Category: Europe

  • MIL-OSI Europe: The Sciences Po Summer School has officially begun!

    Source: Universities – Science Po in English

    The Sciences Po Summer School opened its doors for its 14th edition on our Paris campus! This summer, Sciences Po is welcoming over 900 students from around the world, with a session in June and a second session in July.

    The University Programme

       Credits: Annie for the Summer School

    The University Programme began on 2 June with a sunny orientation day. Just over 150 students have joined for the June session. Participants will study an intensive course for 4 weeks, in either social sciences or French as a foreign language. Courses in social sciences are offered by faculty members of Sciences Po, researchers and experts in their respective fields. The topics range from global challenges on inequality, through the course Tackling Inequality and Social Risks: A Global Perspective, diplomacy, with the course Diplomacy in Times of Global Crises: Theory & Practice, digital challenges on politicisation, with the course Internet & Politics, and major international challenges, through the course World Politics.

    42 nationalities are represented in the June cohort, and 35 students are supported by programmes with partner universities, namely the organisation Pour le Brésil, the Mastercard Foundation, and the Professional Certificate for Young Refugees. 

    A Custom Programme

       Credits: Annie for the Summer School

    On 10 June, we welcomed 200 students from ESADE Business and Law School for our annual custom programme. These students, with an average age of 19, will spend 2 weeks on our Paris campus studying public international law and European law, with members of Sciences Po’s faculty and a team of young researchers specialized in these areas. 

    Like each programme held at the Summer School, before embarking on a programme of intensive study, the students were able to enjoy a river cruise on the Seine, under a bright blue and sunny sky!

    Pre-College Programmes

    Finally, the Pre-College Programmes kicked off on 16 June with an online programme centred on the risks and regulations of artificial intelligence and new technologies. This innovative programme has welcomed 14 high school students from 11 countries, with an average age of 16, to explore global questions and the regulatory challenges related to new technologies as well as the corresponding law and policy development processes, both from a practical and theoretical perspective.

    The theoretical teachings within the framework of these programmes are supplemented by simulation sessions which allow students to develop their analytical comprehension of the issues, while also gaining practical negotiation skills.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Griffin Park showcases skills to ONR guests

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Griffin Park showcases skills to ONR guests

    The new Chair of the nuclear industry regulator, the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR), enjoyed a visit to Griffin Park last week.

    Superintendent Keith McCarthy, Paul Dicks, Dr Nicola Crauford and Chief Superintendent Shree Owen at Griffin Park.

    Dr Nicola Crauford, who was appointed as Chair on 1 March 2025, was introduced to the training division and, along with colleagues Gary Cook, Paul Dicks and Martin Burgess, treated to a demonstration of CNC’s capabilities in the live fire tactical training area. 

    Chief Superintendent Sheree Owen, head of training, said: “We were delighted to be approached by ONR to host Nicki and her colleagues and to make the most of an opportunity to showcase our skills and facilities. Building relationships and increasing stakeholder understanding of how we work is always time well spent. 

    “I would like to thank all those involved in making the visit so successful, especially the NFIs and the officers from Sellafield OPU who facilitated the capability demonstration.” 

    Dr Nicola Crauford, the Office for Nuclear Regulation’s Chair, said: “I’d like to thank the Civil Nuclear Constabulary (CNC) for this fascinating and informative visit. It provided a very useful understanding of the important role the CNC provides in keeping the nuclear sector safe.” 

    The ONR is the UK’s independent nuclear regulator for safety and security. It regulates nuclear safety, nuclear security and conventional health and safety at the 36 licensed nuclear sites in Great Britain. This includes ensuring the adequacy of security arrangements for dealing with special nuclear material and special nuclear information within the civil nuclear industry as well as the safety and security of the transport of civil nuclear and radioactive materials.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK Armed Forces recognise Poland’s Second World War contribution at ceremony in Warsaw

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Press release

    UK Armed Forces recognise Poland’s Second World War contribution at ceremony in Warsaw

    UK Defence Minister Lord Coaker, Polish Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz pay tribute to the extraordinary courage displayed by Polish paratroopers during one of the most famous allied operations of the Second World War.

    Lord Coaker with Poland’s Deputy Prime Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz. Copyright reserved to the Polish Ministry of Defence.

    • UK honours Polish courage during Second World War in first-of-its-kind commemoration in Poland
    • Historic event reinforces UK and Poland relationship and Britain’s commitment to European security
    • New security deal between the two countries to be signed later this year The United Kingdom has recognised the contribution of Polish personnel as part of the allied war effort during the Second World War at a moving ceremony in Poland.

    Lord Coaker, pictured left, with Poland’s Deputy Prime Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz, pictured right. Copyright reserved to the Polish Ministry of Defence.

    Today, during an historic ceremony at Wilanów Palace in Warsaw, UK Defence Minister Lord Coaker, Polish Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz paid tribute to the extraordinary courage displayed by Polish paratroopers during one of the most famous allied operations of the Second World War.

    The event is the first formal standalone commemoration to mark the heroism of the 1st Polish Independent Parachute Brigade, during Operation Market Garden in 1944 – the allied operation which aimed to hasten the end of the Second World War by opening up new routes for advancing troops into Germany.

    The event symbolised the enduring bond between British and Polish forces forged during the darkest days of the Second World War. During the ceremony Lord Coaker and Deputy Prime Minister Kosiniak-Kamysz inspected troops and received a salute, before giving speeches focussed on the shared values and sacrifices that have bound the two nations together.

    Copyright reserved to the Polish Ministry of Defence.

    Speaking from Wilanów Palace, Defence Minister Lord Coaker said:

    At a time when Britain and Poland’s Armed Forces are once again working together to protect Europe’s security and deter those who threaten peace, the generation of heroes from both countries who fought side-by-side during the Second World War remain an enduring source of pride and inspiration.

    Today, we acknowledge the extraordinary contribution of the 1st Polish Independent Parachute Brigade which Major General Sosabowski created and led into battle.

    During the events of 1944, Allied forces aimed to seize a series of crucial bridges in the Netherlands through a combination of airborne attack and ground advances, often regarded as one the of most daring and ambitious operations of the entire war.

    Major General Ollie Kingsbury, Colonel Commandant of The Parachute Regiment, presented a banner to Brigadier General Michał Strzelecki, Commander 6th Polish Airborne Brigade – the proud descendants of the 1st Polish Independent Parachute Brigade – signifying the enduring and historic bond between our armed forces. Members of The Parachute Regiment, British Army and the Polish 6th Airborne Brigade also formed a guard of honour during the ceremony.

    Polish Deputy Prime Minister, Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz, said:

    General Stanisław Sosabowski and his soldiers, fighting side-by-side with British paratroopers, laid the foundation for today’s cooperation, also military, as well as for strong ties between our nations. On my own behalf and on behalf of the soldiers of the Polish Armed Forces, I thank you for honouring our heroes. It constitutes an important gesture, which demonstrates our unity and shared values that have connected us for over 80 years.

    Temporary Military Assistant to the Minister of State in the House of Lords, pictured left, with the UK’s Defence Attaché to Poland Chris Brown, pictured right. Copyright reserved to the Polish Ministry of Defence.

    The event comes at a time of unprecedented cooperation between the UK and Poland on defence and security matters. Announced by the Prime Minister in January, the two nations are set to sign a new security and defence treaty later this year, building on strong bilateral ties which have seen over 20 British operational deployments to Poland since February 2022.

    Both countries remain steadfast allies in supporting Ukraine against Russian aggression and are working together to strengthen NATO’s eastern flank.

    Lord Coaker’s visit also follows the publication of the UK’s Strategic Defence Review, which underscores Britain’s commitment to European security.

    The review sets out the UK’s vision to move to warfighting readiness, create a more lethal integrated military force, and strengthen UK leadership in NATO. Additionally, it will put service personnel at the heart of our defence plans by renewing the nation’s contract with those who serve and having a whole of society approach to our national resilience.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Marat Khusnullin: Preparations for construction of Mariupol bypass have begun in the DPR

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Construction of a bypass road around the city of Mariupol.

    In order to form a single backbone network of Russian highways and develop the federal highway R-280 “Novorossiya” in the Donetsk People’s Republic, it is planned to build a bypass road around the city of Mariupol. At present, a contract has been signed and specialists have begun preparatory work, Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin reported.

    “The federal highway R-280 “Novorossiya” is one of the important directions of the south of the country. It is part of the Azov Transport Ring. Last year, the highway began to be expanded in stages. And from the border of the Rostov region to Mariupol – this is 37 km – it became a completely four-lane. Now they are expanding new sections with a length of about 70 km – from Mariupol to the border with the Zaporozhye region and further to Berdyansk. Preparatory work has also begun as part of the construction of a bypass road around Mariupol with a length of more than 30 km. It will not only increase the throughput capacity threefold – up to 40 thousand cars per day, but also significantly reduce travel time. In addition, the quality of life of local residents will improve due to a decrease in noise and pollution levels,” said Marat Khusnullin.

    The Deputy Prime Minister added that the Mariupol bypass project envisages the construction of 6 multi-level interchanges, 14 overpasses and three bridges. For traffic safety, oncoming traffic flows will be separated by a barrier fence, and outdoor electric lighting is planned along the entire route. The construction of the facility is planned to be completed by the end of 2028.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Russian-South African negotiations.

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    The meeting took place as part of the working visit of the Vice President of the Republic of South Africa Paul Mashatile to the Russian Federation.

    M. Mishustin: Good afternoon, dear Mr. Mashatile! Dear friends!

    Welcome to the Government House of the Russian Federation. I know that this is your first visit to the Russian Federation as Vice President of South Africa, although you have been to Russia several times before. And I would like to welcome you personally and your delegation to Moscow, to the Russian Federation.

    We highly value the trusting and meaningful dialogue with the Republic of South Africa. Russian President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin and South African President Mr. Ramaphosa are in constant contact – both bilaterally and at international venues. And, of course, first and foremost in the BRICS association.

