kaleen, Evans faces ongoing challenges.

    “In each class, I have 30 young people with diverse abilities and needs, but we’re all working towards the same goal: ensuring everyone can succeed,” she says.

    For example, last year, she adapted PE lessons so a blind student who loves to run could participate.

    “We’d go out onto the oval and play ‘tips’. I got a whole class set of little bells for the other students to wear, so she knows they’re about to try to tag her.”

    Funding wish list

    Evans says more funding would improve equipment, facilities, and accessibility for schools like hers.

    “Some of the gear only lasts a term. Things get thrown on the roof, then you put a fragile badminton racket in the hands of a 13-year-old who’s never used one before – one will break every couple of lessons.”

    Boosting funding would also mean “extra hands to create tasks to help students who need differentiated learning”.

    Limited facilities remain a problem, too.

    “Our school ovals aren’t good enough for PE, so we use the public ovals 500 metres away, which takes more of our teaching time,” she says.

    Wet weather brings further challenges, with up to six PE classes crammed into a gym designed for two.

    Despite these hurdles, Evans’ dedication hasn’t gone unnoticed. She was nominated for an ACT teaching award last year for co-founding a Year 8 and 9 girls’ empowerment group. About 20 students attend twice-weekly sessions, which include lunch, music, and resilience-building activities.

    “A parent has twice run workshops on saying ‘no’ – what to do if you’re approached in the street – and how to walk and look tougher than you feel,” Evans says.

    Last year, she co-ordinated the transition of Year 6 students into high school. Additionally, she is studying a Certificate IV in mental health at her own expense to upskill in wellbeing support.

    “It will help me have an input in decision-making for the benefit of all students and staff. I want to help lead my school in a positive direction,” Evans says.


    By Margaret Paton

    This article was originally published in the Australian Educator, Autumn 2024

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Barber shop blaze at Blackwood

    Source: New South Wales – News

    Police are investigating a suspicious fire at a southern suburbs barber shop overnight.

    Emergency services responded to reports of a fire at a barbers in a group of shops on Coromandel Parade, Blackwood just before 1.30am on Tuesday 17 June.

    CFS crews managed to contain the fire to just the barber shop and quickly extinguished the blaze.  Neighbouring premises were affected by smoke.  There were no reports of injuries.

    Crime scene investigators will attend the scene this morning.

    Police are treating the fire as deliberate and ask anyone with information to contact police.

    Anyone who saw any suspicious activity or has dashcam or CCTV from the area in the early hours of this morning is asked to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or online at www.crimestopperssa.com.au – you can remain anonymous.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: What’s the right way to mark Juneteenth? The newest US holiday is confusing Americans

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Timothy Welbeck, Director of the Center for Anti-Racism, Temple University

    Martha Yates Jones and Pinkie Yates sit in a decorated buggy for Juneteenth 1908 in front of Houston’s Antioch Baptist Church. African American Library at The Gregory School, Houston Public Library

    The United States’ newest federal holiday, celebrated annually on June 19, has quickly become its most puzzling one. Four years after President Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act, Americans have wrestled with what to make of the holiday.

    What is Juneteenth? What is the proper way to celebrate it? Should holiday observers attend barbecues and cookouts? Should Juneteenth’s observance be a day of learning? Is there a way to acknowledge the holiday without misappropriating it?

    This confusion likely emerged because many Americans did not even learn about Juneteenth until around when it became a federal holiday in 2021. Moreover, the Trump administration and state legislatures across the country have further complicated matters with their increased efforts to ban the type of education that led to the national recognition of the holiday in the first place.

    ‘All slaves are free’

    Juneteenth – short for June Nineteenth – recognizes the day in 1865 when Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, with roughly 2,000 federal troops from the 13th Army Corps. Upon arriving, Granger issued General Order No. 3. The order read:

    “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere.”

    The official handwritten record of General Order No. 3, preserved at the National Archives Building in Washington, D.C.
    National Archives

    Granger’s order effectively freed 250,000 enslaved people in the region.

    Though President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed the enslaved in all the states that had seceded from the U.S., nearly 2½ years earlier, Texas, a Confederate state, rebelled against it.

    At the time, Texas had a minimal number of Union soldiers to enforce the proclamation’s emancipation of enslaved people residing within Confederate territory. Consequently, many of those enslaved in Texas remained ignorant of the proclamation’s potential impact on their lives, or of the fact the Civil War had functionally ended two months earlier.

    In an interview published in 1941, for example, Laura Smalley of Hempstead, Texas, remembered how her enslaver fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War. He returned without informing those whom he enslaved of their freedom. In her interview, she recounted,
    “Old master didn’t tell, you know, they was free … I think now they say they worked them, six months after that.”

    ‘Second Independence Day’

    June 19, 1865, a Monday, changed that.

    The news of emancipation culminated a generations-long struggle for Black people to obtain a modicum of freedom in the U.S.

    For this reason, some refer to Juneteenth as the nation’s second Independence Day. The end of bondage was ostensibly codified in the 13th Amendment ratified later that year.

    Spontaneous Juneteenth celebrations emerged almost immediately. Celebrants referred to the day as “Emancipation Day,” “Freedom Day,” “Juneteenth” and “Jubilee Day.” The latter title alluded to the biblical period following seven sabbatical cycles that resulted in canceling debts and freeing the enslaved.

    Flake’s Bulletin, a weekly, Galveston-based publication, reported on an Emancipation Celebration occurring on Jan. 2, 1866, that included upward of 800 people. A similar gathering occurred in Galveston on June 19, 1866, in what is now the church known as Reedy Chapel AME. Annual celebrations continued, beginning in southeastern Texas, with events such as historical reenactments, parades, picnics, music and speeches.

    Emancipation Day celebration, June 19, 1900, in ‘East Woods’ on East 24th Street in Austin, Texas.
    Mrs. Grace Murray Stephenson, Austin History Center, Austin Public Library

    Legacies of slavery

    While the holiday marked a joyous occasion for some, Juneteenth met early and persistent opposition, particularly in the time following Reconstruction.

    For years, local reporting spoke of Juneteenth, as the Galveston Historical Foundation put it, in a “flagrantly racist nature.” Additionally, the racist stereotyping – “idleness” – in the final sentence of Granger’s order simultaneously illustrated its complicated nature while also “[foreshadowing] that the fight for freedom would continue,” National Archives staffer Michael Davis wrote in 2020.

    Historian Keisha Blain explains, “The enslavement of Black people in the U.S. may have ended but the legacies of slavery still shape every aspect of Black life.”

    Advocates such as Opal Lee, commonly referred to as the “grandmother of Juneteenth,” pressed for Juneteenth celebration to continue and, ultimately, for it to be made a national holiday.

