Category: Europe

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dialogue between Chinese and Russian experts: complementarity of economic structures of China and Russia opens up huge prospects for cooperation

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    BEIJING, June 9 (Xinhua) — The 17th Mingde Strategic Dialogue, organized by the Chongyang Institute for Financial Research of Renmin University of China, was held in the Chinese capital on June 6.

    The discussion on “New Opportunities for Cooperation between Chinese and Russian Enterprises” was attended by Wang Wen, Dean of the Chongyang Institute and Dean of the College of Global Leadership at Renmin University of China, and Anastasia Likhacheva, Dean of the Faculty of World Economy and International Politics at the National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE, Russia), the Zhongguo Qingnianbao newspaper reported.

    Wang Wen noted that economic cooperation between China and Russia has developed slowly over the past decade, but has shown rapid growth over the past three years, increasing by more than 30 percent annually, with trade turnover rising from $190 billion to $240 billion.

    He stressed that the potential for economic cooperation between the two countries is limitless, citing as an example significant opportunities in Russia’s agricultural sector, where most land resources remain undeveloped. In his opinion, investment cooperation between China and Russia in agriculture is extremely promising, as is the development of bilateral partnership in energy, high technology and e-commerce.

    A. Likhacheva agreed with this assessment, pointing to the complementarity of the economic structures of China and Russia, which creates the basis for expanding regional cooperation in various areas. In general, A. Likhacheva noted, Chinese companies are not yet sufficiently familiar with the Russian market, and the key task for stimulating Chinese investment in Russia is to find qualified personnel and reliable partners to identify common ground in cooperation.

    A. Likhacheva added that as China’s rise accelerates, more and more Russian economists and international experts are paying attention to China’s experience of rapid development. Studying Chinese in Russian educational institutions is becoming a fashionable trend. More and more Russian students are showing interest in the Chinese legal system and other aspects of Chinese reality.

    Wang Wen, for his part, expressed the opinion that Chinese students should consider Russia as an attractive destination for education, not limited to world university rankings or choosing exclusively Western countries, and called on the younger generation of the two countries to more actively show mutual interest. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Chinese capital will host the Moscow Seasons in Beijing festival

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    Beijing, June 9 (Xinhua) — The Moscow Seasons in Beijing festival will be held in the Chinese capital from June 12 to 15, the Russian Embassy in China reported.

    The festival, organized by the Moscow government with the support of the Beijing People’s Government, will be one of the largest in a series of events within the framework of the China-Russia Cross Years of Culture 2024-2025.

    From historical traditions to contemporary gastronomy and art, visitors will be able to get to know Russian culture better. Guests will have the opportunity to try their hand at national crafts, enjoy instrumental music, ballet and opera.

    A special platform with information on Moscow’s tourist opportunities will be organized separately. And on June 13, a conference will be held called “Cities of the Future. Synergy of the Strategic Partnership of Moscow and Beijing”, where participants will discuss issues of developing international cooperation in trade, technology, culture and creative spheres.

    Beijing and Moscow have been sister cities for 30 years. Last year, a cooperation program was signed between the Beijing People’s Government and the Moscow Government for 2024-2026. The parties agreed to exchange experience and implement joint projects in various areas. These include culture, technology, education, trade and tourism.

    Let us recall that from January 28 to February 9 this year, the festival “Chinese New Year in Moscow” was held in the Russian capital. The festival attracted about 1.5 million people. Great interest was aroused by master classes in calligraphy and making paper dragons, board games and street performances, drum shows and tea ceremonies.

    China ranks first among foreign countries in the number of tourists coming to the Russian capital. In 2024 alone, Moscow was visited by more than 420 thousand guests from China. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The container hub project in the port of Aktau gives a new powerful impetus to the development of TMTC

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    NANJING, June 9 (Xinhua) — The first phase of the first launch complex of the container hub project in the Aktau port of Kazakhstan was officially put into operation on Monday, which will give a new powerful impetus to the development of the Trans-Caspian International Transport Corridor (TITC), experts said.

    The above-mentioned project, located on the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea, is a key hub that connects the port of Baku in Azerbaijan and increases the capacity and efficiency of the TMTC.

    “The launch of the first launch complex of the container hub in the port of Aktau is an important stage in the development of the transport system of Kazakhstan and the Trans-Caspian route connecting China with Europe via Central Asia and the Caspian Sea,” noted Damir Kozhakhmetov, General Director of KTZ Express JSC.

    According to him, the emergence of modern transshipment infrastructure on the Caspian Sea coast will reduce the overall time of cargo delivery between China, Central Asian countries and Europe. This will make TMTC more reliable, competitive and convenient for business.

    According to the data, the total area of the project is about 19 hectares, and its designed throughput capacity is 240 thousand standard containers /TEU, twenty-foot equivalent/ per year.

    “The project contributes to the creation of new jobs, stimulates the development of related industries, such as warehouse logistics and terminal services, and also opens up additional opportunities for export-import operations,” added D. Kozhakhmetov.

    Over the years of joint work between China and Kazakhstan in the transport and logistics sector, such large infrastructure projects as the Kazakh-Chinese logistics base in the port of Lianyungang /Jiangsu Province, East China/, the land port “Khorgos – Eastern Gate” on the border of the two countries, and the international transit motor corridor “Western Europe – Western China” have been put into operation.

    D. Kozhakhmetov believes that these facilities have become the basis for building a modern logistics infrastructure between the two countries. And the container hub in Aktau is a logical continuation of joint work.

    “It unites more than 7 thousand km of transport network – from the east coast of China to the Caspian Sea, forming a full-fledged land-sea route within the framework of the Belt and Road initiative,” said D. Kozhakhmetov.

    Chairman of the Board of JSC “FB “Samruk-Kazyna” Nurlan Zhakupov said that this project is an important step in the development of the transport and logistics sector of Kazakhstan.

    He emphasized that Kazakhstan is located at the junctions of the international transport corridors “North-South” and the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route /Middle Corridor/. This emphasizes the importance of the Aktau port in regional and international logistics.

    Deputy Mayor of Lianyungang Ren Dong noted that the container hub project in Aktau port demonstrates the forward-looking planning of China and Kazakhstan within the framework of the joint construction of the “Belt and Road”. It will further deepen interconnectivity, increase the throughput capacity of the TMTC, and promote trade and economic development of countries along the route.

    Let us recall that the project is being implemented in two stages. The first stage occupies an area of 9.1 hectares, on the territory of which 3 railway loading and unloading lines and about 690 container sites have been built. It will allow for a full cycle of operations – container handling, customs inspection and handling of hazardous cargo. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Russia and BRICS partners working to build an effective system of equal international cooperation — Russian President

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    St. Petersburg, June 9 (Xinhua) — Russia, together with its partners, primarily in the BRICS association, intends to continue working to build an effective system of equal and mutually beneficial international cooperation, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in his greeting to participants of the 2025 St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Monday.

    According to him, this cooperation is free from any forms of discrimination, dictate and sanctions pressure. Russia consistently defends the principles of sovereign development, respect for the cultural and civilizational identity of countries and peoples, the president added.

    The central place in the forum program this year is occupied by the topics of technology and digital transformation as the most important factors of leadership in the modern world, creating a comfortable environment for life and self-realization of people, noted V. Putin.

    The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in 2025 will be held from June 18 to 21 under the motto “Common Values — the Basis for Growth in a Multipolar World.” –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Russia is in favor of continuing contacts with Ukraine, but there is no clear understanding yet about a new round of negotiations – press secretary of the Russian president

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    Moscow, June 9 /Xinhua/ — Contacts with Ukraine need to continue, but there is no clear understanding yet about a new round of talks, Russian presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov said on Monday.

    “Now, depending on how the situation develops, the conversation should, in theory, turn to continuation and the next round of negotiations. There are no precise understandings on this matter yet,” TASS quotes him as saying.

    As D. Peskov noted, Russia will continue contacts with Ukraine, despite significant changes in the vision of the essence of Kyiv after the recent attacks on railway tracks in the Bryansk and Kursk regions, which Moscow classified as terrorist attacks.

    “We will certainly talk about continuing the conversation,” concluded D. Peskov. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Assessing the U.S. Climate in May 2025

    Source: US National Oceanographic Data Center

    Key Points:

    • Thirteen states experienced one of their five wettest Mays on record, while dry conditions persisted across much of the Northwest.
    • Two significant severe weather outbreaks on May 15–16 and May 18–20 resulted in over 200 tornado reports, very large hail and damaging winds.
    • Alaska had its second-wettest May on record with exceptionally heavy rainfall in the Southeast.
      Several sites across Hawai`i observed their warmest spring on record.
    • Widespread drought improvement occurred along the East Coast and across much of the Plains.
    Map of the U.S. selected significant climate anomalies and events in May 2025.

    Other Highlights:

    Temperature

    Map of the U.S. showing temperature departures from average for May 2025 with warmer areas in gradients of red and cooler areas in gradients of blue.

    The average temperature for the contiguous U.S. (CONUS) in May 2025 was 61.7°F, 1.5°F above the 20th-century average, ranking in the warmest third of the 131-year period of record. Much of the West, Southwest and Northwest, as well as the northern Rockies and Plains, recorded above-average temperatures. Warmer-than-normal conditions also extended along the southern Gulf Coast from Texas to Florida and up the entire Atlantic seaboard. Florida experienced its second-warmest May on record at 4.0°F above average. In contrast, temperatures across the central U.S. were generally near- to below-average.

    During meteorological spring (March–May) 2025, the CONUS average temperature was 54.1°F, 3.2°F above average, making it the second-warmest spring in the 131-year record. North Carolina recorded its second-warmest spring (3.7°F above average), while Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi and Virginia each matched or exceeded their third-warmest spring on record.

    Alaska’s average temperature for May was 39.0°F, 1.2°F above the long-term average, ranking in the middle third of the 101-year record. For the spring season (March–May), Alaska’s average temperature was 27.7°F, 3.7°F above average, ranking in the warmest third of the historical record.

    Hawai`i was warmer than average in May, with several stations reporting record average temperatures for the month. Spring ranked as the warmest on record at multiple sites, including the Honolulu International and Moloka`i airports.

    Precipitation

    May 2025 U.S. Total Precipitation Percentiles

    The average precipitation across the CONUS in May was 3.63 inches, which is 0.72 inch above the 20th-century average, ranking in the wettest third of the 131-year record. Much of the Southeast and Northeast experienced notably wet conditions, with the Southeast region recording its second-wettest May and the Northeast its third-wettest. Alabama had its wettest May on record—its first with more than 10 inches of rainfall—while Maryland, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont each recorded their second wettest. Precipitation was also above average in parts of the Southwest and northern Plains, while drier-than-average conditions prevailed along portions of the Pacific Coast, the Northwest and the upper Mississippi Valley.

    During spring, the CONUS received an average of 8.90 inches of precipitation, 0.97 inch above the long-term average, ranking in the wettest third of the 131-year record. Much-above-average precipitation fell across parts of the southern Plains, South, Ohio Valley and Northeast, as well as in portions of the northern Plains and upper Great Lakes. In contrast, below-average precipitation was observed in parts of the Mountain West, central Plains and across the Florida Peninsula.

    Alaska experienced its second-wettest May on record, largely due to exceptionally heavy rainfall in the Southeast region, where many long-term stations set new monthly precipitation records. Alaska also tied its second-wettest spring on record, despite some parts of the West Coast and western Aleutians being drier than average.

    Drought

    According to the June 3 U.S. Drought Monitor report, about 29.6% of the contiguous U.S. was in drought, a decrease of approximately 7.4% since the end of April. Drought conditions contracted or decreased in intensity along much of the East Coast, from Florida to the Northeast. Improvements were also observed in parts of the Southwest and across sections of the southern, central and northern Plains. In contrast, drought developed or intensified across parts of the Northwest, central Rockies, middle Mississippi Valley and Great Lakes regions. In Hawai`i, drought conditions improved over the western islands but intensified over the Big Island.