    We attach great importance to expanding cooperation with the Republic of South Africa. It is based on the principles of a comprehensive strategic partnership, mutual respect and consideration of each other’s interests.

    Through governments, we ensure the implementation of agreements between the leaders of Russia and South Africa on expanding cooperation. We are talking (we have already briefly exchanged opinions) about industry, energy, agriculture, the digital economy and, of course, humanitarian cooperation.

    We propose to work out new cooperation projects in a mixed intergovernmental committee. On the Russian side, it is headed by the Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Alexander Kozlov.

    In addition to Moscow, I know that you plan to visit St. Petersburg and take part in the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. It is very important that the forum will host a special session on the development of business and investment cooperation between Russia and South Africa. I am confident that this will contribute to the restoration of business contacts, the emergence of new ideas and initiatives that will strengthen our cooperation.

    A few words about the humanitarian sphere. We are interested in cooperation here too, of course. First of all, in the area of personnel training. South African citizens study at leading Russian universities. They choose sought-after professions of engineers, doctors, and IT specialists. We are happy about this. We consider it very important to hold joint events in the field of culture and art on a regular basis. Last year, the Days of Russian Spiritual Culture were held in South Africa for the first time. And this year we will hold a Festival of Russian Culture.

    Dear Mr. Mashatile, I am ready to discuss with you the most important issues of cooperation between Russia and South Africa.

    To be continued…

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Technological repatriation scenarios discussed at St. Petersburg International Economic Forum

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    First Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Denis Manturov took part in the panel session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum “Scenarios of Technological Repatriation: the Role and Place of Foreign Companies in the Russian Market.”

    In 2022, a number of foreign companies from unfriendly countries unilaterally terminated cooperation with Russian partners, demonstrating their unreliability as business counterparties. At the same time, as Denis Manturov noted, many of them made investments before their departure and left the enterprises in an intermediate stage of localization.

    “Not all foreign investors have made so-called smart investments by investing in the creation of R

    In particular, this affected the packaging segment. The largest manufacturer left the Russian market, which caused interruptions in the supply of thick cardboard and special paints. As Denis Manturov emphasized, the industry managed to ensure import substitution of these products, meeting all consumer demands and simultaneously allowing a number of companies from other industries to gain new competencies.

    “Today we can say that our management is able to cope with the most difficult challenges and tasks in terms of import substitution. Therefore, in the future, of course, we must be guided by at least several principles of doing business with foreign investors. At the same time, we are definitely not refusing foreign investments. But, as I have already said, it is necessary for these investments to be smart. So that these are investments not just in the creation of capacities, but first of all in the creation of new technological competencies in those areas that still require additional development and investments,” Denis Manturov emphasized.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • Russia warns US not to help Israel militarily against Iran

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov warned on Wednesday that direct U.S. military assistance to Israel could radically destabilise the situation in the Middle East, where an air war between Iran and Israel has raged for six days.

    In separate comments, the head of Russia’s SVR foreign intelligence service, Sergei Naryshkin, was quoted as saying that the situation between Iran and Israel was now critical.

    Ryabkov warned the U.S. against direct military assistance to Israel or even considering such “speculative options,” according to Russia’s Interfax news agency.

    “This would be a step that would radically destabilise the entire situation,” it cited him as saying.

    Earlier, a source familiar with U.S. internal discussions said President Donald Trump and his team were considering a number of options, including joining Israel in strikes against Iranian nuclear sites.

    On Tuesday, Trump openly mused on social media about killing Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but said “We are not going to take him out (kill!), at least not for now.”

    Israel launched air strikes last Friday against Iran’s nuclear sites, scientists and top military leaders in a surprise attack that Russia condemned as unprovoked and illegal. Iran has responded with missile and drone attacks on Israeli cities.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin, who in January signed a strategic partnership treaty with Iran, has called for a cessation of hostilities between the two sides.

    (Reuters)

  • Russia warns US not to help Israel militarily against Iran

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov warned on Wednesday that direct U.S. military assistance to Israel could radically destabilise the situation in the Middle East, where an air war between Iran and Israel has raged for six days.

    In separate comments, the head of Russia’s SVR foreign intelligence service, Sergei Naryshkin, was quoted as saying that the situation between Iran and Israel was now critical.

    Ryabkov warned the U.S. against direct military assistance to Israel or even considering such “speculative options,” according to Russia’s Interfax news agency.

    “This would be a step that would radically destabilise the entire situation,” it cited him as saying.

    Earlier, a source familiar with U.S. internal discussions said President Donald Trump and his team were considering a number of options, including joining Israel in strikes against Iranian nuclear sites.

    On Tuesday, Trump openly mused on social media about killing Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but said “We are not going to take him out (kill!), at least not for now.”

    Israel launched air strikes last Friday against Iran’s nuclear sites, scientists and top military leaders in a surprise attack that Russia condemned as unprovoked and illegal. Iran has responded with missile and drone attacks on Israeli cities.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin, who in January signed a strategic partnership treaty with Iran, has called for a cessation of hostilities between the two sides.

    (Reuters)

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Local support you can find on the Local Offer!

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    We have taken on board valuable feedback received from families with children and young people with SEND and created a section on the website for local support available to families.

    Support for young people | Wolverhampton SEND Local Offer
    Support for parents/carers | Wolverhampton SEND Local Offer
    Autism and ADHD assessment and diagnosis | Wolverhampton SEND Local Offer

    Parents and carers have shared that these pages are ‘ helpful, useful and definitely worth looking at for seeking advice, joining a support group or finding a service they can speak to.
     

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Transport Secretary draws line under HS2 ‘mismanagement’ with bold reset plan

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Press release

    Transport Secretary draws line under HS2 ‘mismanagement’ with bold reset plan

    All recommendations from the James Stewart review into HS2 to be accepted by government as Mike Brown takes over as HS2 Ltd Chair.

    • report reveals historic mishandling, lack of ministerial oversight and inadequate control of the project from HS2 Ltd
    • all recommendations to be accepted to grip failing HS2 project and get it back on track
    • new HS2 Ltd Chair Mike Brown appointed as progress made on resetting project

    The Transport Secretary has today (18 June 2025) announced that she will accept all recommendations from the landmark James Stewart review to address years of mismanagement and restore public trust in HS2.

    First commissioned by the government in October last year, the report sets out evidence of the historic mishandling of HS2 including a lack of ministerial oversight and scrutiny, inadequate control of the project by HS2 Ltd and a lack of effective incentives with the supply chain, which will collectively cost the taxpayer billions more than planned. 

    In a statement to Parliament, the Secretary of State condemned the ‘litany of failure’ that has plagued HS2, citing spiralling costs, ineffective oversight and broken promises.

    Without action, Phase 1 alone risks becoming one of the most expensive railway lines in the world – with costs ballooning by £37 billion and £2 billion wasted on cancelled Phase 2 works.

    That’s why since entering office, the government has taken decisive action to get back control of HS2 including: appointing new leadership to reset the project, commissioning the James Stewart review, reducing financial delegations to HS2 Ltd, limiting what the company can do without government approval to place a lid on spiralling costs until the reset is complete and providing £25 billion in the recent Spending Review to support all of this work.

    Speaking from the House of Commons earlier this afternoon, the Transport Secretary set out how the department is already delivering on Mr Stewart’s 5 key recommendations: 

    • Lack of effective ministerial oversight – the HS2 taskforce has been re-established with full senior official and ministerial attendance, offering much-needed oversight and accountability.
    • Stricter cost control – the department is ensuring HS2 Ltd and its suppliers negotiate incentives that ensure cost savings for taxpayers.
    • Lack of capability, skills and trust – the Chief Executive of HS2 Ltd, Mark Wild, is instilling a new era of leadership, reforming the organisation with a focus on building the rest of the railway safely and at the lowest reasonable cost. Wild has previous experience in this, having turned the delayed and over-budget Elizabeth line into one of the most successful and celebrated new operating railways in the world.
    • Lack of clarity on Euston station – the government has already committed funding to start the tunnelling from Old Oak Common to Euston and further detail on delivery of the station will be set out in due course.
    • Lessons for the wider transport portfolio – the government is committing to learning the lessons of the past 15 years to delivering infrastructure differently across its projects, with more to be set out in the upcoming 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy.

    The Prime Minister has asked the Cabinet Secretary to consider the implications for the Civil Service and wider public sector of the issues raised in the report, including whether further action or investigation is warranted.

    The Transport Secretary confirmed that Mike Brown will be taking over as HS2 Ltd Chair, working alongside CEO Mark Wild to deliver a programme reset, including reviewing the costs and schedule, renegotiating HS2’s large construction contracts and reviewing HS2 Ltd’s skills and structure. The Transport Secretary has asked Mark Wild to be ready to provide an update on revised costs and delivery timescales at the end of the year.

    He brings decades of experience to the role, having previously delivered major projects such as the successful delivery of London Underground and mainline rail for the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2012, and a multi-billion pound investment programme on London’s roads, rail and cycling network. 

    Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said:

    This must be a line in the sand. This government is delivering HS2 from Birmingham to London after years of mismanagement, flawed reporting and ineffective oversight.  

    Mark Wild and Mike Brown were part of the team, with me, that turned Crossrail into the Elizabeth Line – we have done it before, we will do it again.

    Passengers and taxpayers deserve new railways the country can be proud of and the work to get HS2 back on track is firmly underway. 

    The initial assessment of the newly appointed CEO, Mark Wild was also published today, reiterating that the overall project in terms of cost, schedule and scope is unsustainable. Due to the scale of the mismanagement of the project, it set out that there is no route by which trains can be running by 2033 as previously planned and warns that costs would continue to increase if not taken in hand. The Transport Secretary accepted this conclusion.

    HS2 is supporting over 33,000 jobs and over 3,400 UK businesses across all UK nations and regions. Over 44 miles of tunnels have been completed to date and the 2.1-mile deck of the Colne Valley Viaduct, the UK’s new longest railway bridge, was completed in September 2024. 