    Lee began her advocacy in earnest during the mid-1970s in the Fort Worth, Texas, area. The oldest member of the National Juneteenth Observance Foundation, Lee spearheaded several campaigns to draw attention to Juneteenth. These campaigns included initiatives such as an online petition promoting the holiday’s observance launched in 2019 that amassed 1.6 million signatures.

    In speaking on the significance of Juneteenth, Lee said, “Freedom is for everyone. I think freedom should be celebrated from the 19th of June to the Fourth of July; however, none of us are free until we are all free. We are not free yet, and Juneteenth is a symbol of that.”

    Opal Lee, whose advocacy culminated in Juneteenth becoming a federal holiday in 2021, is known as the ‘grandmother’ of Juneteenth.
    AP Photo/LM Otero

    National recognition

    Because of this advocacy, Juneteenth has grown from relatively obscure regional celebrations to, starting in 2021, a federal holiday.

    The establishment of the holiday was the capstone of initiatives during the racial reckoning. Historians refer to the racial reckoning as the time period beginning in the summer of 2020 until the spring of the following year that witnessed heightened attention to America’s nagging history of racism.

    This reckoning included the historic protests prompted by the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery.

    During this time, numerous institutions, ranging from colleges and universities to major companies, made commitments to racial equity. The recognition of Juneteenth represented a symbolic means to honor those commitments.

    In remarks marking his signing of the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act, Biden said, “Juneteenth marks both the long, hard night of slavery and subjugation, and a promise of a brighter morning to come.”

    President Joe Biden signs the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act on June 17, 2021.
    Evan Vucci/AP

    Backtracking on gains

    But within a year, some had already begun to argue the nation had, as community organizer Braxton Brewington wrote, “betrayed the spirit of Jubilee Day.”

    Many of the racial equity commitments made during the racial reckoning quickly vanished within a year or two. Economist William Michael Cunningham revealed American companies pledged $50 billion to racial equity efforts in 2020, yet had only spent $250 million by 2021.

    By the spring of 2025, companies such as Walmart and McDonald’s announced they will discontinue their diversity, equity and inclusion work. Moreover, Walmart will stop using the term altogether. Amazon, Meta and dozens of other large corporations made similar announcements.

    And members of the Trump administration have mounted continual attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion policies and used the term as a politically expedient slur to deride Black people. This is also exacerbated by the Trump administration’s challenges to birthright citizenship, a key right that gave citizenship to the formerly enslaved and later guaranteed important rights to the entire populace.

    This major shift has fueled arguments that the U.S. has regressed from efforts toward racial equity and thus undermined the meaning of Juneteenth. And such backtracking arguably makes some Juneteenth celebrations performative exercises rather than celebrations of true racial equity.

    As one critic asked, has the holiday devolved “into an exploitative and profit-driven enterprise for companies that disregard the true significance of this day to the Black community?”

    All of this has led to increasing confusion over how to commemorate Juneteenth, if at all. Juneteenth is not the first federal holiday with a complicated history. Nevertheless, with other complex holidays, Americans had years to process their misgivings. In short, the nation is still deciding what it means to be free.

    Between 2021-2023, Timothy Welbeck received honorariums from companies like 1Hotels, AON, Aramark, Campbell Soup, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, and Merrill Lynch, to deliver invited keynote addresses on subject matter similar to that discussed in this article.

    ref. What’s the right way to mark Juneteenth? The newest US holiday is confusing Americans – https://theconversation.com/whats-the-right-way-to-mark-juneteenth-the-newest-us-holiday-is-confusing-americans-258436

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Dragon boat races in Toronto promote athleticism and cultural heritage (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Dragon boat races in Toronto promote athleticism and cultural heritage  
    Organised by the Toronto Chinese Business Association, the mega event attracted thousands of people to celebrate the Chinese tradition that blends athleticism and cultural heritage.
     
    Speaking at the opening ceremony of the Festival, the Acting Director of the Toronto ETO, Mr Gavin Yeung, remarked that the Toronto ETO is pleased to continue supporting the Festival. “Hong Kong brought this water sport to Canada almost four decades ago,” he said. “The dragon boat race signifies the strong and enduring ties between Hong Kong and Canada.”
     
    Mr Yeung shared that Hong Kong, as the events capital of Asia, stands as a globally connected city that hosts world-class events, including mega sports competitions, international conferences and cultural exhibitions, attracting tourists around the world. 
     
         “A notable highlight is the newly opened Kai Tak Sports Park,” he said. “Spanning over 28 hectares, this multipurpose venue is the largest sports, entertainment and mega event complex in Hong Kong.” Highlighting the concept of “tourism is everywhere” in Hong Kong, he encouraged Canadians to visit Hong Kong and discover the many exciting developments in Asia’s world city.
     
    The Toronto ETO also set up a Hong Kong pavilion with a mini-exhibition to showcase the history of dragon boating in Hong Kong. Cheering for their favourite teams while exploring the cultural favours, visitors enjoyed an unforgettable weekend.
     
    Besides Toronto, the Toronto ETO also celebrated dragon boat festivals in different cities across Canada. The festivals in Vancouver and Ottawa will be held from June 20 to 22 (Vancouver and Ottawa time) respectively. 
    Issued at HKT 5:00

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: Reliance Global Submits Request for Withdrawal of Form S-1 Registration Statement

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LAKEWOOD, N.J., June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Reliance Global Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: RELI) (“we,” “us,” “our” or the “Company”), today announced that it has filed a request for withdrawal with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) of the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 333-284218), originally filed January 10, 2025 (as amended, the “Registration Statement”), as the Company no longer intends to pursue a public offering under the Registration Statement at this time. The Registration Statement has not been declared effective by the SEC, and no securities have been sold in connection with the offering described in the Registration Statement.

    This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy the Company’s common stock or any securities, and there shall not be any offer, solicitation or sale of securities mentioned in the press release in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities law of such any state or jurisdiction.

    About Reliance Global Group, Inc.