    Monthly Outlook

    Above-average temperatures are expected across much of the Lower 48 in June, particularly in parts of the Northwest and Northeast. In contrast, below-average temperatures are favored in Alaska. Lower-than-average precipitation is favored in the Northwest, while wetter-than-average conditions are expected across parts of the Southwest, central Plains and extending into the South and Southeast.

    Drought is expected to persist across much of the Southwest and parts of the central and northern Plains, with additional further development likely in portions of the Pacific West, Northwest and northern Rockies. Some drought improvement is anticipated in parts of Florida and along the Mid-Atlantic Coast.

    Visit the Climate Prediction Center’s Official 30-Day Forecasts and U.S. Monthly Drought Outlook website for more details.

    Significant wildland fire potential  is above normal for June across portions of the Pacific Coast, Northwest and Southwest, as well as parts of the southern Plains, upper Mississippi Valley and Southeast. For additional information on wildland fire potential, visit the National Interagency Fire Center’s One-Month Wildland Fire Outlook.


    For more detailed climate information, check out our comprehensive May 2025 U.S. Climate Report scheduled for release on June 12, 2025. For additional information on the statistics provided here, visit the Climate at a Glance and National Maps webpages.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Kemp: May Net Tax Revenues Up 9.1%; Adjusted YTD Up 0.2%

    Source: US State of Georgia

    ATLANTA – The State of Georgia’s net tax collections in May totaled $2.69 billion, for an increase of $224 million, or 9.1%, compared to FY 2024, when net tax collections approached $2.47 billion for the month. As a result of the hurricane-related tax filing deadline extension granted by Governor Kemp to file tax year 2024 income tax returns, a large number of filers took advantage of the extension by remitting payments at the May 1 deadline, leading to a significant portion of both individual and corporate return payments being captured in the May reporting cycle.

    Year-to-date, net tax revenue totaled $30.46 billion, for an increase of $536.2 million that was driven largely by the collection of the state’s motor fuel excise tax, which was suspended by Executive Order for a period of two and a half months during FY 2024.  Adjusting for the year-over-year motor fuel tax changes, year-to-date net tax revenue collections for the period ending May 31 were up $64.8 million, or 0.2%.

    The changes within the following tax categories help to further explain May’s overall net tax revenue increase:
     
    Individual Income Tax: Individual Income Tax collections totaled nearly $1.33 billion, for an increase of $102.3 million, or 8.3%, compared to last year when Individual Tax collections totaled $1.23 billion.

    The following notable components within Individual Income Tax combine for the net increase:

    • Individual Income Tax refunds issued (net of voided checks) increased $57.9 million or 38.7 percent
    • Individual Withholding payments declined by $38.1 million, or 3.2 percent, from the previous fiscal year
    • Individual Income Tax Return payments were up $162.5 million, or 142.9 percent, over last year
    • All other Individual Tax categories, including Estimated payments, were up a combined $35.8 million

    Sales and Use Tax: Gross Sales and Use Tax collections totaled roughly $1.6 billion in May, for an increase of $74.2 million, or 4.9%, compared to FY 2024.  Net Sales and Use Tax increased by $37.5 million, or 5%, compared to last year, when net sales tax totaled $746 million. The adjusted Sales Tax distribution to local governments totaled $809.4 million, for an increase of $41.7 million, or 5.4%, while Sales Tax refunds decreased by $4.9 million compared to the previous fiscal year.

    Corporate Income Tax: Corporate Income Tax collections for the month of May totaled $121.2 million, which was an increase of $50.2 million, or 70.8%, compared to last year’s total of $70.9 million.

    The following notable components within Corporate Income Tax make up the net increase:

    • Corporate Income Tax refunds issued (net of voids) declined roughly $31.1 million, or 75.1%
    • Corporate Income Tax Return payments increased by $30.7 million, or 98.5%, over May 2024
    • All other Corporate Tax types, including Corporate Estimated payments, were down a combined $11.6 million 

    Motor Fuel Taxes: Motor Fuel Tax collections increased by $5 million, or 2.6%, compared to FY 2024.

    Motor Vehicle – Tag & Title Fees:  Motor Vehicle Tag & Title Fees increased by $1.4 million, or 4.2%, for the month, while Title Ad Valorem Tax (TAVT) collections increased by $6.3 million, or 8.3%, over May 2024.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Man jailed for carrying out murder in south London car park

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    A man has been jailed for life for fatally stabbing his victim during an unprovoked attack in a Battersea car park two years ago.

    Earl Morin-Briton, 36 (22.01.87), of Rosehill, Sutton was found guilty on Friday, 6 June of murdering 32-year-old Theo Porteous and possession of a knife following a trial at Kingston Crown Court.

    At his sentencing on Monday, 9 June he was jailed for life to serve a minimum of 27 years.

    Detective Chief Inspector Wayne Jolley, from Specialist Crime South, who led the investigation, said: “My thoughts remain with Theo’s family and friends who have had to sit in court and re-live the devastating events of that day. Nothing will ever bring Theo back to them but I do hope this outcome will give them some sense of closure.

    “Morin-Briton murdered Theo in an unprovoked and senseless attack in broad daylight. Theo was simply sitting in his car when Morin-Briton approached him, saying something which caused Theo to get out of the vehicle. What he was tragically unaware of was that the defendant had in his possession a large knife which he then used to stab Theo numerous times.

    “Our investigation combined solid detective work with crucial CCTV evidence – enabling us to get justice for Theo’s family and take a very dangerous individual off the streets.”

    The court heard that at around 12.35hrs on Saturday, 24 August 2023 Theo was sat in the car park of a block of flats in Nine Elms, Battersea when Morin-Briton approached his vehicle and spoke to him through the open driver’s window. Theo got out of the vehicle and was immediately confronted by Morin-Briton who pulled a knife from his shorts and stabbed him three times – to his face, neck and back.

    Members of the public witnessed the attack, and once Morin-Briton left the scene, they rushed to Theo’s aid. Despite their best efforts, and those of the Metropolitan Police officers and paramedics from the London Ambulance Service who were called to the scene, Theo sadly died from his injuries.

    Detectives launched an immediate investigation, trawling through hours of CCTV. The attack on Theo was captured in full on CCTV, and further footage was obtained from a variety of locations, including buses and trains to track Morin-Briton’s movements that day.

    After identifying him through their enquiries, officers launched a manhunt and Morin-Briton was arrested just over a week later – on 1 September – at an address in Norwood. He was charged the following day.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: The History and Legacy of Camp Mitchell: A Pillar of Seabee Excellence in Rota, Spain

    Source: United States Navy

    NAVAL STATION ROTA, Spain – Nestled within Naval Station Rota, Spain, Camp Mitchell stands as a testament to the unwavering commitment and operational excellence of the U.S. Navy Seabees. Named in honor of Capt. Thomas J. Mitchell, a distinguished Civil Engineer Corps (CEC) officer who was killed in action in 1974, the camp has served as a forward-deployed hub for Naval Construction Forces in the European and African theaters for decades.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Fisheries and Seafood Scheme reopens with around £6 million of investment

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Fisheries and Seafood Scheme reopens with around £6 million of investment

    The latest round of the Fisheries and Seafood Scheme (FaSS) in now open, supporting projects that strengthen England’s seafood sector and support economic growth while enhancing nature recovery.

    Administered by the Marine Management Organisation (MMO) on behalf of Defra, around £6 million in funding is open to seafood and marine businesses, recreational sector, charities and other organisations. 

    The latest round of funding is available to support projects in the 2025/2026 financial year which focus on the following priorities: 

    • Creating a sustainable and resilient seafood sector 

    • Reduce emissions and waste from the seafood sector 

    • Clean up rivers, lakes, seas and support nature recovery 

    • Boost regional and economic growth within the seafood sector 

    Fisheries Minister Daniel Zeichner said: 

    I’m thrilled to further invest in our exceptional seafood industry, demonstrating our steadfast support for England’s coastal communities alongside our substantial £360 million Fishing and Coastal Growth Fund. 

    This is on top of our new agreement with the EU, which will boost exports by making it easier for producers to sell their high-quality products to our largest trading partner. 

    “This government is committed to creating a sustainable seafood sector that grows local economies while safeguarding our precious marine habitats, all central to our Plan for Change.

    Paul Errington, Acting Director of Finance and Resources at MMO, said: 

    We’re proud to facilitate the delivery of continued financial support through FaSS, which has already had a real impact across England’s fishing communities and coast. 

    This new round of funding will deliver investment to safeguard the long-term sustainability, resilience and prosperity of England catching, aquaculture and processing sectors as well as continue efforts to protect our precious marine environment. 

    This round of FaSS builds on four successful years of the scheme, which has seen more than £35 million committed and over 1700 projects approved, ranging from marine litter removal and funding for vital processing equipment to promoting careers within the industry. 

    Fishing and coastal communities are also set to benefit from £360 million investment to drive growth and boost the sector for the future as the Government launches its Fishing and Coastal Growth Fund, a major investment to support the next generation of fishermen and breathe new life into our coastal communities as part of the Government’s Plan for Change. 

    A new agreement with the EU will also cut red tape for seafood exporters and reopen certain markets for British shellfish, making it easier to sell our fish to our biggest trading partner. 

    Applicants can find out more about FaSS, access scheme guidance and submit their application online.

    Additional information

    • Learn more about the legacy of FaSS through MMOs selected case studies

    • £1 million from the total fund has been set aside specifically to support the seafood processing sector and to help businesses get their products from the sea to the consumer.  

    • Applications with a total project cost of £150,000 or more must be considered by the FaSS panel, which is responsible for reviewing and recommending projects in line with the overall objectives of the scheme. Projects over £150,000 must be submitted by 21 July 2025. The panel is expected to meet to consider these during the week commencing 8 September 2025. 

    • MMO is also on hand to provide expert advice to those considering applying. Telephone 0208 026 5539 or email FaSS.queries@marinemanagement.org.uk 

    • Fishing and coastal communities are also set to benefit from £360 million investment to drive growth and boost the sector for the future as the Government launches its Fishing and Coastal Growth Fund.

    Updates to this page

    Published 9 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: DTEP funding for SCI the CHERI on the cake

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    DTEP funding for SCI the CHERI on the cake

    Cambridge-based SCI Semiconductors secure funding through the Defence Technology Exploitation Programme

    • Cambridge-based SCI Semiconductors are the latest SME to be awarded a DTEP grant
    • They are collaborating with an experienced higher-tier partner on a project to resolve a number of long standing cyber security challenges
    • The Defence Technology Exploitation Programme (DTEP) boosts security and defence innovation while supporting the technology supply chain

    SCI Semiconductors, a leading cyber security company based in Cambridge, are the latest SME to be awarded DTEP funding for their innovative approach to tackling the escalating problem of compromised computer integrity within military systems.

    SCI are collaborating with Ultra, a higher-tier supplier who specialise in mission focused technological innovations, who will provide mentoring for the duration of the project. SCI will receive a government grant worth 50% of the project value with the aim of developing innovative new solutions that meet UK defence and security challenges.

    The DTEP programme, which seeks to improve the competitiveness of the UK defence supply chain, is sponsored by the MOD’s Directorate of Industrial Strategy and Exports (DISE) and delivered through a number of partners including the Defence and Security Accelerator (DASA) and Innovate UK.

    Congratulations to SCI Semiconductors

    The UK has invested heavily in Capability Hardware Enhanced RISC Instructions (CHERI) systems to manage cyber defences, however gaps still exist in getting this crucial technology into real world applications (e.g. autonomous drone platforms). Through their DTEP project, SCI are working to resolve these gaps by developing high integrity, isolated hardware and software structures for a broad array of applications. This means that vital military control systems can be much safer from the risk of cyber attack.

