Category: European Union

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Energy rescue plan approved to finance EU-backed emergency heating and power projects for Ukraine ahead of winter season

    Source: European Investment Bank

    • EIB President Nadia Calviño presented the Ukraine Energy Rescue Plan to EU finance ministers at their meeting in Luxembourg today.
    • The plan foresees up to €600 million in EU-backed financing for critical energy projects in the public and private sectors to meet urgent heating and power needs of wartime Ukraine.
    • The rescue plan will also support new green energy initiatives, including for energy efficiency and renewable energy, to help rebuild Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and bring the country closer to the European Union.

    Today, European Investment Bank President Nadia Calviño announced the Ukraine Energy Rescue Plan, an initiative to extend EU support for Ukraine’s heavily damaged energy infrastructure due to Russia’s ongoing war, ahead of the winter season, aimed at supporting the resilience of the country and its people. 

    Briefing EU finance ministers in Luxembourg today, President Calviño outlined that as part of the plan, the EIB expects to invest up to €600 million in financing for emergency energy projects across the public and private sectors. This funding will be guaranteed under the European Union’s Ukraine Facility and in part supported by the EIB’s EU for Ukraine Fund and Advisory Programme. It will help restore and strengthen Ukraine’s energy infrastructure while also aligning it with EU standards, further advancing the country’s integration into the European Union.

    Initially the emphasis will be on making finance available for projects that generate electricity and heat using equipment which can be quickly set up to meet the urgent needs of households and businesses. The plan focuses also on projects to protect key electricity substations with shelters. It aims to urgently restore electricity and heating to prevent disruptions to critical services such as hospitals, schools and water supplies, ensuring uninterrupted operations for households, businesses and public services.

    Furthermore, part of the plan also refers to more medium-term measures aimed at making the Ukraine energy sector more sustainable and resilient. It aims to improve energy efficiency in both the industrial and residential sectors, reducing energy consumption and promoting long-term resilience.

    The plan will also extend the EIB’s ongoing recovery and municipal framework programmes, to include energy-related initiatives. It is closely aligned with the priorities of the Ukrainian government and follows discussions with Ukraine’s Ministry of Finance.

    EIB Group President Nadia Calviño said: “The Ukraine Energy Rescue Plan is a crucial measure to ensure that millions of Ukrainian citizens and businesses have the electricity and heat they urgently need to face the coming winter. We aim to invest up to €600 million, leveraging the European Union’s Ukraine Facility and the contributions of our shareholders, the EU member states. The EIB is also strengthening Ukraine’s energy infrastructure for the future. Together with our EU partners, our support is unwavering, working hand-in-hand with Ukraine in this critical phase and for the better times ahead.”

    “While addressing Ukraine’s immediate energy needs, the plan also invests in the country’s green transition through energy efficiency and renewable projects. This will not only help Ukraine recover but also accelerate its path to a sustainable energy future and deeper integration with the European Union, aligning the country with EU standards for a stronger, shared future,” added EIB Vice-President Teresa Czerwińska, who is in charge of the Bank’s operations in Ukraine and will present the rescue plan to the Steering Committee of the Ukraine Donor Platform this week in Rome.

    Ukraine’s Minister of Finance Sergii Marchenko said: “I am grateful to the EIB for recognising Ukraine’s urgent energy needs and for the swift decision that has been taken. Russia’s relentless attacks on our energy infrastructure place immense pressure on our country. The EIB’s plan to support Ukraine’s energy sector is yet another crucial form of assistance for us in restoring power and heating to essential services like hospitals and schools. This will ensure that our people have access to the energy they need to withstand the potential challenges ahead.”

    European Commission Executive Vice-President for an Economy that Works for People Valdis Dombrovskis said: “This financing from the EIB, also backed by the EU budget, comes at just the right moment to allow Ukraine’s authorities to restore power and heating for basic services like hospitals and schools, while guarding against further supply disruptions given Russia’s brutal attacks on its energy infrastructure. It will help Ukraine to prepare for the winter season, make its energy network more reliable and resilient, and improve its sustainable energy efficiency as the country aligns with EU standards on its way to eventual accession. The European Union remains committed to supporting Ukraine and its people.”

    Background information

    The Ukraine Facility is the European Union’s financial assistance programme for Ukraine. During the 2024-2027 period, €50 billion will be allocated by the European Union to finance the state budget, stimulate investment and provide technical support in the implementation of the programme.

    The EU for Ukraine Fund (EU4U) was established in 2023 as part of a larger EU for Ukraine initiative. The fund aims to accelerate EIB Global’s support for Ukraine’s most urgent infrastructure needs and to help sustain the country’s economy. It supports critical recovery and reconstruction projects involving both the public and the private sector and improves access to finance for entrepreneurs in Ukraine. To date, the fund has secured over €420 million in pledges from the Member States.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Funding of defence by the European Union – E-001782/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001782/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Georgios Aftias (PPE)

    Greece has from the beginning been one of the Member States that have consistently supported the EU’s common foreign and security policy. Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Prime Minister of Greece, has been steadfastly leading attempts to create an integrated European defence policy. Greece has the longest coastline in Europe, at a colossal 15 000 kilometres, and this must be protected by the EU.

    Nikos Dendias, Greek Minister of National Defence has stated that ‘Europe must have its own defence industry. Not for the purposes of competition, but so that we are able to defend ourselves. The budgetary rules on defence must be changed. That is the main thing that the EU should do in the future’.

    In view of this:

    • 1.What measures will the Commission take concerning public and private funding to strengthen the defence industrial and technological base and address critical capability gaps?
    • 2.What actions will it take to support and coordinate efforts to strengthen the defence industrial base, innovation and the single market?
    • 3.Will it propose the issue of joint bonds for defence and the Greek borders in conjunction with the fiscal relaxation of the rules governing such an issue?

    Submitted: 23.9.2024

    Last updated: 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – New school year is marred by grade/year group section mergers and acute problems – E-001844/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001844/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Kostas Papadakis (NI)

    Major problems are once again clouding the start to the new school year as parents and pupils face unacceptable grade/year group section mergers. The mergers come at a time when, as is known, there are serious shortages in teaching and other school staff (cleaning, catering and infirmary staff) and parents are having to dig deep into their pockets again this year to pay for the necessary back-to-school supplies.

    The 1 000 or so mergers are supposedly a solution to provide more teachers at a time when Greece faces a shortage of around 60 000 teachers. Only 10 000 have been hired and they were forced to accept on the condition that they will have to undergo an evaluation.

    In view of this, what is the Commission’s position concerning:

    • 1.The unacceptable school situation that is taking shape in 2024, whereby teachers, parents and pupils are confronted with ‘streamlining’ efforts – as the Government described the merger in question – that are moving the educational process backwards and are creating two-speed schools based partly on EU cost-cutting guidelines?
    • 2.The fact that each grade/year group section will now have only one special educational needs teaching assistant to support children who have been diagnosed as having learning difficulties, regardless of how many such pupils there are, forcing parents to turn to private tutors and therapists to support their children?
    • 3.The dangerous situation that is developing as a result of a lack of school maintenance and inspections, forcing pupils and teachers to attend lessons in classrooms that are unsuitable in every respect, pedagogically and in terms of safety, with private sponsors being ‘drafted into’ schools that are becoming increasingly commercialised?

    Submitted: 26.9.2024

    Last updated: 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Raksha Mantri & his German counterpart discuss ways to further strengthen defence industrial collaboration & supply chain resilience during telephonic conversation

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 08 OCT 2024 2:22PM by PIB Delhi

    Raksha Mantri Shri Rajnath Singh held a telephonic conversation with the German Federal Minister of Defence Mr Boris Pistorius on October 08, 2024. They briefly reviewed the ongoing defence cooperation activities including exercises in the air and maritime domains.

    The Ministers discussed ways to further strengthen the defence industrial collaboration and enhance supply chain resilience. They planned to meet in the near future to give concrete shape to the defence engagements and joint projects with an aim to transform defence as a key pillar of the India-Germany bilateral relationship.

    ****

    VK/Savvy

    (Release ID: 2063119) Visitor Counter : 10

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: Baker Hughes Lands Largest Integrated Compressor Line Order in Company’s History

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Baker Hughes Integrated Compressor Line (ICL) technology to enhance gas swing storage capacity as part of the United Arab Emirates decarbonization strategy
    • Scope includes 10 ICL units to be installed at Margham Gas storage facility in the Emirate of Dubai

    HOUSTON and LONDON, Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Baker Hughes (NASDAQ: BKR), an energy technology company, announced Tuesday its largest order ever of Integrated Compressor Line (ICL) units with Dubai Petroleum Establishment (DPE), for and on behalf of Dubai Supply Authority (DUSUP), to enhance the reliability of energy supply and support local decarbonization efforts. The order was booked in the third quarter of 2024.

    The 10 ICL units – five for gas storage and five for dual-use injection boosting or gas export to the existing gas distribution system – will be installed at the Margham Gas storage facility in Dubai, significantly increasing its capacity. Through the adoption of the ICL technology, the project aims to achieve a high-reliability system with reduced emissions. The project will provide stability to Dubai’s energy supply by strengthening the system’s ability to switch between natural gas and solar power.

    “Our innovative ICL technology is set to be critical to support the gas infrastructure needed to address Dubai’s increasing expansion of renewables into its energy mix,” said Ganesh Ramaswamy, executive vice president of Industrial & Energy Technology at Baker Hughes. “This landmark order underscores the proven track record we have built in the market for our low-carbon solutions, and we are grateful to DPE for their continued commitment and trust as they deliver sustainable energy development.”

    With already three ICL units successfully in operation since 2020, DPE’s decision to continue working with Baker Hughes is a testament to the performance and reliability of the installed technology. With zero seal leakages and minimal downtime required for maintenance, Baker Hughes’ ICL technology continues to solidify its position as a highly sought-after option in the market. The latest award from DPE continues the positive order momentum for this technology and follows awards for different applications in projects across Italy, Germany, Argentina and the United States.

    About Baker Hughes
    Baker Hughes (NASDAQ: BKR) is an energy technology company that provides solutions to energy and industrial customers worldwide. Built on a century of experience and conducting business in over 120 countries, our innovative technologies and services are taking energy forward – making it safer, cleaner, and more efficient for people and the planet. Visit us at bakerhughes.com.

    For more information, please contact:

    Media Relations
    Chiara Toniato
    +39 3463823419       
    chiara.toniato@bakerhughes.com

    Investor Relations:

    Chase Mulvehill
    +1 346-297-2561
    investor.relations@bakerhughes.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Improving and maintaining your mental health

    Source: City of Coventry

    The Council and other health agencies are keen to highlight the importance of managing our mental health.

    As part of World Mental Health Day on Wednesday 10 October, we are encouraging people to take a little time and sign up to the free NHS mind plan.

    If you are struggling with your mental health and wellbeing, it is a simple and quick mental health quiz that generates a personalised plan based on the information you provide.

    If you want help to deal with anxiety or low mood, tips to reduce stress or advice on how to fall asleep faster and sleep better, you can start the quiz.

    As a Council we also have lots of information on our website, which covers all sorts of tips and advice and support for adults and for children.

    Immediate support

    For any urgent support you should contact:

    Samaritans on 116 123, for urgent medical needs call your GP, or NHS 111 or if you are in a life-threatening situation call 999.

    For Urgent Mental Health Support call Freephone 08081 966798 (Hours of operation: 24 hours a day, seven days a week). For more information visit the Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership Trust’s ‘Find help now’ information.

    If you live in Coventry or Warwickshire and are feeling low, anxious or stressed, struggling to cope, or need to talk to someone in confidence to find the right service, call 0800 616171. The Mental Wellbeing Line team provides connection, advice, information and signposting, 24/7, 365 days a year.

    Encouraging people with suicidal thoughts to seek help

    When life is difficult, Samaritans are available day or night, 365 days a year. You can call them for free on 116 123, email them at jo@samaritans.org, or visit http://www.samaritans.org to find your nearest branch.

    Reading or hearing about a person or character coming through a suicidal crisis can serve as a powerful testimony to others and can encourage vulnerable people to seek help.

    Understanding how seeking help and coming through a difficult time can serve as a powerful testimony to all of us. Watch Rebekah’s story.

    For more information on suicide prevention, you can visit dearlife.org.uk where there are resources available if you need help, are worried about someone or looking for options of support for young people.

    Service Number When to use
    Emergency Services 999 Threat to life
    Samaritans 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org Immediate support
    NHS Mental Health line 111 then Mental Health option 2 Immediate support
    Shout Crisis Line

    Text ‘SHOUT’ to 85258

    Text ‘YM’ to 8528 if you’re under 19

    Immediate support
    Coventry and Warwickshire Mental Wellbeing Line 0800 616 171 Immediate support
    GP Contact your local GP surgery To book an appointment

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Focus on global health issues at UN General Assembly Session

    Source: Government of Sweden

    On 26 September, Ms Ankarberg Johansson took part in a High-level Meeting of the UN General Assembly on antimicrobial resistance (AMR). AMR means that infectious agents (bacteria, viruses, parasites and fungi) develop resistance to treatment.

    “Thanks to Sweden’s prominent work to counter antimicrobial resistance, we are well-equipped to contribute to global efforts. That’s why the General Assembly is a very important forum in which to participate and share Swedish experiences,” says Ms Ankarberg Johansson.

    The Meeting was the second of its kind, with the first having taken place in 2016. The Meeting included the ceremonial adoption of a political declaration on undertakings to counter AMR. Sweden was one of the most active EU countries during negotiations on the declaration, and many of Sweden’s priority issues have in some way been incorporated into the political declaration.

    Sweden’s AMR Ambassador Malin Grape also took part in the High-level Meeting.

    Swedish side event emphasises cooperation against AMR across borders

    On 25 September, the day before the High-level Meeting, Ms Ankarberg Johansson delivered the opening address at the side event Fostering Cross-Country Solidarity to Address Antimicrobial Resistance in the WHO European Region and Beyond. The event was organised by the Public Health Agency of Sweden together with the WHO Regional Office for Europe (WHO/Europe). The starting point for discussions during the event was the roadmap to counteract AMR agreed upon by the WHO/Europe’s members at the end of 2023. During the event, participants discussed issues such as how support from WHO and cooperation with other countries work in practice.

    Along with Ms Ankarberg Johansson, European Commissioner for Health and Food Safety Stella Kyriakides and WHO Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge were in attendance.

    In conjunction with the side event, Ms Ankarberg Johansson met bilaterally with Ukrainian First Deputy Minister of Health of Ukraine Serhii Dubrov. During their meeting, Ms Ankarberg Johansson re-emphasised Sweden’s support to Ukraine’s health and medical care in light of Russia’s ongoing full-scale invasion that began in February 2022.