    HS2 will deliver high-speed rail services between London and the West Midlands, providing much-needed extra capacity between London and Birmingham and delivering faster and more reliable trains from London to Manchester, Liverpool and Scotland. Research estimates that HS2 will be responsible for the generation of £10 billion and 30,000 new jobs in the West Midlands, as well as £10 billion and over 18,000 new jobs in west London.

    HS2 and major projects media enquiries

    Media enquiries 0300 7777 878

    Switchboard 0300 330 3000

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Resetting the High Speed Two (HS2) programme

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Oral statement to Parliament

    Resetting the High Speed Two (HS2) programme

    A statement outlining the future of High Speed Two (HS2), including new management and a bold reset plan.

    Mr Speaker, with permission, I’d like to make a statement on HS2.

    As a London Councillor over 15 years ago, I remember hearing the then Labour government’s bold plans for high-speed rail.

    To link our major cities, to address the capacity needs of the future and in the words of then Prime Minister, Gordon Brown: ‘to join the high-speed revolution sweeping the world’.

    It was a vision of a confident nation, a clear signal our great towns and cities in the Midlands and the North.

    With potential that had been untapped at best and ignored at worst, could be places of opportunity and aspiration again.

    That was the promise of HS2.

    Inheritance

    But after [political redaction].

    Routes drawn up then cancelled, budgets calculated then blown, promises made then broken, we inherited a project that had lost the trust of the public.

    That created an image of a Britain woefully unable to deliver big infrastructure projects. And that axed swathes of the country it was originally meant to serve.

    Phase 1 could end up becoming one of the most expensive railway lines in the world.

    With projected costs soaring by £37 billion [political redaction]. And £2 billion of taxpayers’ money sunk into phase 2 work before it was cancelled by the previous government.

    There was also clear evidence of poor management [political redaction].

    Gripping the project

    It has been no less than a litany of failure.

    And today (18 June 2025), I’m drawing a line in the sand – calling time on years of mismanagement, flawed reporting and ineffective oversight.

    It means this government will get the job done between Birmingham and London.

    We won’t reinstate cancelled sections we can’t afford.

    But we will do the hard, but necessary, work to rebuild public trust – and we’ve not wasted any time.

    Since July, we have:

    • appointed new leadership of HS2 Ltd to turn this project around
    • we’ve made clear to the new Chief Executive, Mark Wild, that the priority is building the rest of the railway safely, at the lowest reasonable cost – even if this takes longer
    • we’ve started the year long task of fundamentally resetting the project, including commissioning infrastructure expert James Stewart to lead a review into governance and oversight
    • as part of the reset, we have reduced financial delegations to HS2 Ltd – placing a lid on spiralling costs until the reset is complete and we regain confidence
    • and we’ve supported Mark Wild’s review of the size and cost of HS2 as an organisation

    But today we’re going further.

    James Stewart review

    Mr Speaker, I can confirm we’ve published the landmark James Stewart review and the department’s response.

    The review, commissioned in October of last year by my predecessor, was a tough independent look at how Department for Transport and government delivers major projects.

    The government not only welcomes the review, but we have accepted all its recommendations.

    My department is already delivering on these, specifically across 5 key areas.

    First, the lack of oversight and scrutiny.

    Quite simply, there have been too many dark corners for failure to hide in.

    [Political redaction].

    This government has re-established the taskforce, with full senior attendance, as per the review’s recommendation.

    And new performance, programme and shareholder boards will offer much needed oversight and accountability.

    Secondly, the report highlights HS2 could cost the taxpayer billions more than planned.

    We’ll stop this spiralling any further by delivering all the recommendations on cost control.

    That starts with HS2 fundamentally changing their approach to estimating costs.

    It includes certainty over funding – which the Spending Review has given.

    And it also means HS2 working with suppliers so their contracts incentivise saving costs for taxpayers.

    As far as I’m concerned, suppliers should make a better return the more taxpayer money they save.

    Thirdly, the review identified a deficit in capability and skills, with a fundamental lack of trust between my department and HS2 Ltd

    I am clear, both capability and cultural issues within HS2 must be addressed.

    The new chief executive is already strengthening the organisation, including filling critical gaps in areas such as commercial expertise. And he will be backed by Mike Brown, announced today as the new chair.

    This is a new era of leadership the project desperately needs, with Mike bringing significant experience as a former TfL Commissioner.

    Mark and Mike were part of the team, with me, that turned Crossrail into the Elizabeth Line.

    We have done it before, we will do it again.

    Fourthly, Euston Station.

    Between 2019 and 2023, HS2 Ltd provided initial designs for Euston Station, coming in almost £2 billion over budget.

    When asked for a more affordable option, they offered one costing £400 million more than the first attempt.

    The word ‘affordable’ was clearly not part of the HS2 lexicon.

    The combined costs for these 2 failed designs, which has now been written off, was more than a quarter of a billion pounds.

    What’s more, the previous government announced a Euston ministerial taskforce.

    Unbelievably, the taskforce never met.

    Mr Speaker, this government recognises Euston’s huge potential.

    And we’ve already committed funding to start the tunnelling from Old Oak Common to Euston and we’ll set out more details in our 10-year Infrastructure Strategy.

    And finally, we will use James Stewart’s findings to transform infrastructure delivery across government.

    Implementing real change in how we deliver infrastructure is not just for the Department for Transport.

    This government is committed to implementing these recommendations and adopting a new approach to delivering infrastructure, as will be set out in our upcoming 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy.

    In that spirit, the Prime Minister has also asked the Cabinet Secretary to consider the implications for the Civil Service and wider public sector of the issues raised in the report, including whether further action or investigation is warranted.

    Mr Speaker, we’re wasting no time in delivering on this review.

    And I will update Parliament on our progress through my 6-monthly reports, even if the information is uncomfortable.

    Because for a government that, last week, pledged billions in capital investment for new major projects.

    That believes in the power of transport infrastructure to improve lives and deliver on our Plan for Change.

    This level of failure cannot stand.

    We will learn the lessons of the past 15 years and restore our reputation of delivering world-class infrastructure projects.

    Mark Wild assessment

    Mr Speaker, I’ve spoken about our inheritance; I’ve spoken about James Stewart’s review.

    Let me finally turn to Mark Wild’s initial assessment, [political redaction].

    I will place a copy of his interim findings in the library.

    He stated, in no uncertain terms, the overall project with respect to cost, schedule and scope is unsustainable.

    Based on this advice, I see no route by which trains can be running by 2033 as planned.

    He reveals costs will continue to increase if not taken in hand, further outstripping the budget set by the previous government.

    And he cannot be certain that all cost pressures have yet been identified.

    Mr Speaker, it gives me no pleasure to deliver news like this.

    Billions of pounds of taxpayers’ money has been wasted by constant scope changes, ineffective contracts and bad management.

    There are also allegations that parts of the supply chain have been defrauding taxpayers, and I have been clear these need to be investigated rapidly and rigorously.

    If fraud is proven, the consequences will be felt by all involved.

    Mr Speaker, I have to be honest: it’s an appalling mess. But it’s one we will sort out.

    We need to set targets which we can confidently deliver – that the public can trust – and that will take time.

    But rest assured, where there are inefficiencies – we will root them out.

    Where further ministerial interventions are needed – I’ll make them without fear or favour.

    HS2 will finally start delivering on our watch.

    Conclusion

    Mr Speaker, years of mismanagement and neglect have turned HS2 into a shadow of the vision put forward 15 years ago.

    But this government was elected on a mandate to restore trust to our politics.

    That’s why we won’t shirk away from this challenge and why today, we turn the page on infrastructure failures. 

    I can think of no better mission than delivering new economic opportunities, new homes and commercial regeneration, of an upskilled supply chain, all of which HS2 can still unlock.

    But no one should underestimate the scale of the reset required.

    Passengers and taxpayers deserve new railways the country can be proud of.

    The work to get HS2 back on track is firmly underway under this government.

    And I commend this statement to the House.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: HS2 Ltd CEO’s initial assessment of HS2’s current position on cost and schedule

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Correspondence

    HS2 Ltd CEO’s initial assessment of HS2’s current position on cost and schedule

    A summary of the new HS2 Ltd CEO’s assessment of HS2’s current position on cost and schedule.

    Documents

    Letter to the Secretary of State for Transport: assessment of HS2’s current position on cost and schedule

    Request an accessible format.
    If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email HS2enquiries@hs2.org.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Details

    Letter from High Speed Two (HS2) Ltd CEO, Mark Wild, sent to the Secretary of State for Transport on 31 March 2025.

    The letter outlines Mark Wild’s initial findings and assessment of HS2’s current position regarding cost and schedule.

    See the major transport projects governance and assurance review.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

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    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Sergei Sobyanin launched the tunnel boring for the Biryulevskaya metro line

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Sergei Sobyanin took part in the ceremony to mark the start of tunnel boring for the Biryulevskaya Line of the Moscow Metro.

    The first (right) transfer tunnel, 1.67 kilometers long and six meters in diameter, will be built between the Ostrov Mechty and Klenovy Bulvar stations. In addition, construction of the second (left) tunnel between them is planned to begin in the coming months. Part of the tunnels will pass under the Moskva River, which is a complex engineering task. Their construction is planned to be completed in the spring of 2026.

    “A historic event in Moscow metro construction: today we are launching the tunneling of a new radius of the Moscow metro – the Biryulevskaya line. Long awaited. Residents of the Biryulyovo Zapadnoye and Biryulyovo Vostochnoye districts have long asked for the metro to be built in their districts,” noted Sergei Sobyanin.

    The new metro line will be put into operation in stages. The construction of the first stage – the ZIL – Kuryanovo section (8.65 kilometers, four stations) is expected to be completed in 2028, and the second stage on the Kuryanovo – Biryulevo section (13.55 kilometers, six stations) – in 2030.