    Haydn Povey, Chief Executive of SCI Semiconductors said:

    The UK government are keen to act on Security by Design and this project will leverage CHERI technology, a key technology to delivering this capability. With over 70% of critical vulnerabilities and exploits (CVE’s) directly linked to software Memory Safety issues, which form the vast majority of cyber-attacks on critical systems, there is a clear need to address this systemic weakness. This project is directly focused on ensuring communication systems and active control systems are more robust, higher integrity, and are inherently secured again broad-based cyber-attacks.

    DTEP’s funding for SCI Semiconductors highlights the MOD’s commitment to fostering innovation and strengthening the UK defence and security supply chain through strategic SME partnerships.

    Learn more about DASA’s funding opportunities here.

    Updates to this page

    Published 9 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Woman invented business to claim Covid loan then sent money to Poland

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Press release

    Woman invented business to claim Covid loan then sent money to Poland

    Jagoda Rubaszko guilty of fraud after inventing a business to apply for a £50,000 Covid Bounce Back Loan which she then sent to bank accounts in Poland

    • Rubaszko invented a business to get a £50,000 Covid Bounce Back Loan – which was paid out to five bank accounts in Poland 

    • She told Insolvency Service investigators a man called Daniel told her how to apply for the loan – but provided no evidence he exists 

    • Sentenced to six-month curfew and 18-month suspended sentence 

    A woman who pretended to run a business to secure a £50,000 Covid Bounce Back Loan has been sentenced for fraud following an investigation by the Insolvency Service. 

    Jagoda Rubaszko, 37, of Old Ruislip Road, Northolt, invented an administrative service business which she falsely claimed had a turnover of £210,000. 

    In reality, she had no business – and the £50,000 loan she received was sent to five separate bank accounts in Poland.  

    Rubaszko told investigators she had been contacted by a man called Daniel who told her how to apply for the loan, and to declare herself bankrupt to avoid having to repay it. 

    Rubaszko was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment, suspended for 21 months, for fraud by misrepresentation at Isleworth Crown Court on 5 June 2025.  

    She will be tagged and under curfew between 7.30pm and 6am every day for six months, and must complete 175 hours of unpaid work.  

    The Insolvency Service is seeking to recover the fraudulently obtained funds under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. 

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

    Jagoda Rubaszko claimed to be a business director, but she had no business at all. She invented a turnover of £210,000 even though her bank accounts showed no business dealings.  

    She invented a man called Daniel, who she has blamed for her actions, claiming he had told her to apply for the loan, and she believed she’d get away with this by declaring herself bankrupt. 

    What is definitely real, is that she took money which was meant to help businesses during a difficult period, and sent that funding off to the bank accounts of five men in Poland. 

    As a result, reality has now caught up with her.

    Rubaszko applied to a bank for a Covid Bounce Back Loan on 26 April 2021, which was approved on 28 April 2021 and paid into her bank account. 

    In the application, she claimed she had been operating a business since 1 March 2020 and had a turnover of £210,000. But investigations into Rubaszko’s finances showed her tax returns were no higher than £15,100 each year between 2019 and 2021. 

    In a prepared statement, Rubaszko claimed to have been contacted by a man called Daniel, who told her how to apply for the loan, and to declare herself bankrupt to avoid repaying it. 

    But Rubaszko admitted she had never met Daniel, even though she said she paid him a £17,500 commission for his ‘help’ after receiving the £50,000. 

    Her bank records showed no such payment was made – instead, 22 smaller payments up to £11,690 were made to five individual bank accounts in Poland over a two-month period.  

    After declaring herself bankrupt, Rubaszko was subject to a 10-year Bankruptcy Restrictions Undertaking (BRU) on 12 May 2023. The BRU prevents her from managing a limited company until 2033.  

    Further information 

    Updates to this page

    Published 9 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: expert reaction to science and tech R&D package announced ahead of the full Spending Review

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Scientists comment on the £86bn R&D package unveiled by the Chancellor ahead of the Spending Review. 

    Sharon Todd Chief Executive at historic science charity SCI, said:

    “We very much welcome the government’s commitment to putting science at the heart of the forthcoming industrial strategy. At £86bn, this is real money targeted at the right scientific and technological advances, such as new drug treatments and AI.

    “However, what is critical is that a significant proportion of funds are dispensed to actively support the scale up of new technologies to full scale manufacture in the UK. Our research has shown significant ‘innovation leakage’ and the investment we make in science needs to feed back into the economy.”

    Professor Dame Ottoline Leyser, UKRI Chief Executive, said:

    “This multi-year settlement confirms the government’s continued commitment to the critical role of research and innovation in delivering a high-productivity, high-growth economy, improving public services and creating high-quality jobs across the UK. 

    “The new Local Innovation Partnerships Fund is a welcome boost for this endeavour, ensuring that local communities across the UK can contribute to and benefit from a thriving research and innovation ecosystem.”

    John-Arne Røttingen, chief executive of Wellcome, the UK’s biggest non-governmental research funder, said:

    ‘The government rightly acknowledges that investing in science and technology is a key way to boost the economy.

    ‘But while it’s positive under the financial circumstances, a flat real-terms science budget, along with continuing barriers such as high visa costs for talented scientists and the university funding crisis, won’t be enough for the UK make the advances it needs to secure its reputation for science in an increasingly competitive world.

    ‘The UK should be aiming to lead the G7 in research intensity, to bring about economic growth and the advances in health, science and technology that benefit us all. We look forward to seeing the full details at the spending review.’

    Dr Tim Bradshaw, Chief Executive of the Russell Group of research-intensive universities commented: 

    “Today’s announcement of £86 billion for research and innovation is a welcome vote of confidence in the UK’s R&D sector, and the role it plays in driving economic growth right across the country. 

    “We know government faces difficult decisions on spending with tight fiscal constraints. We’re therefore pleased to see investment in the critical contributions that science and innovation can make to the lives of people throughout the UK – from breakthrough medicines and next-generation batteries, to AI technologies and advanced manufacturing. We await the full details of the settlement, but it’s encouraging to see recognition of the existing R&D strengths in different parts of the UK, with plans to go further to transform regional prosperity. 

    “Our universities are already delivering in the high-growth sectors that will drive the Industrial Strategy, boost productivity and improve public services. We will continue using our research, innovation and skills as engines for growth, ensuring this new investment pays dividends for the national economy and for local communities for decades to come”. 

    Adrian Smith, President the Royal Society, said:

    “We have to be cautious as there is very little detail in the announcement but it does look like the core science budget could increase by 10% over the next four years. In difficult financial circumstances, that would be a vote of confidence in research and innovation and in the people and ideas that will increase productivity, drive growth and improve lives across the UK.

    “Such an uplift would protect science from real terms cuts in the coming years and hopefully lay the ground for real terms increases once the country’s finances improve.

    “This looks to be a positive outcome, but we must await the full details in the Chancellor’s speech on Wednesday.”

     

    Nicola Perrin, Chief Executive of the Association of Medical Research Charities, said:

    “Given the tough financial climate and many competing priorities, it’s fantastic to see the Government backing research and innovation. This is a smart investment – it will not only drive economic growth and productivity, but will also benefit patients across the country and unlock new ways to prevent, diagnose and treat disease. We look forward to seeing more detail and, most importantly, how this funding will secure the fundamental building blocks that underpin UK R&D.”

    Professor Andrew Morris, President of the Academy of Medical Sciences, said:

    “This is exactly the kind of long-term thinking our healthcare sector and economy need. The investment signals the UK’s commitment to remaining a global leader in medical research and innovation. By backing science, the Government is investing in a healthier, more prosperous future that will bring economic growth and benefit generations to come.”

     

    Tony McBride, Director of Policy and Public Affairs at the Institute of Physics, said:

    “It’s good to see the government recognise the power of science and innovation to transform lives and grow prosperity in every part of the UK.

    “But to fully harness the transformational potential of research and innovation – wherever it takes place – we need a decade-long strategic plan for science. This must include a plan for the skilled workforce we need to deliver this vision, starting with teachers and addressing every educational stage, to underpin the industrial strategy.

    “We hope that the Chancellor’s statement on Wednesday will set out such a vision.”

     

    Dr Alicia Greated, Executive Director, Campaign for Science and Engineering (CaSE), said:

    “It is pleasing to see the Government continue to recognise UK R&D as a driving force behind economic growth.  Based on OBR forecasts for inflation, the spending plans announced today would appear to be broadly flat in real terms.  While not the ambitious settlement we called for, in these difficult fiscal circumstances it is positive that the R&D budget has been protected.  However, the detail is important, and we will need to wait for the full spending review announcement on Wednesday before we can offer a considered analysis.”

    Embargoed press release from DSIT entitled ‘Transformative £86bn boost to science and tech to turbocharge economy, with regions backed to take cutting-edge research into own hands’, was under embargo until 00:01 UK time on Sunday 8 June 2025

    Declared interests

    The nature of this story means everyone quoted above could be perceived to have a stake in it. As such, our policy is not to ask for interests to be declared – instead, they are implicit in each person’s affiliation.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Plymouth Cabinet reaffirms bold action to end violence against women and girls

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Plymouth City Council and its partners are doubling down on their mission to end violence against women and girls (VAWG), as Cabinet Members today reflected on progress and reaffirm their commitment to lasting change. 

    Councillor Sally Haydon, Cabinet Member for Community Safety, delivered a powerful update on the strides made since the launch of the Plymouth VAWG Commission in 2022. From strategic leadership to grassroots empowerment, the city is taking bold, coordinated action. 

    She said: “We’re not just talking about change—we’re making it happen. Ending violence against women and girls is not optional. It’s urgent, it’s necessary, and it’s everyone’s responsibility. I’m proud of how far we’ve come, but we’re not stopping here. Together, we’re calling time on VAWG in Plymouth.” 

    Key milestones include: 

    • Strategic Leadership: A dedicated VAWG Strategic Lead was appointed in 2023, followed by the launch of the city’s first VAWG Strategy (2024–2026), setting a clear roadmap for action. 
    • Training and Awareness: Citywide training programmes are equipping professionals with the tools to identify and respond to all forms of VAWG. 
    • Safety Initiatives: From the Safe Bus at Derry’s Cross to the fifth consecutive Purple Flag accreditation, Plymouth is making its night-time economy safer. Initiatives like Ask for Angela and Best Bar None are empowering staff and patrons alike. 
    • Male Allyship: The MAN Culture network is engaging men in meaningful conversations and cultural change through workshops with various organisations, conferences, podcasts, and monthly meetups. 
    • Community Empowerment: The VAWG Community Fund, launched in partnership with Devon Community Foundation and the Sedel-Collings Foundation, is backing nine grassroots projects—from anti-spiking campaigns to confidence-building workshops for young girls. 

    Councillor Haydon added: “We’re building a city where women and girls feel safe, supported, and heard. This is about culture change, and we’re in it for the long haul. 

    “Every initiative, every training session, every conversation we have is a step towards a safer Plymouth. We know there’s no quick fix—but we also know that silence and inaction are not options. 

    “I’m incredibly proud of the progress we’ve made. From grassroots projects to citywide strategies, we’re seeing real momentum. But we’re not complacent. 

    “We owe it to every woman and girl in this city to keep going—to keep challenging harmful behaviours, to keep creating safe spaces, and to keep pushing for change.  

    “Together, we are calling time on violence against women and girls—and we won’t stop until it ends.” 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Keep Manadon Moving: Tackling delays

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Delays at Manadon. We all know about them, we’ve all felt it.

    Some days it can be absolutely fine; others it’s bit of a gamble. It’s not reliable.

    And that’s just now. In the next few years, as the city grows with ambitious new housing targets, the growth of the hospital and the expansion of the dockyard, it’s going to get worse.

    That’s why we’re bringing forward potential changes to the roundabout, to improve things not just now but in the future.