    Panel discussion on measures to combat cervical cancer

    On 25 September, the American publication Foreign Policy organised a livestreamed panel discussion on cervical cancer, in which Ms Ankarberg Johansson took part. Cervical cancer is caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) in approximately 98 per cent of all cases. Thanks to vaccination and screening against HPV, it is now possible to completely eradicate HPV and cervical cancer.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: HSBC Continental Europe: Pre Stabilisation Notice

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    PARIS, Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —

    Banque Fédérative du Crédit Mutuel
    (“BFCM”)

    Pre Stabilisation Notice

    HSBC (contact: syndexecution@noexternalmail.hsbc.com) hereby gives notice, as Stabilisation Coordinator, that the Stabilisation Manager(s) named below may stabilise the offer of the following securities

    The securities:
    Issuer: Banque Fédérative du Crédit Mutuel (“BFCM”)
    Guarantor (if any): na
    Aggregate nominal amount: EUR Benchmark
    Description: Fixed rate due 17th October 2031
    Offer price: TBC
    Other offer terms:  
    Stabilisation:
    Stabilising Manager(s): HSBC Continental Europe, CIC, Société Générale and UBS
    Stabilisation period expected to start on: 8th October 2024
    Stabilisation period expected to end no later than: 15th November 2024
    Existence, maximum size & conditions of use of over-allotment facility[1]: 5% of the aggregate nominal amount
    Stabilisation Venue(s) Over the counter (OTC)
       

    In connection with the offer of the above securities, the Stabilisation Manager(s) may over-allot the securities or effect transactions with a view to supporting the market price of the securities at a level higher than that which might otherwise prevail. However, there is no assurance that the Stabilisation Manager(s) will take any stabilisation action and any stabilisation action, if begun, may be ended at any time. Any stabilisation action or over-allotment shall be conducted in accordance with all applicable laws and rules.

    This announcement is for information purposes only and does not constitute an invitation or offer to underwrite, subscribe for or otherwise acquire or dispose of any securities of the Issuer in any jurisdiction.

    In addition, if and to the extent that this announcement is communicated in, or the offer of the securities to which it relates is made in, any EEA Member State before the publication of a prospectus in relation to the securities which has been approved by the competent authority in that Member State in accordance with the Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 (the “Prospectus Regulation”) (or which has been approved by a competent authority in another Member State and notified to the competent authority in that Member State in accordance with the Prospectus Regulation), this announcement and the offer are only addressed to and directed at persons in that Member State who are qualified investors within the meaning of the Prospectus Regulation (or who are other persons to whom the offer may lawfully be addressed) and must not be acted on or relied on by other persons in that Member State.

    This announcement and the offer of the securities to which it relates are only addressed to and directed at persons outside the United Kingdom and persons in the United Kingdom who have professional experience in matters related to investments or who are high net worth persons within article 12(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 and must not be acted on or relied on by other persons in the United Kingdom.

    This announcement is not an offer of securities for sale into the United States. The securities have not been, and will not be, registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933 and may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration. There will be no public offer of securities in the United States.

    _____________________________________

    [1] Please note that the existence and the maximum size of any greenshoe option, the exercise period of the greenshoe option and any conditions for exercise of the greenshoe option must also be disclosed, if such option exists. In addition, the exercise of the greenshoe option must be disclosed to the public promptly, together with all appropriate details, including in particular the date of exercise and the number and nature of securities involved 

    This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution of this information may apply. For further information, please contact rns@lseg.com or visit http://www.rns.com.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Europe: UN political declaration focuses on efforts to counter antimicrobial resistance

    Source: Government of Sweden

    On 26 September, a High-level Meeting on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) was held during the United Nations General Assembly. The Meeting is the second of its type, with the first having been held in 2016. The meeting included the ceremonial adoption of a political declaration on global and national undertakings in efforts to counter AMR. Minister for Health Care Acko Ankarberg Johansson headed Sweden’s participation in the Meeting.

    “A global problem must be addressed at global level, because AMR does not respect national borders. Sweden welcomes that the world’s countries have agreed on a collective approach. That being said, the declaration is not the end of our work, but rather the beginning of a greater global and national responsibility to safeguard access to antibiotics for all,” says Ms Ankarberg Johansson.

    AMR and antibiotic resistance are a major and growing threat to people’s and animals’ health, and our food production. Access to effective antibiotics is a prerequisite for providing modern medical care and saving lives. Efforts to combat AMR have been one of the Government’s priorities for many years. Sweden is a global leader in efforts to counter antibiotic resistance through measures such as responsible use of antibiotics on people and animals, monitoring of prescriptions and resistance, infection prevention and control, and good animal husbandry practices.

    Political declaration advances global efforts

    The political declaration contains almost 50 undertakings towards combating AMR. This includes global goals, such as reducing the global number of deaths associated with AMR by 19 per cent by 2030. The declaration also includes undertakings by the member countries to set and follow up on national goals. The declaration includes a clear focus on both access to antibiotics and preventive measures such as vaccination, infection prevention and control, and access to water, sanitation and hygiene.

    Sweden was one of the most active EU countries during negotiations on the declaration, and many of Sweden’s priority issues have in some way been incorporated into the political declaration.

    Sweden’s AMR Ambassador Malin Grape also took part in the Meeting.

    “The next High-level Meeting will take place in five years–2029. The most important thing we can do, apart from implementing the undertakings in the declaration, is to continue to raise awareness about the problem, broaden the issue from an infection problem to a patient safety issue, expand the perspective from a health problem to a long-term socioeconomic problem, where several actors need to contribute more actively,” says Ms Grape.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Racecourse reading hub proves a hit

    Source: City of Derby

    A new reading hub has been created at a Derby football and community venue. Derby City Council’s Derby Libraries service has provided the facility for visitors to Derby Racecourse Hub.

    The state-of-the-art Racecourse Hub opened earlier this year as a centre for football, fitness and community activities. Managed by Leisure United, it’s already attracted thousands of visitors.

    By bringing books to the Racecourse Hub, the aim is to engage with the wider community and make reading more accessible to those who might not usually visit a library.

    The reading hub has a wide selection of books to choose from, from popular fiction and thrillers, books on health and wellbeing and lots of picture books and board books to keep little ones entertained.

    It operates on an honesty basis, where everyone is welcome to borrow a book to read at the hub or at home and then return the book for someone else to enjoy.

    Derby Libraries now wants to start Rhymetimes sessions for children and Book Club events at the Racecourse Hub and is looking for volunteers to help run them. These popular programmes are already offered at libraries throughout the city.

    Councillor Sarah Chambers, Derby City Council Cabinet Member for Cost of Living, Equalities and Communities, said:

    The reading hub has already been very popular, particularly at weekends when the Racecourse is busy. One example of the great impact it’s having is parents taking the opportunity to share books with their younger children while older siblings play football.

    As a Labour administration, we recognise that Derby’s libraries are a valuable community resource that enrich people’s lives. We’re really pleased that Leisure United share that view and we can provide this facility.

    We want reading to be accessible people of all ages and backgrounds, and the reading hub could help us reach people who may not already be a member of our libraries. If you’ve enjoyed using it and want to read more, you can join Derby Libraries for free.

    We’d love to see Rhymetimes and Book Club sessions running at the hub. If you’re interested in helping children develop a love of reading, or you’re an enthusiastic reader who loves talking about books over a coffee, why not volunteer?

    The Racecourse Hub was jointly funded by Derby City Council and the Premier League, The FA, and the Government’s Football Foundation.

    Richard Smith, regional manager for Leisure United, said:

    We are extremely proud to support the reading hub. Initiatives like this goes to show that the Racecourse Hub is not just about football, but a flexible space for positive initiatives like this one.

    We’ve seen many people from the local community using the library – and even some of the staff – and we look forward to supporting it for years to come.

    Find out how to volunteer on the Derby Libraries website. For more information about Derby Racecourse Hub, go to the Leisure United website.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Freedom of Religion or Belief: UK Statement to the OSCE Warsaw Human Dimension Conference, 2024

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The UK calls on OSCE participating States to build mutual understanding and combat intolerance based on religion or belief.

    Thank you, Madam Moderator, good morning colleagues.  

    Human rights and fundamental freedoms are interdependent, mutually reinforcing and crucial to securing lasting peace and security in the world. With more countries engaged in conflict than at any time since the Second World War, we must work harder to ensure respect for human rights. 

    Vibrant and diverse civic spaces where people can access and enjoy their rights to the freedoms of peaceful assembly, association, and expression are foundational to governance and democracy. A world where civic space continues to decline is one which is less secure.  

    Similarly, religious intolerance and persecution fuels instability, impeding both conflict prevention and resolution. However, when freedom of religion or belief is respected, and interreligious dialogue is promoted, we can build trust and understanding between communities, helping to secure sustainable peace. 

    Last year, the UK was pleased to lead with the UAE a landmark UN Security Council resolution on “Tolerance and International Peace and Security,” which directly addresses, for the first time, the persecution of religious minorities in conflict settings. 

    In putting into practice our commitment to Freedom of Religion or Belief, we must learn the lessons of the past. The global surge in both antisemitism and Islamophobia since October 7th 2023 highlights that there is still much work to be done. All forms of religious hatred are completely unacceptable. 

    Antisemitism has no place in society, and the UK is determined to tackle it in all its forms. We have committed further funding to the Community Security Trust, enabling them to continue their vital work in protecting UK Jewish communities until 2028. 

    Alongside domestic action, the UK proudly holds the presidency of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance this year. Our presidency’s theme is “In Plain Sight”, drawing attention to the fact that the Holocaust did not happen in a dark corner. Our presidency is focussing on safeguarding remembrance of the Holocaust, securing the narrative for the future and tackling Holocaust distortion. 

    We are also taking action to support Muslim communities in the UK. Islamophobia is abhorrent and has no place in society. Our Protective Security for Mosques Scheme provides physical protective security measures in both mosques and associated Muslim faith community centres. The Government is also committed to supporting programmes which monitor and support victims of Islamophobia. 

    The UK welcomes the work of the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights to foster tolerance and non-discrimination.  We proudly support the Office’s programme combatting hate crime in our region.   

    We must all, individually and collectively, work to build mutual understanding and combat intolerance based on religion or belief.  Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Frank Elderson: Interview with Delo

    Source: European Central Bank

    Interview with Frank Elderson, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB and Vice-Chair of the Supervisory Board of the ECB, conducted by Miha Jenko

    8 October 2024

    You hold two high positions in the European Central Bank: you are a member of the ECB’s Executive Board as well as the Vice-Chair of its Supervisory Board. You are responsible for both monetary matters and banking supervision in the euro area. Can you explain your dual role at the ECB?

    Let me clarify that, at the ECB, decision-making on monetary policy and banking supervision is separate, and for good reason. We want these two functions to pursue their specific objectives and we want to avoid potential conflicts of interest.

    That being said, it is important for each side to be aware of what the other is thinking and to understand how the decisions being taken affect the other side. Let me give you a couple of examples. During our strategy review in 2021 we explicitly recognised the importance of safe and sound banks for our price stability mandate, acknowledging that financial stability is a precondition for price stability. Moreover, banks that are safe and sound are able to effectively pass through our monetary policy.

    So in the governance of the ECB there is a bridge between the two sides. And I currently occupy this bridge as a member of the Executive Board, which has six members including President Lagarde, as a member of the Governing Council and as Vice-Chair of the Supervisory Board. In practice, this means that I inform the Executive Board about what was discussed in the Supervisory Board, and I debrief the Supervisory Board on the decisions taken by the Governing Council. In short, my role is to help ensure that the ECB does not carry out these two separate tasks in isolation.

    What is the purpose of your current visit to Slovenia?

    The ECB’s two decision-making bodies – the Supervisory Board and the Governing Council – will meet in Slovenia in the space of a week. The Supervisory Board will meet for its regular retreat to discuss strategic issues, while the Governing Council will hold its next monetary policy meeting here. Our colleagues at Banka Slovenije are kindly hosting both events.

    Turning to banking supervision, how are banks’ activities and lending affected by the current environment of weak economic growth and deteriorating economic trends, which include increasing bankruptcies in some euro area countries? How resilient is the banking sector in Europe?

    European banks are resilient. They have sufficient and adequate capital and liquidity buffers which enable them to absorb losses and withstand shocks. But they should not be complacent, especially in the context of the worsening geopolitical environment, which could have direct and indirect effects on banks. Near-term growth prospects have deteriorated and are subject to high uncertainty because of these rising geopolitical risks. And banks also face several medium-term, more structural challenges.

    In this context, our supervisory priorities, which we update every year, help us focus on both the near-term and medium-term challenges faced by banks. We want to ensure that banks are resilient not only today, but also in the long run. As part of our priorities, we want to increase their resilience to sudden macroeconomic and geopolitical shocks and to accelerate the remediation of shortcomings in the governance and management of climate-related and environmental risks. At the same time, banks need to make further progress with their digital transformation and build up their operational resilience.

    In short, banks are resilient, but we should not be complacent amid these longer-term challenges, which we will address through our supervision over the coming years.

    What lessons have the ECB and the Eurosystem learned from the last financial crisis in order to be better prepared for a possible new crisis, which will not necessarily originate in the banking sector itself, but in companies connected to it?

    Since the global financial crisis we have created strong pan-European supervision – the Single Supervisory Mechanism. The financial reforms implemented after that crisis have strengthened banks without compromising their lending capacity. Several things have happened since the global financial crisis: we have had a pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, an energy shock and high inflation. So European economies have been exposed to unforeseen challenges. We also witnessed turmoil in international banking markets last year, which exposed fragilities in banks’ risk management and internal governance.

    The European banking sector has shown itself to be resilient in the face of these challenges. Take non-performing loans, for example, which have fallen significantly in the European banking system. In 2015, their share was 7%, while in 2023 it was below 2%. That is a big step forward. And as I said, capital and liquidity indicators are now much higher than they were a decade ago. But as supervisors, we should never be complacent, especially given the new risk drivers, such as energy prices, cyberattacks, climate and nature-related risks and geopolitical risks.

    Turning now to current developments in the European banking sector, where UniCredit Group’s intention to take over the German bank Commerzbank has recently made headlines. What is your view as euro area banking supervisor?

    Let me first say that I cannot comment on individual banks, so my answer will be more general.

    We have been crystal clear that cross-border consolidation can be an instrument for further integration of the European banking sector, and we stand by that. Consolidation can also help address long-standing issues in the European banking sector, such as low profitability.

    Nonetheless, mergers always carry risks and, as supervisors, we assess them carefully, always applying the limitative criteria set out in Article 23 of the Capital Requirements Directive. Our job is to ensure that every banking transaction – whether at cross-border or national level – results in a banking group that can comply with supervisory requirements in the foreseeable future.

    What is your view of the banking sector in our country? What is your message to Slovenia?

    Thanks to the reforms implemented after the great financial crisis, banks in Slovenia have come a long way, and in the right direction. When the crisis hit, the Government had to support the three largest banks with a recapitalisation of €3.5 billion. And, naturally, it has taken several years for lending to strengthen. More recently, the privatisation of state-owned banks increased competition in the sector, and this has attracted international banks. Slovenian banks are now well-capitalised, highly profitable and are above the euro area average for profitability, mainly on account of very high net interest margins. Some of this progress can also be attributed to the work of supervisors, including those at Banka Slovenije, with whom we work very well.

    So, like in the rest of Europe, your banks are robust but they will continue to face a number of headwinds stemming from the macro-financial environment, geopolitical shocks and challenges related to the green and digital transitions.

    As mentioned, our central bank will host a Governing Council meeting next week. Do you expect a new interest rate decision at this meeting?

    We will come to Slovenia with an open mind, so I am looking forward to the trip to Ljubljana and to a very genuine and open discussion. Before the meeting, we will take note of all the data and analysis and, as we have said many times before, we will take a meeting-by-meeting approach. A number of recent indicators suggest that downside risks to economic growth are already materialising, so we will need to carefully assess whether this has any implications for our inflation outlook.

    What is very clear, however, is the direction of travel in the period ahead. If our projections that inflation will converge towards our 2% target in the second half of 2025 continue to be confirmed, we will continue to gradually ease our restrictive policy stance. At the same time, we need to maintain flexibility regarding the pace of adjustments. This will depend on incoming data, on the economic situation and on inflation. The latest data will of course be taken into account in whatever decision we take in Slovenia.

    What specific downside risks to growth do you have in mind?