    “Today, the active phase of work begins: the first shield, in a couple of months the second shield will go. In general, of course, the project is very complex. 22 kilometers, 10 stations, four passages under the Moscow River. But I am sure that the builders will cope,” added the Mayor of Moscow.

    It is expected that the first four stations of the line will be used by 32 thousand passengers per day, and after full commissioning, the daily passenger flow will increase to 170 thousand people.

    At the first stage, the Yuzhnoye electric depot will service the trains on the line, and from 2030, the new Biryulevskoye electric depot will service them.

    Biryulevskaya metro line

    “The excavation of the right tunnel of the Biryulevskaya line between the stations “Dream Island” and “Klenovy Bulvar” has begun – the first stage of a large-scale and complex engineering project. As a result, 10 stations will be built. The length of the entire line is 22 kilometers. The first three stations – “ZIL”, “Dream Island” and “Klenovy Bulvar” – have already begun to be built,” Sergei Sobyanin wrote in

    on your telegram channel.

    Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @mos_sobyanin

    The Biryulevsky radius will be the seventh new line on the Moscow metro map since 2014. It will mainly serve residents of the south of the capital. The long-awaited metro will first come to the territory of the Biryulevo Vostochnoye and Biryulevo Zapadnoye districts, where about 260 thousand people will live by 2030.

    The first plans to build a metro line in Biryulyovo appeared half a century ago, in the early 1970s, when mass residential construction began on the site of the workers’ settlement of the same name and the adjacent territory, which became part of the capital in 1960. Then, the construction of the Biryulevskaya metro line was included in the General Plan of the City of Moscow for the period up to 2025, approved in 2010. On the instructions of Sergei Sobyanin, projects for the planning of sections of the Biryulevskaya line were developed and approved in 2021–2023.

    It will stretch from ZIL to the Biryulevo East and West districts and as a result will allow:

    — improve transport services for residents (including new neighborhoods being built as part of the renovation program) and the operating developing areas of ZIL, the Danilovsky, Nagatinsky Zaton, Nagatino-Sadovniki, Pechatniki, Moskvorechye-Saburovo, Tsaritsyno, Biryulevo Vostochnoye and Biryulevo Zapadnoye districts with a population of over one million people;

    — improve transport accessibility of the Dream Island amusement park;

    — reduce the load on sections of the Zamoskvoretskaya and Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya metro lines;

    — reduce the intensity of traffic on adjacent streets, which in turn will improve the environmental situation in the listed areas of the city;

    — provide transfers for passengers to the Moscow Central Circle (MCC), the Big Circle, Zamoskvoretskaya and Troitskaya metro lines, as well as to the Paveletskaya direction of the Moscow Railway.

    By 2030, it is planned to create more than 400 thousand jobs at the stations of the Biryulevskaya line.

    The new radial line, more than 22 kilometers long, will include 10 stations:

    — “ZIL” — at the intersection of Likhachev Avenue and Bratyev Ryabushinskikh Street, near the MCC station of the same name (transfer to the MCC and the Troitskaya metro line under construction);

    — “Dream Island” — near the theme park of the same name, between Andropov Avenue and the Southern Landscape Park (transfer to the Zamoskvoretskaya metro line);

    — “Klenovy Boulevard” — along the boulevard of the same name at the intersection with Novinki Street (transfer to the Big Circle Line of the metro);

    — “Kuryanovo” — near the junction of 4th Kuryanovskaya Street and Batyuninskaya Street;

    — “Moskvorechye” – near the junction of Koshkina Street and Kashirskoe Highway;

    — “Kavkazsky Boulevard” — along Kavkazsky Boulevard near the junction with Yerevanskaya Street;

    — “Caspian” — near the intersection of 6th Radial Street and Projected Driveway No. 6631;

    — “Lipetskaya” — along the street of the same name near the junction with Pedagogical Street;

    — “Lebedyanskaya” — along Lipetskaya Street near the junction with Lebedyanskaya Street;

    — “Biryulevo” — along Bulatnikovskaya Street near the junction with Bulatnikovsky Proezd, not far from the Biryulevo-Passazhirskaya railway station.

    Three stations are currently under construction: ZIL, Ostrov Mechty, and Klenovy Bulvar. Work is underway to install enclosing structures and excavate the soil for the pits.

    At all other future stations of the Biryulevskaya line, preparatory work is underway.

    Monument to Russian metro builders to be erected on Sokolnicheskaya SquareSergei Sobyanin: Four more stations of the Troitskaya metro line will open in 2025Moscow Metro Turns 90 — Sergei Sobyanin

    Results of the implementation of the Moscow metro construction program

    Since 2011, 255.5 kilometers of lines, 123 stations, 13 electric depots of the Moscow Metro and the Moscow Central Circle have been built and reconstructed in the capital. Jointly with JSC Russian Railways, the MCD-1, MCD-2, MCD-3 and MCD-4 ground metro lines were also put into operation: 303 kilometers of tracks and 137 stations.

    New lines and stations of the Moscow metro, MCC and MCD

    Lublin-Dmitrovskaya line:

    — section from Maryino station to Zyablikovo station (three stations);

    — the section from the Maryina Roshcha station to the Fiztekh station (nine stations).

    Kalininskaya and Solntsevskaya lines:

    — section from Novogireevo station to Novokosino station (one station);

    — section from Delovoy Tsentr station to Vnukovo Airport station (14 stations).

    Zamoskvoretskaya line:

    — section from Krasnogvardeyskaya station to Alma-Atinskaya station (one station);

    — Technopark station;

    — section from Rechnoy Vokzal station to Khovrino station (two stations).

    Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line:

    — section from Mitino station to Pyatnitskoe Shosse station (one station).

    Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya line:

    — section from Vykhino station to Kotelniki station (three stations);

    — Spartak station.

    Butovskaya line:

    — section from the station “Ulitsa Starokachalovskaya” to the station “Bitsevsky Park” (two stations).

    Sokolnicheskaya line:

    — the section from the Yugo-Zapadnaya station to the Potapovo station (eight stations).

    Nekrasovskaya line: eight stations.

    Large Circle Line: 31 stations.

    Trinity Line:

    — section from Novatorskaya station to Novomoskovskaya station (seven stations).

    Moscow Central Circle: 31 stations.

    Moscow Central Diameters (MCD-1, MCD-2, MCD-3, MCD-4): 137 stations, of which 53 are transfer stations to metro, MCC and MCD lines.

    Electric depots (including reconstruction): Mitino, Brateevo, Pechatniki, Vykhino, Planernoye, Nizhegorodskoye, Likhobory, Solntsevo, Vladykino, Rudnevo, Sokol, Aminyevskoye, Yuzhnoye (Brateevo-2).

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

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

    HTTPS: //vv.mos.ru/mayor/tkhemes/12957050/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM): Council and Parliament strike a deal on its simplification

    Source: Council of the European Union

    The Council presidency and European Parliament’s negotiators reached a provisional agreement today on one of the proposals of the so-called ‘Omnibus I’ legislative package: a regulation, which simplifies and strengthens the EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM).

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM): Council and Parliament strike a deal on its simplification

    Source: Council of the European Union

    The Council presidency and European Parliament’s negotiators reached a provisional agreement today on one of the proposals of the so-called ‘Omnibus I’ legislative package: a regulation, which simplifies and strengthens the EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM).

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Fintech and Global Growth in Focus as Russia National Centre Hosts Key Session at SPIEF 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MOSCOW, RUSSIA, June 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) 2025 opened in St. Petersburg on June 18 with a high-level session hosted by the Russia National Centre, highlighting fintech innovation and strategies for global economic growth.

    The forum’s business program opened on June 18 with the session “Shaping a New Platform for Global Growth,” where the final report on the results of the International Open Dialogue of the Russia National Centre was presented. The discussion focused on key challenges of modernity: economic and political fragmentation, demographic shifts, the implementation of breakthrough technologies, and the growing social and technological gap within and between states.

    The CEO of Tanssi Foundation, Tiago Rudiger (Brazil), emphasised that the real fintech revolution is happening in Global South countries.

    “Forget Wall Street – the fintech revolution is happening in Global South countries. Thanks to blockchain, money and assets are becoming programmable, and combined with artificial intelligence, this provides a powerful impulse for transforming the entire financial sector. Fintech is changing the game’s rules, affecting traditional banks and opening new opportunities for millions of people,” believes Tiago Rudiger.

    He noted that Brazil and Russia are sharing their experiences in these areas with each other.

    “I read that this will help people reduce transaction costs in global financial markets. I’m ready to discuss this with enthusiasm. I look forward to when these processes arrive in Brazil and worldwide,” emphasised Tiago Rudiger.

    Maxim Oreshkin, Deputy Chief of Staff of the Presidential Administration of the Russian Federation, moderated the session. He emphasised that this year, the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum is taking place against turbulent world events.

    “This year, the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum is taking place against turbulent world events. This includes the situation in the Middle East and trade wars. Much time will be devoted to this current agenda at the forum. We must not forget which long-term trends and challenges are basic and defining. It is important to conduct an open dialogue about how we build the world of the future and how to form a new platform for global growth. In which countries does this global growth occur, on which technologies will it be built, and on which principles and cultural code? Our task is to ensure that forward movement benefits people in all countries that, like Russia, are working on the future. It is through open dialogue that our future and its understanding are built,” emphasised Maxim Oreshkin.

    At the session organised by the Russia National Centre, speakers also discussed the report on the results of the Open Dialogue prepared by the Centre for Cross-Industry Expertise “Third Rome.” The session took place in sequential discussions, in which speakers discussed economics, technologies, and people in a rapidly changing world.

    The results of the session “Shaping a New Platform for Global Growth” became the foundation for the subsequent business program of SPIEF-2025. The recording of the session can be viewed on the Russia National Centre website.