    The graphic below has been developed from queue length data and shows how traffic queues will look in years to come in scenarios where we continue with the scheme and if we do nothing.

    “The data is clear,” explains Councillor John Stephens, Cabinet Member for Transport. “Doing nothing, sitting on our hands, is simply not a viable option. Manadon needs investment so that we can provide the infrastructure we need for the expected growth of this city.

    “I’d ask everyone who travels through Manadon to get involved in this engagement exercise. Give us your feedback and let us know what you think of the proposals.”

    Manadon is at the heart of Plymouth’s transport network and is a key part of the journey to and from some of the busiest places in the city.

    You’ve got an appointment at Derriford at 10am, but you’re still stuck queuing on the A38 at 9.40am. You thought you’d left enough time. It was fine when you came through Manadon last week but it’s just not moving today. You hope you don’t miss it.

    University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust (UHP), who runs Derriford Hospital, the largest specialist teaching hospital in the south west peninsula and the region’s major trauma centre, continues to redevelop their facilities.

    Stuart Windsor, Future Hospital Director, said: “Our Future Hospital Programme is transforming how care is delivered to improve lives across Plymouth, Devon and Cornwall through investing in our healthcare estate.

    “This includes a new purpose-built Emergency Care Building at our Derriford site, which will double the space to care for the increasing numbers of patients with urgent and emergency conditions.

    “Works that improve accessibility to Derriford Hospital will be hugely beneficial for our patients and colleagues, and are an important part of enabling our organisation to delivering its long-term goals.”

    Argyle have got a crunch late-season game to secure promotion and by some miracle, you’ve bagged yourself a ticket. You left the house in good time – enough time for a pasty before the game. But you didn’t account for Manadon. There’s been a shunt somewhere else in the city, and everyone is using Manadon instead. It’s 2.40pm. You’ve still got to find somewhere to park once you get to Home Park. It’s not the start to the afternoon you had planned.

    Meanwhile, every other week for most of the year at least 16,000 people descend on Home Park to cheer on Plymouth Argyle. Many of that crowd make their way through Manadon.

    Christian Kent, Head of Venue, Hospitality & Events at Plymouth Argyle, said: “Supporters will be aware that Plymouth Argyle have worked hard on making Home Park more accessible over the past two seasons with additional transport and parking.

    “The Manadon project ethos and aims are a step in the right direction in ensuring attending matches and events at Home Park is as efficient as possible.

    “We’d very much encourage our fans to engage with the scheme, so the needs of our fanbase are considered.”

    You can view the plans for improvements at Manadon and fill in the online survey at https://keepmanadonmoving.commonplace.is

    Manadon Key Facts
    • 60,000+ journeys pass through the interchange every day.
    • Journeys through Manadon junction regularly take significantly longer than necessary due to congestion.
    • The existing layout was designed for much lower traffic volumes and cannot cope with future demand.
    • By 2040, queues are expected to back onto the A38 daily, creating major safety risks

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Sunderland shows support for Carers Week

    Source: City of Sunderland

    Sunderland is proud to support Carers Week 2025 as part of its commitment to recognising, valuing and supporting unpaid carers across the city.

    This annual national campaign, running until Sunday 15 June, shines a spotlight on the individuals who carers. Sunderland City Council is marking the week with action, awareness, and celebration.

    This year’s Carers Week theme, “Caring About Equality,” calls for greater recognition of carers’ rights and equal access to the support they deserve.

    As a visible sign of this commitment, some of Sunderland’s most iconic landmarks will be lit up blue on Saturday 14 and Sunday 15 June. Penshaw Monument, Northern Spire Bridge, Hylton Castle, and Fulwell Mill will be lit up to honour the invaluable contribution of unpaid carers throughout the city.

    Carers Week also marks one year since the launch of Sunderland’s Carers Strategy. A five-year plan developed with and for carers, in partnership with the North East and North Cumbria Integrated Care Board, Sunderland Carers Centre, and Together for Children. Since its launch, the strategy has driven real improvements in how carers are identified, supported, and listened to.

    Sunderland’s unpaid adult carers can now easily carry out a self-assessment to access valuable information and support tailored to their needs.

    Any adult in Sunderland aged 18 or over who looks after someone with day-to-day tasks is entitled to a carer’s assessment. The new self-assessment tool is designed for adults who care for someone and have not yet had a formal carer’s assessment.

    The tool simplifies the process for carers to share their situation and receive the help and support they need. It offers a clear and straightforward way to identify what assistance may be available, ensuring that carers have access to the resources they deserve.

    Councillor Kelly Chequer, Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for Health, Wellbeing and Safer Communities at Sunderland City Council, said: “We would like to recognise the tremendous contributions unpaid carers make to Sunderland. We understand that alongside providing care, many carers face challenges of their own—whether it’s in terms of health, well-being, finances, or employment.

    “This new self-assessment tool is one way we are addressing those concerns and ensuring that carers receive the support they need to live healthy and fulfilling lives. In line with this year’s theme of ‘Caring for Equality,’ we are committed to creating an equitable environment where all carers can thrive.”

    For more information on the self-assessment tool and to learn more about the support available, visit: Carer’s self-assessment – Sunderland City Council

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Criminal Illegal Alien Arrested during Los Angeles ICE Operation Committed Notorious Gang-Affiliated Murder of Two Teenagers at a Graduation Party

    Source: US Department of Homeland Security

    This criminal illegal alien is who Governor Newsom, Mayor Bass and the rioters in Los Angeles are trying to protect over U.S. citizens

    WASHINGTON – The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is revealing further details of Cuong Chanh Phan’s, one of the criminal illegal aliens arrested in Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) operation in Los Angeles, criminal past.  

    According to local reports in 1994, Phan and his gang member associates were asked to leave a high school graduation party following a dispute. They returned with semiautomatic weapons and fired shots at 30 partygoers. Dennis Buan, 18, of South Pasadena and David Hang, 15, of San Marino, California were killed, and seven others were wounded.

    Following the shooting, more than 120 sheriff’s deputies and police officers launched a manhunt that resulted in the arrests of Phan and eight other alleged gang members linked to the murders and shootout. 

    “It is sickening that Governor Newsom and Mayor Bass continue to protect violent criminal illegal aliens at the expense of the safety of American citizens and communities. This cold-blooded killer is who the rioters are trying to protect over U.S. citizens,” said Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin. “The brave men and women of ICE put their lives on the line every day to arrest violent criminals like this and protect the lives of American citizens.” 

    On June 7, ICE arrested Cuong Chanh Phan, a 49-year-old illegal alien from Vietnam. His criminal history includes a conviction for second degree murder.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: Johannesburg’s problems can be solved – but it’s a long journey to fix South Africa’s economic powerhouse

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Philip Harrison, Professor School of Architecture and Planning, University of the Witwatersrand

    South African president Cyril Ramaphosa met senior leaders of Johannesburg and Gauteng, the province it’s located in, in March 2025 to discuss ways to arrest the steep decline in South Africa’s largest city.

    Ramaphosa announced a two-year-long presidential intervention to tackle some of the city’s most pressing issues. It is to be led by the Presidential Johannesburg Working Group with eight cross-governmental and multi-stakeholder workstreams.

    Johannesburg was established 130 years ago, where the world’s largest-ever gold deposits were discovered. It grew rapidly in the early 20th century and became the country’s economic heartland and largest population centre. Like all South African cities, it was deeply scarred by apartheid policies. People were divided by racially defined groups. Good services and a strong economy benefited a minority, and a black majority were pushed into impoverished ghettos.

    But, for about the first two decades of post-apartheid rule from 1994, Johannesburg led the country with innovation and progressive change. It pioneered the new local government system, institutional reforms, new practice on city strategy and planning, pro-poor service delivery, and modern transport infrastructure.

    Today, however, the city is in a dire state. Over the past decade, roughly coinciding with the arrival of messy coalition governance in 2016, sound political leadership, administrative stability and financial management have crumbled. Underinvestment in infrastructure maintenance has led to collapsing services. Public trust is deteriorating among increasingly frustrated communities. This was evident in local election results. It also shows up in recent data released by the Gauteng City-Region Observatory on public trust in local government.

    The local economy has stagnated. The city’s official unemployment rate of 34.3% is higher than the national average of 32.9%. Mounting joblessness and dwindling incomes have intertwined with depleted trust to knock levels of payment for property rates and service charges. In turn this has deepened the financial and service maintenance crisis.

    Corruption in many parts of the city is an endemic complicating factor.

    The presidential intervention is designed to address this complex interplay between embedded legacies and failings post-apartheid. The workstreams involving city officials and concerned stakeholders are generating ideas for priority actions. There is also a new energy in the city government, with the executive mayor and members of his mayoral committee making turnaround promises.

    This long overdue attention is heartening. But some caution is called for. While some “quick wins” are needed, there will be no easy turnaround. The best prospect is likely to be a process of recovery that will require patience and methodical attention over the long term. A city cannot be repaired in the way an automobile can. A city has a trillion moving parts and is in a constant state of makeover, as dynamics of economy, technology, demography, environment, society, politics, and more, interact and produce change.

    The question is not whether a city is fixed – it can never finally be – but rather what trajectory it is on. For Johannesburg, the question is how to exit the downward spiral and begin the process of reconstruction.

    We are a group who previously worked in the City of Johannesburg as officials, who are now academics with decades of experience observing local governance trends and dynamics, or scholars engaged in civil society coalitions or communities mobilising around the crisis. Some of us have been involved in the Presidential Johannesburg Working Group over the last few months.

    Our view is that there are four areas needing urgent but sustained attention.

    Focus areas

    The first is the need for a joint effort across national, provincial and municipal government to resolve the crisis. We are pleased that this has begun. The political leadership in the city (and of the province) failed to grasp the opportunity provided by the post-2024 election national compromises to put together a broad-based government of local unity to lead reconstruction. There is no option now but to pursue an inter-governmental initiative led by national government with the committed involvement of the other spheres.

    Only genuine collaboration will succeed.

    In this respect, the Presidential Johannesburg Working Group holds promise. But what will be needed is careful, concerted work focused first on short-term priorities. Then, over years, on key structural challenges facing the city.

    Second, the city needs civil society in all its forms to hold a careful balance between keeping up the pressure on municipal government, constantly holding it accountable to its residents, and working with government to help it solve problems. The Joburg Crisis Alliance, Jozi-my-Jozi, WaterCAN and similar initiatives are claiming well-recognised and respected voice in the affairs of the municipality.

    Johannesburg needs a city government that is open to this scrutiny, accepting the need for transparency, and open to the help that civil society can offer.

    To raise the level of accountability and collaboration, a clear programme of restoration has to be communicated openly to the public. Milestones and expenditure requirements need to be set that allow for constant monitoring. There must be open council meetings, and regular online and in-person briefings.

    Also required are new mechanisms for citizen-based monitoring. These may include trained citizen monitors reporting on service delivery. Alternatively, the establishment of a sort of “Citizen’s Council” which meets regularly to receive reports from these monitors and the city administration.

    International examples include the Bürgerrat model. This is now fully institutionalised in parts of Germany and Austria to strengthen local democracy and accountability. In this model, citizens are randomly selected to sit on a council which monitors performance of local government and provides new ideas.

    Another approach could be for civil society organisations to be invited to a Citizen’s Council that would act in support of the oversight processes of the elected Municipal Council.

    Third, there has to be a solution to unstable coalition governments. These seem to be structured to facilitate separate political fiefdoms where spoils can be divided in the allocation of portfolios. At minimum, the presidential intervention must provide for a check and balance on processes where bureaucratic appointments and budgetary allocations may serve the interests of cronyism. For example, there should be transparency and rigour in appointments to the boards of Johannesburg’s municipally owned companies.

    Regulatory reforms are required in the political arena. This should include rules for the distribution of seats on the municipal executive and the election of mayors. Between January 2023 and August 2024 a tiny minority party held the mayoralty because the larger parties could not agree on a mayoral selection or, more cynically, to ensure that the executive mayor could not call large parties to account.