    Economic growth came in at 0.2% in the second quarter, falling somewhat short of our projections. We look at a broad range of data, but we have seen that households are consuming less than anticipated and firms are less keen to invest than we had projected.

    What is your view on the exact nature of inflation in the euro area? In particular, services price inflation remains very persistent. Why?

    We expect inflation to decline to our target in the second half of 2025. Headline inflation is projected to average 2.5% in 2024, then 2.2% in 2025 and 1.9% in 2026. Services inflation remains strong but, according to our projections, we will see a deceleration going into the new year.

    We always look at the upside and downside risks surrounding these projections. Geopolitical tensions could raise energy prices, shipping costs and other transport costs in the short term, which could also lead to disruptions to global trade, which would push prices up. Inflation could also increase if wages rise more than expected or if profit margins increase, and extreme weather events and the climate crisis could increase food prices. However, there are also downside risks to inflation, such as lower than expected demand or an unexpected deterioration in the economic environment in the United States and globally.

    At the ECB, you are also responsible for monitoring the effects of climate change, in addition to the dual tasks mentioned at the beginning. This year we saw the catastrophic effects of floods in some central European countries, and last year we experienced them in Slovenia as well. Greece, Spain and other parts of southern Europe are ravaged by catastrophic droughts and fires. Can the ECB and national central banks contribute more effectively to mitigating the effects of climate change? After all, you have the power – you have monetary policy and banking supervision in your hands…

    I am very aware of the consequences of floods, and of those last year in Slovenia. They caused €10 billion of damage and more than two-thirds of the country was affected. Some places in the Koroška region were cut off from the world and most roads were completely submerged. Recently, we have seen similar things in several other EU countries.

    When talking about climate, nature and the ECB, I always say that we are not climate policymakers. We are not involved in climate policy. This is a task for governments, who implement legislation and policies like the European Climate Law and the EU “Fit for 55” plan, for example.

    But this topic is also extremely relevant for our mandate, because extreme events like flooding, wildfires and summer droughts also lead to financial risks for banks and the wider economy. In our banking supervision, we check whether banks are adequately managing their climate and nature-related risks. We also take climate and nature into account in our macroeconomic projections.

    Are you in favour of introducing more decisive measures that would offer banks more targeted incentives to grant loans for more environmentally friendly or “greener” purposes?

    It would be speculative to talk about possible measures that we might hypothetically take in the future. What is clear is that any measure we implement must be consistent with our primary objective of price stability. Our current monetary policy stance is restrictive, so a green lending facility would be something for us to consider in the future, in another phase of the cycle.

    That being said, climate change is part of our monetary policy strategy, and we have committed to regularly reviewing our climate-related measures to ensure that we continue to support a decarbonisation path that is consistent with the EU’s climate objectives. For this, within our mandate, all options are on the table. If we were to design new instruments in the future, it’s fair to assume that they would include climate considerations.

    In terms of global competitiveness, the EU is falling behind the United States and China. Former ECB President Mario Draghi recently presented a very ambitious plan to increase European competitiveness, including investments of up to €800 billion per year. In his opinion, this money could also be raised through European borrowing, so common European debt. What is your take on this proposal and Mr Draghi’s other recommendations?

    We welcome the publication of this report, how concrete it is and its call for urgent action. Competitiveness is critical for sustainable growth, improving the living standards of citizens and boosting economic resilience, especially in the current environment of heightened geopolitical fragmentation. We strongly support this urgent call for coordinated action at the European and national levels. It is now a matter of turning these proposals into concrete measures.

    Meeting the strategic investment needs identified in the report requires completing the capital markets union, which we have been advocating for a long time.

    The private sector will not be able to finance all of these investment needs alone. European initiatives, including financing through common European funds, could help finance common European public goods such as defence, public procurement, energy grids, disruptive innovation and cross-border infrastructure. Under the right conditions, the potential issuance of common European debt could help bridge the financing gap.

    Finally, a new European Commission is expected to start its work in a few weeks’ time. How do you see your cooperation, including on the common objective of making Europe more competitive?

    I am very much looking forward to continuing our excellent interactions with the European Commission, both with the outgoing Commission and the incoming one. There are a number of common European initiatives that we both have a very strong interest in. I have already mentioned the capital markets union. Further progress could be made on that, as well as on finalising all aspects of the banking union. And we know from the ECB’s stress tests that the longer we take to complete the green transition, the more it will cost us, so we would very much welcome further progress on that front as well.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Hera planetary defence mission successfully launched

    Source: Thales Group

    Headline: Hera planetary defence mission successfully launched

    • Hera aims to confirm if it is possible to deflect a hazardous asteroid on a collision course with the Earth, as a repeatable strategy ready for use in case of an actual asteroid threat
    • Thales Alenia Space provided key technologies onboard the Hera spacecraft, which will send essential data from the Didymos binary asteroid, similar to one that could potentially impact our Planet

    Madrid, 8 October, 2024 – Hera, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) first planetary defence mission,  was successfully launched yesterday aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, from Cape Canaveral in Florida. The satellite is now heading to a unique target among the 1.3 million known asteroids of our Solar System.

    If an incoming asteroid were to threaten Earth, what could be done to cope with the situation? On September 26th 2022, NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission performed humankind’s first test of asteroid deflection by crashing into the Great-Pyramid-sized Dimorphos moonlet. This resulted in a shift of its orbit around the mountain-sized Didymos main asteroid.

    Hera networking with Cubesats ©ESA 

    Next comes ESA’s own contribution to the international Asteroid Impact & Deflection Assessment (AIDA) collaboration: the Hera mission will travel to Dimorphos so as to gather vital close-up data regarding the deflected body and turn DART’s grand-scale kinetic impact experiment into a well-understood and potentially repeatable planetary defence technique. Hera will provide in particular accurate measurements concerning the asteroid’s mass, as well as crucial information about its make-up and structure, which are essential to interpret the outcome of the impact.

    The Hera mission, will also carry out the most detailed exploration to date of a binary asteroid system – although binaries make up 15% of all known asteroids, they have never been studied in detail. Hera will also perform technology demonstration experiments, including the deployment of ESA’s first deep space ‘CubeSats’ – shoebox-sized spacecraft to venture closer than the main mission then eventually land – and an ambitious test of ‘self-driving’ for the main spacecraft, based on vision-based navigation. The OHB System AG (Germany), as prime contractor of Hera, led the industrial consortium, including responsibility for the overall spacecraft design, development, assembly, and testing.

    Thales Alenia Space’s contribution: a teamwork between Spain, Italy and Belgium

    Thales Alenia Space, a joint venture between Thales (67%) and Leonardo (33%), provided key technologies onboard Hera spacecraft. Thales Alenia Space in Spain was responsible for the communications subsystem, which allows to control and track the spacecraft from a distance up to 500 million kilometre away and to send all the information gathered by Hera back to Earth. Thales Alenia Space in Italy developed the state-of-art Deep Space Transponder, while Thales Alenia Space in Belgium developed the Travelling Wave Tube Amplifiers (TWTA), as well as the Power Conditioning and Distribution Unit (PCDU), which provides power to the spacecraft during all its lifetime.

    Safeguarding our planet

    Asteroids are bodies originated in the young stars nebulae that never grew to planets, formed of rock and metal. Among them, those that have an orbit that brings them close to Earth (within 45 million kilometres), known as near-Earth asteroids, represent a risk of hitting the Earth. There are plenty of such bodies in our Solar system, from tiny little ones measuring a few meters (there are 40-50 millions of them) up to larger ones, measuring more than 1 km but much more scarce (there’s less than 1000 of them).

    Neither the smaller near-Earth asteroids nor the larger ones represent a real threat to humanity. Small asteroids actually hit the Earth quite frequently (every two weeks) with no consequences. The larger ones, although potentially dangerous, are well known and tracked, and it takes millions of years to have one of them hitting the Earth. Actually, a 10km asteroid impact is the most accepted theory of the Cretaceous extinction around 66 million years ago, ending with three-quarters of the plant and animal species, among others the dinosaurs.

    Hera scans DART’s impact crater ©ESA 

    The mid-sized class asteroids of more than 100 meters are the ones we need to worry about. There are about 30,000 near-Earth asteroids of the 100 to 300 meter size class, 82% of them still to be spotted, hitting the Earth every 10,000 years. The impact energy of such an asteroid is equivalent to around 50 megatons of TNT, the power of a “Tsar Bomba”. The effect of such an impact would be devastating if it reached a populated area, capable of destroying an entire city or to create a tsunami if it impacted a sea.

    The Didymos binary asteroid system is prototypical in terms of size of the thousands of asteroids that pose a hazardous risk of impact to our planet. Around the Dydimos main body, 780 meter in diameter, orbits the 150 meter Dimorphos moonlet, which is the first body in the Solar System to have had its orbit measurably changed through human action, by the DART impact, and it is also the smallest asteroid yet visited by humankind.

    The Hera spacecraft will reach the binary asteroid in October 2026, after a two-year cruise phase. The day Hera reaches Didymos, it will be 195 million km away from Earth.

    ABOUT THALES ALENIA SPACE

    Drawing on over 40 years of experience and a unique combination of skills, expertise and cultures, Thales Alenia Space delivers cost-effective solutions for telecommunications, navigation, Earth observation, environmental management, exploration, science and orbital infrastructures. Governments and private industry alike count on Thales Alenia Space to design satellite-based systems that provide anytime, anywhere connections and positioning, monitor our planet, enhance management of its resources and explore our Solar System and beyond. Thales Alenia Space sees space as a new horizon, helping to build a better, more sustainable life on Earth. A joint venture between Thales (67%) and Leonardo (33%), Thales Alenia Space also teams up with Telespazio to form the parent companies’ Space Alliance, which offers a complete range of services. Thales Alenia Space posted consolidated revenues of approximately €2.2 billion in 2023. Thales Alenia Space has around 8,600 employees in 9 countries, with 16 sites in Europe and a plant in the US.

    http://www.thalesaleniaspace.com

    THALES ALENIA SPACE – PRESS CONTACTS

    Oriol Casas Thió
    Tel.: +34 618 509 197
    oriol.casasthio@thalesaleniaspace.com

    Tarik Lahlou
    Tel: +33 (0)6 87 95 89 56
    tarik.lahlou@thalesaleniaspace.com

    Catherine des Arcis
    Tel: +33 (0)6 78 64 63 97
    catherine.des-arcis@thalesaleniaspace.com

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI: Eviden launches PQC HSMaaS, a EU sovereign, Post-Quantum Cryptography Hardware Security Module as a Service

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Press Release

    Eviden launches PQC HSMaaS, a EU sovereign, Post-Quantum Cryptography
    Hardware Security Module as a Service

    This secure cloud-independent solution, based on ANSSI’s Highest Qualified HSM,
    helps organizations meet the most stringent NIS2 requirements

    Les Assises de la Sécurité, Monaco and Paris, France – October 8, 2024Eviden, the Atos Group business leading in digital, cloud, big data and security today announces PQC HSMaaS, its EU sovereign, post-quantum cryptography Hardware Security Module (HSM) as a Service, powered by the Eviden HSM Trustway Proteccio™ brand.

    This secure, cloud-independent solution is the only HSM available on the market today which is based on ANSSI’s (Agence Nationale de la Sécurité des Systèmes d’Information1) Highest Security Qualification (“reinforced qualification”), thereby providing businesses with the highest level of security possible.

    Post-quantum-ready and EU sovereign for NIS2 compliance

    In addition to being based upon one of the most certified HSM on the market, Eviden’s PQC HSMaaS supports Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) algorithms, providing encryption that is future-proof against the advances of quantum computing.

    As a fully EU sovereign solution, Eviden’s PQC HSMaaS is hosted in resilient, sovereign data centers in France and managed by French teams, ensuring full control over sensitive data. This minimizes dependence on public cloud providers, reinforcing both data sovereignty and regulatory compliance. Furthermore, Eviden’s PQC HSMaaS helps businesses meet the stringent requirements of the NIS22Directive, securing sensitive data with robust encryption practices that guarantee confidentiality, integrity, and availability.

    Antoine Schweitzer-Chaput, Head of Trustway Business Unit, Eviden, Atos Group said: This solution not only empowers companies to protect against emerging threats such as quantum computing through Post-Quantum Cryptography support, but it also established us as a strategic partner in helping organizations meet the stringent requirements of the NIS2 Directive. We take pride in offering an HSMaaS that blends the highest levels of security with the flexibility and control businesses need in today’s evolving landscape.”

    Eviden customers can now benefit from the PQC HSMaaS solution, via a monthly subscription. For more information, please visit : https://eviden.com/solutions/digital-security/data-encryption/trustway-proteccio-nethsm/

    ***

    About Eviden

    Eviden is a next-gen technology leader in data-driven, trusted and sustainable digital transformation with a strong portfolio of patented technologies. With worldwide leading positions in advanced computing, security, AI, cloud and digital platforms, it provides deep expertise for all industries in more than 47 countries. Bringing together 47,000 world-class talents, Eviden expands the possibilities of data and technology across the digital continuum, now and for generations to come. Eviden is an Atos Group company with an annual revenue of c. € 5 billion.

    About Atos

    Atos is a global leader in digital transformation with c. 92,000 employees and annual revenue of c. € 10 billion. European number one in cybersecurity, cloud and high-performance computing, the Group provides tailored end-to-end solutions for all industries in 69 countries. A pioneer in decarbonization services and products, Atos is committed to a secure and decarbonized digital for its clients. Atos is a SE (Societas Europaea) and listed on Euronext Paris.

    The purpose of Atos is to help design the future of the information space. Its expertise and services support the development of knowledge, education and research in a multicultural approach and contribute to the development of scientific and technological excellence. Across the world, the Group enables its customers and employees, and members of societies at large to live, work and develop sustainably, in a safe and secure information space.

    Press contact

    Zohra Dali – zohra.dali.external@eviden.com – +33 (0) 6 71 92 71 87


    1 National Cybersecurity Agency of France responsible for ensuring the security of information systems across France, particularly within government institutions and critical infrastructure.
    2 The NIS2 Directive (Directive on security of network and information systems) is a European Union regulation aimed at enhancing cybersecurity across the EU. It updates and expands upon the original NIS Directive (2016) to address the evolving landscape of cyber threats and improve the overall level of cybersecurity within member states.

    3 Eviden business is operated through the following brands: AppCentrica, ATHEA, Cloudamize, Cloudreach, Cryptovision, DataSentics, Edifixio, Energy4U, Engage ESM, Evidian, Forensik, IDEAL GRP, In Fidem, Ipsotek, Maven Wave, Profit4SF, SEC Consult, Visual BI, Worldgrid, X-Perion.

    Eviden is a registered trademark. © Eviden SAS, 2024.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Kampala: invitation to submit tender for media consultancy services

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The British High Commission in Kampala is inviting tender submissions for consultancy services by 14 October 2024.

    Client British High Commission (BHC) Kampala
    Expected starting date 1 November 2024
    Duration of consultancy 5 months (1 November 2024 to 15 March 2025)

    The UK is committed to strengthening a closer UK-Uganda partnership that supports mutual prosperity, ensures stability, reduces poverty, and strengthens democracy.

    The UK invests in strengthening its economic partnership with Uganda, supporting climate change adaptation efforts, building broader UK-Uganda connections, and supporting Uganda’s engagements that stabilise the region. Through all these efforts the UK has consistently used their science, innovation, and technology (SIT) strengths to partner with Uganda and deliver progress and impact.

    Through a focused 5-month campaign, the British High Commission (BHC) Kampala would like to better highlight breadth of the work of the UK in Uganda, by capturing the impact, diversity, and innovation of work over the years and creatively telling the story to the Ugandan people. While we would like to use the lens of SIT as a theme, we want the work of climate, growth, energy, stability, and other priority areas to be included as part of the storytelling.