    Reliance Global Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: RELI) is an InsurTech pioneer, leveraging artificial intelligence (AI), and cloud-based technologies, to transform and improve efficiencies in the insurance agency/brokerage industry. The Company’s business-to-business InsurTech platform, RELI Exchange, provides independent insurance agencies an entire suite of business development tools, enabling them to effectively compete with large-scale national insurance agencies, whilst reducing back-office cost and burden. The Company’s business-to-consumer platform, 5minuteinsure.com, utilizes AI and data mining, to provide competitive online insurance quotes within minutes to everyday consumers seeking to purchase auto, home, and life insurance.  In addition, the Company operates its own portfolio of select retail “brick and mortar” insurance agencies which are leaders and pioneers in their respective regions throughout the United States, offering a wide variety of insurance products. Further information about the Company can be found at https://www.relianceglobalgroup.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. You can identify forward-looking statements by terminology such as “may,” “should,” “could,” “would,” “will,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “estimate,” “continue,” “potential,” and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements in this press release include, but are not limited to, statements regarding:

    • Our future financial condition and operating results;
    • Our plans, objectives, expectations and intentions with respect to future operations, products and services;
    • Our ability to execute the planned withdrawal of the Registration Statement on Form S-1;
    • The development and growth of our RELI Exchange and 5minuteinsure.com platforms;
    • The expansion and performance of our portfolio of retail “brick-and-mortar” insurance agencies;
    • Our ability to maintain compliance with Nasdaq’s continued listing requirements; and
    • Other statements identified by the words noted above;

    These forward-looking statements are based on a number of assumptions, including the assumptions that: we will complete the withdrawal process without unexpected delay; our AI-driven underwriting and cloud-based systems will perform as anticipated; demand for our InsurTech solutions will continue to grow; we will remain in compliance with applicable insurance regulations and Nasdaq listing rules; and there will be no material adverse changes in our relationships with agency partners or service providers. There can be no assurance that these assumptions will prove correct. There are numerous risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results or performance to differ materially from those expressed in these forward-looking statements. These include, among others: delays or failure to complete the withdrawal; inability to execute our growth plans for RELI Exchange or 5minuteinsure.com; competitive and regulatory challenges faced by our retail agency operations; fluctuations in our stock price or failure to maintain Nasdaq compliance; and the other factors described in the “Risk Factors” section of our Registration Statement and in other reports we file with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The foregoing list of factors is not exhaustive. You should carefully review our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, as amended, and the other reports we have filed or will file with the SEC for a more complete discussion of risks and uncertainties. Except as required by law, Reliance Global Group, Inc. disclaims any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this press release.

    Contact:

    Crescendo Communications, LLC
    Tel: +1 (212) 671-1020
    Email: RELI@crescendo-ir.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-Evening Report: Jaws at 50: a cinematic masterpiece – and an incredible piece of propaganda

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Colin Alexander, Senior Lecturer in Political Communications, Nottingham Trent University

    Jaws turns 50 on June 20. Last year, Quentin Tarantino called Stephen Spielberg’s film “possibly the greatest movie ever made”. Though he was quick to add that it isn’t the best film in terms of script, cinematography or acting, he was convinced that its overall quality as a movie remains unmatched.

    I’m not so sure if Jaws is the best movie ever made – but it’s certainly the movie that I like to watch the most. It is as fascinating and multilayered as it is entertaining and depressing. As a researcher of political propaganda, I believe that Jaws had political purpose.

    I have watched Jaws well over 50 times and still, with every viewing, I spot a new detail. Just last week I noticed that when police chief Brody (Roy Scheider) leaves his office after the first shark attack, he opens a gate in a white picket fence.

    The white picket fence is often used to symbolise the American dream and Brody’s actions are likely intended to symbolise the disruption to the dream’s pursuit of capitalism as he seeks to close the beaches and potentially ruin the town’s tourism season.


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


    The film was released in June 1975. Just in time for summer holidays spent splashing in the waves (or not!). However, despite its continued acclaim, it didn’t win any of the big Academy Awards in 1976. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest dominated that year. Composer John Williams did, however, win the Oscar for best original score, which I assume you are now humming in your head.




    Read more:
    One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest: 50 years on Jack Nicholson’s greatest performance is as fresh as ever


    The film is based on the book by Peter Benchley, published a year earlier in 1974. The book’s plot is somewhat different to the film. For example, Matt Hooper – the shark specialist played by Richard Dreyfuss in the film – is eaten by the shark, possibly as an act of retribution for his sins on land. He survives in the film.

    Benchley was US president Lyndon Johnson’s (1963-1969) communications advisor before he became an author and so knew Washington’s priorities well. The film was then commissioned before the book had time to become a commercial success, which is somewhat unusual.

    The trailer for Jaws.

    The shark – powerful, mysterious, dark eyed, stalking the American people and killing without emotion – represents the threat posed by communism. The defeat of this “menace” will require the reunification of American society following its disastrous and fractious involvement in the Vietnam war and political scandals like Watergate.

    Hence, the white public sector worker (Brody), the scientist (Hooper) and the military veteran (Quint), put their differences aside to band together on a rickety and ill-equipped boat – the Orca – which was possibly meant to symbolise the wobbling US of its time.

    So while Jaws is a parable of societal repair, it is also a story of exclusively white unification amid external threats. The civil rights movement and Vietnam are inextricably linked through the service of young black men to the cause, and yet black characters are conspicuous by their absence from the book and the film. The only black presence in the book is an anonymous gardener who rapes wealthy white women.

    Human will to dominate the natural world

    In the book, the horror focuses upon human, rather than animal, behaviour. This comes in the form of political corruption, mafia influence, adultery, snobbery, racial prejudice, community disconnect and dishonest journalism. And it occurs as much on land as it does at sea. There is a large section midway through the book where the shark plays no part in the, at times, highly sexual plot.

    Spielberg removed many of the undercurrents and insinuations of the book for his adaptation. The film gives less attention to life in the town of Amity and focuses largely on the shark and the horror of its actions.

    The irony is that so many characters feel personally offended by an animal capable of instinct alone, when they as humans – capable of reason and choice – behave so badly towards each other. Indeed, the lack of an eco-centric character to defend the shark in both the book or the film is telling.

    Brody yells for people to ‘get out of the water’.

    The overwhelming horror is instead found in the treatment of the shark and the assertion that it must be killed rather than respected and left alone. Indeed, Jaws represents a parable of the modern human perception of battle against nature. Wherein Brody, Hooper and Quint, despite their differences, are united in their assumption of human superiority and their perspective that the problem ought to be dealt with using violence.

    The story of Jaws also speaks to George Orwell’s essay Shooting an Elephant from 1936. It captured the author’s dilemma while working as a police officer in colonial Burma when an elephant disrupted the regular process of capitalism by trampling through a local market.

    The philosophers Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno referred to the enlightenment as having created a “new barbarity” wherein humans are engaged in a project of destruction. Here then, a shark has had the audacity to behave in an inconvenient way to man’s profiteering from tourism and must be killed.

    Indeed, one of the biggest criticisms of the film, which Spielberg has subsequently acknowledged, is its inaccurate representation of shark behaviour and the extent to which the film’s success contributed to the decline of the species.

    Ultimately then, Jaws – the book, the film and the reaction of audiences to it – serves as a testimony to the role played by fear within human decision-making. The fear of “others”. Fear of the unknown. Fear of the natural world. Fear of loss of status or reputation.

    It’s a testament to the susceptibility of humans to become insular and violent when they are scared, but also to the distorting influence of propagandists in determining what they ought to be afraid of.

    This article features references to books that have been included for editorial reasons, and may contain links to bookshop.org. If you click on one of the links and go on to buy something from bookshop.org The Conversation UK may earn a commission.