    More importantly, though, there has to be a change in political culture. This is a longer-term process.

    Fourth, the problems run far deeper than what bureaucratic reorganisation can achieve.

    The longer-term project is to build a capable administration with clear political direction and oversight but insulated from personal agendas and factional battles. The administration became confused and demoralised because of the political instability over an extended period. There are, however, still many capable and committed public servants in the city bureaucracy. The focus should be on working with them to rebuild the administration, making it a place where talent and initiative are recognised and rewarded.

    Restored political leadership and a rejuvenated administration is needed for a long term process, extending far beyond the quick wins. This process will involve refurbishing the decaying network infrastructure, restoring financial stability, reestablishing social trust and returning confidence to the city’s economy.

    2025 marks 30 years since the first democratic local elections. National government is looking seriously at sweeping municipal reforms. And the next municipal election – likely to be held at the end of 2026 – is an opportunity to make a deep transformation effort. Citizens can ensure that parties contesting the election place Johannesburg’s recovery at the heart of their agenda.

    Philip Harrison has received funding from South Africa’s National Research Foundation in support of the South African Research Chair in Spatial Analysis and City Planning.

    The Gauteng City-Region Observatory receives core grant funding from the Gauteng Provincial Government.

    Lorena Nunez Carrasco received funding from the National Research Foundation in support of research on the South African response on COVID-19

    Rashid Seedat receives funding from Gauteng Provincial Government for the Gauteng City-Region Observatory. He is affiliated with the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation as a member of the Board of Trustees.

    ref. Johannesburg’s problems can be solved – but it’s a long journey to fix South Africa’s economic powerhouse – https://theconversation.com/johannesburgs-problems-can-be-solved-but-its-a-long-journey-to-fix-south-africas-economic-powerhouse-256013

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-Evening Report: Johannesburg’s problems can be solved – but it’s a long journey to fix South Africa’s economic powerhouse

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Philip Harrison, Professor School of Architecture and Planning, University of the Witwatersrand

    South African president Cyril Ramaphosa met senior leaders of Johannesburg and Gauteng, the province it’s located in, in March 2025 to discuss ways to arrest the steep decline in South Africa’s largest city.

    Ramaphosa announced a two-year-long presidential intervention to tackle some of the city’s most pressing issues. It is to be led by the Presidential Johannesburg Working Group with eight cross-governmental and multi-stakeholder workstreams.

    Johannesburg was established 130 years ago, where the world’s largest-ever gold deposits were discovered. It grew rapidly in the early 20th century and became the country’s economic heartland and largest population centre. Like all South African cities, it was deeply scarred by apartheid policies. People were divided by racially defined groups. Good services and a strong economy benefited a minority, and a black majority were pushed into impoverished ghettos.

    But, for about the first two decades of post-apartheid rule from 1994, Johannesburg led the country with innovation and progressive change. It pioneered the new local government system, institutional reforms, new practice on city strategy and planning, pro-poor service delivery, and modern transport infrastructure.

    Today, however, the city is in a dire state. Over the past decade, roughly coinciding with the arrival of messy coalition governance in 2016, sound political leadership, administrative stability and financial management have crumbled. Underinvestment in infrastructure maintenance has led to collapsing services. Public trust is deteriorating among increasingly frustrated communities. This was evident in local election results. It also shows up in recent data released by the Gauteng City-Region Observatory on public trust in local government.

    The local economy has stagnated. The city’s official unemployment rate of 34.3% is higher than the national average of 32.9%. Mounting joblessness and dwindling incomes have intertwined with depleted trust to knock levels of payment for property rates and service charges. In turn this has deepened the financial and service maintenance crisis.

    Corruption in many parts of the city is an endemic complicating factor.

    The presidential intervention is designed to address this complex interplay between embedded legacies and failings post-apartheid. The workstreams involving city officials and concerned stakeholders are generating ideas for priority actions. There is also a new energy in the city government, with the executive mayor and members of his mayoral committee making turnaround promises.

    This long overdue attention is heartening. But some caution is called for. While some “quick wins” are needed, there will be no easy turnaround. The best prospect is likely to be a process of recovery that will require patience and methodical attention over the long term. A city cannot be repaired in the way an automobile can. A city has a trillion moving parts and is in a constant state of makeover, as dynamics of economy, technology, demography, environment, society, politics, and more, interact and produce change.

    The question is not whether a city is fixed – it can never finally be – but rather what trajectory it is on. For Johannesburg, the question is how to exit the downward spiral and begin the process of reconstruction.

    We are a group who previously worked in the City of Johannesburg as officials, who are now academics with decades of experience observing local governance trends and dynamics, or scholars engaged in civil society coalitions or communities mobilising around the crisis. Some of us have been involved in the Presidential Johannesburg Working Group over the last few months.

    Our view is that there are four areas needing urgent but sustained attention.

    Focus areas

    The first is the need for a joint effort across national, provincial and municipal government to resolve the crisis. We are pleased that this has begun. The political leadership in the city (and of the province) failed to grasp the opportunity provided by the post-2024 election national compromises to put together a broad-based government of local unity to lead reconstruction. There is no option now but to pursue an inter-governmental initiative led by national government with the committed involvement of the other spheres.

    Only genuine collaboration will succeed.

    In this respect, the Presidential Johannesburg Working Group holds promise. But what will be needed is careful, concerted work focused first on short-term priorities. Then, over years, on key structural challenges facing the city.

    Second, the city needs civil society in all its forms to hold a careful balance between keeping up the pressure on municipal government, constantly holding it accountable to its residents, and working with government to help it solve problems. The Joburg Crisis Alliance, Jozi-my-Jozi, WaterCAN and similar initiatives are claiming well-recognised and respected voice in the affairs of the municipality.

    Johannesburg needs a city government that is open to this scrutiny, accepting the need for transparency, and open to the help that civil society can offer.

    To raise the level of accountability and collaboration, a clear programme of restoration has to be communicated openly to the public. Milestones and expenditure requirements need to be set that allow for constant monitoring. There must be open council meetings, and regular online and in-person briefings.

    Also required are new mechanisms for citizen-based monitoring. These may include trained citizen monitors reporting on service delivery. Alternatively, the establishment of a sort of “Citizen’s Council” which meets regularly to receive reports from these monitors and the city administration.

    International examples include the Bürgerrat model. This is now fully institutionalised in parts of Germany and Austria to strengthen local democracy and accountability. In this model, citizens are randomly selected to sit on a council which monitors performance of local government and provides new ideas.

    Another approach could be for civil society organisations to be invited to a Citizen’s Council that would act in support of the oversight processes of the elected Municipal Council.

    Third, there has to be a solution to unstable coalition governments. These seem to be structured to facilitate separate political fiefdoms where spoils can be divided in the allocation of portfolios. At minimum, the presidential intervention must provide for a check and balance on processes where bureaucratic appointments and budgetary allocations may serve the interests of cronyism. For example, there should be transparency and rigour in appointments to the boards of Johannesburg’s municipally owned companies.

    Regulatory reforms are required in the political arena. This should include rules for the distribution of seats on the municipal executive and the election of mayors. Between January 2023 and August 2024 a tiny minority party held the mayoralty because the larger parties could not agree on a mayoral selection or, more cynically, to ensure that the executive mayor could not call large parties to account.

    More importantly, though, there has to be a change in political culture. This is a longer-term process.

    Fourth, the problems run far deeper than what bureaucratic reorganisation can achieve.

    The longer-term project is to build a capable administration with clear political direction and oversight but insulated from personal agendas and factional battles. The administration became confused and demoralised because of the political instability over an extended period. There are, however, still many capable and committed public servants in the city bureaucracy. The focus should be on working with them to rebuild the administration, making it a place where talent and initiative are recognised and rewarded.

    Restored political leadership and a rejuvenated administration is needed for a long term process, extending far beyond the quick wins. This process will involve refurbishing the decaying network infrastructure, restoring financial stability, reestablishing social trust and returning confidence to the city’s economy.

    2025 marks 30 years since the first democratic local elections. National government is looking seriously at sweeping municipal reforms. And the next municipal election – likely to be held at the end of 2026 – is an opportunity to make a deep transformation effort. Citizens can ensure that parties contesting the election place Johannesburg’s recovery at the heart of their agenda.

    Philip Harrison has received funding from South Africa’s National Research Foundation in support of the South African Research Chair in Spatial Analysis and City Planning.

    The Gauteng City-Region Observatory receives core grant funding from the Gauteng Provincial Government.

    Lorena Nunez Carrasco received funding from the National Research Foundation in support of research on the South African response on COVID-19

    Rashid Seedat receives funding from Gauteng Provincial Government for the Gauteng City-Region Observatory. He is affiliated with the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation as a member of the Board of Trustees.

    ref. Johannesburg’s problems can be solved – but it’s a long journey to fix South Africa’s economic powerhouse – https://theconversation.com/johannesburgs-problems-can-be-solved-but-its-a-long-journey-to-fix-south-africas-economic-powerhouse-256013

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: First meeting of defence industry body to forge new partnership and industry mobilisation

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Press release

    First meeting of defence industry body to forge new partnership and industry mobilisation

    Defence Secretary John Healey co-chairs the first Defence Industrial Joint Council meeting today, bringing together defence firms, trade unions and investors to forge a new partnership aimed at improving warfighting readiness, driving innovation and boosting British jobs.

    • Defence Secretary to co-chair inaugural Defence Industrial Joint Council meeting at Hadean’s London headquarters.
    • Council members include primes, tech companies, small and medium enterprises (SMEs), trade unions and investors, bringing diverse defence industry expertise from all across the UK to the heart of defence decision-making.
    • Focus on delivering the Government’s Plan for Change by driving jobs and prosperity through a new partnership with industry and driving procurement reforms, marking start of London Tech Week and following launch of the Strategic Defence Review.

    The UK’s drive to improve warfighting readiness and turbocharge defence innovation will be the focus of the first ever meeting of the Government’s new Defence Industrial Joint Council (DIJC) today – bringing together Ministers and defence firms of all sizes with trade unions and investors.  

    Co-chaired by the Secretary of State for Defence, John Healey and Dr. Charles Woodburn, Chief Executive Officer at BAE Systems, the meeting comes at a significant moment for defence, following the publication of the Government’s Strategic Defence Review and in the lead-up to the Defence Industrial Strategy’s publication this summer. 

    Industry, innovators and investors will benefit from the new partnership with UK Defence, enabling better decision-making and communication between the MOD and its industry partners, boosting British jobs and national security, underpinning the Government’s Plan for Change. 

    This comes as the Prime Minister made the historic commitment to increase defence spending to 2.5% of UK GDP by April 2027, recognising the critical importance of military readiness in an era of heightened global uncertainty.

    Closer collaboration with the defence industry was a key focus of the Strategic Defence Review, which saw the UK committing to: 

    • Investing £6bn in munitions this parliament, including £1.5bn in an “always on” pipeline for munitions and building at least 6 new energetics and munitions factories in the UK, generating over 1,000 jobs and boosting export potential. 
    • Establishing UK Defence Innovation with £400m to fund and grow UK based companies. 
    • Creating a new Defence Exports Office in the Ministry of Defence to drive exports to our allies and growth at home. 
    • Introducing radical new reforms to speed up defence procurement. 

    Defence Secretary John Healey MP said:

    National security is at the heart of our Plan for Change and is essential for economic security. We are sending a signal to industry and to our adversaries: with a strong UK defence sector we will make Britain secure at home and strong abroad. 

    It is an honour to co-chair the inaugural meeting of the Defence Industrial Joint Council, through which we can forge a new and improved partnership between government and industry, while also bringing trade unions and investors closer to the heart of defence decision-making. I am proud that this council brings together, for the first time, the full range of voices across UK Defence.  