    The UK is looking to strengthen its partnership with Uganda, by building new awareness of the work, new collaborations and strengthening existing ones, including but not limited to, Uganda’s young creators and innovators, women, and academic institutions around areas of research, innovation, and emerging tech.

    Objectives

    This Terms of Reference (ToR) is to enlist supplier(s) to:

    • support BHC Kampala in breaking down its broader policy and program work, achievements and impact into engaging narratives while understanding stakeholder perceptions and refining our outreach strategy

    • enhance and execute communication efforts through compelling storytelling, strategic content development – specifically using radio as the main platform

    Work packages

    Due to the breadth of the work and specialisations required in some areas, this ToR has been broken down into two packages (Package A and Package B). The supplier may bid for either one or both packages.

    Up to £21,750 is available to the winning bidder for each work package. With an overall total budget for both packages not exceeding £43,500, taxes inclusive. If you are planning to bid for both packages you should clearly separate your deliverables and budgets for both in a single return.

    Package ‘A’

    Scope of work

    The exact approach for this work will be discussed further with BHC Kampala and set out in the Supplier Proposal. However, it will require the consultant to engage in joint ideation and conceptualisation session(s) with the BHC, engage with the full breadth of the BHC’s policy and program work around areas of SIT, and proceed to breakdown the highlights and impact of this work into engaging and visually appealing content tailored for different audiences.     

    During the content gathering and creation process, the consultant may be required to travel up to two times outside of Kampala with responsible BHC staff in the field and produce content as required by the campaign implementation plan. The travel costs should be accounted for in the bid, with the many flexible to be re-allocated if not needed for travel.

    The entire work will cut across the following four areas:

    Content development

    • collaborate with our team to identify key projects and initiatives
    • extract impactful stories and results that highlight the organization’s impact

    Content processing and design

    • create multiple formats of content that may include articles and a series of human impact stories
    • develop visual assets such as infographics, motion graphics, and short videos
    • adapt content for various digital platforms, including social media, websites, and presentations

    Stakeholder mapping and analysis

    • identify and categorise key stakeholders based on their influence, interest, and impact on the BHC’s goals
    • develop stakeholder profiles and relationship dynamics to map engagement opportunities and risks
    • provide recommendations for targeted messaging and relationship-building strategies tailored to each stakeholder group

    Deliverables

    In close consultation and collaboration with the BHC, the consultant is expected to deliver the following:

    Content outputs

    Overall, the BHC would like to have a set of high-quality pieces of impact storytelling that highlight our different areas of work. This will include print, visuals, digital and other potential content. Pace of content creation can be discussed.

    Stakeholder Mapping Report

    • detailed stakeholder map, including profiles, influence, and interest levels
    • strategic recommendations on how to engage each stakeholder group more effectively

    Client responsibilities

    The BHC will be responsible for:

    • availing data and all information material needed by the consultant in their content generation and program production work
    • approving all content, broadcast or digital before it is aired or published
    • facilitating the consultant’s representatives with access to its program sites, activities, or project beneficiaries for purposes of gathering content as part of this partnership     
    • proven experience in content creation, storytelling, and digital strategy

    Timelines

    All work will need to be completed by end of February 2025 or not later than the 15th of March 2025 at the latest. Specific timelines will be agreed upon with the BHC at our first engagement meeting after which they will be spelt out in the engagement contract.

    Qualifications

    • expertise in conducting perception research and stakeholder mapping
    • ability to deliver high-quality outputs within tight deadlines
    • knowledge of Ugandan media consumption trends, preferences, and audience dynamics
    • demonstrable experience in Data and Information design and visualisation

    The following are desirable:

    • flexibility and adaptability: the consultant will have to work closely with the team from the BHC in the execution of this work, which may require them to be flexible in adapting to new deliverable dynamics during the duration of consultancy
    • experience working with the UK or similar development partners: demonstrating keen understanding of development work, programming, and impact assessment of the same will be an added advantage as it is an important first step towards communicating such work effectively
    • ability to speak at least 3 local languages intelligibly would be useful but is not essential

    Package ‘B’

    Scope of work

    The supplier will be expected to, in consultation with the British High Commission (BHC) Kampala, design and produce a 1-hour monthly radio program devoted to the BHC’s SIT policy work, which will be co-hosted by the British High Commissioner in Uganda and a co-host agreed upon by the two parties.

    The supplier will also be expected to report at least one weekly story on the BHC’s SIT-related work across its policy and program areas and do at least one ground activation from one of the areas where the BHC’s SIT-related interventions is taking place.

    The supplier will also be expected to promote all stories and programs delivered as part of this partnership on all its social media programs pre, during and after the said programs, and generally produce visually appealing multimedia content communicating the BHC’s SIT work to run on the radio partner and the BHC’s official media platforms. 

    Occasionally, especially during the content gathering and creation process, representatives of the supplier may be required to travel with responsible BHC staff in the field and produce content as required.

    Deliverables

    In close consultation and collaboration with the BHC, the supplier will be expected to:

    • design, produce and host a 1-hour monthly program devoted to the BHC’s SIT policy work, which will be co-hosted by the British High Commissioner in Uganda and a co-host agreed upon by the two parties
    • report/host at least one story or radio-discussion per week on the BHC’ SIT-related work across its policy and program areas
    • undertake at least one on-ground activation per month to report live on the impact of the BHC’s SIT-focused interventions on people and/communities
    • come up with social media promotion material for all stories and programs to be hosted and reported on the radio partner station as part of this partnership, pre, during and after the said programs
    • come up with a data and information visualisation strategy to complement the radio broadcasts of this partnership’s activities. This will involve producing appealing multimedia content communicating the BHC’s SIT work which will run on the supplier’s and the BHC’s official media platforms

    Client responsibilities

    The BHC will be responsible for:

    • availing data and all information material needed by the radio partner in its content generation and program production work
    • approving all content, broadcast or digital before it is aired or published
    • facilitating the radio partner’s representatives with access to its program sites, activities, or project beneficiaries for purposes of gathering content as part of this partnership

    Timelines

    All work will need to be completed by end of February or not later than the 15th of March 2025 at the latest. Specific timelines will be agreed upon with the BHC at our first engagement meeting after which they will be spelt out in the engagement contract.

    Requirements

    • verifiable data of audience size and reach
    • experience of providing similar broadcast support to recognisable organisations/development partners.
    • the supplier should demonstrate a keen understanding of diverse demographic content preferences and audience peak hours and how both will be used to ensure a maximum audience for the stories, programs and content produced under this partnership

    The following are desirable:

    • flexibility and adaptability:  the supplier will have to work closely with the team from the BHC in the execution of this work, which may require them to be flexible in adapting to new deliverable dynamics during the duration of consultancy
    • experience working with the UK or similar development partners: demonstrating keen understanding of development work, programming, and impact assessment of the same will be an added advantage as it is an important first step towards communicating such work effectively
    • ability to broadcast in more than one language would be useful but is not essential
    • experience in Data and Information Visualisation: The consultant should have demonstrable skill and expertise in designing and producing creative, visually appealing multimedia content that can give visual appeal to the UK’s work in Uganda

    Budget and payment terms

    Any submissions in response to this ToR must include a technical and commercial proposal. The commercial proposal will need to include a budget with a comprehensive breakdown of costs per activity for the full duration of the work.

    The BHC will make available up to £21,750 to the winning bidder for each work package, with an overall total budget for both packages not exceeding £43,500, including taxes. Payments to the winning bidder(s) will be made in arrears following review of agreed deliverables in the stipulated timeframes. These will be agreed in detail with the winning bidder, prior to signing the contract with the BHC.

    Intellectual Property Rights

    The BHC will own all intellectual property rights to the final designs and materials created under this agreement. The designer may include the work in their portfolio with the BHC’s permission.

    Application process

    Interested suppliers can bid for either options – package (A) or package (B) or both, and proceed to submit a proposal outlining their approach, relevant experience, and pricing by 14 October 2024. In your submission, include samples of previous work, details of methodologies and a sample stakeholder mapping framework.

    Submit your proposal (s) to Kampala.Bhcinfo@fcdo.gov.uk and include “Bid for media consultancy” in the subject line of your email.

    Key documents

    Commercial Pro Forma

    Annex A

    Scoring methodology and evaluation criteria

    Technical evaluation

    BHC will convene an evaluation panel to score the supplier proposal based on the evaluation criteria below. The proposal will need to achieve a score of 6 ‘good’ in order to proceed.

    Technical scoring methodology

    The Evaluation Team will apply the following scoring methodology to the Technical Criteria:

    Score Comment
    10 (Expert) Demonstrates expert understanding of Terms of Reference and proposes excellent and accurate solutions which address all requirements, and which are innovative where appropriate. Responses are excellently tailored to the customer’s requirements in all aspects. Level of detail and quality of information provides the highest degree of confidence in certainty of delivery.
    8 (Very Good) Demonstrates a very good understanding of the majority of issues relating to delivery of the Terms of Reference. Responses are relevantly tailored to the customer’s requirements in the majority of aspects. Provides sufficient detail and quality of information to give a strong level of confidence that they will deliver.
    6 (Good) Demonstrates a good understanding of many of the issues relating to the delivery of the Terms of Reference. Responses are reasonably tailored to the customer’s requirements for many of the of aspects. Provides a good level of detail and quality  of information to give a good level of confidence that they will deliver.
    4 (Satisfactory) Demonstrates a satisfactory understanding of some of the issues relating to delivery of the Terms of Reference. Only some appetite to tailor to customers requirements where required. Provides only some level of detail and quality of information to give only some level of confidence they will be able to deliver.
    2 (Unsatisfactory) Demonstrates a poor understanding of the issues relating to delivery of the Terms of Reference. Poor appetite to tailor to the customers requirements where required. Generally, an unsatisfactory and a low level of quality information and detail leading to a low level of confidence that they will deliver.
    0 (Fail) Complete failure to address all material requirements of the Terms of Reference. No tailoring of responses to meet customer requirements. No quality responses providing no confidence that they will deliver.

    Technical evaluation criteria

    The Evaluation Criteria and Weightings that will be applied to bids are detailed in the ‘Main Criteria’ table below. The Total Score for each Criteria will comprise of the score awarded (0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10) multiplied by the weighting allocated to each Criteria.

    Main criteria Weighting Score 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 Total score
    Team leader:
    Demonstrate the ability to meet all criteria outlined in the qualifications section, including individual experience and organisational track record of delivering.

    Team leader should be a highly experienced individual with 8+ years in related work.

    Provider will have experience of gathering evidence from multiple sources simultaneously and quality assuring data and show how this is intended to be undertaken.

    [20] 0-6 [0-6×20]
    Quality of personnel:
    Appropriateness of Project Team. Will be judged in relation to the skills required as set out in the ToRs.  This includes an appropriate mix of qualified staff with not less than five years of experience in relation to methodology and need. CVs and 3 references will be required.
    [40] 0-6 [0-6×40]
    Methodology:
    Evidence that suppliers understand and are responding to the ToRs. This could include a work-plan and analysis that clearly shows how they will deliver the assignment e.g., what processes they will use.

    Evidence that methodology will provide a high-quality outcome capturing, the key requirements in the TORs.

    [40] 0-6 [0-6×40]
    Overall total [100]   [600]

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: OPCW 107th Executive Council: UK national statement

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Statement by UK Permanent Representative to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Joanna Roper, at the 107th Executive Council.

    Mr Chair, Director General, Excellencies, Distinguished Delegates,

    I would like to express my thanks to you, His Excellency, Ambassador Parral for his continuing strong leadership of this Executive Council and reiterate our support for your chairing of this 107th Session. I would also like to thank the Director General, His Excellency, Mr Fernando Arias, for his comprehensive report detailing this organisation’s continuing determined efforts to rid the world of chemical weapons. The achievements are even more remarkable considering the growing challenges presented by a difficult international security environment.

    Mr Chair,

    The United Kingdom’s national statement will be posted online but I would like to take this opportunity to comment on the appalling situation in Ukraine and the UK’s response.    

    Russia used the lethal nerve agent, Novichok, on the streets of the UK in 2018, ultimately leading to the death of Dawn Sturgess. Russia used Novichok again to poison Alexei Navalny in 2020. And now we are witness to Russian breaches of the Chemical Weapons Convention on the frontlines in Ukraine. Russia is making systematic use of chemical weapons against Ukrainian forces, including multiple reports of the use of the choking agent chloropicrin, with complete contempt for its legal and moral obligations to uphold the CWC.

    The UK will hold all those who use these barbaric weapons to account. Today, my government has therefore announced sanctions on Russia’s Radiological, Chemical and Biological Defence Troops and their commander Igor Kirillov, and 2 of their subordinate laboratories, for their role in Russia’s use of chemical weapons in Ukraine.

    We call on Russia to immediately cease its use of these appalling weapons and to meet its obligations under the Chemical Weapons Convention.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy has sent a clear message to President Putin – and I quote – that “Russia’s cruel and inhumane tactics on the battlefield are abhorrent and I will use the full arsenal of powers at my disposal to combat Russia’s malign activity.”

    Alongside these sanctions, we remain committed to working through this Council and other international forums to reduce the growing threat to international security posed by Russia’s chemical weapon use. We reiterate our request to the Executive Council under Article IX paragraph 3 to assist in clarifying reports that Russian armed forces have repeatedly breached the Chemical Weapon Convention in Ukraine.

    The UK is committed to supporting Ukraine’s fight for freedom, liberty and victory in the face of these inhumane attacks. The UK has now committed £12.8 billion in military, humanitarian and economic support to Ukraine. As part of this package of support, we have recently announced a further voluntary contribution to the OPCW’s Assistance to Ukraine trust fund. The UK welcomes the recent OPCW technical assistance visit to Ukraine – delivering vital equipment and training to ensure Ukraine can protect its people.

    Mr Chair,

    The OPCW remains one of the foremost arms control bodies, fundamental to international security. Yet, the challenges it faces are growing. The UK is fully committed to working with other states and the Technical Secretariat to meet these challenges to achieve a world free of chemical weapons.

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Professor Earns Prestigious Award for Advancing Education in International Social Work

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Twenty years ago, when Rebecca Thomas joined the UConn School of Social Work, she didn’t consider herself someone who specialized in global human rights – let alone someone who’d become an expert in the subject matter.

    “I was just Rebecca, born and raised in another country, sensitive to issues of global concerns,” she says.

    Then Thomas met colleague Lynne Healey, now a professor emeritus from UConn, who became a mentor, friend, and colleague. Together, they coupled on many projects, including the literal writing of their widely recognized textbook, “International Social Work.”

    Thomas says her professional development as an international social worker helped shape her sense of self. And soon, “just Rebecca,” became chair of the Council on Social Work Education’s Global Commission, a current board member on the Katherine Kendall Institute of Council of Social Work Education, a Fulbright Scholar, and a representative of the International Association of the Schools of Social Work on the NGO Committee on Migration at the United Nations.

    Now, she’s a 2024 PIE Award winner from the Council on Social Work Education, a prestigious honor given annually to a trio of winners – individual, organization, and student – for their innovative work and dedication to international social work.

    The Partners in International Education awards precede the Hokenstad International Lecture at the 2024 CSWE Annual Program Meeting in late October.

    “I vacillate between feeling like I have a strong knowledge base and being humbled by the vast body of knowledge of colleagues,” says Thomas, a UConn professor and director of the Center for International Social Work Studies, which just celebrated its 30th anniversary. “I recently was with the Southeast Europe Academic Women’s Leadership Network, for instance, and these women were from all over the Balkans and talking about their global perspective on social work. The adage applies, ‘The more you know, the more you realize how much you don’t know.’”