    Media contact

    Brand: Russia National Centre

    Contact person name: Vadim Samodurov

    E-mail: info@russia.ru

    Website: https://future.russia.ru

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Fintech and Global Growth in Focus as Russia National Centre Hosts Key Session at SPIEF 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MOSCOW, RUSSIA, June 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) 2025 opened in St. Petersburg on June 18 with a high-level session hosted by the Russia National Centre, highlighting fintech innovation and strategies for global economic growth.

    The forum’s business program opened on June 18 with the session “Shaping a New Platform for Global Growth,” where the final report on the results of the International Open Dialogue of the Russia National Centre was presented. The discussion focused on key challenges of modernity: economic and political fragmentation, demographic shifts, the implementation of breakthrough technologies, and the growing social and technological gap within and between states.

    The CEO of Tanssi Foundation, Tiago Rudiger (Brazil), emphasised that the real fintech revolution is happening in Global South countries.

    “Forget Wall Street – the fintech revolution is happening in Global South countries. Thanks to blockchain, money and assets are becoming programmable, and combined with artificial intelligence, this provides a powerful impulse for transforming the entire financial sector. Fintech is changing the game’s rules, affecting traditional banks and opening new opportunities for millions of people,” believes Tiago Rudiger.

    He noted that Brazil and Russia are sharing their experiences in these areas with each other.

    “I read that this will help people reduce transaction costs in global financial markets. I’m ready to discuss this with enthusiasm. I look forward to when these processes arrive in Brazil and worldwide,” emphasised Tiago Rudiger.

    Maxim Oreshkin, Deputy Chief of Staff of the Presidential Administration of the Russian Federation, moderated the session. He emphasised that this year, the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum is taking place against turbulent world events.

    “This year, the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum is taking place against turbulent world events. This includes the situation in the Middle East and trade wars. Much time will be devoted to this current agenda at the forum. We must not forget which long-term trends and challenges are basic and defining. It is important to conduct an open dialogue about how we build the world of the future and how to form a new platform for global growth. In which countries does this global growth occur, on which technologies will it be built, and on which principles and cultural code? Our task is to ensure that forward movement benefits people in all countries that, like Russia, are working on the future. It is through open dialogue that our future and its understanding are built,” emphasised Maxim Oreshkin.

    At the session organised by the Russia National Centre, speakers also discussed the report on the results of the Open Dialogue prepared by the Centre for Cross-Industry Expertise “Third Rome.” The session took place in sequential discussions, in which speakers discussed economics, technologies, and people in a rapidly changing world.

    The results of the session “Shaping a New Platform for Global Growth” became the foundation for the subsequent business program of SPIEF-2025. The recording of the session can be viewed on the Russia National Centre website.

    Media contact

    Brand: Russia National Centre

    Contact person name: Vadim Samodurov

    E-mail: info@russia.ru

    Website: https://future.russia.ru

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Huawei and China Mobile win TM Forum’s 2025 Excellence Award for Autonomous Networks

    Source: Huawei

    Headline: Huawei and China Mobile win TM Forum’s 2025 Excellence Award for Autonomous Networks

    [Copenhagen, Denmark, June 18, 2025] During DTW 2025, Huawei and China Mobile won the Excellence Award for Autonomous Networks for the End-to-End Autonomous Network Operation Center (Dark NOC) solution. This project focuses on high-value Autonomous Networks scenarios, leveraging telecom foundation model and agents, and has achieved significant achievements in end-to-end automation, quality & revenue enhancement, and efficient operations & maintenance, which has effectively accelerated the advancement of the telecom industry towards level 4.

    Huawei and China Mobile win TM Forum’s Excellence Award for Autonomous Networks

    To achieve the L4 industry goal of “end-to-end automation of NOC operations in high-value scenarios and self-service site operations”, Huawei and China Mobile have jointly created the End-to-End Autonomous Network Operation Center (Dark NOC) solution. Focusing on high-value scenarios such as fault handling and customer complaint resolution, the solution leverages telecom foundation model to build two main types of agents: role-based Copilots and scenario-based Agents. This solution was first deployed in Guangdong and Zhejiang provinces, achieving significant results including a 30% improvement in maintenance efficiency and a 30% reduction in average MTTR. Currently, the solution has been commercially deployed across fault management and complaint handling scenarios in China Mobile Guangdong and Zhejiang, covering mobile bearer, wireless, core, and home broadband networks. It is now being promoted to other provincial subsidiaries, empowering operators to serve tens of millions of users.
    The successful implementation of the End-to-End Autonomous Network Operations Center (Dark NOC) Solution provides a valuable practical reference for global operators accelerating their journey toward L4. In the future, Huawei and China Mobile will continue to deepen innovation and practical exploration in high-value scenarios, injecting new impetus into the automation and intelligent transformation of the telecoms industry.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Global: China positions itself as a stable economic partner and alternative to ‘unpredictable’ Trump

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Chee Meng Tan, Assistant Professor of Business Economics, University of Nottingham

    After the second world war, the US and its western allies created a set of international agreements and institutions to govern attitudes to mutual defence, economics and human rights. For decades this created stable alliances and predictable economic plans.

    But, unlike his predecessors, Donald Trump believes that international organisations undermine US interests and sovereignty. He has withdrawn the US from the World Health Organization, and there is speculation he could reduce US commitment to the UN. US investment in Nato’s mutual defence pact remains under discussion.

    But while Washington is busy sounding the retreat from the very world order it had a hand in building, Beijing is looking to increase its international role. Chinese leadership in international agencies affiliated with the UN has increased over the years, and so has its financial commitment to international institutions.

    That’s not all. China is also a prominent member of trade coalitions such as the
    15-member Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, and the ten-member Brics group (led by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). These groups not only promote greater economic integration among its members, but may reduce members’ reliance on the US economy and the US dollar. Amid an increasingly volatile US, China’s presence as the second largest economy in the world in these trade groups would be useful.

    Now with the whole world negotiating new US trade deals, most nations see their relationship with the US as unstable. China sees this as a golden opportunity to position itself as a global counterbalance to the US. One of its policies is to “deliver greater security, prosperity and respect for developing countries”, and this is particularly relevant in African nations, where US aid is being reduced rapidly.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    A US-Sino trade deal was reached in London on June 10 2025. US tariffs on Chinese goods now stand at 55%, while Chinese tariffs on US imports will remain at 10%. But how long this trade deal will last remains uncertain, when Trump has a tendency to change his mind.

    There are few details of the US trade deal with China so far.

    Just a month earlier, on May 12, Washington and Beijing concluded a major trade accord in Geneva aimed at diffusing massive trade tensions. Unfortunately, this deal only lasted for 18 days before Trump started accusing China of violating the agreement.

    But Trump’s tendency to escalate trade tensions and then diffuse them is not just China’s problem. His allies are also a victim of his frequent wavering. This leaves nations around the world, whether traditional US partners or not, in a crisis of not knowing what the US’s next move will be, and whether their economy will suffer.

    In February 2025, Trump imposed 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada but temporarily called off the tariffs a month later. Then in early April 2025, Trump raised tariffs on 60 countries and trading blocs, including traditional US allies such as the EU (20%), Japan (24%), South Korea (25%) and Taiwan (32%). Hours later, Trump unexpectedly rescinded these tariffs, but that caused massive damage to the global economy.

    If there is a time that the world needs a more predictable partner it would be now. But it isn’t a Trump-helmed US. A recent annual report on democracy and national attitudes indicates that for first time, respondents across 100 countries view China more favourably than they do the US. So, could China be the partner that the world seeks?

    Why China needs trade

    While the world needs a stable environment to promote economic growth, Beijing needs this stability for reasons that go beyond economics.

    Unlike liberal democracies that derive their legitimacy through elections, a large part of Beijing’s legitimacy comes from its ability to deliver sustained economic prosperity to the Chinese people. But with a battered economy that was first triggered by a real estate crisis in 2021, this task of maintaining legitimacy has become more difficult.

    Exporting its way of out the economic slump may have been on Beijing’s books, as this was one of China’s traditional methods for promoting economic growth. But Trump’s trade war has made this an increasingly difficult prospect, especially to the US which imports 14.8% of total Chinese exports.

    As a result, fixing China’s economy has become a priority for the Chinese government, and it is because of this that Xi tours neighbouring Asean countries such as Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia to promote trade and strategic plans to maintain economic stability.

    Obstacles for China

    Despite everything that China is doing, its image remains a problem, for some. For instance, China has claimed sovereignty over the South China Sea and has built ports, military installations and airstrips on artificial islands across the region, despite territorial disputes with its neighbours including Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei.

    But there are other concerns about China. The country’s rapid advancements in military technology, for example, have the potential to destabilise security within the Indo Pacific, potentially allowing China to take control of strategically placed islands to use as bases for its navy. China is also becoming a dominant hacking threat, according to UK cyber expert Richard Horne, which is likely to cause problems for worldwide cybersecurity.

    Polish prime minister Donald Tusk once remarked: “With a friend like Trump, who needs enemies?” Many other national leaders are likely to share Tusk’s sentiment today, and may see opportunities to extend trade deals with China as an alternative to a turbulent relationship with Trump.

    Chee Meng Tan 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. China positions itself as a stable economic partner and alternative to ‘unpredictable’ Trump – https://theconversation.com/china-positions-itself-as-a-stable-economic-partner-and-alternative-to-unpredictable-trump-258443

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Another public inquiry into institutional abuses – why they so often fail to deliver justice for victims

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Anne Marie McAlinden, Professor, School of Law, Queen’s University Belfast

    House of Commons/Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

    Public inquiries have become the standard political response to scandals and public crises, including allegations of institutional abuses.

    At the time of writing, there are multiple ongoing inquiries (or calls for them) into forms of abuse throughout the UK and elsewhere. Northern Ireland, Scotland and Ireland have ongoing institutional abuse inquiries or commissions of investigation. Victims of the late Mohamed Al Fayed are calling for an inquiry into abuses suffered while they were employed at Harrods.