    UK Defence is open for business and driving defence as an engine for economic growth, boosting British jobs across the UK.

    The DIJC replaces the former Defence Suppliers Forum and aims to harness a wider, and more diverse set of defence expertise to shape the future of Britain’s defence manufacturing, supply chain and innovation – including trade union representation alongside SMEs and investors for the first time.

    The Council is underpinned by a commitment to continually refresh and widen its membership, to champion new entrants to the defence sector. The diversity of the DIJC’s members reflects the defence sector of the future, a joint endeavour characterised by innovation and efficiency. 

    The meeting coincides with the first day of London Tech Week, serving as a reminder of the cutting-edge innovation delivered through defence tech year-round and its contribution to keeping the UK safe at home and strong abroad. Innovation as a driver for growth has been recognised by government with a commitment to ringfencing 10% defence budget for investment in novel technologies. 

    Dr. Charles Woodburn, Chief Executive Officer at BAE Systems said: 

    Today’s meeting of the Defence Industrial Joint Council is an important moment, bringing together defence companies of all sizes, along with trade unions and investors, to support implementation of the Government’s forthcoming Defence Industrial Strategy.

    Improved collaboration and communication will enable industry to continue investing in new technologies, facilities and our workforce to create a stronger UK defence industrial base ready to meet evolving military requirements in an increasingly uncertain world.

    Innovation can be delivered most efficiently through partnerships between the public and private sectors, exemplified by the latest remotely operated underwater robot developed by the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) with small and medium enterprises. By modifying a commercially available remotely operated vehicle, Dstl and its industry partners have created a prototype which might soon be able to save lives at sea for the Royal Navy and prevent adversaries from sabotaging undersea cables and pipelines. 

    Updates to this page

    Published 9 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Global: The path to conserving protected areas in the Amazon lies in uniting public policy with traditional local knowledge

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Everton Silva, Doutorando no Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal do Pará (UFPA)

    Despite serving as crucial guardians of biodiversity, traditional communities continue to be systematically excluded from developing and managing protected areas. This often subtle, silent exclusion has fueled persistent, complex socio-environmental conflicts, harming both conservation and the welfare of Indigenous peoples, riverside populations, Afro-Brazilian quilombola communities, and smallholder farmers.

    A recent study, “Socio-environmental Conflicts and Traditional Communities in Protected Areas: A Scientometric Analysis,” published in the Journal for Nature Conservation, mapped how scientific literature has examined these conflicts over time.

    Researchers from the Federal University of Western Pará (UFOPA), the Federal University of Pará (UFPA), the University of International Integration of Afro-Brazilian Lusophony (UNILAB), and the Vale Institute of Technology (ITV) collaborated on the study as part of the National Institute of Science and Technology in Synthesis of Amazonian Biodiversity (INCT-SynBiAm) and the Eastern Amazon Biodiversity Research Program (PPBio-AmOr).

    The team reviewed 263 scientific articles published worldwide between 1990 and August 2024, sourced from Scopus and Web of Science. Their analysis revealed significant gaps in research on this topic and offered recommendations for more just, inclusive, and effective management of protected territories.

    What does science reveal about these conflicts?

    The research shows not only a rise in conflicts involving traditional communities and protected zones, but also their diversity. The main sources of tension are:

    1. Access to subsistence resources: Local prohibitions—often unilaterally enacted—restrict fishing, hunting, gathering, and subsistence agriculture, all vital for food and income. These constraints sever longstanding traditions of sustainable resource use, leading to food insecurity and marginalization.

    For example, in Ethiopia’s Nech Sar National Park, new conservation policies have curtailed local residents’ access to nature, sparking community tension and resistance.

    2. Exclusionary management of protected areas: Community voices are rarely included in decisions about protected area creation or management. The absence of prior consultation and disregard for traditional knowledge often yield policies disconnected from local realities. Such centralized management breeds resentment and undermines conservation; participatory governance is essential to socio-environmental justice.

    A study in Chile involving Aymaras, Atacameñas, and Mapuche-Huilliches communities found that while participatory practices and technical support from the CONAF forest agency improved perceptions, dissatisfaction persists due to initial exclusion. Many continue to assert ancestral land rights and demand meaningful input, highlighting the urgent need to build trust and align conservation with social justice.

    3. Conflicts involving wildlife: Local communities contend with damaged crops, attacks on domestic animals, and even threats to personal safety. Large mammals such as elephants, lions, jaguars, and buffalo are the main culprits. Habitat loss and depleted food sources exacerbate these incidents. Peaceful coexistence requires inclusive, context-specific solutions.

    A study from Ethiopia highlighted rising human-wildlife conflict in Chebera Churchura National Park: crop invasion, livestock predation and disease, and increased risks to human life were all reported.

    4. Territorial disputes and land rights: Many protected areas overlap with territories long used by traditional peoples. Disavowed land rights provoke legal battles, forced displacement, and greater insecurity, compounding social challenges. Formal recognition of collective land title is key to reducing conflict and ensuring autonomy; these disputes exemplify the global fight for territorial justice.

    In Mexico, a recent study documents the impact of land privatization, livestock expansion, plantations, and urbanization in the protected areas of Veracruz, Chiapas, and Morelos. It generated a land market that is disrupting Indigenous and peasant communities and threatening both their territories and forest conservation.

    5. Cultural and socioeconomic disruption: Establishing protected areas can upend ways of life rooted in symbolic, generational relationships with nature. Prohibiting customary practices disrupts rituals, beliefs, and the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, silently eroding local cultures.

    In the United States, Australia, and New Zealand, studies have noted frequent friction between Indigenous groups, recreational visitors, and managing agencies. Issues include access to sacred sites and resources on traditional lands, visitor infrastructure, permitted activities, and even place names.

    6. Lack of recognition and real participation: When communities are denied a voice in decisions, historical inequities deepen, fueling conflict. Despite legal progress, many traditional groups remain excluded from governance. Without meaningful participation, environmental policy fails to address local needs—highlighting the urgent need for community leadership and real power-sharing in conservation.

    Italy’s Monti Sibillini National Park in the Central Apennines offers an instructive case: rural depopulation has coincided with rising friction between environmental managers and locals. Imposed bureaucratic guidelines, unresponsiveness to community aspirations, and challenging collaboration between the park and municipalities have generated mutual frustration and hostility. This underscores the need for “knowledge democracy” and truly participatory stewardship that respects diverse ways of living on the land.

    Within Brazil, the same types of socio-environmental strife observed worldwide are especially acute in national protected areas. Research shows that even in sustainably managed zones like Extractive Reserves, communities regularly face resource restrictions and limited decision-making power—a recipe for lingering resentment and compromised conservation. Centralized authority and denial of customary land rights often lead to drawn-out disputes, mirroring patterns across the Global South.

    These findings highlight Brazil’s urgent need for strong co-management models—mechanisms that value local knowledge and foster territorial justice.

    Such tensions cluster in nature reserves and national parks, where regulatory regimes often disregard local lifeways and worldviews. Although the law guarantees consultation and participation mechanisms like free, prior, and informed consultation, they are often ignored or implemented ineffectively.

    Another key finding: 66.54% of studies focused on non-Indigenous populations, while only 16.73% examined Indigenous peoples exclusively. This imbalance exposes the under-representation of research attentive to the full range of traditional communities.

    Such gaps hinder efforts to understand these peoples’ rich cultural and ecological realities—and in turn, weakens recognition of their expertise and the value of their knowledge for global biodiversity conservation. Scientific consensus now affirms the vital role these communities play in preservation, yet too often they are treated as problems to be managed, not as collaborative partners.

    Why does conservation demand inclusion?

    Ensuring traditional communities participate in planning and stewarding protected lands is not only a matter of justice, but fundamental to effective conservation. Sustainable outcomes depend on their involvement. This study underscores the urgent need for public policies that are both inclusive and tailored to local conditions, embedding traditional knowledge as an indispensable part of conservation solutions, not as an obstacle.

    Worldwide, co-management experiments show that community involvement fosters compliance with conservation rules, improves governance, and delivers stronger socio-environmental benefits.

    Shifting the focus to Amazonian science

    While most studies reviewed focus on countries in the Global South—like Brazil and India—research production is dominated by institutions in the Global North. This reflects persistent “parachute science”: fieldwork by foreign scientists in rich biodiversity zones, often excluding local scientists and communities from the research process. Such projects often leave little local benefit, treating Amazonian residents as data collectors or study subjects.

    To address this, efforts must shift toward empowering Amazonian scientific institutions and researchers, strengthening their role in shaping conservation and research agendas, and realizing epistemic justice. Investments are especially needed in institutions serving remote, often overlooked regions of the Amazon.

    With robust support, these institutions can fill crucial gaps—producing research attuned to local realities, expanding our understanding of Amazonian ecosystems, and inspiring new generations of scientists.

    Researchers living and working in the Amazon possess deep, context-sensitive knowledge of the territory, enabling them to pose more relevant questions and craft solutions suited to regional challenges and opportunities. Their scholarship, in ongoing dialogue with both environment and community, enriches global science and yields practical advances that matter for daily life in the forest.

    Proximity to Indigenous, riverside, and urban populations also enables more authentic community participation in research. When research projects originate from local priorities and perspectives, they strengthen communities, help protect biodiversity, and affirm the possibility of uniting science, social justice, and climate action.

    Leandro Juen has a productivity grant from the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), research projects funded by CNPq, the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES), the Amazon Foundation for Studies and Research (FAPESPA) and the BRC Biodiversity Consortium.

    Everton Silva, Fernando Abreu Oliveira, Fernando Geraldo de Carvalho, James Ferreira Moura Junior, José Max B. Oliveira-Junior, Karina Dias-Silva e Mayerly Alexandra Guerrero Moreno não presta consultoria, trabalha, possui ações ou recebe financiamento de qualquer empresa ou organização que poderia se beneficiar com a publicação deste artigo e não revelou nenhum vínculo relevante além de seu cargo acadêmico.

    ref. The path to conserving protected areas in the Amazon lies in uniting public policy with traditional local knowledge – https://theconversation.com/the-path-to-conserving-protected-areas-in-the-amazon-lies-in-uniting-public-policy-with-traditional-local-knowledge-258348

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Chikungunya vaccine (IXCHIQ) temporarily paused in people aged 65 and over as precautionary measure

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Chikungunya vaccine (IXCHIQ) temporarily paused in people aged 65 and over as precautionary measure

    This is a precautionary measure while the MHRA conducts the safety review.

    Following global reports of serious adverse events in older people, the government’s independent expert advisory body, the Commission on Human Medicines (CHM), has temporarily restricted use of a chikungunya vaccine called IXCHIQ in people aged 65 and over until a further safety review has been concluded.

    This is a precautionary measure while the MHRA conducts the safety review.

    The MHRA is working with the manufacturer of the IXCHIQ  vaccine, Valneva. This vaccine was approved by the MHRA in February 2025. There will be no impact on operational issues as this vaccine is not yet available in the UK and therefore there is no immediate safety concern.

    The decision to restrict the licence until further review is based on global data which has highlighted 23 cases of serious adverse reactions, including two cases reporting a fatal outcome, in people aged from 62 to 89 years of age who received the vaccine. There are no changes in the recommendations for vaccination with IXCHIQ for people of 18 to 64 years of age.

    The vaccine is currently contraindicated in individuals with immunodeficiency or immunosuppression as a result of disease or medical therapy. 

    Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is found in the subtropical regions of the Americas, Africa, Southeast Asia, India, and the Pacific Region, and is spread to humans by the bite of an infected mosquito (Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus). It cannot be passed from human to human. A recent outbreak in La Reunion, an overseas department and region of France, saw over 47,500 people contract the virus, with 12 fatalities.