    Thomas has just returned from her Fulbright in Bulgaria where she and graduate assistant Fizza Saghir completed 30 interviews with displaced persons, many from Ukraine, and 20 interviews with service providers as part of a study that’s similar to one she did in Armenia.

    She says she connected with Yerevan State University in Armenia years ago when UConn helped the school develop its Master of Social Work policy program. Now, Thomas directs a joint academic exchange between UConn and Yerevan.

    Despite the leadership opportunities and accolades she’s earned, working with students is perhaps one of the things she’s most proud of, she says.

    “I’m passionate about teaching. I get excited about the exchange of ideas,” Thomas says. “Helping students to see the interconnectedness of global issues and the local issues they are trying to address here in Connecticut is so important. Yesterday, I was talking to a doctoral student about a paper we’re writing together, and our discussion was so interesting because we each had different perspectives. Engaging in a dialogue, having off-the-cuff conversations has been meaningful to me.”

    She adds that students need to understand they don’t have to spend time overseas to do international global work. Change can happen right here, like when a former student, who was a refugee from Albania via Greece, was in kindergarten and the school saw her struggling because of the language barrier. Her elementary teacher got someone to translate, and her learning exploded.

    “As Americans, we see migrants in every sphere of our lives. They are in our classrooms. They are in our health systems. Our NESW code of ethics requires that we understand the perspectives of those who are living together here in community,” Thomas says. “We need to be sensitive to issues of immigration, like for my former student. These are not isolated situations.”

    Read more about Thomas’ work here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: ‘Hidden Gem’ at UConn Helps International Studies Scholars Find their Academic Home

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    A decade ago, Sercan Canbolat ’17 MA ’23 Ph.D. was a graduate student in his home country of Turkey. His focus was studying the political psychology of leaders.

    What makes them think?

    How do they make decisions?

    What influences them in their decision making?

    His particular focus was on political leaders in the Middle East, where he had grown up and completed his undergraduate degrees.

    But as a master’s student at Bilkent University in Turkey’s capital city of Ankara, he knew first-hand some of the challenges he would face as he tried to present his research to a broader, international audience.

    “I’m from Turkey,” Canbolat says, “and I know in the broader Middle East and North Africa regions, we don’t have a lot of opportunities to get our work published, to present our work to top scholars in the field, and to get good feedback – to learn and acquire the best research skills and presentation skills.”

    Sercan Canbolat ’17 MA ’23 Ph.D. at the ISA International Conference 2017 in Hong Kong. (Contributed photo)

    It was during his master’s studies that his advisor, Özgür Özdamar, first introduced him to the International Studies Association, or ISA – one of the oldest interdisciplinary organizations dedicated to understanding international, transnational, and global affairs.

    “I was writing my MA thesis with him,” Canbolat explains, “and he offered for me to write a paper that we could present at ISA. But I couldn’t get a visa. So, my advisor went to the conference instead, and he presented our paper.”

    The following year, though – in 2014 – Canbolat was able to travel to the ISA conference in Toronto, where he put himself in front of a global audience for the first time to present his research.

    “I got some feedback from the chair and from the audience, and it was great,” he says. “It helped me to build self-confidence, and actually, through ISA, I met many scholars based in the U.S., Canada, and Western Europe. Those connections helped me to apply for and receive a Fulbright scholarship to come to the U.S. for my Ph.D.”

    That Fulbright Ph.D. grant led Canbolat to UConn in 2014, where he started his doctoral studies in political science.

    And in 2015, the organization that helped Canbolat make those connections and first share his research on a global stage – the International Studies Association – also came to UConn.

    Best-Kept Secret

    Founded in 1959, the ISA has long served as a central hub for the exchange of ideas, for networking, and for programmatic initiatives among those involved in the study, teaching, and practice of international studies.

    Through its international and regional conferences and its academic journals, the organization works to promote rigorous discussion, research, and writing on a broad range of topics, including foreign policy, environmental studies, global health, diplomacy, human rights, peace studies, law, and religion.

    ISA has been headquartered at UConn since 2015. Under agreements with UConn’s Office of Global Affairs, it will remain in residence at UConn until at least 2030.

    Sarah Dorr, Ph.D., ISA director of professional development (Contributed photo)

    From 2015 to 2024, ISA was under the leadership of Mark Boyer, Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor Emeritus at UConn. As of July 1, 2024, Mike Bosia, professor of political science and international relations and director of gender and sexuality studies at Saint Michael’s College, took over the role of ISA’s executive director.

    “ISA is a hidden gem – one of the best kept secrets at UConn,” says Sarah Dorr, the ISA’s director of professional development. “We have over 7,000 members in 120 countries.”

    UConn and ISA are a good fit for each other, says Daniel Weiner, a professor of geography and UConn’s vice president for global affairs, because both the organization and the University share similar missions to foster a sense of global-mindedness and facilitate life-transformative educational and research experiences.

    “ISA is really a success story about the positive impact of international collaboration,” Weiner says. “One of our major goals in Global Affairs is to support interdisciplinary research and engagement on issues of worldwide importance and impact, so partnership with ISA here at UConn is really a natural pairing.”

    Evolving and Growing

    In a complex and ever-changing world, adapting to the needs of the time is important for any organization – ISA included.

    “Our organization is constantly evolving and growing,” says Dorr, “and we offer different levels of interaction to help people make connections and foster dialogue – something that we feel is particularly critical at this point in time in our increasingly polarized world.”

    The ISA publishes seven academic journals, co-sponsors an eighth, and partners with Oxford University Press to publish the International Studies Encyclopedia, the most comprehensive reference work of its kind for the fields of international studies and international relations.

    The organization has steadily grown its online and social media presence and, in response to the pandemic in 2020, launched a roster of unique virtual programs to broaden its reach to scholars who might not otherwise have the ability to take part in global opportunities.

    Not all students and academics have access to the same resources at their institution. ISA’s virtual initiative provides these programs to level the playing field and create community whilst doing so. &#8212 Sarah Dorr, ISA’s director of professional development

    “Not all students and academics have access to the same resources at their institution,” says Dorr, who curates virtual programming as part of her role at ISA. “ISA’s virtual initiative provides these programs to level the playing field and create community whilst doing so. Virtual programming allows people to interact with the association throughout the year, and it widens participation and increases accessibility to ISA’s pedagogical and research communities.”

    ISA’s virtual programming is available to all members of the UConn community, regardless of membership. To date in 2024, ISA has produced more than 30 programs, with additional virtual events scheduled for the remainder of the calendar year on topics including banal nationalism, Fulbright scholar opportunities, and the impending results of the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election.

    But what ISA has historically been known for are its national and regional conferences – gatherings where scholars from all walks of life and levels of experience come together to share their research, build new networks, and contribute to scholarship on a global level.

    An Academic Home

    Canbolat’s first ISA conference was in Toronto, but in the years since, ISA has taken him to San Francisco, Nashville, Atlanta, and even Hong Kong.

    “It was a great experience; my first time in that part of the world,” he recalls about the 2017 Hong Kong conference. “It was amazing. I really enjoyed it.”

    ISA supported Canbolat’s travel to its conferences through a grant program that assists junior scholars, senior graduate students, and scholars from low-income countries in attending conferences that would otherwise be out of reach.

    “Grad students don’t have a great budget to go to conferences, and it’s expensive,” Canbolat says. “Travel, accommodations – ISA is really great at providing financial help, especially to students and junior scholars. I benefitted a lot from my ISA travel grants. It really helped make it happen, to go and attend the conferences.”

    While on those trips, Canbolat says he had opportunities to meet eminent scholars in his field, network and build relationships with them, attend panel discussions, and meet and workshop with both journal editors and book publishers.

    UConn President Radenka Maric delivers remarks at the ISA International Conference 2024 at the University of Rijeka in Croatia. (Photo Courtesy of UNIRI)

    “Even if you don’t present, it’s still a great experience to go to panels, listen to state-of-the-art research being presented by both prominent scholars and rising scholars,” he says. “I’ve really enjoyed meeting top scholars, prominent scholars, in a personal setting – not in a panel or in a workshop, but at a reception, and to really make personal connections. Tell them about my family. Tell them about my background. Tell them about my plans. And they were very helpful, listening and giving great feedback.

    “I think that stands out, meeting those big names. We always read their books, their articles, but it’s something else to meet them, especially in a personal setting, a relaxed environment. Having a coffee with them. That stands out,” he says.

    ISA holds a series of regional conferences throughout each year as well as an annual convention, which will be held in Chicago in 2025.

    “One of the major benefits of attending ISA regional conferences is they become a source of intellectual community,” says Dorr. “But ISA’s annual convention is where people go to find their ‘academic home.’”

    In June 2024, the ISA built on its long-standing collaboration with the Central and Eastern European International Studies Association, or CEEISA, to host a joint international conference at the University of Rijeka in Croatia.

    Focused on “Knowing the Global-Local: Imagining Pasts, Debating Futures,” the conference hosted 800 participants – including Weiner and UConn President Radenka Maric – from 65 countries to discuss global and local political science and international relations.

    The conference marked the largest gathering of experts in international relations in Croatia to date.

    Full Circle

    Canbolat wasn’t able to travel to Croatia in June, but earlier this year, he attended an ISA conference in San Francisco – to accept the ISA Foreign Policy Analysis Section Best Book Award for 2024.

    In 2023, Canbolat and his co-author, Özdamar, published their book, Leaders in the Middle East and North Africa: How Ideology Shapes Foreign Policy, through Cambridge University Press in 2023.

    The book is based on the initial research that Canbolat presented at his very first ISA conference in Toronto in 2014.

    Co-authors Sercan Canbolat ’17 MA ’23 Ph.D. (center) and Özgür Özdamar, professor of international relations at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey, (right) — with Danielle Lupton, associate professor of political science at Colgate University (left) — accept the 2024 ISA Best Book in Foreign Policy Analysis Award at the ISA 2024 Annual Convention in San Francisco. (Contributed photo)

    “We published it as a journal article first,” he says. “After I presented at ISA, I got feedback. We published it in a good journal. It was well-received, and we got great feedback. And then, we discussed and decided to turn it into a book, into a larger project, and we worked on it for like five, six years. It was a blast, because it kept giving.”

    Also in 2023, Canbolat completed his Ph.D. at UConn. He’s now serving as the inaugural director of Abrahamic Programs at UConn Global Affairs, and he’s teaching as a postdoctoral lecturer in the Department of Political Science.

    He says he tells all his students about ISA – how it’s headquartered at UConn and how they can access the programs and opportunities ISA has to offer.

    And he tells other faculty at UConn as well.

    “I was surprised that some faculty don’t know that ISA is here at UConn,” Canbolat says. “I strongly suggest for anyone to try and at least give ISA a shot. Attend one year, and actually, they will be hooked.”

    To learn more about or connect with the International Studies Association, headquartered at UConn Storrs, visit isanet.org. To stay up-to-date on the latest ISA virtual programs, sign up for ISA Connected at isanet.org/Programs/Virtual-Programs/ISA-Connected.

    For more information about global learning, research, and entrepreneurship opportunities available through UConn’s Office of Global Affairs, visit global.uconn.edu.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, August 2024

    Source: US Bureau of Economic Analysis

    The U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis announced today that the goods and services deficit was $70.4 billion in August, down $8.5 billion from $78.9 billion in July, revised.

    U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services Deficit
    Deficit: $70.4 Billion  –10.8%°
    Exports: $271.8 Billion  +2.0%°
    Imports: $342.2 Billion  –0.9%°

    Next release: Tuesday, November 5, 2024

    (°) Statistical significance is not applicable or not measurable. Data adjusted for seasonality but not price changes

    Source: U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis; U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, October 8, 2024

    Exports, Imports, and Balance (exhibit 1)

    August exports were $271.8 billion, $5.3 billion more than July exports. August imports were $342.2 billion, $3.2 billion less than July imports.

    The August decrease in the goods and services deficit reflected a decrease in the goods deficit of $8.4 billion to $94.9 billion and an increase in the services surplus of $0.1 billion to $24.4 billion.

    Year-to-date, the goods and services deficit increased $47.1 billion, or 8.9 percent, from the same period in 2023. Exports increased $79.0 billion or 3.9 percent. Imports increased $126.1 billion or 4.9 percent.

    Three-Month Moving Averages (exhibit 2)

    The average goods and services deficit decreased $1.6 billion to $74.1 billion for the three months ending in August.

    • Average exports increased $3.7 billion to $267.8 billion in August.
    • Average imports increased $2.0 billion to $342.0 billion in August.

    Year-over-year, the average goods and services deficit increased $11.1 billion from the three months ending in August 2023.

    • Average exports increased $13.3 billion from August 2023.
    • Average imports increased $24.4 billion from August 2023.

    Exports (exhibits 3, 6, and 7)

    Exports of goods increased $4.4 billion to $179.4 billion in August.

      Exports of goods on a Census basis increased $4.9 billion.

    • Capital goods increased $1.7 billion.
      • Telecommunications equipment increased $0.5 billion.
      • Civilian aircraft increased $0.4 billion.
      • Computer accessories increased $0.4 billion.
      • Other industrial machinery increased $0.4 billion.
      • Semiconductors decreased $0.8 billion.
    • Consumer goods increased $1.0 billion.
      • Pharmaceutical preparations increased $1.0 billion.
    • Industrial supplies and materials increased $0.9 billion.
      • Nonmonetary gold increased $1.5 billion.
      • Crude oil decreased $1.1 billion.
    • Automotive vehicles, parts, and engines increased $0.8 billion.
      • Passenger cars increased $0.6 billion.

      Net balance of payments adjustments decreased $0.5 billion.

    Exports of services increased $0.9 billion to $92.3 billion in August.

    • Travel increased $0.5 billion
    • Government goods and services increased $0.2 billion.
    • Transport decreased $0.2 billion.

    Imports (exhibits 4, 6, and 8)

    Imports of goods decreased $3.9 billion to $274.3 billion in August.

      Imports of goods on a Census basis decreased $3.8 billion.

    • Industrial supplies and materials decreased $3.9 billion.
      • Nonmonetary gold decreased $1.2 billion.
      • Finished metal shapes decreased $1.0 billion.
      • Crude oil decreased $1.0 billion.
    • Automotive vehicles, parts, and engines decreased $1.3 billion.
      • Passenger cars decreased $1.1 billion.

      Net balance of payments adjustments decreased $0.2 billion.

    Imports of services increased $0.7 billion to $67.9 billion in August.

    • Travel increased $0.4 billion.
    • Charges for the use of intellectual property increased $0.4 billion.
    • Transport decreased $0.3 billion.

    Real Goods in 2017 Dollars – Census Basis (exhibit 11)

    The real goods deficit decreased $8.6 billion, or 8.9 percent, to $88.6 billion in August, compared to an 8.5 percent decrease in the nominal deficit.

    • Real exports of goods increased $5.5 billion, or 3.8 percent, to $150.1 billion, compared to a 2.9 percent increase in nominal exports.
    • Real imports of goods decreased $3.2 billion, or 1.3 percent, to $238.7 billion, compared to a 1.4 percent decrease in nominal imports.

    Revisions

    Revisions to July exports

    • Exports of goods were revised down less than $0.1 billion.
    • Exports of services were revised down $0.1 billion.

    Revisions to July imports

    • Imports of goods were revised up $0.1 billion.
    • Imports of services were revised down $0.1 billion.