    And the government has just announced a further national inquiry into grooming gangs in England and Wales. There has also been a concentration of institutional abuse inquiries globally over the last 30 years.


    Want more politics coverage from academic experts? Every week, we bring you informed analysis of developments in government and fact check the claims being made.

    Sign up for our weekly politics newsletter, delivered every Friday.


    Ireland in particular has had a lengthy history of such official investigations. Over the last two decades, it has had at least eight. In England and Wales, the issues of grooming gangs and child sexual exploitation have already been examined as part of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse led by child protection expert Alexis Jay. With 19 reports and evidence from over 6,000 victims within its Truth Project alone, it was the largest ever public inquiry in the UK.

    Frequently demanded by victims and the public, inquiries have symbolic value in signifying official acknowledgement of wrongdoing and abuses. However, they arguably fail to deliver truth, justice, accountability and healing for victims in several ways.

    The failures of abuse inquiries

    Inquiries are inevitably constrained by their narrow terms of reference. This sets the parameters of the inquiry and shapes the scope and scale of their investigations and any eventual outcomes.

    Terms of reference are frequently focused on how authorities responded to emerging allegations of abuses – whether churches, police or social services. A fuller examination of the systemic and structural issues that made abuses possible or allowed them to go unchecked for so long would be more useful.

    The investigations are also usually focused on fact-finding at an institutional level. As a result, they often fail to deliver the comprehensive truth of specific cases or hold individual perpetrators to account, which is what many victims seek.

    In older cases of abuse, things are even more difficult because so much time has passed and there may be no witnesses or records left to help prove what happened.




    Read more:
    How to make sure the new grooming gangs inquiry is the last


    Previous research shows that the inquiry process is often deeply traumatising for victims. Even if the emphasis is purportedly non-adversarial, the presence of lawyers and the dominance of legal culture and cross-examination effectively requires them to prove or justify their experiences. The basic effect becomes one of disbelief of victims or dismissal of their experiences of abuse.

    Added to this are the significant costs of inquiries – in terms of money and time. The independent inquiry into child sexual abuse is said to have cost more than £180 million. As with many large investigations, it took seven years to produce its final report.

    Inevitably, victims are left waiting years for outcomes and any sense of justice. Monetary redress (or compensation), if it comes at all, only usually happens once the inquiry has concluded.

    Above all, public inquiries are severely limited in their capacity to produce meaningful, systemic and lasting change. Research shows that successive child abuse inquiries, decades apart, continue to make the same or similar recommendations. The lack of action by governments and institutions on recommendations means the issues remain unaddressed.

    Over two and a half years later, many of the Jay report’s 20 recommendations remain unimplemented.

    The collective failures of past abuse inquiries should prompt the government to pause and consider whether another is truly needed – or whether a different approach is required.

    Rethinking public inquiries

    With colleagues at the Transforming Justice Project, I’ve researched justice responses to historical institutional abuses over many years. Our work, based on extensive primary research with victims, as well as advocates and church and state representatives on the island of Ireland, has highlighted some of the failings of inquiries. We have also uncovered an appetite for doing things differently.

    On one level, it is possible to reform inquiries by focusing more centrally on victims and the trauma they have experienced. This could include, for example, adopting themed approaches to inquiries, perhaps related to particular contexts or abuses, which report sooner as standard.

    It might also mean specialist support services for victims running in parallel to inquiries. Or, it might mean involving victims in the design of the inquiry process from the outset.

    It is also worth exploring alternative models of truth recovery, such as non-statutory independent panel in Northern Ireland. This panel focuses specifically on mother and baby institutions, Magdalene laundries, and workhouses. Here, the accumulated testimony of victims and their experiences will feed into the full statutory public inquiry on these forms of institutional abuse.

    More broadly, rather than commissioning yet another inquiry, the government needs to follow up on existing recommendations from previous inquiries, including on child abuse. It is only by addressing the systemic issues underlying institutional abuse – including cultural attitudes and responses to victims – that we will prevent a recurrence of abuse in the longer term.

    Anne Marie McAlinden received funding from the AHRC and, with colleagues on the Transforming Justice Project, from the British Academy and the Higher Education Authority.

    ref. Another public inquiry into institutional abuses – why they so often fail to deliver justice for victims – https://theconversation.com/another-public-inquiry-into-institutional-abuses-why-they-so-often-fail-to-deliver-justice-for-victims-259103

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Welfare bill will protect the most vulnerable and help households with income boost

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Welfare bill will protect the most vulnerable and help households with income boost

    Additional protections for millions of vulnerable people on benefits are set to be written into law, under new measures being introduced to Parliament today [18 June 2025].

    • New welfare legislation to ensure there are robust protections in place to support the most vulnerable and severely disabled.
    • Nearly 4 million households to benefit from uprating of Universal Credit standard rate, the largest, permanent real-terms increase to basic out of work support since 1980, according to the IFS.
    • More than 200,000 people with most severe, lifelong conditions to be protected from future reassessment for Universal Credit entitlement.
    • 13-week period of financial support for those affected by PIP changes as part of upcoming welfare reforms.
    • Comes alongside £1 billion employment support package that will unlock opportunity and grow the economy as part of the Plan for Change.

    The Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill will provide 13-weeks of additional financial security to existing claimants affected by changes to the PIP daily living component, including those who their lose eligibility to Carers Allowance and the carer’s element of Universal Credit.

    The 13-week additional protection will give people who will be affected by the changes time to adapt, access new, tailored employment support, and plan for their future once they are reassessed and their entitlement ends.

    This transitional cover is one of the most generous ever and more than three times the length of protection provided for the transition from DLA to PIP.

    This government inherited a broken social security system, with costs spiralling at an unsustainable rate and millions of people trapped out of work. The case for change is stark:

    • Since the pandemic, the number of PIP awards has more than doubled – up from 13,000 a month to 34,000 a month. That is around 1,000 people signing on to PIP every day – that is roughly the size of Leicester signing up every year.
    • The surge has been largely by driven by a substantial increase in the number of people who report anxiety and depression as their main condition. Before the pandemic (in 2019), 2,500 people a month were awarded PIP for these conditions, this has more than tripled to 8,200 a month in 2023.
    • Almost 1 million young people – 1 in 8 – are not in education, employment or training.
    • 1-in-10 people of working age are now claiming a sickness or disability benefit.
    • Without reform, the number of working age people on disability benefits is set to more than double this decade to 4.3 million.
    • Spending on working age disability and incapacity benefits is up £20 billion since the pandemic and is set to increase by almost that much again by the end of this Parliament, to a staggering £70 billion a year.

    That’s why, through the introduction of this Bill; the government is fixing our broken social security system so it supports those who can work to do so while protecting those who cannot – putting welfare spending on a more sustainable path to unlock growth as part of our Plan for Change.

    Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall said:

    Our social security system is at a crossroads. Unless we reform it, more people will be denied opportunities, and it may not be there for those who need it.

    This legislation represents a new social contract and marks the moment we take the road of compassion, opportunity and dignity.

    This will give people peace of mind, while also fixing our broken social security system so it supports those who can work to do so while protecting those who cannot – putting welfare spending on a more sustainable path to unlock growth as part of our Plan for Change.

    As part of our commitment to protect the most vulnerable and severely disabled, peace of mind will also be given to 200,000 individuals in the Severe Conditions Criteria group – individuals with the most severe and permanently disabling conditions who will never be able to work – as they will not be called for reassessed for Universal Credit (UC) under new legislation.

    Those protected from reassessment will also be paid the higher rate of UC health top up of £97 per week, so they can live with dignity and security, knowing the reforms to the welfare system mean it will always be there to support them.

    In the coming weeks, legislation will also be drafted for a Right to Try Guarantee. This will ensure that trying work will not, in and of itself, lead to a reassessment or award review, breaking down barriers to employment.

    Reforms being delivered by the legislation introduced today go hand in hand with a £1 billion employment support package to support more people with health conditions back into work, unlocking opportunity and growing the economy as part of the Plan for Change.

    Funding will offer personalised employment and health support for individuals on out of work benefits, with 500,000 people having already been supported into employment. This is a quadrupling the level of annual spend on supporting sick and disabled people into work, from the £275m in 2024/25 we inherited, to over £1bn in 2029/30.

    Nearly 4 million households will also receive an income boost with the main rate of Universal Credit set to increase above inflation every year for the next four years – estimated to be worth £725 by 2029/30 for a single household 25 or over. This is around £250 higher than an inflation only increases.

    The Bill will also rebalance Universal Credit rates by reducing the health element for new UC claims to £50 from April 2026, fixing a system which encourages sickness by paying health element recipients more than double the standard amount.

    To open up opportunities to work, everyone affected by changes to the UC health element from April 2026 will be offered support from a dedicated Pathways to Work adviser, with 1,000 advisers in place across Britain.

    All of those affected by reforms will be actively contacted and given the offer of a conversation about their support needs, goals and aspirations; offered one-to-one follow-on support, and given help to access additional work, health and skills support that can meet their needs.

    The reforms build on the Get Britain Working White Paper that will overhaul Jobcentres, empower Mayors and local leaders to tackle inactivity, and deliver a Youth Guarantee so every young person is either earning or learning, as part of the Government’s ambition to deliver an 80% employment rate.

    Additional information

    • The Bill will introduce a new additional eligibility requirement for the daily living component of PIP so that a minimum of 4 points must be scored on at least one daily living activity to be eligible for the daily living component. It will also rebalance Universal Credit.
    • The Work and Pensions Secretary gave a speech at the IPPR on setting out the case for reforming the welfare system: Welfare reform: Speech to the IPPR by Work and Pensions Secretary – GOV.UK
    • Based on current forecasts, the rebalancing mean single households 25 or over, will see their standard allowance rise to around £106pw by the end of this parliament.
    • Current UC health top up is more than double the UC standard allowance for a single claimant.

    There are 4 criteria for the healthcare professional to consider, all of which must apply for the claimant to meet the SCC, namely whether:

    • The individual’s level of function will always meet LCWRA
    • The individual’s condition will last for the rest of their life
    • There is no realistic prospect of recovery of function, and
    • The condition has been diagnosed by an appropriately qualified healthcare professional in the course of the provision of NHS services.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Construction director sentenced after failing to explain almost £500,000 worth of transfers out of company account

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Construction director sentenced after failing to explain almost £500,000 worth of transfers out of company account

    Suspended sentence for director who did not deliver accounting records to the liquidator

    • Construction director Mario Huiu failed to account for nearly £500,000 transferred out of his company’s accounts in a one-month period in 2020 

    • Huiu also failed to verify more than £200,000 in cash receipts and explain why his Incentive Services Limited company failed with debts of over £160,000 

    • Insolvency Service investigations have resulted in Huiu being given a suspended sentence for failing to provide accounting records

    A construction director who failed to explain transfers totalling almost £500,000 out of his company’s bank account has been handed a suspended sentence. 

    Mario Huiu’s failure to keep proper accounting records for Incentive Services Limited meant liquidators were also unable to verify cash receipts of more than £200,000 into the same bank account. 

    The 39-year-old, of Hayesbrook Road, Ilford, was prosecuted for offences under the Companies Act 2006 and Insolvency Act 1986. 

    Huiu was given a four-month prison sentence, suspended for 12 months, when he appeared at Thames Magistrates’ Court on Friday 13 June. 

    Mark Stephens, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said: 

    Limited liability companies provide vital protection for business owners, but this protection comes with serious responsibilities.

    Maintaining proper accounting records is not just a legal requirement – it is essential for responsible business management.  

    Directors such as Mario Huiu who fail to keep accurate financial records put their creditors and trading partners at unacceptable risk and jeopardise their own ability to make sound trading decisions. 

    Incentive Services Limited was incorporated in March 2017 under the name of EMA Dry-Lining Ltd. The company changed its name three times before settling on Incentive Services Limited in May 2020. 

    Huiu was sole director of the company when it went into liquidation seven months later in December 2020. 

    As director of the company, Huiu was required to maintain and preserve company books and records and deliver them to the liquidator. 

    His failure to do this meant the liquidator was unable to verify transfers of £498,480 from the company’s account between May and June 2020. 

    Huiu’s explanation during interview that the money was spent on paying suppliers was uncorroborated and described by the Insolvency Service as “not credible”. 

    Similarly, unverified cash receipts of £261,960 into the same company bank account did not have supporting sales records. 

    Four other company bank accounts were identified during the course of Insolvency Service investigations. Huiu did not declare them all to investigators. 

    Huiu’s failure to deliver books and records to the liquidator meant the true level of the company’s financial turnover could not be verified. 

    The reasons why the company failed owing creditors £162,482 were also not explained due to the inadequate accounts. 

    Huiu was disqualified as a company director for six years in November 2021 following initial Insolvency Service investigations into his misconduct at Incentive Services Limited.

    Further information

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: 23 residential buildings to be built in 13 districts of Moscow as part of renovation program

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The Moscow Fund for the Renovation of Residential Development has identified contractors for the design and construction of housing under the renovation program at 23 sites in four administrative districts of the capital. This was reported by the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of Urban Development Policy Vladislav Ovchinsky.

    Plots with a total area of more than 18.8 hectares are located inWestern, South-East, Eastern AndSouth administrative districts of the capital in the districts Nizhny Novgorod, Izmailovo, Novogireevo, Vostochny, Nagatinsky Zaton, Yuzhnoye Chertanovo, Zapadnoye Biryulevo, Tsaritsyno, Vykhino-Zhulebino, Textile workers, Yuzhnoportovy, Mozhaisk and Filevsky Park.

    “In 13 districts of Moscow, 23 residential buildings will be built to implement the renovation program. The area of apartments in all buildings will be more than 382.8 thousand square meters. Most of them will appear on the site of old buildings from the first period of industrial housing construction, which will also be demolished by contractors. Thus, in Izmailovo, five-story buildings built in 1958-1961 will be replaced by three new modern residential complexes. The same number will be built in Bulatnikovsky Proezd in Biryulyovo Zapadny. Contractors were determined as part of the bidding for five lots,” said Vladislav Ovchinsky.

    The houses will be built according to individual projects with unique layouts and facade solutions that match the architectural appearance of the area. All of them will correspond to a high energy efficiency class, they will be equipped with video surveillance cameras for the safety of residents. The territories of new buildings will be landscaped taking into account the principles of a barrier-free environment.

    Earlier, Sergei Sobyanin spoke about the inclusion of more in the renovation program 131 sites for the construction of houses.

    The renovation program was approved in August 2017. It concerns about a million Muscovites and provides for the resettlement of 5,176 houses. Earlier, Sergei Sobyanin ordered to increase the pace of implementation of the renovation program intwice.

    Moscow is one of the leaders among regions in terms of construction volumes. High rates of housing construction correspond to the goals and initiatives of the national project “Infrastructure for life”.

    Get the latest news quicklyofficial telegram channel the city of Moscow.

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

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

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/155433073/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: Research project VERDAS completed –  Terranet part of the work for safer traffic

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    After a year, the research project VERDAS has now been completed – 
    a collaboration led by AstaZero, a subsidiary of RISE, and carried out together with Terranet, If Insurance, Folksam, the Swedish Transport Administration, Volvo Cars, Toyota, Zenseact, Aptiv, and Viscando. The project was funded by Vinnova, Sweden’s innovation agency, and aimed to develop new physical and virtual verification methods for more robust driver assistance systems (ADAS), with a particular focus on accident scenarios involving vulnerable road users.

    The project has been carried out in close dialogue with Euro NCAP and has taken important steps to improve how future driver assistance systems are tested and evaluated. The work shows that today’s test methods do not always capture accident scenarios that occur in real traffic – especially when pedestrians are involved. To ensure that the systems function in these situations, new test methods need to be developed to better reflect these types of accidents.

    Euro NCAP will introduce new test methods for robust ADAS functionality in Euro NCAP 2026. The VERDAS project has contributed by proposing test scenarios that include both infrastructure elements and interactions with other road users.

    Examples of highlighted test scenarios include:

    • Pedestrians stepping out from between parked cars
    • Pedestrians stepping out from behind another pedestrian
    • Pedestrians stepping out from behind traffic light poles

    Scenarios that may seem simple – but place high demands on the technology’s ability to detect and predict movement in a dynamic and often complex environment.

    “We are proud that VERDAS has contributed to Euro NCAP 2026 with robustness test scenarios based on real-world accident data. By placing higher demands on future driver assistance systems, these scenarios help drive development toward safer traffic environments – and, ultimately, fewer pedestrians killed or seriously injured,” says Mats Petersson, Project Manager for VERDAS at AstaZero and Senior Product Manager at Terranet.

    The closing event at RISE Proving Ground AstaZero brought together representatives from all participating parties, as well as Euro NCAP and Vinnova. Presentations were given by AstaZero, Euro NCAP, and the project group. Participants were given insights into the project methodology, implementation, and results from the past year. The event concluded with a forward-looking perspective on the next step – the newly launched follow-up project VERDAS 2, in which Terranet is participating.

    For more information, please contact:
    Lars Lindell, CEO
    E-mail: lars.lindell@terranet.se

    About Terranet AB (publ)
    Terranet’s mission is to save lives in urban traffic. We develop groundbreaking technology solutions for advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous vehicles, with a focus on protecting vulnerable road users from injury. Using a unique and patented sensor technology, Terranet’s system BlincVision scans the road with laser precision – detecting objects up to ten times faster and with greater accuracy than any other ADAS solution on the market today.

    Terranet is headquartered in Lund, Sweden, with additional operations in Gothenburg and Stuttgart – at the heart of the European automotive industry. Since 2017, the company has been listed on Nasdaq First North Premier Growth Market (Nasdaq: TERRNT-B). Visit us at www.terranet.se

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Research project VERDAS completed –  Terranet part of the work for safer traffic

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    After a year, the research project VERDAS has now been completed – 
    a collaboration led by AstaZero, a subsidiary of RISE, and carried out together with Terranet, If Insurance, Folksam, the Swedish Transport Administration, Volvo Cars, Toyota, Zenseact, Aptiv, and Viscando. The project was funded by Vinnova, Sweden’s innovation agency, and aimed to develop new physical and virtual verification methods for more robust driver assistance systems (ADAS), with a particular focus on accident scenarios involving vulnerable road users.

    The project has been carried out in close dialogue with Euro NCAP and has taken important steps to improve how future driver assistance systems are tested and evaluated. The work shows that today’s test methods do not always capture accident scenarios that occur in real traffic – especially when pedestrians are involved. To ensure that the systems function in these situations, new test methods need to be developed to better reflect these types of accidents.

    Euro NCAP will introduce new test methods for robust ADAS functionality in Euro NCAP 2026. The VERDAS project has contributed by proposing test scenarios that include both infrastructure elements and interactions with other road users.

    Examples of highlighted test scenarios include:

    • Pedestrians stepping out from between parked cars
    • Pedestrians stepping out from behind another pedestrian
    • Pedestrians stepping out from behind traffic light poles

    Scenarios that may seem simple – but place high demands on the technology’s ability to detect and predict movement in a dynamic and often complex environment.

    “We are proud that VERDAS has contributed to Euro NCAP 2026 with robustness test scenarios based on real-world accident data. By placing higher demands on future driver assistance systems, these scenarios help drive development toward safer traffic environments – and, ultimately, fewer pedestrians killed or seriously injured,” says Mats Petersson, Project Manager for VERDAS at AstaZero and Senior Product Manager at Terranet.

    The closing event at RISE Proving Ground AstaZero brought together representatives from all participating parties, as well as Euro NCAP and Vinnova. Presentations were given by AstaZero, Euro NCAP, and the project group. Participants were given insights into the project methodology, implementation, and results from the past year. The event concluded with a forward-looking perspective on the next step – the newly launched follow-up project VERDAS 2, in which Terranet is participating.

    For more information, please contact:
    Lars Lindell, CEO
    E-mail: lars.lindell@terranet.se

    About Terranet AB (publ)
    Terranet’s mission is to save lives in urban traffic. We develop groundbreaking technology solutions for advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous vehicles, with a focus on protecting vulnerable road users from injury. Using a unique and patented sensor technology, Terranet’s system BlincVision scans the road with laser precision – detecting objects up to ten times faster and with greater accuracy than any other ADAS solution on the market today.

    Terranet is headquartered in Lund, Sweden, with additional operations in Gothenburg and Stuttgart – at the heart of the European automotive industry. Since 2017, the company has been listed on Nasdaq First North Premier Growth Market (Nasdaq: TERRNT-B). Visit us at www.terranet.se

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: BTCC Exchange Celebrates 14th Anniversary with Launch of First-Ever User Badge Program

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VILNIUS, Lithuania, June 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BTCC, one of the world’s longest-serving exchanges, celebrates its 14th anniversary by launching its first-ever user badge program. The milestone campaign, running from June 16 to July 1, 2025, introduces the exclusive “14 Years of Momentum” badge. This limited-edition emblem aims to honor community loyalty as the exchange steps into its 15th year of operation in the crypto space.

    In the fast-paced cryptocurrency industry, 14 years of operation represent an extraordinary milestone of excellence. BTCC has proven its commitment to security and reliability by weathering market volatility and regulatory changes while consistently maintaining user trust around the world.

    The anniversary campaign marks BTCC’s first step into community recognition badges, offering users a new way to showcase their loyalty and trading achievements. To earn the anniversary badge, participants must deposit $200 worth of tokens, achieve VIP 2 status, and complete $1 million in cumulative futures trading volume during the event period. Anniversary badge holders will also receive trading rewards totaling $140, plus eligibility for ongoing exclusive benefits, including airdrops, special campaigns, and community recognition.

    The campaign also features progressive social tasks that unlock throughout the event period, encouraging users to engage across BTCC’s social media channels including X (Twitter), Instagram, and Discord.

    “This badge program represents just the beginning of how we plan to recognize and reward our community members,” said Alex, Head of Operations at BTCC. “BTCC stands the test of time thanks to our community’s support. Now we’re launching the badge program to create lasting value for those who’ve chosen to grow with us, and this is only the start of our journey in building meaningful connections with our trading family.”

    This anniversary event will kickstart BTCC’s comprehensive badge program, with plans to roll out regular campaigns allowing users to collect badges and exchange them for rewards.

    Bringing the celebration into the physical world, BTCC is launching an offline campaign featuring BTCC-branded taxis with QR codes roaming the streets of Berlin, Germany and Poznań, Poland. Pedestrians can scan the codes to participate directly in the anniversary campaign, bridging the gap between crypto trading and real-world engagement.

    The “14 Years of Momentum” anniversary badge serves as both a celebration of BTCC’s milestone and a symbol of the platform’s evolution toward enhanced community engagement. As a pioneer that has stood the test of time in crypto’s demanding landscape, BTCC continues to evolve while prioritizing the security and trust that have defined its remarkable 14-year journey.

    For more details about the anniversary campaign, please visit BTCC’s website.

    About BTCC

    Founded in 2011, BTCC is one of the world’s longest-serving cryptocurrency exchanges, offering secure and user-friendly trading services to millions of users globally. With a commitment to security, innovation, and community building, BTCC continues to be a trusted platform in the evolving cryptocurrency landscape.

    Website: https://www.btcc.com/en-US

    X: https://x.com/BTCCexchange

    Contact: press@btcc.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/b7e2626e-1b0f-4723-8e5e-66576f3494a8

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Video: UK Misogyny: the manosphere and online content – Women and Equalities Committee

    Source: United Kingdom UK Parliament (video statements)

    The Women and Equalities Committee is hearing from Laura Bates, Activist, Speaker and Writer, on the impact of:

    – the manosphere
    – misogynistic online content
    – the use of AI

    This hearing is part of the Committee’s wider inquiry on the manosphere and misogynistic online content. Find out more: https://committees.parliament.uk/work/9089/misogyny-the-manosphere-and-online-content

    #Manosphere #Misogyny #OnlineHarm

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVwyQdkS6A0

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Briefing – What role for AI skills in (re-)shaping the future European workforce – 18-06-2025

    Source: European Parliament 2

    Driven by the rapid pace of technological change and the need for a human-centric approach to the development of artificial intelligence (AI), AI skills have a significant role in shaping the future European workforce. The growing skills gap in the EU, with almost half of the population lacking basic digital skills, including AI skills, poses a significant challenge for the future that needs to be addressed for the EU to maintain its competitiveness and manage regional disparities. Several EU initiatives are under way, including the recently adopted union of skills communication and AI continent action plan. Fostering anticipatory governance, a culture of innovation, supporting diversity and inclusiveness in the AI workforce, and strengthening digital infrastructure are all critical to ensuring that the benefits of AI are shared by all, while minimising its negative impacts. Aligning with European values will be important to ensure fairness in this process. The EU’s future prosperity depends on using AI’s potential while basing it on a human-centric approach and ethical development, ensuring transparency and accountability, as well as prioritising people’s wellbeing. Targeted investment in EU-wide digital infrastructure and education that emphasises lifelong learning and skills development could ensure balanced economic growth and competitiveness in the global talent market. By examining the multifaceted interaction between AI, skills and jobs, a way forward may be identified that focuses on the needs of EU citizens and ensures that the future European workforce – and citizens in general – are equipped to succeed in an increasingly automated and AI-driven economy.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Strengthening Women, Peace and Security focus of FSC Security Dialogue and side-event of the Estonian Chairpersonship

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: Strengthening Women, Peace and Security focus of FSC Security Dialogue and side-event of the Estonian Chairpersonship

    Strengthening Women, Peace and Security focus of FSC Security Dialogue and side-event of the Estonian Chairpersonship | OSCE

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    Home Newsroom News and press releases Strengthening Women, Peace and Security focus of FSC Security Dialogue and side-event of the Estonian Chairpersonship

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: Tackling hate speech in the digital age: Stronger Action Needed

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: Tackling hate speech in the digital age: Stronger Action Needed

    SARAJEVO, 18 June 2025 – Hate speech is not new, but, fueled by the anonymity and viral nature of digital platforms, it now travels faster and further. These new arenas for hate speech carry the potential for more devastating consequences – accelerating discrimination, creating hostile environments or inciting violence, including hate crimes. As we mark the International Day for Countering Hate Speech, we cannot ignore the real risks of our digital and internet age, including the growing incidence and impact of online hate speech and the escalating dangers of posed by generative artificial intelligence (AI).
    These risks are particularly relevant in the context of Bosnia and Herzegovina, where hate speech has long prevented healing and exacerbated the wounds of a painful past, at the same time jeopardizing efforts to look towards a common brighter future.
    One of the most widespread and troubling forms of hate speech in the country is the denial, justification and relativization of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes committed during the 1992–1995 conflict as well as the glorification of war criminals. Such narratives are perpetuated — sometimes by high-profile public figures and politicians — for political gain and with impunity. Murals and offensive graffiti that publicly glorify war criminals are not just painful and haunting reminders for victims; they also contribute to politically motivated historical revisionism by reflecting a deliberate manipulation of history to justify harmful ideologies and obstruct reconciliation.
    Hate speech reflects our biases, for example, infused with gendered components such as such as discrediting survivors of conflict-related sexual violence or minimizing the distinct impact of war crimes of on the respective genders. Gendered hate speech undermines international justice, retraumatizes survivors and dehumanizes victims by aggravating suffering or erasing their experiences.
    Hate speech also disproportionately targets marginalized communities, such as ethnic minorities, migrants and persons with disabilities, as well as women and girls, including those from these communities. This further amplifies fear and compounds structural inequalities and social exclusion. Children are especially vulnerable to online hate speech, with such exposure potentially permanently negatively impacting their well-being and development.
    The anonymity and impersonal nature of online spaces often embolden the authors of hate speech, social media posts, videos or AI-generated images can be created and disseminated in seconds, reaching thousands—sometimes millions—without accountability.
    No single organization or institution can tackle this issue alone. Eradicating hate speech demands joint action, bringing together governments, civil society, the media and tech platforms. Media and tech companies, who may profit from emotive and shocking content, must be aware of the particular responsibilities they have. Political actors and institutions at all levels must also act—decisively and consistently.
    Critically, civil society, including grassroots organizations, human rights defenders, and environmental advocates, must be enabled and protected in fulfilling their vital role in raising awareness, providing support to survivors, and advocating for safer digital and public spaces. Countering hate speech must prioritize support for survivors, including access to justice through free legal aid, psychosocial services, and safe reporting mechanisms. We must also remember that protecting the most vulnerable requires active resistance to all forms of hate.
    We — the United Nations, the European Union, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe Mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the Council of Europe Office in Sarajevo — remain committed to working together and supporting Bosnia and Herzegovina towards stronger regulation against hate speech, greater accountability, and ethical and responsible public discourse, notwithstanding the right to freedom of opinion and expression in line with international standards.
    We urge those in positions of responsibility, whether in politics, the media or other roles of influence, as well as citizens, to take a stand against hate speech and challenge hateful narratives in everyday life. Together, through courage and commitment, we can combat all forms of hate speech and ensure that dignity and respect remain the foundations of our both our democratic and digital societies.
    —–
    The Op-ed is published as part of the joint project “Možemo bolje”, funded by the European Union’s Service for Foreign Policy Instruments under the Neighborhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument –  jointly implemented by the European Union in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the United Nations in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the OSCE Mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the Council of Europe Office in Sarajevo. 

    MIL OSI Europe News