    The majority of people infected with chikungunya develop a sudden fever and severe pain in multiple joints (arthralgia). Other symptoms may include headache, muscle pain, joint swelling, or rash. These symptoms typically resolve within 7 to 10 days, and most patients make a full recovery. However, in some cases joint pain and arthritis may persist for several months or even years. Occasional cases of eye, neurological and heart complications have been reported, as well as gastrointestinal complaints. A small number of people may develop severe acute disease, which can lead to multiorgan failure and death.

    Notes to editors    

    • The Commission on Human Medicines (CHM) advises ministers on the safety, efficacy and quality of medicinal products. The CHM is an advisory non-departmental public body, sponsored by the Department of Health and Social Care.
    • The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) is responsible for regulating all medicines and medical devices in the UK by ensuring they work and are acceptably safe.  All our work is underpinned by robust and fact-based judgements to ensure that the benefits justify any risks.
    • The MHRA is an executive agency of the Department of Health and Social Care.
    • For media enquiries, please contact the newscentre@mhra.gov.uk, or call on 020 3080 7651.

    Updates to this page

    Published 9 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Global: How school choice policies evolved from supporting Black students to subsidizing middle-class families

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Kendall Deas, Assistant Professor of Education Policy, Law, and Politics, University of South Carolina

    Originally developed as a tool to help Black children attend better schools, school voucher programs now serve a different purpose. Drazen via Getty Images

    School voucher programs that allow families to use public funds to pay tuition to attend private schools have become increasingly popular.

    Thirteen states and the District of Columbia currently operate voucher programs.

    In addition, 15 states have universal private school choice programs that offer vouchers, education savings accounts and tax credit scholarships.

    More states are considering school choice and voucher programs as the Trump administration advocates for widespread adoption.

    School vouchers have a long history in the U.S.

    The first vouchers were offered in the 1800s to help children in sparsely populated towns in rural Vermont and Maine attend classes in public and private schools in nearby districts.

    After the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, in which justices ruled that separating children in public schools on the basis of race was unconstitutional, segregationists used vouchers to avoid school integration.

    More recently, school voucher programs have been pitched as a tool to provide children from low-income families with quality education options.

    As a scholar who specializes in education policy, law and politics, I can share how current policies have strayed from efforts to support low-income Black children.

    History of school voucher programs

    Over time, as school voucher policies grew in popularity, they evolved into education subsidies for middle-class families.
    Peter Dazeley/Getty Images

    Research from education history scholars shows that more recent support for school choice was not anchored in an agenda to privatize public schools but rooted in a mission to support Black students.

    Over time, as school voucher policies grew in popularity, they evolved into subsidies for middle-class families to send their children to private and parochial schools.

    School choice policies have also expanded to include education savings account programs and vouchers funded by tax credit donations.

    Vouchers can redirect money from public schools, many of which are serving Black students.

    Impact on public schools

    School voucher programs can negatively impact the quality of public schools serving Black students.
    Connect Images via Getty Images

    States looking to add or expand school choice and voucher programs have adopted language from civil rights activists pushing for equal access to quality education for all children. For example, they contend that school choice is a civil right all families and students should have as U.S. citizens. But school voucher programs can exclude Black students and harm public schools serving Black students in a host of ways, research shows.

    This impact of voucher programs disproportionately affects schools in predominantly Black communities with lower tax bases to fund public schools.

    Since the Brown v. Board ruling, school voucher programs have been linked to racial segregation. These programs were at times used to circumvent integration efforts: They allowed white families to transfer their children out of diverse public schools into private schools.

    In fact, school voucher programs tend to exacerbate both racial and economic segregation, a trend that continues today.

    For example, private schools that receive voucher funding are not always required to adopt the same antidiscrimination policies as public schools.

    School voucher programs can also negatively impact the quality of public schools serving Black students.

    As some of the best and brightest students leave to attend private or parochial ones, public schools in communities serving Black students often face declining enrollments and reduced resources.

    In cities such as Macon, Georgia, families say that majority Black schools lack resources because so many families use the state’s voucher-style program to attend mostly white private schools.

    Moreover, the cost of attending a private or parochial school can be so expensive that even with a school voucher, Black families still struggle to afford the cost of sending children to these schools.

    Vouchers can siphon school funding

    Voucher programs can disproportionately affect funding in majority Black school districts.
    kali9/Getty Images

    Research from the Economic Policy Institute, a nonpartisan, nonprofit think tank based in Washington, D.C., shows that voucher programs in Ohio result in majority Black school systems such as the Cleveland Metropolitan School District losing millions in education funding.

    This impact of voucher programs disproportionately affects schools in predominantly Black communities across the U.S. with lower tax bases to fund public schools.

    Another example is the Marion County School District, a South Carolina system where about 77% of students are Black.

    Marion County is in the heart of the region of the state known as the “Corridor of Shame,” known for its inadequate funding and its levels of poor student achievement. The 17 counties along the corridor are predominantly minority communities, with high poverty rates and poor public school funding because of the area’s low tax base due to a lack of industry.

    On average, South Carolina school districts spent an estimated US$18,842 per student during the 2024-25 school year.

    In Marion County, per-student funding was $16,463 during the 2024-2025 school year.

    By comparison, in Charleston County, the most affluent in the state, per-student funding was more than $26,000.

    Returning voucher policy to its roots

    Rather than focus on school choice and voucher programs that take money away from public schools serving Black students, I argue that policymakers should address systemic inequities in education to ensure that all students have access to a quality education.

    Establishing restrictions on the use of funds and requiring preferences for low-income Black students could help direct school voucher policies back toward their intent.

    It would also be beneficial to expand and enforce civil rights laws to prevent discrimination against Black students.

    These measures would help ensure all students, regardless of background, have access to quality education.

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

    ref. How school choice policies evolved from supporting Black students to subsidizing middle-class families – https://theconversation.com/how-school-choice-policies-evolved-from-supporting-black-students-to-subsidizing-middle-class-families-252481

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Lafayette helped Americans turn the tide in their fight for independence – and 50 years later, he helped forge the growing nation’s sense of identity

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Matthew Smith, Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Miami University

    Jean Marie Joseph Bove’s depiction of Lafayette returning to the U.S. The caption says, ‘A great man belongs to the whole universe.’ Blancheteau Collection/Cornell University Library via Wikimedia Commons

    America is nearing the 250th anniversary of its revolutionary birth, the Declaration of Independence. July 4, 2026, will mark a milestone – and a time for reflection.

    Yet as fascination with America’s founding endures, controversy colors how the revolution is taught across the United States. From contested efforts by The New York Times “1619 Project” to put slavery at the center of America’s story, to attempts to limit teaching about race and racism, partisanship surrounds the teaching of American history. Anniversaries can inspire public passion, but they can also open old wounds.

    As an American historian and a naturalized citizen of the United States, I regard the American Revolution with both personal and professional interest. The fact that I grew up in the United Kingdom amuses my students to no end whenever we discuss the Revolutionary War. Sometimes, in my British-accented English, I remind them I did not personally grow up with King George. Teaching history is encouraging students to think critically about the past without dictating what emotions they should feel – patriotic or otherwise.

    Sadly, in the U.S., the sort of objective historical knowledge once taken for granted now appears to be waning. According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress, just 13% of eighth graders in 2023 ranked “proficient” in American history. A 2010 survey found that 26% of adults could not identify from whom America declared its independence, with China, Mexico and France among the responses.

    America divorcing France would have been news to Gilbert du Motier, better known as the Marquis de Lafayette. His commitment to the new country not only helped secure its independence, but it also helped solidify American identity decades later.

    Key alliance

    A privileged aristocrat who served in both the American and French revolutions, Lafayette went to war at age 19. Commissioning and equipping his own expedition across the Atlantic in 1777, he fought in many battles against the British, including decisive action at Yorktown. Earning George Washington’s confidence, Lafayette attained the rank of major general in the Continental Army.

    ‘The reception of Lafayette at Mount Vernon, home of Washington,’ painted by Herman Bencke around 1875.
    Bencke & Scott/Library of Congress

    Lafayette’s enrollment in the U.S. military predated the 1778 alliance between his home country and the United States. Eventually, France’s alliance turned the tide against Great Britain on land and at sea. By the war’s end, the French had supplied some 12,000 soldiers, 22,000 sailors and dozens of warships to the American cause, plus huge financial resources. When Lafayette volunteered, however, he was one of just a few foreign volunteers – and the most acclaimed.

    “Nowadays,” as historian Sarah Vowell conceded, Americans think of Lafayette as “a place, not a person.” But an abundance of cities, counties and thoroughfares named after the revolutionary hero attest to his former celebrity. During World War I, U.S. troops sailed to France under the slogan “Lafayette here we come,” promising to repay America’s debt of gratitude to France.

    A growing country

    Older Americans may recall the U.S. bicentennial of 1976, marked with much pageantry and even a state visit by Queen Elizabeth II. America’s semicentennial, however – the 50th anniversary of independence – played a far greater role shaping the idea of America in the minds of its citizens.

    Lafayette starred in the buildup to this 1826 commemoration, the first of its kind at the national level. President James Monroe, a fellow veteran of the War of Independence, invited Lafayette to be “the guest of America,” honored as the last living major general of the Continental Army. Beginning in July 1824, at the age of 66, Lafayette embarked on a triumphal tour of all 24 states then comprising the union – nearly double the original 13.

    Lafayette greeting members of the National Guard upon his arrival in New York in 1825, painted by Ken Riley.
    The National Guard/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons

    As Lafayette headed west, borne by horse-drawn carriage, steamboat and canal barge, he journeyed across a changing America. Nowhere was America’s economic and demographic growth more evident than Cincinnati, where a crowd of 50,000 welcomed Lafayette in May 1825. Once a small frontier town, Cincinnati was growing faster than any comparably sized city in the nation: Its population increased from around 15,000 to roughly 115,000 in the quarter century following Lafayette’s visit.

    He addressed his audience with emotion: “The highest reward that can be bestowed on a revolutionary veteran is to welcome him with a sight of the blessings which have issued from our struggle for independence, freedom and equal rights.”

    Lafayette gave human face to America’s national commemoration. He granted citizens of frontier states like Ohio – hitherto excluded from the revolutionary narrative – license to celebrate themselves. High turnouts in western stops such as Cincinnati reflected enthusiasm for grand spectacles. They also reflected the growth of America’s print media, which had advertised his visit, and improved transportation in formerly remote regions of the country.

    Lafayette’s tour culminated with a September 1825 state banquet in Washington, D.C., hosted by the new president, John Quincy Adams. Adams – the son of America’s second president, John Adams – praised “that tie of love, stronger than death,” connecting Lafayette “for the endless ages of time, with the name of Washington.”

    Rose-colored glasses

    The enthusiasm that welcomed Lafayette 200 years ago was authentic. But like all good history lessons, Lafayette’s legacy is open to interpretation.

    ‘Portrait of Lafayette as an Old Man,’ painted by Louise-Adéone Drölling around 1830.
    Musée de l’Armée via Wikimedia Commons

    His grand tour cemented the myth of “the Era of Good Feelings”: a golden age of American political harmony. In reality, the seeds of America’s civil war were already evident. Missouri’s 1820 admission to the union threatened the country’s precarious balance between states that opposed slavery and states that allowed it – a crisis Thomas Jefferson warned was “a fire bell in the night.”

    Likewise, Lafayette’s lionization in the western United States coincided with the ongoing forced removal of Indigenous people. Ohio, for example, forcibly removed its last Native American tribe in 1843.

    Despite the uses and abuses of historical memory and the aversion of modern historians toward hero-worship, Lafayette remains a charismatic figure – a “citizen of two worlds” who championed both abolitionism and women’s rights. I believe his fading public memory indicates a troubling amnesia. America’s anniversary offers the opportunity to reconsider his legacy, alongside revolutionary stories of Americans from all walks of life.

    As Lafayette wrote home following the British army’s surrender in 1781: “Humanity has won its battle. Liberty now has a country.”

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

    ref. Lafayette helped Americans turn the tide in their fight for independence – and 50 years later, he helped forge the growing nation’s sense of identity – https://theconversation.com/lafayette-helped-americans-turn-the-tide-in-their-fight-for-independence-and-50-years-later-he-helped-forge-the-growing-nations-sense-of-identity-249455

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Public Health Warning: Dangerous Blue Pills in Plymouth

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Public health officials in Plymouth are warning people about blue tablets being sold illegally as Valium. These tablets may come in blister packs with Arabic writing.  

    This follows the news that three people died after taking what is believed to be these tablets.  

    Professor Steve Maddern, Director of Public Health for Plymouth City Council, said:  

    “Any loss of a life is a tragedy, and we want to prevent it happening to anyone else.  We’re very concerned about these tablets. We cannot currently speculate about the content of these drugs whilst they are being tested, but we do want people to be aware. They might look like Valium, but they could be contaminated with another substance and therefore more toxic. If you or someone you know has these tablets, do not take them.” 

    What to do if someone becomes unwell 

    If someone has taken drugs and becomes unwell, call 999 straight away or take them to Derriford Hospital’s Emergency Department. Don’t wait—doctors and nurses are there to help, not to judge. 

    If the person is unconscious but breathing, put them in the recovery position. This helps keep their airway clear. You can find more advice on the FRANK website. 

    Reducing the risk 

    The safest option is not to take these pills at all. But if you do choose to use drugs: 

    • Don’t use alone. Being with someone else could save your life. 
    • Take a small amount first and wait to see how it affects you. 
    • Don’t all take drugs at the same time—stagger your use so someone is always alert. 
    • If you’re using alone, tell someone your plans or use the BuddyUp app by Cranstoun so someone can check on you. 
    • Carry naloxone if you can. It’s a medicine that can reverse opioid overdoses, and it won’t harm someone even if they haven’t taken opioids. Having naloxone nearby could save a life. In some cases, more than one dose is needed, so carrying extra is a good idea. You can get naloxone for free in Plymouth from:  
    • Harbour, Hyde Park House, Mutley 
    • Hamoaze House, Mount Wise 
    • North Road West Medical Centre 
    • Adelaide Street GP Surgery 
    • St Levan GP Surgery 

    Detective Inspector Michelle Dunn from Devon and Cornwall Police said: “We are currently investigating the unexplained deaths of three men in Plymouth which occurred over the weekend.  

    “At this time, the deaths are believed to be drug related and we are working closely with our partner agencies to establish the full circumstances. 

    “Anyone with information which may assist police is asked to call 101 or report via our website quoting reference 50250144278.”  

    Want to learn more or get support? 

    NAP Plymouth runs free monthly training on drugs and naloxone for anyone supporting people who use drugs. Find them on Facebook at NAP Plymouth 66 or email [email protected] 

    If you’re looking for help with your own drug use, contact Harbour on 01752 434343 or visit harbour.org.uk. 

    Hamoaze House offers support for anyone affected by someone else’s drug or alcohol use. Their Affected Others group meets every Friday from 1–3pm. Call 01752 566100 to get in touch. 

    Anyone with information about these pills are asked to contact police through their website, or call 101. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rosneft Team Wins Corporate Chess Blitz Tournament

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Rosneft – Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    The Rosneft team won the second tournament of the corporate league in chess blitz. The competition was attended by 108 chess players in 15 teams.

    As a result of a tense struggle, the Rosneft team scored 29 points and overtook all competitors. At the same time, in the personal standings, the first place was also taken by an employee of the Company’s audit service – Dmitry Obolenskikh. He led the entire tournament and finished with a score of 9.5 points out of 11 possible.

    Rosneft’s corporate chess team is one of the strongest in the country. In May 2025, the Company held a team corporate online rapid chess tournament dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the Victory in the Great Patriotic War. About 100 teams from 54 Rosneft subsidiaries took part in the competition.

    Support for mass and professional sports, as well as a healthy lifestyle, is one of the key areas of Rosneft’s social work. In the regions where it operates, the Company builds multifunctional sports complexes and venues, ice arenas, and holds mass sports events in various disciplines for children and adults.

    As part of the corporate sports and health movement “Energy of Life”, employees regularly engage in sports and compete in various sports disciplines. In 2024, almost 128 thousand employees of the Company engaged in sports as part of the “Energy of Life” movement. At the same time, more than 92 thousand employees took part in competitions in various sports.

    Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft June 9, 2025

    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 Canada: Multi-national naval exercise to take place off the coast of Nova Scotia

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    June 9, 2025 – Ottawa, ON – National Defence / Canadian Armed Forces

    Exercise CUTLASS FURY 2025 (Ex CF25) will take place from June 9 to 18, 2025 off the coast of Halifax, Nova Scotia. This strategic initiative will bring together a diverse array of military forces from across Canada and around the world to enhance collective defence capabilities, strengthen maritime security, and foster international cooperation.

    Ex CF25, led by Canada, will feature the Canadian Atlantic Fleet alongside joint elements of the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), and Allied Forces from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Denmark. The focus will be on anti-submarine warfare and air-maritime integration, aiming to refine warfighting skills and improving interoperability among participating forces.

    This exercise underscores Canada’s commitment to global security and its role as a reliable defence partner on the international stage. By participating in Ex CF25, Canada and its allies will demonstrate their readiness to address complex security challenges collaboratively, promoting stability and peace worldwide.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Foster Portsmouth takes ‘Pride’ of place at nationwide event

    Source: City of Portsmouth

    Foster Portsmouth braved the thunderstorms alongside Fostering South East cluster partners Fostering Southampton and Hampshire County Council at UK Pride on Saturday 7 June.

    Of the 260+ community-run Pride organisations across the UK, Portsmouth Pride won the bid to host UK Pride in 2025.

    Taking ‘Pride’ of place at the event is part of a campaign being run throughout June by Foster Portsmouth, Portsmouth City Council‘s fostering service. Their team were also part of UK Pride and The Family Network’s LGBTQ+ Routes to Parenting event on 3 June, and they will be celebrating their foster carers from the LGBTQ+ community and taking action to bust myths around who can foster throughout Pride Month.

    Foster Portsmouth, Fostering Southampton and Hampshire County Council’s fostering service joined forces at UK Pride with the aim to raise awareness of the national crisis in foster care and the need for more foster carers in the area.

    They also engaged with event goers to tackle any perceptions that may prevent some from the LGBTQ+ community from exploring fostering to build a family life.

    Anyone aged over 21 with a spare bedroom could foster – regardless of their age, gender, sexuality, faith, ethnicity, marital or work status, or whether they rent or own their own home.

    Councillor Nick Dorrington, Cabinet Member for Children, Families and Education at Portsmouth City Council, said:

    “Foster Portsmouth celebrates the diversity of our committed team of foster carers, and we are all proud to work with many individuals and couples from the LGBTQ+ community.”

    Foster Portsmouth’s presentation at the Parenting Network and UK Pride’s ‘LGBTQ+ Routes to Parenthood’ event helped identify pathways to parenthood within the LGBTQ+ community. Attendees were also offered expert insights, lived experiences and an opportunity to connect with community members and support networks.

    This Pride Month, Foster Portsmouth also aims to shine a light on the incredible efforts of our existing LGBTQ+ foster carers and thank them for their contribution to the care of vulnerable children and young people in the city and the immediate surrounding areas. Foster carers like sole carer Michael.

    Michael, a full-time IT project manager, fosters teens with Foster Portsmouth. He shared:

    “Because I was fostered myself, I chose to become a foster carer rather than adopt. I had the same wonderful long-term carers who gave me amazing opportunities. I want to give something back to children who need care and stability in their lives.”

    Michael has fostered a number of teenagers, including providing respite care for a sibling pair and an emergency placement, and three longer-term arrangements for teenage boys, one of whom was a child seeking safety and asylum.

    “There have been many touching moments which makes it all worthwhile and lets me know that I’ve been a positive chapter in their story.”

    Foster Portsmouth are in need of additional foster carers with the skills and experience to help children develop a positive sense of their own identity, so they are asking individuals and couples in the LGBTQ+ community to consider the impact they could have on a child or young person’s life through fostering.

    There are many types of fostering and everyone will be able to find one that will work for them and their family or commitments. This could be a short or long-term arrangement for a child or siblings until they’re ready to live independently or be reunited with family, support for children with a disability or children seeking safety and asylum, supported lodgings to develop their independent living skills, a parent and baby placement, or respite care.

    Our Foster carers receive local round the clock support and ongoing quality training such as therapeutic care, including through our mentoring scheme and our innovative award-winning Mockingbird programme which provides a support network of other foster carers similar to that of an extended family. They also receive competitive fees, discounts, benefits and allowances, social activities, and free membership to The Fostering Network.

    Our foster carers come from Portsmouth or the immediate surrounding areas, from Emsworth and Rowlands Castle to Gosport and Fareham, and the Isle of Wight and Hayling Island to Petersfield and Havant.

    They would welcome the opportunity to explore if their close-knit fostering community at Foster Portsmouth would be the right fit for them.

    To enquire or to arrange a 1:1 with Foster Portsmouth’s experienced team or existing foster carers, visit: www.foster.portsmouth.gov.uk, call 0300 1312797 or email info@lafosteringse.org.uk.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Zhejiang sees increase in China-Europe freight train departures in January-May

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    BEIJING, June 9 (Xinhua) — The number of China-Europe/Central Asia freight trains originating and returning from Zhejiang Province totaled 904 in the first five months of this year, up about 8 percent from the same period last year, according to the official website of the State Post Administration of China.

    In particular, in January-May, 201 freight trains departed from the city of Jinhua in this province, with 113 trains arriving there on the return journey, and 348 trains departed from the city of Yiwu, with 242 trains arriving back.

    China-Europe/Central Asia rail freight plays an important role in developing trade links between Zhejiang Province and Belt and Road countries. At present, the province has opened a total of 25 China-Europe regular rail freight routes, covering 160 cities in 50 countries and regions.

    Zhejiang Province is one of China’s economically developed regions. The province’s Yiwu City is known as the “world’s supermarket” and a key supplier for China’s cross-border e-commerce platforms. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Scientists from China and Russia have agreed to strengthen cooperation in the field of organosilicon polymers

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    BEIJING, June 9 (Xinhua) — Chinese and Russian scientists have agreed to step up cooperation in the field of organosilicon polymers, according to the official website of Shandong University, which is located in Jinan, the capital of Shandong Province (East China).

    From June 4 to 6, the university hosted a Chinese-Russian symposium on green organosilicon polymers. The ceremony was held by Feng Shengyu, a professor at the university’s Institute of Chemistry and Chemical Industry, and Aziz Muzafarov, an academician at the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS).

    The event was attended by more than one hundred people, including academicians and corresponding members of the Russian Academy of Sciences, professors from Zhejiang University, Nankai University, the Institute of Chemistry of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, as well as representatives of business circles.

    “A favorable foundation for cooperation has been laid between Shandong University and the Russian Academy of Sciences. The two sides should jointly promote innovative development in the field of research on polyorganosiloxanes and high-molecular polyorganosiloxanes,” said Shandong University Rector Li Shucai, speaking at the opening ceremony of the symposium.

    A. Muzafarov called on the parties to deepen exchanges and jointly solve technological problems in order to further expand the application areas of polyorganosiloxanes.

    Research between China and Russia in the field of polyorganosiloxanes is complementary, Feng Shengyu noted, expressing hope that experts from both sides will make important contributions to global innovation in materials science.

    Silicones are widely used in the automotive industry, aerospace, construction, electronics and medicine. The unique and universal set of properties, biological inertness and recyclability of silicones into raw materials allow them to be considered one of the most promising materials of the future. According to data, since the beginning of the 21st century, silicone production has been growing at a rate of 5-7 percent per year. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News