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

    ref. Jaws at 50: a cinematic masterpiece – and an incredible piece of propaganda – https://theconversation.com/jaws-at-50-a-cinematic-masterpiece-and-an-incredible-piece-of-propaganda-253498

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Army’s 250th birthday celebration on June 14, 2025

    Source: United States Army

    WASHINGTON – Members of the media are invited to cover the celebration of the Army’s 250th birthday on June 14, 2025.

    The festival is at the National Mall in Washington D.C. and begins with an Army Fitness competition at 9:30 a.m. Festival exhibits open at 11 a.m. The festival will provide opportunities to interact with Soldiers, Army astronauts, NFL representatives, and Medal of Honor recipients. There will be military demonstrations, equipment displays, a cake cutting ceremony and opportunities to take part in a variety of activities.

    All press have access to cover the fitness event and the exhibits which are open to the public. If press registered for the parade they are automatically registered for the festival. If press have not registered for the parade, they will still have access to the festival. In other words, press do not need credentials for the festival.

    Press covering the festival may arrive as early as 8 a.m. and should enter through the festival entrance at 7th St. SW and Jefferson St. SW.

    First stop for the press should be the Media Operations Center (Tent #48) located behind the main stage. From there, press will be directed to the media tents (Tents #43&44).

    Soldiers, historians in uniform, and other experts will be available throughout the day for interviews.

    The media can move from the festival to the parade through the pedestrian checkpoint located at 14th St. NW, south of Constitution Ave. NW beginning at 2 p.m.

    The screening checkpoint for the general public attending the parade will be open at 2 p.m. at the following locations:

    • 14th Street between Constitution and Independence Avenue
    • C Street NW between 18th and 19th Street

    At 6:30 p.m. the Army Birthday Parade will celebrate the Army’s history and will feature Army equipment, flyovers and 6,700 Soldiers in uniforms from the past and the present. The day will end with an enlistment and reenlistment ceremony, a parachute demonstration by the Golden Knights and a fireworks display.

    All press access for the parade is controlled by the America250 Commission. If press did not request parade access through the America250 Commission, they can still access the parade with the general public. For more information about press access to the parade, please contact press@america250.org.

    WEATHER

    The weather is being closely monitored and taken into consideration, but at this point nothing has changed. New developments, if any, will be announced by the Army or the America250 Commission.

    To learn more about road/metro closures, and prohibited items, visit:

    For questions about parade credentialing, visit:

    To learn more about the Army’s 250th birthday, visit:

    Livestreams on June 14:

    The U.S. Army Fitness Competition – 9:20 a.m. to 12 p.m.,

    The 250th Army Birthday Festival is made possible through the support of 22 sponsors. This includes presenting sponsors General Dynamics and USAA, and festival entertainment sponsor the Gary Sinise Foundation. Platinum sponsors include the Wounded Warrior Project, the Army & Air Force Exchange Service, the Association of the United States Army, Bell Textron, Wal-Mart, GOVX, Leonardo DRS, RTX Corporation, Lockheed Martin, Leidos and BAE Systems. Gold sponsors include Armed Forces Mutual, Boeing, First Command, General Electric Aerospace, T-Mobile, King George, InterContinental Hotels Group and the NFL. Sponsorship does not imply U.S. Army or federal endorsement.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Seven NFB shorts celebrating GGPAA laureates launching June 14 at 9 p.m. EDT on NFB platforms, CBC Gem and ICI TOU.TV. NFB’s GGPAA film collection reaches 125 films.

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    June 14, 2025 – Montreal – National Film Board of Canada (NFB)

    Seven National Film Board of Canada (NFB) short films celebrating Canadian performing arts excellence will premiere online Saturday, June 14, at 9 p.m. EDT, immediately following the 2025 Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards (GGPAA) celebration at Ottawa’s National Arts Centre.

    Canadians will be able to watch these cinematic tributes to this year’s laureates on NFB platforms as well as CBC Gem (in English) and ICI TOU.TV (in French).

    Each year, the NFB works to find the right combination of director, concept and laureate—producing portraits of distinguished Canadians that also stand on their own as innovative short works of cinema. This year’s films are directed by accomplished Canadian filmmakers Tara Johns and Monique Leblanc.

    The NFB’s GGPAA film collection now totals 125 shorts, created over a 17-year partnership with the Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards Foundation that began back in 2008.

    Laureates and their films

    • Directed by Tara Johns and produced by Robert Vroom
      • Legendary Toronto-born music producer and Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award laureate Bob Ezrin struggles to write his memoir in That Damn Book. Daunted by the pressure of doing justice to a life filled with rock legends, career milestones and family memories, he turns to Alice Cooper—and his own children—for guidance. It turns out the true story he has to tell isn’t just about star-studded accomplishments, but the family and love that gives meaning to it all.
      • In I’m Just Me, a struggling actor—sporting the literal head of a wolf—seeks guidance from a five-star-rated, fox-headed psychiatrist. As their therapy session spirals into a comically surreal commentary on the anxieties of artistic ambition and self-worth, the mask slips to reveal none other than Graham Greene, the southwestern Ontario-bornlegendary actor and Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award.
      • Time Flies features revered Montreal-based contemporary composer and Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award laureate Denis Gougeon balancing the roles of pilot and air traffic controller. Evoking both the flights of imagination and precision required to create his music, Gougeon recounts a musical journey of self-discovery that’s led to his compositions being performed all over the world, while he remains grounded in Quebec.
      • In The ’Hood in Me, veteran Montreal comic actor and Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award laureate Patrick Huard (as Pops) guides young Nathan on a whimsical journey of life lessons in a backstreet curiosities shop. Through his own stories of resilience, creativity and responsibility, Pops tests Nathan’s qualifications as apprentice. At first, it does not go well.
      • A Sonic Rematriation is a hybrid music video and spoken-word film honouring National Arts Centre Award recipient Jeremy Dutcher, Wolastoqiyik member of the Tobique First Nation in northwest New Brunswick, and his reclamation of ancestral songs and the mother tongue of the Wolastoqiyik. Featuring intimate Wolastoqey language performances, archival voices and dreamlike visuals, the film traces Dutcher’s liberation from smoke-bound silence to fiery, unbound song.
    • Directed by Monique Leblanc and produced by Christine Aubé
      • The founder of Red Sky Performance, Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award laureate Sandra Laronde has revolutionized Indigenous storytelling. Embodied Stories captures her artistic journey through dance productions and her AI film Land Dances Us, as well as stunning imagery of the Temagami region in Ontario—her childhood home and creative wellspring.
      • The recipient of this year’s Ramon John Hnatyshyn Award for Voluntarism in the Performing Arts, April Hubbard is a Halifax-based performance artist, arts administrator and Mad Disability advocate. Leading by Example follows her trajectory from excluded performer to revolutionary force in Nova Scotia’s arts scene as she transforms artistic spaces. Hubbard shatters perceptions through captivating performances while creating accessible opportunities for all artists—embodying a creative liberation that transcends physical limitations and a vision that knows no boundaries.