    Goods by Selected Countries and Areas: Monthly – Census Basis (exhibit 19)

    The August figures show surpluses, in billions of dollars, with Netherlands ($5.5), South and Central America ($4.0), Australia ($1.9), Hong Kong ($1.6), Brazil ($0.8), Singapore ($0.5), and United Kingdom ($0.3). Deficits were recorded, in billions of dollars, with China ($24.7), European Union ($19.1), Mexico ($14.3), Vietnam ($9.8), Ireland ($8.0), Taiwan ($7.3), Germany ($6.6), Japan ($4.9), South Korea ($4.9), Canada ($3.9), Italy ($2.9), India ($2.7), Switzerland ($2.5), France ($1.7), Malaysia ($1.1), Israel ($1.0), Belgium ($0.6), and Saudi Arabia ($0.1).

    • The deficit with Canada decreased $3.8 billion to $3.9 billion in August. Exports increased $1.1 billion to $28.5 billion and imports decreased $2.7 billion to $32.3 billion.
    • The deficit with China decreased $2.6 billion to $24.7 billion in August. Exports increased $1.1 billion to $12.6 billion and imports decreased $1.5 billion to $37.3 billion.
    • The balance with Belgium shifted from a surplus of $1.0 billion in July to a deficit of $0.6 billion in August. Exports decreased $0.1 billion to $2.8 billion and imports increased $1.5 billion to $3.4 billion.

    All statistics referenced are seasonally adjusted; statistics are on a balance of payments basis unless otherwise specified. Additional statistics, including not seasonally adjusted statistics and details for goods on a Census basis, are available in exhibits 1-20b of this release. For information on data sources, definitions, and revision procedures, see the explanatory notes in this release. The full release can be found at http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/Press-Release/current_press_release/index.html or http://www.bea.gov/data/intl-trade-investment/international-trade-goods-and-services. The full schedule is available in the Census Bureau’s Economic Briefing Room at www.census.gov/economic-indicators/ or on BEA’s website at http://www.bea.gov/news/schedule.

    Next release: November 5, 2024, at 8:30 a.m. EST
    U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, September 2024

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Need for Vehicle Affordability Becoming More Pronounced, According to New CarGurus Report

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Analysis of third quarter trends also highlights hybrid demand overtaking electric vehicles, the ongoing balance between new car inventory and sales, and more

    BOSTON, Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — CarGurus, Inc. (Nasdaq: CARG), the No. 1 visited digital auto platform for shopping, buying, and selling new and used vehicles1, today released its Quarterly Review for Q3 2024, identifying areas of opportunity as the consumer need for affordability becomes more pronounced.

    “As we near the end of 2024, it’s clear that consumers are speaking loudly with their wallets. After years of post-pandemic revenge spending, consumers are becoming more prudent as they face economic uncertainty, still-high interest rates, and vehicle prices that remain elevated,” said Kevin Roberts, Director of Economic and Market Intelligence at CarGurus. “As a result, we’re seeing concentrated demand for more affordable cars, with sales of certain price segments—$20,000 to $30,000 for new and $15,000 to $20,000 for used—accounting for the greatest share of annual sales growth, 43% and 59% respectively.”

    According to CarGurus data, the shift is especially pronounced in the used market, with vehicles $30,000 and under driving year-over-year sales growth, while cars over $30,000 declined. Further reflecting this trend, used cars over $35,000 are remaining on dealer lots longer compared to more affordable options.

    Additional highlights from the report include:

    • Hybrids are having the year many expected for electric vehicles (EVs): There were big expectations for EV demand in 2024, but hybrids have taken the spotlight with more affordable pricing and fewer concerns around range and charging. Year-to-date, new hybrids accounted for nearly 11% of total retail sales, while EVs were 4% (excluding direct-to-consumer sales volumes). New hybrid retail sales volumes are up nearly 44% year-over-year.
    • New car inventory working to find equilibrium with demand: As automakers try to balance new inventory with demand, a larger share of aging new cars remain on dealer lots. At the end of September, about 58,000 new listings nationwide were two years or older (a nearly 58% increase compared to pre-Covid averages). With 2025 models rolling onto lots, the surplus of these new, but slightly older, models could present an opportunity for price-conscious shoppers.
    • The upcoming election could impact new and used sales demand: In analyzing vehicle sales from 2002 onward—and comparing the seasonality of non-presidential election years to presidential election years—presidential election years tend to see a decline in sales demand in August, October, and November before rebounding at year-end.
    • Immediate impact of interest rate cuts might be muted: While interest rate reductions are a welcome update, the September cuts will do little to improve near-term affordability concerns. Because auto rates tend to follow two- and five-year treasury rates as opposed to the short-term Federal Funds Rate, consumers will not immediately see significant declines. Additionally, with auto loan delinquencies rising, financial institutions may be more hesitant to lend credit or quickly lower rates.

    To read about these trends and more, the complete Quarterly Review for Q3 2024 is available here.

    About CarGurus, Inc.

    CarGurus (Nasdaq: CARG) is a multinational, online automotive platform for buying and selling vehicles that is building upon its industry-leading listings marketplace with both digital retail solutions and the CarOffer online wholesale platform. The CarGurus platform gives consumers the confidence to purchase and/or sell a vehicle either online or in-person, and it gives dealerships the power to accurately price, effectively market, instantly acquire and quickly sell vehicles, all with a nationwide reach. The company uses proprietary technology, search algorithms and data analytics to bring trust, transparency, and competitive pricing to the automotive shopping experience. CarGurus is the most visited automotive shopping site in the U.S.1

    CarGurus also operates online marketplaces under the CarGurus brand in Canada and the United Kingdom. In the United States and the United Kingdom, CarGurus also operates the Autolist and PistonHeads online marketplaces, respectively, as independent brands.

    To learn more about CarGurus, visit http://www.cargurus.com, and for more information about CarOffer, visit http://www.caroffer.com.

    CarGurus® is a registered trademark of CarGurus, Inc., and CarOffer® is a registered trademark of CarOffer, LLC. All other product names, trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

    1Similarweb: Traffic Insights (Cars.com, Autotrader.com, TrueCar.com), Q2 2024, U.S.

    Media Contact:
    Maggie Meluzio
    Director, Public Relations & External Communications
    pr@cargurus.com

    Investor Contact:
    Kirndeep Singh
    Vice President, Investor Relations
    investors@cargurus.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: iLearningEngines Aims to Serve European Insurtech Market with Enterprise AI Platform and Knowledge Cloud

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BETHESDA, Md., Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — iLearningEngines, Inc. (Nasdaq: AILE) (“iLearningEngines” or “the Company”), a leader in AI-powered learning and work automation, today announced the launch of its Insurtech Enterprise AI Knowledge Cloud and hyper apps aiming to serve the European Insurtech industry. iLearningEngines aims to help private insurers and their industry associations adopt and scale their AI projects, particularly where telematics application development can be accelerated and hyper-automated. This will be achieved by leveraging Generative AI partners such as Genlab Venture Studio, a founding member of CoSAI (Coalition for Safe AI), and global cloud service providers, global systems integrators, assurance and audit partners.

    The decision to serve the European Insurtech market builds on the capabilities of the ILE’s Telematics Hyper-App, a cloud marketplace application that is now a cornerstone of the ILE Hyper-App portfolio. The company aims to introduce ILE’s Knowledge Cloud service to insurers across Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands, and the UK – markets known for their mature digital ecosystems.

    Harish Chidambaran, CEO of iLearningEngines, commented: “The European Insurtech industry can now leverage iLearningEngines’ expertise in hyper-automation, AIOps, and AI model development to drive innovation and operational efficiency. Our AI solutions, which include telematics for industrial fleets and claims automation, can help insurers fast-track their digital transformation and deliver enhanced value to their customers.”

    Balakrishnan Arackal, President of iLearningEngines, added: “We are excited to formally introduce the iLearningEngines offering to Europe. Our strong digital transformation team, led by experts from leading tech companies, combined with our AI platform and marketplace partnerships, positions us uniquely to accelerate the hyper-automation journey of Europe’s top insurers.”

    About iLearningEngines

    iLearningEngines (Nasdaq: AILE) is a leading Applied AI platform for learning and work automation. iLearningEngines enables Enterprises to rapidly productize and deploy a wide range of AI applications and use cases (AI Engines) at scale. 

    iLearningEngines is powered by proprietary vertical specific AI models and data with a flexible No Code AI canvas to drive rapid out-of-the-box deployment while offering low latency and high levels of data security and compliance. Serving over 1,000 enterprise end customers, iLearningEngines is deployed globally into some of the most demanding vertical markets including Healthcare, Education, Insurance, Retail, Energy, Manufacturing and Public Sector to achieve mission critical outcomes.

    For more information about iLearningEngines, please visit: http://www.ilearningengines.com.

    About GenLab Venture Studio

    GenLab Studio is a venture studio focused on business models that leverage the impact, application, and growth of generative AI. By focusing on solid design principles and engaging a diverse community, GenLab Studio aims to create groundbreaking products that help build a more robust AI ecosystem. GenLab is also a founding sponsor of CoSAI.

    For more information about GenLab Studio, please visit: https://genlab.studio/.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Certain statements included in this press release that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements for purposes of the safe harbor provisions under the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 with respect to the Business Combination. Forward looking statements generally are accompanied by words such as “believe,” “may,” “will, “estimate,” “continue,” “anticipate,” “intend”, “expect”, “should”, “would”, “plan”, “predict”, “potential”, “seem”, “seek”, “future”, “outlook”, the negative forms of these words and similar expressions that predict or indicate future events or trends or that are not statements of historical matters. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding: the ability of iLearningEngines to help private insurers and their industry associations adopt and scale their AI projects and hyper-automate and scale their AI DevSecOps best practices; the ability of iLearningEngines’ and GenLab Ventures’ alliance to help to scale model development, AIOps, governance, risk management, and compliance; the potential benefits that iLearningEngines’ digital transformation expertise can provide to private European insurers and their industry association partners, including their ability to accelerate their most critical transformation initiatives, particularly in telematics for global industrial fleets, asset management and claims automation; iLearningEngines’ ability to help the European Insurtech industry achieve operational excellence across the region; and iLearningEngines’ ability to address market opportunities across artificial intelligence. These statements are based on various assumptions, whether or not identified in this press release, and on the current expectations of the iLearningEngines’ management and are not predictions of actual performance. These forward-looking statements are provided for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to serve as, and must not be relied on by an investor as, a guarantee, an assurance, a prediction, or a definitive statement of fact or probability. Actual events and circumstances are difficult or impossible to predict and will differ from assumptions this press release relies on. Many actual events and circumstances are beyond the control of iLearningEngines. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including changes in domestic and foreign business, market, financial, political, and legal conditions; the outcome and findings of the ongoing special committee investigation of allegations raised by a recent short-seller report; iLearningEngines’ failure to realize the anticipated benefits of its recently completed business combination with Arrowroot Acquisition Corp.; risks related to the rollout of iLearningEngines’ business and the timing of expected business milestones; iLearningEngines’ dependence on a limited number of customers and partners; iLearningEngines’ ability to obtain sufficient financing to pay its expenses incurred in connection with the closing of the business combination; the ability of iLearningEngines to issue equity or equity-linked securities or obtain debt financing in the future; risks related to iLearningEngines’ need for substantial additional financing to implement its operating plans, which financing it may be unable to obtain, or unable to obtain on acceptable terms; iLearningEngines’ ability to maintain the listing of its securities on Nasdaq or another national securities exchange; the risk that the business combination disrupts current plans and operations of iLearningEngines; the effects of competition on iLearningEngines’ future business and the ability of iLearningEngines to grow and manage growth profitably, maintain relationships with customers and suppliers and retain its management and key employees; risks related to political and macroeconomic uncertainty; the outcome of any legal proceedings that may be instituted against iLearningEngines or any of their respective directors or officers, including litigation related to the business combination; the impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic on any of the foregoing risks; and those risks and uncertainties identified in the “Risk Factors” sections of the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2024, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on August 13, 2024, and its other subsequent filings with the SEC. If any of these risks materialize or our assumptions prove incorrect, actual results could differ materially from the results implied by these forward-looking statements. There may be additional risks that iLearningEngines does not presently know, or that iLearningEngines does not currently believe are immaterial, that could also cause actual results to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements. In addition, forward-looking statements reflect iLearningEngines’ expectations, plans, or forecasts of future events and views as of the date of this communication. iLearningEngines anticipates that subsequent events and developments will cause iLearningEngines’ assessments to change. However, while iLearningEngines may elect to update these forward-looking statements at some point in the future, iLearningEngines specifically disclaims any obligation to do so. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing iLearningEngines’ assessments as of any date subsequent to the date of this communication. Accordingly, undue reliance should not be placed upon the forward-looking statements.

    For iLearningEngines Investors:
    iLearningEngines, investors@ilearningengines.com
    Kevin Hunt, iLearningEnginesIR@icrinc.com

    For iLearningEngines PR:
    Dan Brennan, ICR Inc., iLearningPR@icrinc.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The Generator hub expands to Ancoats, boosting support for local businesses

    Source: City of Manchester

    The Generator enterprise hub has opened a site at Royal Mills in Ancoats. It is the second to launch as part of a multi-site project to support early-stage business across Greater Manchester.

    The first site opened in St Peter’s Square, adjacent to Manchester Central Library, earlier this year and has since benefited over 300 pre-startups, new businesses, freelancers and hybrid/remote workers.

    This new site offers a modern and flexible workspace with a wide range of office amenities to meet the needs of Manchester’s growing creative community and includes an in-house podcasting studio, mini photo studio and editing suite, which members can use for free to further their activities.

    Members can meet new people through workshops and networking events as well as receiving on-site support from an Enterprise Officer.

    Additionally, they can benefit from expert IP advice, start-up and new business advice, and access to £5million worth of business resources available through the Business and IP Centre of Greater Manchester and the Build a Business programme.

    Councillor Bev Craig, Leader of Manchester City Council said:

    “The Generator hubs provide a unique opportunity for independent small businesses and freelancers to access to a range of support to help grow their businesses as well as meeting like-minded people in a creative environment. This second Generator hub in Ancoats is a welcome addition to the original one in the city centre.”

    Below is what some businesses, who have already benefited from the Generator services, have said about their experience:

     

    Wafa Elamin – Founder of Ladr said:

    “Finding the Generator has been a godsend. Before, I was working alone at home but now I love my morning walks into the city to start my day at the Generator. It is convenient, comfortable and quiet and the staff are always friendly!”

    Andrea Whyne and Duré Shahawar, Co-founder of Consult Integrated Solutions said:

    “We both connected at a Generator networking event. Through shared ideas and experiences, we immediately felt a common purpose to bring about sustainable change, and our partnership has flourished ever since. Our experience at the Generator workspace has been invaluable. The creative, collaborative environment has provided the ideal setting to work with like-minded founders. The staff at Generator have been consistently supportive, offering guidance and encouragement. This support network has significantly boosted our journey, helping us feel supported as we take the next steps in growing our business.”

     

    Amy Thomson – Founder of the Travel Podcast Agency said:

    “Using the conference meeting space at Royal Mills Ancoats was brilliant! I held a concept development session there with my first big contract client. This meant I was able to offer a professional workspace in front of my client, I used the big TV screen to present podcast concepts to them and by the end of the day we even raised the standing desk so we could get some much needed movement into the meeting too. As always, the Generator team were super helpful and organised, which made the day totally stress-free”

    The Generator project has received £565,879 from the UK government through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: A nostalgic trip down memory lane at recent Tea Dance!