    About the directors

    Tara Johns

    Tara Johns is an Alberta-born writer-director who’s built her cinematic career in Montreal. Tara’s debut short film, Killing Time, was awarded Best Canadian Short at the 2001 Toronto Worldwide Short Film Festival and named one of the Top 10 Best Québécois Shorts of the Decade at the Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois. Tara was most recently tapped by MarVista Entertainment to direct Our Christmas Mural for Hallmark and is currently in development on her new original feature project, Good Bones, with Palomar Films.

    Monique Leblanc

    Director, actress, screenwriter, writer and producer Monique LeBlanc is a prominent figure in Eastern Canada’s film industry, working in both documentary and fiction. Acclaimed recent credits include her 2020 adaptation of Louise Dupré’s book of poetry,Higher Than Flames Will Go (2020), and The Geographies of DAR (2023), her fourth feature documentary and fifth collaboration with the NFB. 

    – 30 –

    Stay Connected

    Online Screening Room: nfb.ca
    NFB Facebook | NFB Twitter | NFB Instagram | NFB Blog | NFB YouTube | NFB Vimeo
    Curator’s perspective | Director’s notes

    About the NFB

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI: AlayaCare Announces the Launch of Layla in Canada, an AI-Powered Assistant Designed for Home Care

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — AlayaCare, a leading provider of cloud-based home and community care solutions, is proud to announce the Canadian launch of Layla, an AI-powered conversational assistant designed to transform how care is delivered across the country.

    Now available to AlayaCare customers nationwide, Layla provides real-time, secure access to vital information through a conversational chat interface, supporting both caregivers and administrators in delivering higher-quality care with greater efficiency. Seamlessly integrated into the AlayaCare platform, Layla is purpose-built for the realities of home-based care — helping providers stay connected, informed, and empowered.

    “With the launch of Layla in Canada, we’re excited to bring the power of AI directly to frontline staff, simplifying access to information and improving how care is coordinated and delivered,” said Adrian Schauer, CEO of AlayaCare. “This marks a major step forward in our commitment to supporting the Canadian home care sector through innovation.”

    As home care organizations across Canada face increasing pressures — including workforce shortages and growing service demand — Layla offers a transformative solution. According to the National Center for Biotechnology Information, 80% of healthcare data is unstructured, and staff lose up to 30 minutes per shift searching for scattered information.

    Layla addresses this challenge head-on by delivering:

    • Comprehensive Data Access: Instant access to hundreds of data points across care plans, client records, visit notes, schedules, and more.
    • Integration with AlayaCare Cloud (ACC): Leverages real-time, structured data from existing systems for immediate utility.
    • Mobile-First, On-the-Go Support: Enables caregivers to find information quickly, wherever they are, ensuring faster, safer decisions.
    • Secure, Compliant Infrastructure: Designed with robust data security, including HIPAA compliance and Canadian privacy standards.
    • Trusted Clinical Knowledge: Provides accurate, easy-to-understand definitions for medical terms and conditions.

    Layla supports care teams across Canada in making informed decisions faster, improving documentation, and reducing administrative burden — ultimately enhancing client experiences and health outcomes.

    “Canadian care providers deserve technology built for their realities. Layla helps ensure they have the right information at the right time,” added Schauer. “It’s not just about efficiency; it’s about better outcomes and better support for the people delivering care every day.”

    For more information about Layla, visit alayacare.com/layla/.

    AlayaCare Press Contact:
    Steph Davidson
    steph.davidson@alayacare.com

    About AlayaCare

    AlayaCare is an end-to-end software platform for public, private, non-profit, and community home-based care organizations that manages the entire client lifecycle, including needs assessments, care plans, scheduling, visit and route optimization, and visit verification. Founded in 2014 and now with over 600 employees, AlayaCare combines traditional in-home and virtual care solutions that enable care providers to lower the cost of care and achieve better outcomes for their clients. For more information, visit: AlayaCare.com.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/38002137-5b0d-4ec4-9eb6-4856e4eaca1f

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Iran’s state broadcaster IRIB has reported an attack on it from Israel

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    TEHRAN, June 16 (Xinhua) — Iran’s state broadcaster IRIB said one of its buildings came under attack from Israel on Monday, calling it a “brutal aggression” and adding that live broadcasts were continuing without major interruptions.

    The Israeli strike targeted the broadcaster’s news network in an apparent attempt to “silence the voice of the Iranian people and the voice of truth,” IRIB said. It said IRIB staff were continuing to report “at maximum capacity.”

    The television broadcast showed the moment of the Israeli attack, which occurred during a live broadcast. In the footage, the presenter was reading the news when the explosion occurred. She reported on it and condemned the attack, but was forced to interrupt the broadcast after a second explosion and the resulting smoke.

    The TV presenter later reappeared live on IRIB without any injuries.

    In the early hours of June 13, Israel launched massive airstrikes on Iran, killing several military commanders, scientists and dozens of civilians. Iran retaliated later that day, and the exchange of strikes continued into Monday. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Civil Society Organizations Brief the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women on the Situation of Women in Mexico, Thailand, Ireland, Kazakhstan, Paraguay, Poland and Republic of Moldova

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women was this afternoon briefed by representatives of civil society organizations on the situation of women’s rights in Mexico, Thailand and Ireland, the reports of which the Committee will review this week, and in Kazakhstan, Paraguay, Poland and the Republic of Moldova, the reports of which had been scheduled for consideration in the cancelled ninety-third pre-sessional Working Group.

    In relation to Mexico, speakers raised concerns regarding disappearances and abductions of women; gender-based violence and its impact on marginalised women; and legislative issues affecting women, including related to abortion, sex work, surrogacy and homicide.

    Non-governmental organizations speaking on Ireland raised topics including the lack of access of marginalised women, including Roma and Traveller women, to State services; the high prevalence of gender-based violence; discrimination against migrant women; and overcrowding in women’s prisons.

    On Thailand, speakers addressed discrimination against marginalised women, including lesbian, bisexual, transgender and intersex women; the negative effects of mining projects on indigenous women and girls; gender-based violence; and discrimination against women and girls with disabilities.

    The following non-governmental organizations spoke on Mexico: Alianza por los derechos de las mujeres y niñas en toda su diversidad; GAMAG & Laboratorio Feminista de Derechos Digitales; Alianza de Mujeres Indígenas de Centroamérica y México, y Mujeres afromexicanas; and Mujeres defensoras y periodistas.

    The Human Rights Commissioner of the National Human Rights Commission of Ireland spoke on the country, as did the National Women’s Council of Ireland; Immigrant Council of Ireland/NASC/Akidwa; Traveler and Roma Coalition; Beyond Surviving; Irish Penal Reform Trust; University of Galway; and Disabled Women Ireland.

    As for Thailand, the Chairperson of the National Human Rights Commission of Thailand spoke, as did the following non-governmental organizations: Protection International; PPM, Khon Rak Ban Kerd Dan Khun Thot Group; Civil Society Assembly for Peace; Indigenous Women’s Network of Thailand; Young Pride Foundation and Asia Pacific Transgender Network; Foundation of Transgender Alliance for Human Rights and World Coalition against the Death Penalty; Shero Thailand; and Association for the Empowerment of Women with Disabilities.

    Speaking on the Republic of Moldova were Amnesty International; Eurasian Harm Reduction Association; and a coalition of women-led organizations including Eurasian Women’s Network on AIDS and NGO Association for Creative Development of Personality.

    Speaking on Kazakhstan was Equality Now; while the Centre for Reproductive Rights spoke on Poland, and Amnesty International spoke on Paraguay.

    There were no speakers present to discuss Angola, Comoros and Guinea-Bissau, the reports of which had also been scheduled for consideration in the cancelled ninety-third pre-sessional Working Group.

    The Committee’s ninety-first session is being held from 16 June to 4 July.  All documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, can be found on the session’s webpage.  Meeting summary releases can be found here.  The webcast of the Committee’s public meetings can be accessed via the UN Web TV webpage.

    The Committee will next meet in public at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, 17 June to consider the tenth periodic report of Mexico (CEDAW/C/MEX/10).

    Opening Remarks by the Committee Chair

    NAHLA HAIDAR, Committee Chairperson, said this meeting was an opportunity for non-governmental organizations and national human rights institutions to provide information on the States parties that were being considered this week, as well as on reports that had been scheduled for consideration in the cancelled ninety-third pre-sessional Working Group, namely those of Angola, Comoros, Guinea-Bissau, Kazakhstan, Paraguay, Poland and the Republic of Moldova.  She noted that the adoption of a list of issues and questions in relation to the combined third and fourth periodic reports of Syria, also initially scheduled for the pre-sessional Working Group, had been postponed.

    Statements by Non-Governmental Organizations from Mexico, Thailand and Ireland

    Mexico

    Concerning Mexico, speakers, among other things, expressed concern about the growing militarisation of the country, which disproportionately affected indigenous, rural marginalised women, as well as about disappearances of women, which were linked to trafficking in persons and femicide. 

    Speakers also expressed concern about gender-based violence, particularly against Afro-descendant women, human rights defenders, and young people.  More than one million Afro-descendant women were facing violence in Mexico, one speaker said, with some 57 per cent having faced some form of sexual violence.  Persons searching for the disappeared were particularly at risk; at least 16 had been killed, and there was impunity for crimes against human rights defenders. Key support for these people, such as refuge and shelter, had been denied.

    Speakers also raised issues related to Mexican legislation, noting that abortion was still regulated by criminal law; that legislative reforms had been made to criminalise sex work; that surrogacy remained legal in 12 states; and that homicide against trans women was not recognised as trans femicide.

    Speakers called on the Committee to encourage Mexico to recognise women human rights defenders; eliminate the crime of abortion; address trafficking of women; take measures to protect vulnerable women; harmonise legislation on violence against women; introduce regulations on digital violence and measures to combat violence against women in the media; release human rights defenders who had been imprisoned; and strengthen protection systems with a gender-based perspective.

    Ireland

    Those speaking on Ireland said, among other things, that deep and systemic barriers affected the access of marginalised women, including Roma and Traveller women, to childcare, abortion, employment, education, housing and healthcare.  These women needed to be supported by targeted policies.  Minority women were severely underrepresented in politics, continued to be over-represented in the criminal justice system, and faced barriers in accessing child benefits.  The State needed to collect ethnic data to inform support policies for minorities, and there needed to be dedicated funding for policies for women, developed in cooperation with women’s organizations. The bill to amend equality legislation needed to be rejected immediately, as it threatened the rights of marginalised women.

    Ireland lacked targeted measures for women with disabilities, one speaker said.  There was systemic discrimination against women with disabilities in work and healthcare; this needed to be addressed.

    Speakers also expressed concern about the high prevalence of gender-based violence in Ireland. Interventions were needed to strengthen the justice system related to such violence.  Ireland disclosed counselling notes in sexual offence trials; it needed to cease this act of secondary discrimination.  The proposed amendment to the law in this regard would exacerbate harm.

    Speakers said migrant women faced significant discrimination in Ireland, including in employment and education opportunities, medical care and housing.  There was no entitlement to legal aid for migrant women; women asylum seekers could not access the labour market, and migrant women were disproportionately represented in the informal sector.  One speaker noted that 7,000 women in Ireland were affected by female genital mutilation, but there was no State strategy to combat female genital mutilation.  There needed to be a dedicated national action plan to address the phenomenon.

    Overcrowding in Irish prisons was at a crisis point, one speaker said, with the two women’s prisons far over capacity. There was a record number of women with babies in prisons.  The Government had not made efforts to establish an open women’s prison; this needed to be done.  It also needed to guarantee investigations into Magdalene Laundries abuses, undocumented deaths, and forced family separation.  There needed to be a timeframe for the full implementation of the redress scheme.

    Thailand

    Concerning Thailand, speakers said, among other things, that marginalised women, including refugees, trans and gender-diverse women, continued to face discrimination and a lack of access to services.  Some 70 per cent of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons had experienced depression.  The Government needed to strengthen the implementation of the gender equality act and address the marginalisation of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons. 

    Mining projects were destroying the lifestyles and livelihoods of indigenous women and girls in Thailand and poisoning the State’s rivers.  Royal decrees issued in 2024 severely undermined indigenous women’s rights, limiting land access and traditional farming practices.  The Committee needed to call on the Government to review and amend these decrees, and to protect indigenous women’s rights and the environment.

    Some five per cent of death row inmates in Thailand were women, one speaker said.  The Committee needed to urge the State party to implement a moratorium on the death penalty for non-violent offences.

    Speakers said Thailand needed to urgently reform its laws on gender-based violence to clearly define consent and cases where mediation was appropriate; stop criminalising survivors of gender-based violence; make ending all forms of gender-based violence a national priority; and ensure protection for all survivors.

    More than one million women and girls with disabilities in Thailand remained invisible, one speaker said. They still faced sterilisation, violence and abuse, and police rarely recorded the complaints of women with disabilities.  The Government needed to outlaw forced sterilisation, ensure the representation of women with disabilities in politics and decision-making bodies, and adopt measures to guarantee procedural accommodation for women with disabilities in justice processes.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert called for recommendations of quotas for representation of Thai women in Parliament.

    Another Expert said pre-trial detention was being weaponised in Mexico.  The suspension of the writ of habeas corpus seemed to have led to the deliberate imposition of lengthy pre-trial detention.  Did the non-governmental organizations have a position on this?

    One Committee Expert asked about the familial rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons in Ireland.  Was there a norm on shared physical custody?

    A Committee Expert asked about reports of the use of unofficial pre-trial detention in Mexico.

    One Committee Expert asked whether trafficked women were offered exit programmes that promoted social empowerment in Mexico.  How was Ireland implementing the Istanbul Convention, including related to restrictions on abortion?

    Responses by Non-Governmental Organizations

    Mexico

    Responding to questions on Mexico, speakers said that “automatic” pre-trial detention implemented in the State was a violation of liberty that disproportionately affected women.  The number of offences for which automatic pre-trial detention was imposed had been broadened recently.

    The criminalisation of victims of trafficking severely affected women’s rights.  Most victims were young girls.  There was a lack of training for officials charged with identifying and protecting victims.  There was a link to disappearances and abduction of women and girls and trafficking, which had been taken over by organised crime.  There needed to be regulation to address the sexual exploitation of women.

    Ireland

    A speaker said there were huge challenges in accessing child maintenance in Ireland.  There had been no progress in establishing a child maintenance agency. Roma women who did not comply with habitual residency laws had no access to child benefits.

    Only one Traveller woman had been elected to the national parliament.  More needed to be done to increase their representation. 

    There were almost 250 Irish women who travelled to the United Kingdom each year to access abortions.  Irish women still faced significant challenges in accessing abortions.  There needed to be political will to implement the conclusions of the independent review into access to abortion.

    Ireland had a national strategy on preventing gender-based violence and domestic violence, but this strategy did not address female genital mutilation.  A plan needed to be implemented to address this issue.

    Thailand

    Responding to questions on Thailand, a speaker said there was low representation of women from rural and marginalised communities on political bodies.  No females had been elected to parliament.  There was a lack of laws addressing discrimination against women with disabilities.

    Women human rights defenders often faced strategic lawsuits against public participation in Thailand, and the State did not have legislation on hate crimes.  Many human rights defenders faced harassment online and needed protection.

    Statements by Non-Governmental Organizations from Kazakhstan, Republic of Moldova, Poland and Paraguay

     

    Kazakhstan

    On Kazakhstan, speakers expressed concern about laws and practices that failed to sufficiently address gender-based violence and sexual violence.  Rape was only recognised by State legislation when it involved physical force.  There were significant barriers to investigating sexual violence, and as a result, few cases reached the justice system. Women with disabilities often faced sexual violence and discrimination.  Support services for survivors of sexual violence remained inadequate; hotlines for reporting and shelters needed to be strengthened.

    Republic of Moldova

    Speakers said that the Republic of Moldova’s legal system lacked provisions to address all forms of gender-based violence, leading to inconsistent interpretation of the law, which needed to be amended in line with the Istanbul Convention.  There was insufficient protection for victims. Sanctions needed to be issued for perpetrators of domestic violence.

    It was concerning that the provision of abortion services via telemedicine had been banned, one speaker said. This ban was implemented without consultation with civil society or medical professionals.  The Government needed to repeal the ban and ensure access to abortion services for all women.  It also needed to amend legislation to decriminalise sex work and implement measures to protect sex workers from discrimination.

    The Republic of Moldova’s low thresholds for small-scale use of illegal drugs led to the criminalisation of women drug users, perpetuating stigma against such women.  Pregnant women who used drugs were often denied access to healthcare, and social workers often initiated child protection proceedings for the children of women who used drugs.  The Committee needed to ask the Republic of Moldova how it would protect the rights of women drug users.

    Women with HIV faced violence and discrimination every day in the Republic of Moldova, one speaker said. Many such women often did not report abuse for fear of stigmatisation.  The law criminalised HIV infection and prevented women with HIV from breastfeeding.  The Government needed to decriminalise HIV infection and support women with HIV to access shelters, legal support and healthcare, protect their confidentiality, and ensure that their voices were heard.

    Poland

    On Poland, a speaker said that the State’s abortion law prevented women from accessing safe and legal abortions. There was a near-total ban on abortion in place, and women were often compelled to travel abroad for abortive care. Legislative proposals seeking to reintroduce access to legal abortion were pending review, while guidelines on access to legal abortions had been developed but had not been sufficiently distributed.  The Committee needed to ensure that the State party guaranteed the right to abortion and health care for women.

    Paraguay

    On Paraguay, a speaker expressed concern at the high rate of teenage pregnancies and sexual violence against women and girls.  There was an almost total ban on abortion, even in cases where the pregnancy was the result of rape.  There was also a lack of comprehensive sexual and reproductive health education in schools. There was a high level of maternal mortality; the State needed to strengthen primary health care.

    Paraguay needed to invest more in public health, the speaker said.  It was one of the most expensive countries in the world to fall sick.  The high cost of healthcare disproportionately affected certain groups, such as those with cancer.  The State party needed to improve the availability of medicines. In April 2025, a bill was brought before the Senate that sought to merge the Ministry of Women into the Ministry of the Family; this bill needed to be rejected.

    Dialogue with the National Human Rights Institutions of Ireland and Thailand

    Statement by the National Human Rights Institution of Ireland

    LIAM HERRICK, Chief Commissioner, Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission, expressed concern about Ireland’s continuing and outstanding failures to effectively vindicate the rights of women and girls at the national level.  Women and girls in Ireland continued to face discrimination at every stage of life.  The State’s approach to domestic implementation of Convention rights fell far short of what would be expected of a wealthy, democratic nation.

    Ireland faced challenges, including transforming the childcare and care sectors, closing the gender pay and pension gap, supporting more women leaders, and reforming the outdated patriarchal system of the male breadwinner, which held society back.

    Violence against women, including femicide, remained at crisis levels in Ireland.  The State was obliged to do everything in its power to keep women and girls safe in communities and in homes.  The lack of adequate supports and refuge spaces for victims and survivors of gender-based violence and human trafficking was a major concern, especially as these were the main cause of homelessness for women and children in Ireland. The State needed to significantly scale up the provision of culturally appropriate, universally designed refuge accommodation units and provide guidance to local authorities on supporting victims and survivors seeking emergency accommodation and social housing.

    Regarding women in politics, progress in Ireland was worryingly slow.  Ireland was currently 99th in the world for women’s representation in national parliaments and 96th in the world for women cabinet ministers.  A third of the 43 parliamentary constituencies had no women as representatives.  Only one woman from an ethnic minority background was elected to Parliament in the recent election.  Robust reforms at local political level, including the introduction of 50 per cent gender quotas, were vital.

    Political leaders had repeatedly apologised for these failures and promised redress for victims and survivors of abuse within Mother and Baby Institutions, Magdalene Laundries, schools, residential institutions and to survivors of the practice of symphysiotomy. However, the State continued to fail to adequately implement the 2014 O’Keeffe judgment.  It needed to establish a new comprehensive, fair and non-discriminatory redress scheme for survivors of child sexual abuse in primary and post-primary schools before 1991/1992.

    Inadequate funding threatened the work of civil society in protecting women’s rights in Ireland.  Civil society organizations needed adequate support. The State also needed to place greater focus on the intersectional nature of issues affecting women and minority groups.  Women’s and girls’ rights were crucial for an integrated, harmonious and thriving society, based on equality and the rule of law.  Never had it been so urgent for Ireland, as a wealthy, leading European Nation, to take decisive action to fulfil its obligations under the Convention.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert asked how to ensure that all constituencies in Ireland had women representatives.

    Another Committee Expert asked about the representation of women in the Irish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the achievements of women in the State’s foreign and policy affairs. 

    One Committee Expert asked about specific quotas that were needed to promote the representation of Roma, women with disabilities and other marginalised women in public life in Ireland.

    A Committee Expert asked about the threat to the Good Friday Agreement posed by the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union.

    Responses by the National Human Rights Institution

    LIAM HERRICK, Chief Commissioner, Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission, said that all political parties needed to increase their share of women candidates to 50 per cent.  This was particularly important at the local level. 

    A significant number of Irish women held leading positions within the international human rights system. However, there had never been an Irish woman head of Government, and there was a lack of representation of women in senior Government positions.  The national human rights institution had made recommendations for addressing hate speech against minorities, including Roma women.

    Specific provisions were drawn into the United Kingdom’s agreement on withdrawal from the European Union that promoted equivalence with established legal measures such as the Good Friday Agreement.

    Statement by the National Human Rights Institution of Thailand

    PORNPRAPAI GANJANARINTR, Chairperson, National Human Rights Commission of Thailand, said the Commission recognised Thailand’s progress in many areas, including the legal reform to raise the minimum age of marriage to 18, broadening access to safe abortion services, and the Government’s success in amending laws on gender equality and domestic violence victim protection.

    The current Constitution of Thailand guaranteed gender equality, but challenges still remained. One key concern was the persistence of gender bias, both in societal attitudes toward women, and in how women perceived their own roles.  Moreover, Thailand had yet to enact a comprehensive law to eliminate discrimination, a critical gap in the legal framework.

    Domestic violence was also a serious concern.  Despite the domestic violence victim protection act, women remained unprotected. The law mainly focused on mediation, which could pressure women to return to abusers instead of seeking justice. In the southern region, men-led community mediation could also result in biased outcomes.  Cultural norms, financial dependence, lack of education, and fear of legal consequences made it harder for women, especially vulnerable groups such as illegal migrant women, to leave.  Legal reforms were needed to make domestic violence a non-compoundable offence, extend the statute of limitations, and introduce offenders’ rehabilitation. Policies needed to focus on protecting victims’ rights, safety, and dignity, rather than forcing families to stay together.

    The Criminal Code did not cover new forms of harassment, such as stalking and online grooming.  Current labour laws only protected against harassment from supervisors, not co-workers. The Criminal Code needed to be reformed to include modern forms of harassment, expand workplace protection, and ensure victim-centred investigation.

    Women often faced barriers when seeking justice.  It was crucial to recruit more female inquiry officers as, at present, they accounted for only 6.5 per cent of the total number.  There were reports of unacceptable conduct by law enforcement, including offensive language and insensitive investigations. Gender-sensitivity training for law enforcement officers, private and gender-friendly complaint facilities, as well as accessible procedures for persons with disabilities were essential.

    Sex work was still illegal, leaving sex workers without labour protection or social welfare, and making them targets for abuse, even by authorities.  Some offences had been changed to non-criminal fines, but many officers still made unlawful arrests.  Sex work needed to be decriminalised to protect the rights and dignity of sex workers.

    Although Thailand had made progress in maternal health, many women still had problems accessing reproductive rights.  Safe abortion services were limited due to a lack of providers and poor referral systems. Pregnant inmates faced delays in counselling and abortion referrals.  Moreover, many women were unaware of their rights.  To address this, the Government needed to ensure that every province had at least one facility offering abortion services, and remove barriers beyond those set out by the law.  Public education on abortion rights and support mechanisms needed to also be promoted.

    The Commission was deeply concerned about the continued violence in Thailand’s southern border provinces, which greatly affected women.  Many had lost their partners, suffered emotional and financial hardship, and struggled to access justice or compensation.  Women were often left out of peace talks, and those who spoke up could face threats.  The Government needed to fully support affected women by providing financial aid, counselling, and childcare.  Rules and regulations that excluded families of those accused in security cases needed to be revised.  Women needed to have a real voice in peacebuilding, religious councils, and efforts to stop domestic and gender-based violence.

    Child marriage remained a serious issue in the southern border provinces.  Although the 2018 change to the Nikah regulation was a step forward, it had not been well enforced or updated to match the new law setting the minimum marriage age at 18.  The Commission called for the regulation to be revised to align with the Convention, and for strong action to ensure its implementation.

    Women human rights defenders continued to face serious risks, including harassment, lawsuits, and surveillance.  Some had even been targeted by disinformation and spyware like Pegasus.  There needed to be legal reforms to ban strategic lawsuits against public participation and stronger awareness raising among justice officials and businesses about the harmful impact of these lawsuits. 

    Women in rural areas were hit hard by climate change but were often excluded from decision-making processes.  Current disaster and climate policies lacked a gender perspective.  At the same time, cybercrime severely affected women, who made up 64 per cent of victims from 2022 to 2024, while legal protections remained weak.  The Government needed to include gender perspectives in environmental policy and women’s voices in climate decisions, and strengthen laws to better prevent and respond to cyber violence against women.

    Thailand had made good progress in meeting its commitments under the Convention. However, the Commission encouraged continued efforts to bring about real gender equality through stronger legal alignment, structural reforms, and the removal of remaining biased practices.

    Question by a Committee Expert

    A Committee Expert said Thailand’s legislation on statelessness was not in line with international standards. Were there any initiatives to reform this legislation?

    Responses by the National Human Rights Institution

    PORNPRAPAI GANJANARINTR, Chairperson, National Human Rights Commission of Thailand, said the Government had announced that there would be an amendment to the law on statelessness some years ago, but this process was still ongoing. Earlier this year, the Government had worked to identify 100,000 stateless people.  There needed to be further recognition of stateless people in Thailand. The Commission would continue to push for all stateless persons to be supported to obtain all necessary documents.

    ___________

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

     

    CEDAW25.012E

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