    Source: Northern Ireland City of Armagh

    Positive Aging Afternoon Tea Dance Armagh City Hotel Armagh 3 October 2024 CREDIT: LiamMcArdle.com

    As part of the Positive Ageing Month celebrations, a Tea Dance was recently held at Armagh City Hotel  – and over 70 residents came along to dance the afternoon away!

    And when a little breather was needed, comfy chairs, tea and treats were on hand!

    A number of information stands from a variety of agencies were also on site giving out advice and information.

    Tea Dances are an invaluable form of exercise and socialisation, with so many health benefits both physically and mentally.

    A wonderful time was had by all who came along – with plenty of smiles on faces by the end of the day.

    This event was supported by Triangle Housing, Ark Housing and the Southern Health and Social Care Trust.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Our ambition to rebuild general practice

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 2

    The Health and Social Care Secretary spoke at the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) annual conference 2024, in Liverpool.

    Political content has been removed.

    I’d like to begin by saying a public thank you to you, Kamila, and, by extension, to your college. In opposition, we engaged in good-natured but robust debate on the things we disagreed on and, more often than not, found ourselves in violent agreement on the state of general practice today and our responsibility to rebuild general practice for a brighter tomorrow.

    That relationship, based on mutual respect and a spirit of partnership, means I come here today feeling that I am not only among friends, but among teammates – a theme I’ll build upon in my speech this morning.

    In that same spirit, can I also say a special thank you to Sunaina, Paula, Rumshia and Andy for those outstanding presentations.

    You are proof that, while the NHS may be in the midst of the worst crisis in its history, the biggest asset we have are the people who work in it. More than that, you provide hope to a country that is desperately looking for it, because you are showing us not only is reform possible, but it is already happening, and you are showing us what a reformed NHS could look like.

    I’m delighted to be the first Secretary of State personally addressing this conference in 7 years. I can’t imagine what the others were so worried about.

    I imagine some of you were quite happy to not have to hear from my 7 predecessors who held the job in that time. The good news is I’m here this year, the bad news is, whether you cheer or boo, I’ll be back for more next year. For 2 reasons:

    First, I always welcome challenge, and as you might have gathered by now, I love a good argument.

    More seriously, I recognise that the health service is in a deep hole, and it’s only by working together that we’ll get out of it.

    It’s my job to mobilise nearly 2 million people who work across the NHS to be the team that takes the NHS from the worst crisis in its history, gets it back on its feet, and makes it fit for the future.

    I can’t do it on my own. We can only do it as a team.

    The team spirit we need to build together starts with honesty.

    The NHS is broken. That’s what 2 in every 3 patients believe. I suspect a poll of NHS staff would find the same sort of result. I’m yet to speak to a GP who tells me – on many of the visits I’ve done in the last few years – everything going really well, my workload is entirely manageable, this is just what I signed up for.

    And I want to be clear about something else too: the NHS is broken, but GPs didn’t break it.

    [Political content has been removed]

    And that’s not just my view – that’s effectively the conclusion of the Darzi investigation.

    I know he’s a surgeon. Sorry about that.

    But I think that, if you’ve read his report, the analysis is so stark and so clear that you might even forgive him for polyclinics.

    Lord Darzi found, “GPs are expected to manage increasingly complex care, but do not have the resources, infrastructure and authority that this requires.”

    Hospital resources have shot up, while primary care has been neglected. There are 1,500 fewer fully qualified GPs in the NHS today than 7 years ago.

    While hospital productivity has fallen, the reverse is true in general practice. Despite there being fewer of you, you’re delivering more appointments than ever before – squeezing the time you spend with each patient. And as RCGP’s research this week revealed, it’s the poorest areas hit the hardest.

    Cuts to capital investment mean that one in every 5 of you are working in buildings older than the NHS itself.

    [Political content has been removed]

    In Lord Darzi’s words, “GPs were to all intents and purposes set up to fail.”

    We’re left with a status quo that isn’t working for anyone. Not for patients, 2 in 3 of whom aren’t satisfied with the service they receive – a record low.

    Nor does the status quo work for staff – you are working harder than ever before, pushing you to burn out and in too many cases pack it in.

    Patients are frustrated they can’t see you. You’re frustrated you can’t meet their demands. It’s not sustainable.

    The NHS is broken, but not beaten, and I think what unites all of us – staff, patients and, crucially, the evidence – is the shared conviction that continuity of care, what most people would call the ‘family doctor relationship’ really matters. It’s what drives patient satisfaction, your job satisfaction and better outcomes for patients.

    It will be at the heart of this government’s plan to reimagine the NHS as much as a neighbourhood health service as a national health service.

    We’ll shortly be embarking on a wide-ranging and deep engagement exercise to build our 10-year plan.

    That 10-year plan for the NHS will deliver 3 big shifts in the focus of healthcare:

    • from hospital to community
    • analogue to digital
    • sickness to prevention

    And general practice is fundamental to each one.

    Just look at what the GPs who introduced me today are already doing.

    Paula is using basic technology to meet demand for same-day appointments and giving patients a digital front door, leading the way on ending the 8am scramble.

    Advances in big data are going to transform the NHS’s ability to end the cruel postcode lottery of health inequality. Rumshia is already showing us how – by taking screening, checks and care directly to the communities most in need – intervening early and preventing ill health from worsening, what we can already do.

    And as Andy and Sunaina have shown, if we bring GPs together with colleagues from mental health services, community pharmacy and social care, all working in lockstep as one team, more patients can be treated in the comfort of their own home – where they want to be. That’s the neighbourhood health service we want to build. That’s the future of the NHS.

    And I think we’ve seen in the last 3 months we’ve started as we mean to go on.

    [Political content has been removed]

    GPs were left qualifying into unemployment this summer. While patients can’t get a GP appointment, GPs couldn’t get a job.

    You asked us to act, so we did – in what might be the first example in history of someone signing a petition that actually led to action.

    I received RCGP’s petition, we cut red tape, found the funding and we’re recruiting an extra 1,000 GPs this year, our first step to fixing the front door of the NHS.

    In my first week as Health and Social Care Secretary, I pledged to increase the proportion of NHS resources going to primary care. And in our first month, the government made a down payment on that pledge, providing practices with their biggest funding increase in years.

    I’ve never pretended that one measure on GP recruitment or indeed the funding that was announced was a panacea. But given the £22 billion blackhole we inherited, and the painful cuts we’ve had to make and are having to make elsewhere, be in no doubt how hard we had to fight to deliver that extra funding. It was a serious statement of intent. A proof point. An early decision to demonstrate that we’re serious about rebuilding general practice.

    Not everything is about more money. It’s also about less waste.

    When I spend time shadowing GPs, one of the things they are dying to show me is the sheer amount of paperwork you are required to fill in to refer a patient.

    I was genuinely stunned to hear about one practice that has to complete more than 150 different forms to refer patients into secondary care services.

    Practices spend as much as 20% of their time on admin and work created by poor communications with secondary care.

    This is intolerable. That time should be spent with patients.

    That’s why today I can announce that Amanda Pritchard and I will launch a red tape challenge to bulldoze bureaucracy so GPs are freed up to deliver more appointments.

    The challenge will be led by Claire Fuller and Stella Vig, primary and secondary care leaders who have their bulldozers at the ready. Tell them what’s working well, but more importantly what needs to change. We will listen, act and solve this problem together.

    Amanda and I will receive the conclusion of this work in the new year. And NHS England will hold ICBs and trusts to account if they fail to act.

    The other frustration I hear from staff and patients alike are the pointless appointments you’re forced to hold and patients are forced to attend. You didn’t go through 5 years of medical school plus 5 years of training to tick boxes. So where there are appointments that can be cut out, with patients seen by specialists faster and GPs’ time freed up to do what only GPs can do, we will act.

    Starting in November, 111 online, which is available through the NHS app, will pilot directly referring women with a worrying lump to a breast clinic.

    That means faster diagnosis for cancer patients.

    And more GP appointments freed up.

    Better for patients and better for GPs.

    I suspect there are other cases that come across your desks every week, where a patient has been passed to you by someone else in the NHS to refer them on to someone else in the NHS. It is a waste of everyone’s time, including yours, and where you give us examples of patient pathways that can be simplified through appropriate patient self-referral or direct referral by other NHS services to save your time, we will act.

    It’s not just that I value your time, I respect your profession and your expertise.

    General practice is a specialism.

    That’s why I am committed to the creation of a single register of GPs and specialist doctors and this government will legislate to give the GMC the power to do it.

    It’s symbolic, but it’s also meaningful.

    It reflects the partnership I want to build with this profession.

    What I need from you in return, is goodwill and the same team spirit.

    When the BMA’s GPC returned their ballot result on collective action, I wasn’t remotely surprised.

    I know that after years of rising pressures, declining resources and a worsening service for patients, you feel it is your duty to sound the alarm.

    And trust me, you weren’t the only ones who wanted to punish the previous government.

    [Political content has been removed]

    Capping appointments now will only punish patients and make the road to recovery steeper. Be in no doubt – it is shutting the door on patients.

    Their care will suffer, receptionists will bear the brunt of their frustration, and the rest of the NHS will be left to pick up the pieces.

    Worse still, our collective job will be made harder. Collective action really means collective failure.

    Your message has been received. Not from this one vote, but from all the time I’ve spent in general practice in the past 3 years, literally looking over GPs’ shoulders, seeing what you deal with and the state of the crisis for myself.

    There’s a reason that, back in July, I rejected the list of hospitals suggested to me for my first visit as Secretary of State, and instead went to Dr Ellie Cannon’s Abbey Medical Centre in North London.

    I wanted to send a message that I understand how bad things are, and I am determined to fix them. But I can’t do that alone. We can only do this together.

    So I ask GPs to stand down collective action and instead work with a new government that is serious about working with you, to rebuild our NHS together.

    There are some tricky issues we’ll need to navigate together.

    Take data.

    It’s the future of the NHS.

    Advances in genomics and data mean the NHS will be able to do things never before possible.

    From the moment a child is born, we will know their risk of disease, giving you the tools you need to keep them healthy.

    Cancer could be detected from its earliest signs, saving countless lives.

    And the NHS will be able to treat patients with personalised medicine – far more effective, with fewer side effects. 

    That’s the prize waiting for us.

    But beyond the day-to-day challenge of whether your machines reliably boot up and the number of passwords you have to enter across a range of applications, we don’t even share patients’ records across primary and secondary care.

    I know there are issues we need to work through together around information governance, risk and liabilities. There’s also, let’s be honest, some producer interest in play.

    But here’s the consequence of inaction.

    Keir and I met a family at Alder Hey earlier this year. Their baby had heart surgery to save his life. When they’d taken the baby home and visited their GP, they weren’t just surprised to find their GP didn’t have sight of the hospital records, they were frightened. Imagine how those parents felt: a tiny life in their hands in front of a medical professional who had only a partial sight on their experience. Imagine how the GP felt, having to ask basic questions about fundamental aspects of that baby’s medical history.

    So we need to work together to create a single patient record, owned by the patient, shared across the system so that every part of the NHS has a full picture of the patient.

    This applies as much to research as to care. The two go hand in hand.

    World-leading studies like the UK Biobank, Genomics England and Our Future Health are building up incredibly detailed profiles of our nation’s health.

    Patients have given their consent for their data to be shared with these studies.

    But we still see, far too often, that this data is not shared according to patients’ wishes.

    That’s why I am directing NHS England to take away this burden from you. Just like they did during the pandemic, if a patient explicitly consents to sharing their data with a study, NHS England will take responsibly for making this happen. In return, we will demand the highest standards of data security.

    My concern is that this isn’t just an information governance issue, it’s a culture issue that, unless addressed, will not only exacerbate the shortcomings of the system today, but also squander the potential of tomorrow.

    A world in which genomics, AI and machine learning will combine to change our entire model of care – not simply to drive earlier diagnosis and treatment, but to predict and prevent illness in the first place – is a world that we’ve got to embrace.

    The UK could lead the world in medical research.

    The NHS, created in 1948, a single payer system, is ideally placed to harness the benefits of the revolution in science and technology in a way that Attlee and Bevan could never have imagined 76 years ago.

    This isn’t just about the system, the model, but also the ethos. Why do we pay our taxes into an NHS that is free at the point of use? Of course it is because we all derive a personal benefit, but it is also because we are paying in for the common good. In this century, our data will be as valuable as our taxes: we contribute our data in the knowledge that it will lead to more personalised medicine, but also because it will contribute to better care for everyone.

    It is that collectivist ethos that created the NHS in 1948 to see us through the 20th century, that will underpin an NHS fit for the 21st century.

    Nothing I have seen or experienced in the last 3 months as our country’s Health and Social Care Secretary has weakened my conviction that, while the NHS may be broken, it is not beaten.

    But the future isn’t just in my hands, it’s in yours too.

    The 3 shifts that underpin this government’s reform agenda:

    From hospital to community.

    Analogue to digital.

    Sickness to prevention.

    Those shifts aren’t new ideas and they aren’t radical.

    But delivering them really would be.

    I can’t do it on my own.

    I need every part of the NHS to pull together as one team with one purpose:

    To be the generation that took the NHS from the worst crisis in its history, got it back on its feet and made it fit for the future.

    That’s the mission of this government and I’m confident that together we will rise to it.

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: WISDOMTREE MULTI ASSET ISSUER PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY (a public company incorporated with limited liability in Ireland) WISDOMTREE S&P 500 VIX SHORT-TERM FUTURES 2.25X DAILY LEVERAGED SECURITIES ISIN: XS2819843736

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    7 October 2024

    LSE Code: VIXL

    WISDOMTREE MULTI ASSET ISSUER PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY
    (a public company incorporated with limited liability in Ireland)
    WISDOMTREE S&P 500 VIX SHORT-TERM FUTURES 2.25X DAILY LEVERAGED SECURITIES ISIN: XS2819843736

    RESULTS OF MEETING OF THE ETP SECURITYHOLDERS

    WisdomTree Multi Asset Issuer Public Limited Company (the “Issuer”) wishes to announce that the Extraordinary Resolution regarding the reduction in the principal amount of the WisdomTree S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures 2.25x Daily Leveraged Securities (the “Affected Securities”) from USD 4.81 to USD 0.481, as set out in a notice to holders of the Affected Securities dated 7 October 2024, was passed at an adjourned meeting of the holders of the Affected Securities held at 11am on 7 October 2024.

    As a result, the Deed of Amendment has been duly executed by the Issuer, the Manager and the Trustee to put the proposed amendments to the Trust Deed into effect from 7 October 2024.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Written Ministerial Statement – Legacy – Northern Ireland 

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, the Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, has written to Parliament to confirm the appointment of Sir John Evans as Chair of the Robert Hamill Inquiry and to provide an initial response to the recent Court of Appeal judgment in Dillon and Others.

    I wish to provide an update to the House following the -regarding the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act (‘the Legacy Act’); and on the appointment of Sir John Evans as the Chair of the Robert Hamill Inquiry.

    The Government is absolutely committed to implementing mechanisms to address the legacy of the Troubles that fully comply with human rights. My previous Written Ministerial Statement, laid on 29 July 2024, confirmed that the Government, as part of its ongoing commitment to repeal and replace the Legacy Act, had formally abandoned all grounds of appeal against the section 4 Human Rights Act declarations of incompatibility made by the Northern Ireland High Court in relation to the Act. This included the immunity provisions, providing important clarity for families that the immunity scheme and other offending provisions would not take effect. I also confirmed the Government’s intention to propose measures to further strengthen the independence and powers of the Independent Commission for Reconciliation and Information Recovery (ICRIR). 

    On 20 September, the Court of Appeal handed down its judgment in Dillon and Others. The Court recognised “the wide powers of ICRIR and the benefit of having investigations placed within one body which is well-resourced” and further noted that the ICRIR has “unfettered access to all information, documents and materials as it reasonably requires in connection with a review”. The Court concluded that such powers “cannot be criticised, nor should they be underestimated”. 

    However, the Court of Appeal also made further declarations of incompatibility in relation to the Legacy Act to those made by the High Court. One of these was in relation to the current prohibition on civil proceedings – another policy pursued by the previous Government that this Government has already committed to reversing.  

    The other declarations of incompatibility relate to effective next of kin participation where an inquest was previously assigned in order to discharge the state’s Article 2 procedural obligations, and the role of the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland in relation to public disclosure of information.  

    The Government has already made clear its intention to propose measures that allow legacy inquests previously halted to proceed, should that be the preference of families. Notwithstanding this, the Government takes these further declarations of incompatibility  very seriously, and it remains my priority to ensure that the ICRIR can provide human rights compliant investigations in all relevant cases.

    The Court largely upheld the High Court’s findings in relation to Article 2 of the Windsor Framework, which as I noted in my statement to the House on 29 July, introduces legal uncertainty about what protections are afforded by Article 2, and how legislation applies across the United Kingdom. 

    This is a complex and wide-ranging judgment with significant implications. The Government is therefore carefully considering its findings to inform a decision on the way forward. I wish to make clear to the House that any such decision will be without prejudice to the Government’s absolute commitment to addressing legacy issues in a way that is fully human rights compliant, and to the fullest possible transparency within the framework that rightly exists to ensure that those who work to keep the citizens of the United Kingdom safe are themselves protected from harm.

    As set out in my statement of 29 July, the Government has begun preparations to lay in Parliament a draft remedial order under section 10 of the Human Rights Act 1998 to remedy the original declarations of incompatibility made by the High Court, including the immunity provisions. In light of the additional declarations of incompatibility made by the Court of Appeal, I am reviewing this process and will update the House in due course. 

    This Government takes its human rights obligations – and its responsibilities to victims and survivors of the Troubles – extremely seriously. As part of my commitment to repeal and replace the Legacy Act, I continue to undertake consultations with interested parties regarding a practical way forward that can command support across communities in Northern Ireland and beyond. I said previously that this process will involve difficult conversations, and that is proving to be the case in my engagements so far which have been sometimes challenging but always insightful. I am encouraged by the willingness of those I have met to date to engage constructively. I look forward to further discussions in the period ahead. 

    Separately, I am pleased to announce the appointment of Sir John Evans as Chair of the Robert Hamill Inquiry. A Chair of the Inquiry is required in order for the Inquiry Report to be formally passed to me for publication. Due to the passage of time since the report was completed in 2011, it was necessary for me to appoint a new Chair of the Inquiry, as the former Chair, Justice Sir Edwin Jowitt, is unfortunately unable to continue in the role. I wish to send him my very best wishes, and thank him for all he did in his time as Chair.

    Sir John was a panel member when the Inquiry was in operation, and worked closely with Sir Edwin on the report. Sir John brings a wealth of experience to the role as a former Chief Constable, and I know he will do everything in his power to ensure the Inquiry Report is published soon.

    I will remain in close contact with Sir John ahead of the Inquiry report being passed formally to me in order to arrange for the necessary legal and security checks to be completed. While I will do everything I can to ensure the report is published as soon as possible, due to the passage of time since the report was completed, it is imperative that these checks happen before publication. 

    I want to pay tribute to Robert Hamill’s family for their patience, and their dignity, as they awaited the conclusion of relevant criminal proceedings. I will make a further statement to Parliament when the report is published.

    Updates to this page

    Published 7 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Ecuador: Libby Green

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Ms Libby Green has been appointed His Majesty’s Ambassador to the Republic of Ecuador.

    Ms Libby Green

    Ms Libby Green has been appointed His Majesty’s Ambassador to the Republic of Ecuador in succession to Mr Christopher Campbell who will be transferring to another Diplomatic Service appointment. Ms Green will take up her appointment during August 2025.

    Curriculum vitae

    Full name: Elisabeth Clare Green

      2022 to Present New Delhi, Head of Climate and Energy
      2017 to 2020 FCO, Deputy Head of Department, Asia Pacific Directorate
      2015 to 2017 Department of Health, Head of Department
      2012 to 2015 Beijing, First Secretary Health
      2010 to 2012 Beijing, First Secretary Climate and Energy
      2008 to 2010 Copenhagen, Deputy Head of Mission
      2007 to 2008 Copenhagen, Second Secretary
      2006 to 2007 Pre-posting training (including Danish language training
      2003 to 2006 FCO, Desk Officer, Security Policy Department
      2001 to 2003 FCO, Press Officer
      2001 Joined FCO

    Updates to this page

    Published 7 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: WISDOMTREE MULTI ASSET ISSUER PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY (a public company incorporated with limited liability in Ireland) WISDOMTREE S&P 500 VIX SHORT-TERM FUTURES 2.25X DAILY LEVERAGED SECURITIES ISIN: XS2819843736

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    7 October 2024

    LSE Code: VIXL

    WISDOMTREE MULTI ASSET ISSUER PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY
    (a public company incorporated with limited liability in Ireland)
    WISDOMTREE S&P 500 VIX SHORT-TERM FUTURES 2.25X DAILY LEVERAGED SECURITIES ISIN: XS2819843736

    RESULTS OF MEETING OF THE ETP SECURITYHOLDERS

    WisdomTree Multi Asset Issuer Public Limited Company (the “Issuer”) wishes to announce that the Extraordinary Resolution regarding the reduction in the principal amount of the WisdomTree S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures 2.25x Daily Leveraged Securities (the “Affected Securities”) from USD 4.81 to USD 0.481, as set out in a notice to holders of the Affected Securities dated 7 October 2024, was passed at an adjourned meeting of the holders of the Affected Securities held at 11am on 7 October 2024.

    As a result, the Deed of Amendment has been duly executed by the Issuer, the Manager and the Trustee to put the proposed amendments to the Trust Deed into effect from 7 October 2024.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Euronext announces volumes for September 2024

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Contacts Media Contact Investor Relations
    Amsterdam +31 20 721 4133 Brussels +32 2 620 15 50 +33 1 70 48 24 17
    Dublin +39 02 72 42 62 13 Lisbon +351 91 777 68 97  
    Milan +39 02 72 42 67 56 Oslo +47 41 69 59 10  
    Paris +33 1 70 48 24 45      

    Euronext announces volumes for September 2024

    Amsterdam, Brussels, Dublin, Lisbon, Milan, Oslo and Paris – 7 October 2024 – Euronext, the leading pan-European market infrastructure, today announced trading volumes for September 2024.

    Monthly and historical volume tables are available at this address:

    https://euronext.com/investor-relations#monthly-volumes

    CONTACTS

    About Euronext
    Euronext is the leading pan-European market infrastructure, connecting European economies to global capital markets, to accelerate innovation and sustainable growth. It operates regulated exchanges in Belgium, France, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway and Portugal. With nearly 1,900 listed issuers and around €6.3 trillion in market capitalisation as of end of September 2024, it has an unmatched blue-chip franchise and a strong diverse domestic and international client base. Euronext operates regulated and transparent equity and derivatives markets, one of Europe’s leading electronic fixed income trading markets and is the largest centre for debt and funds listings in the world. Its total product offering includes Equities, FX, Exchange Traded Funds, Warrants & Certificates, Bonds, Derivatives, Commodities and Indices. The Group provides a multi-asset clearing house through Euronext Clearing, and custody and settlement services through Euronext Securities central securities depositories in Denmark, Italy, Norway and Portugal. Euronext also leverages its expertise in running markets by providing technology and managed services to third parties. In addition to its main regulated market, it also operates a number of junior markets, simplifying access to listing for SMEs. For the latest news, go to euronext.com or follow us on Twitter (twitter.com/euronext) and LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/euronext)

    Disclaimer

    This press release is for information purposes only: it is not a recommendation to engage in investment activities and is provided “as is”, without representation or warranty of any kind. While all reasonable care has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the content, Euronext does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness. Euronext will not be held liable for any loss or damages of any nature ensuing from using, trusting or acting on information provided. No information set out or referred to in this publication may be regarded as creating any right or obligation. The creation of rights and obligations in respect of financial products that are traded on the exchanges operated by Euronext’s subsidiaries shall depend solely on the applicable rules of the market operator. All proprietary rights and interest in or connected with this publication shall vest in Euronext. This press release speaks only as of this date. Euronext refers to Euronext N.V. and its affiliates. Information regarding trademarks and intellectual property rights of Euronext is available at http://www.euronext.com/terms-use.

    © 2024, Euronext N.V. – All rights reserved. 

    The Euronext Group processes your personal data in order to provide you with information about Euronext (the “Purpose”). With regard to the processing of this personal data, Euronext will comply with its obligations under Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and Council of 27 April 2016 (General Data Protection Regulation, “GDPR”), and any applicable national laws, rules and regulations implementing the GDPR, as provided in its privacy statement available at: http://www.euronext.com/privacy-policy. In accordance with the applicable legislation you have rights with regard to the processing of your personal data: for more information on your rights, please refer to: http://www.euronext.com/data_subjects_rights_request_information. To make a request regarding the processing of your data or to unsubscribe from this press release service, please use our data subject request form at connect2.euronext.com/form/data-subjects-rights-request or email our Data Protection Officer at dpo@euronext.com.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Statement to Parliament: PM statement to the House of Commons on 7 October anniversary and the Middle East: 7 October 2024

    Source: United Kingdom – Prime Minister’s Office 10 Downing Street

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer made an oral statement to the House of Commons on 7 October anniversary and the Middle East.

    Thank you Mr Speaker. Today we mark a year since the horrific attack on Israel by the terrorists of Hamas.

    It was the bloodiest day for the Jewish people since the Holocaust. A day of sorrow, a day of grief. Over a thousand people were massacred.

    Hundreds taken hostage in an attack borne of hatred. Targeted not just at individuals but at Jewish communities, at their way of life and at the state of Israel – the symbol of Jewish security to the world. 

    Mr Speaker, 15 British citizens were brutally slain that day, another has since died in captivity. Our thoughts today are with Jewish people around the world, the Jewish community here in the UK and all those we lost a year ago. 

    For so many, the pain and horror of that day is as acute today as it was a year ago. They live it every day.

    Last week I met the families of British hostages and those killed on the 7th of October. I sat with them as they told me about their loved ones. I will never forget their words. 

    Mandy Damari spoke about her love for her daughter, Emily.  She said – and I quote: “My personal clock stopped at 10:24 on the 7th of October…” the moment when Emily sent a desperate, unfinished message as Hamas attacked her Kibbutz. She is still held captive today. 

    We can hardly imagine what hostages like Emily are going through. Nor what the families are going through, the agony, agony – day after day. 

    So, I say again, the hostages must be returned immediately and unconditionally. They will always be uppermost in our minds. 

    And I pay tribute again to the families for their incredible dignity and determination. 

    Mr Speaker today is also a day of grief for the wider region as we look back on a year of conflict and suffering. 

    The human toll among innocent civilians in Gaza is truly devastating. Over 41,000 Palestinians have been killed. Tens of thousands orphaned. Almost two million displaced. Facing disease, starvation, desperation without proper healthcare or shelter. It is a living nightmare, and it must end.  

    We stand with all the innocent victims in Israel, Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon and beyond. And we stand with all communities here in the UK against hatred – of Jews or Muslims. Because any attack on a minority is an attack on our proud values of tolerance and respect – and we will not stand for it.  

    Mr Speaker, with the Middle East close to the brink and the very real danger of a regional war, last week the Iranian regime chose to strike Israel. The whole House will join me in utterly condemning this attack.

    We support Israel’s right to defend herself against Iran’s aggression in line with international law. 

    Because let’s be very clear this was not a defensive action by Iran. It was an act of aggression and a major escalation in response to the death of a terrorist leader. It exposes once again Iran’s malign role in the region. 

    They helped equip Hamas for the 7th of October attacks. They armed Hizballah who launched a year-long barrage of rockets on northern Israel forcing 60,000 Israelis to flee their homes and they support the Houthis who mount direct attacks on Israel. And continue to attack international shipping. 

    Mr Speaker, the whole House will join me in thanking our brave servicemen and women who have shown their usual courage in countering this threat. But make no mistake the region cannot endure another year of this. Civilians on all sides have suffered too much. All sides must now step back from the brink and find the courage of restraint. There is no military solution to these challenges so we must renew our diplomatic efforts.

    Together with My Rt Hon Friend the Foreign Secretary I had discussions with the leaders of Israel, Lebanon, Jordan, the Palestinian Authority, the G7 and the EU and made the case at the United Nations for political solutions to end the fighting.  

    In the weeks ahead we will continue this work focused on three areas. 

    Firstly, Lebanon where our immediate priority is the safety of British citizens, our team is on the ground helping to get people out. We have already brought over 430 people home on chartered flights. We stand ready with additional evacuation efforts, as necessary. 

    And I say again an important message to those British citizens still in Lebanon: you must leave now. 

    Mr Speaker, we are also working to ease the humanitarian crisis in Lebanon. Last week we provided £10 million of vital support in addition to the £5 million we’re already providing to UNICEF.

    But the situation cannot go on. We will continue to lead calls for an immediate ceasefire and the return to a political plan for Lebanon based on Security Council Resolution 1701, which requires Hizballah to withdraw north of the Litani River. 

    They must stop firing rockets and end this now so that people on both sides of the border can return to their homes. 

    Second, Mr Speaker, we must renew efforts for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza. But we cannot simply wait for this to happen. We must do more now to provide relief to the civilian population. That’s why we have restarted aid to UNRWA, we’re supporting field hospitals and the delivery of water, healthcare and treatment for malnourished children.

    But the ongoing restrictions on aid are impossible to justify. Israel must open more crossings and allow life-saving aid to flow. Crucially, they must provide a safe environment for aid workers – too many have been killed, including three British citizens. 

    Israel must act now so that, together with our allies, we can surge humanitarian support ahead of winter. 

    Third, Mr Speaker, we must put in place solutions for the long term to break the relentless cycle of violence. The ultimate goal here is well understood it must be the two state solution. There is no other option which offers stability and security. So we need to build a political route towards it so that Israel is finally safe and secure alongside the long-promised Palestinian state.

    This requires support for the Palestinian Authority to step into the vacuum in Gaza. It requires an urgent international effort to support reconstruction and it requires guarantees for Israel’s security. 

    We will work with our allies and partners to that end. But the key to all of this remains a ceasefire in Gaza now. The unconditional release of the hostages, the unhindered flow of aid. That is the fundamental first step to change the trajectory of the region.

    Mr Speaker, nobody in this House can truly imagine what it feels like to cower under the bodies of your friends, hoping a terrorist won’t find you, mere minutes after dancing at a music festival. 

    Nobody in this House can truly imagine seeing your city, your homes, your schools, your hospitals, your businesses obliterated, with your neighbours and family buried underneath. It is beyond our comprehension and with that should come a humility.

    It is hard even to understand the full depth of this pain but what we can do is remember. What we can do is respect and listen to the voices that reach out to us at these moments. And what we can do, Mr Speaker, is use the power of diplomacy to try and find practical steps that minimise the suffering on the ground and work towards that long-term solution, so that a year of this terrible and bloody conflict can never happen again. 

    That is what we have done on these benches, it’s what the whole House has done and it’s what this Government will continue to do. 

    I commend this statement to the House.

    Updates to this page

    Published 7 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom