Category: European Union

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Audience with members of the Italian Financial Police on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of its founding

    Source: The Holy See

    Audience with members of the Italian Financial Police on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of its founding, 21.09.2024
    This morning, in the Vatican Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father Francis received in audience the members of the Italian Financial Police on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the Corps, to whom he delivered the following address:

    Address of the Holy Father
    Mr. Minister,
    Mr. General,
    Your Excellency and dear Chaplains,
    Dear Members of the Financial Police,
    I welcome you with pleasure: I saw you this morning when you were entering here. I greet the Minister of Economy and Finance, the Commander General and all the officials. I greet and thank the Bishop Military Ordinary and the chaplains.
    “In tradition, the future”. This is the motto of your 250th anniversary. In tradition there is the future. It refers to the roots that led to the founding of the Italian Financial Police, and gave a direction for growth. Born as a special Corps for financial surveillance and border defence, it has taken on the tasks of tax and economic-financial police, and sea policing, with an important mission in the field of rescue, both at sea and in the mountains. A historical reminder of this commitment is the help offered to Jewish refugees and the persecuted during the two great world wars.
    A vast sphere of intervention, therefore, which aims to respond to problems with the tangibility of presence and timely action, while at the same time conveying a cultural alternative to certain evils that threaten to contaminate society.
    Your Patron is Saint Matthew – today is his feast day – apostle and evangelist. Indeed, he was a “publican”, a tax collector, an occupation doubly despised in Jesus’ time, because it was subservient to imperial power, and because it was corrupt. I like to go to the church of the French to see that painting by Caravaggio, “The conversion of Matthew”, which symbolizes this so deeply. He represented a utilitarian and unscrupulous mentality, devoted only to the “god of money”.
    In our times too, a similar logic affects social life, causing imbalances and marginalization: from food wastage – but this is a scandal, food wastage is a scandal! – from this waste, to the exclusion of citizens from benefiting from some of their rights. Even the State can end up a victim of this system; including those States that have vast resources but remain isolated in terms of finance or the global market. How does one explain hunger in the world today, when there is so, so much waste in developed societies? It is terrible. And another thing: if the production of weapons were to cease for a year, world hunger would end. Better to have weapons than solve hunger… Even the State can fall victim to this system: even those States which, despite having resources, as I said, remain isolated.
    In this panorama, you are required to contribute to the justice of economic relationships, verifying compliance with the rules that govern the activities of individuals and businesses. Therefore, you oversee the duty of every citizen to contribute to the needs of the State according to equitable criteria, without favouring the strongest, and you counter the inappropriate use of the internet and social networks. With regard to both tax collection and the fight against undeclared and underpaid work – this is a scandal – or in any case work that is detrimental to human dignity, your action is of paramount importance.
    And all this is your concrete and daily way of serving the common good, of being close to the people, of fighting corruption and promoting legality. That corruption that takes place under the table, no?
    The word ‘corrupt’ “is reminiscent of the broken heart, stained by something, the ruined heart. […] Corruption reveals an anti-social conduct so strong that it dissolves the validity of the relationships and pillars on which a society is founded”. Therefore, the answer, the alternative does not lie in norms alone, but in a “new humanism”.[1] To re-found humanity.
    The gaze of Jesus, placed on the young Matthew, says that the dignity and the life of man are the heart of the life of a people. You can contribute to the emergence of this new humanism also through your work in the service of the young people who apply to enter the Financial Police Corps and attend its schools. Initially they are perhaps looking only for a job, but they then find a specific training, which not only provides them with indispensable knowledge and experience, but also becomes education for life and the common good.
    Matthew, in a certain sense, moved from the logic of profit to that of equity. But, in the school of Jesus, he also went beyond equity and justice and came to know gratuitousness, the gift of self that generates solidarity, sharing, inclusion. Gratuitousness is not just a financial dimension, it is a human dimension. Entering into the service of others, freely, without seeking profit for oneself. Because while justice is necessary, justice is not enough to fill those gaps that only gratuitousness, charity and love can heal.
    You experience this, for example, when you organize the reception and rescue of migrants in danger in the Mediterranean: thank you for this, thank you. Or in your courageous interventions in the event of natural disasters, in Italy and elsewhere. But think of the fight against the scourge of drug trafficking, the merchants of death. Your service does not end with protection of the victims, but includes the attempt to help the rebirth of those who do wrong: indeed, by acting with respect and moral integrity you can touch consciences, showing the possibility of a different life.
    In this way to one can and must construct an alternative to the globalization of indifference – the globalization of indifference: provide an alternative to this – this globalization of indifference, which not only destroys with violence and war, but also neglects social care and the environment. In effect, the wealth of a nation is not solely in its GDP; it resides in its natural, artistic, cultural and religious heritage – and in the smile of its inhabitants, its children. Once, a head of State said to me: “I have a special measurement: the smile of children and the elderly. When both of them smile, things are not going too badly in a society”. It is curious, this … and this favours creativity, openness to the world. You yourselves are citizens who safeguard this “wealth” of Italy, but are ready to go on international missions. There is a need for this impetus to solidarity towards the other as a way to peace and as a hope for a better future!
    Brothers and sisters, I congratulate you, because you cooperate to foster the confidence and hope of the people. This people, that is all of us. And to nurture confidence, hope, smiles. I come back to this: the thermometer is, do the children smile? Do the elderly smile? Don’t forget. And this important anniversary fits well with the theme of the Jubilee that the Church is preparing to celebrate, which is “Pilgrims of Hope”. I bless you from my heart, I bless your work and families. Please, do not lose your sense of humour, please! This is healthy! And I ask you, please, to pray for me. Thank you.

    _____________________________________________________
    [1] Preface in Peter Turkson, Corrosion: combatting corruption in the Church and in society, Bologna 2017.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: AMERICA/PUERTO RICO – Appointment of the Special Envoy for the celebration of the VI American Missionary Congress (CAM 6)

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Saturday, September 21, 2024

    Vatican City (Agenzia Fides) – The Holy Father Francis has appointed His Eminence Cardinal Baltazar Enrique Porras Cardozo, Archbishop Emeritus of Caracas, His Special Envoy to the celebration of the VI American Missionary Congress (CAM6), which will take place in Ponce (Puerto Rico), from 19 to 24 November 2024. (Agenzia Fides 21/9/2024) Share:

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Ebba Busch to lead Swedish delegation to UN Summit of the Future in New York

    Source: Government of Sweden

    Ebba Busch to lead Swedish delegation to UN Summit of the Future in New York – Government.se

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    On 21–23 September, Minister for Energy, Business and Industry and Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch will take part in the opening of the UN Summit of the Future in New York. Ahead of the Summit, Sweden has played an important role leading negotiations on the new Global Digital Compact. In conjunction with the Summit, Ms Busch will attend a G7 ministerial meeting on continued energy support to Ukraine. She will also meet representatives of governments, banks and industry to discuss the role of nuclear energy in the green transition.

    The Summit of the Future aims to accelerate implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals and for world leaders to reach a consensus on measures to manage the challenges the world faces now and in the future. 

    Together with Zambia, Sweden is leading negotiations on the Global Digital Compact, which is expected to be adopted as part of the Pact for the Future. It will be the first comprehensive agreement within the UN that addresses digital issues, including AI. This framework sets a clear direction for how digitalisation can be used to accelerate efforts towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. It also introduces new initiatives, such as a scientific panel on AI inspired by the climate work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a global dialogue on governance of AI and a capacity-building fund. 

    “The framework is an important step towards reducing digital gaps, empowering women and girls in the digital domain and addressing the specific needs of developing countries. It underscores the need for international cooperation and continued dialogue on the governance of growing digital technologies – particularly AI. I am proud that Sweden, together with Zambia, has led this important work,” says Ms Busch.

    Ms Busch will also represent Sweden in the G7+ Energy Coordination Group for the recovery of Ukraine. 

    “Sweden’s support to Ukraine is extensive and long-term, and that also applies to the crucial energy sector. I am very pleased that the Government decided earlier this month to provide an additional SEK 500 million in support for heating and electricity supply in Ukraine. According to World Bank calculations, that support can help generate electricity for 185 000 people,” says Ms Busch.

    In addition to the high-level meeting taking place in conjunction with the Summit of the Future, Ms Busch will also take part in a meeting on enhanced nuclear energy cooperation, where representatives of governments, large banks and industry will gather to discuss the key role of nuclear energy in the green transition. 

    Press contact

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: Press release of the Council of Ministers n. 96

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: Government of Italy

    September 21, 2024

    The Council of Ministers met on Saturday 21 September 2024, at 11:09, at Palazzo Chigi, under the presidency of the Minister for Civil Protection and Maritime Policies Nello Musumeci. Secretary, Undersecretary to the Presidency of the Council Alfredo Mantovano.

    ٠٠٠٠٠

    STATE OF EMERGENCY IN THE REGIONS OF EMILIA ROMAGNA AND MARCHE

    The Council of Ministers, on the proposal of the Minister for Civil Protection and Marine Policies Nello Musumeci, has resolved:

    the declaration of a state of emergency as a result of the exceptional meteorological events that occurred, starting from 17 September 2024, in the territory of the provinces of Reggio Emilia, Modena, Bologna, Ferrara, Ravenna, Forlì-Cesena and Rimini. In order to guarantee the most urgent and priority measures and interventions of relief and assistance to the population affected by the event and to restore the functionality of public services and strategic network infrastructures (letters a) and b) of paragraph 2, of article 25, of Legislative Decree 2 January 2018, no. 1), 20 million euros have been allocated, from the National Emergencies Fund; the declaration of a state of emergency as a result of the exceptional meteorological events that occurred, starting from 18 September 2024, in the territory of the coastal strip of the Marche Region. In order to ensure the most urgent and priority measures and interventions for relief and assistance to the population affected by the event and to restore the functionality of public services and strategic network infrastructures (letters a) and b) of paragraph 2 of Article 25 of Legislative Decree no. 1 of 2 January 2018), 4 million euros have been allocated from the National Emergency Fund.

    ٠٠٠٠٠

    The Council of Ministers ended at 11.18 am.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Independent Afghan journalists and media organizations win 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award presented to independent Afghan journalists and media organizations

    The 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award has been presented today to independent Afghan journalists and media organizations for their courageous reporting despite restrictions imposed by the Taliban. 

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and H.E. Lord Collins of Highbury, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Africa) of the United Kingdom, presented the award to Lotfullah Najafizada, CEO of Amu TV, on behalf of his fellow independent Afghan journalists and media organizations. 

    This award signals the enduring commitment of both Canada and the United Kingdom to support free and independent journalism.

    Every day, independent Afghan journalists and media organizations continue to offer a platform for uncensored information and hope in Afghanistan in the face of the severe repression brought by the Taliban since August 2021. 

    Independent reporters and media organizations navigate the risks posed by the Taliban’s harsh crackdown on journalism, working bravely to ensure the continuation of free press in a difficult climate. They report on significant issues affecting Afghanistan under Taliban rule, including human rights violations and the plight of women and girls, including forced marriages and bans on education.

    Established in 2020, the Canada-U.K. Media Freedom award recognises those who have championed freedom of speech and democracy.  

    Egyptian online newspaper Mada Masr won the award in 2023. Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang was named as winner in 2022, and the 2020 winner was the Belarusian Association of Journalists.  

    The announcement of the 2024 award comes during the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Week.  

    The Media Freedom Coalition, which the U.K. and Canada co-founded and now has more than 50 members, celebrated its fifth anniversary during the week’s activities. 

    Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada said:

    We commend the independent Afghan journalists and media organizations who are working courageously and tirelessly to bring the world up-to-date information and thoughtful, expert analysis about what is happening in Afghanistan under Taliban rule.

    Media freedom remains essential to the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms around the world. These independent journalists and media organizations are giving a voice to people whose voices are being silenced. Canada will continue to support them, together with our partners.

    Lord Collins of Highbury, UK Minister for Africa said:

    Despite the many restrictions they work under, these brave Afghan journalists have found innovative ways to get accurate, timely and valuable information to the people of Afghanistan, including on the plight of women and girls. They play a vital role in preserving the truth. The U.K. remains committed to media freedom, and to championing human rights and democracy around the world.

    Media enquiries

    Email newsdesk@fcdo.gov.uk

    Telephone 020 7008 3100

    Contact the FCDO Communication Team via email (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 September 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Independent Afghan journalists and media organizations win 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award

    Source: Government of Canada News

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and H.E. Lord Collins of Highbury, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Africa) of the United Kingdom, presented the award to Lotfullah Najafizada, CEO of Amu TV, on behalf of his fellow independent Afghan journalists and media organizations.

    September 27, 2024 – New York City, United States of America – Global Affairs Canada

    The 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award has been presented today to independent Afghan journalists and media organizations for their courageous reporting despite restrictions imposed by the Taliban. 

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and H.E. Lord Collins of Highbury, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Africa) of the United Kingdom, presented the award to Lotfullah Najafizada, CEO of Amu TV, on behalf of his fellow independent Afghan journalists and media organizations. 

    This award signals the enduring commitment of both Canada and the United Kingdom to support free and independent journalism.

    Every day, independent Afghan journalists and media organizations continue to offer a platform for uncensored information and hope in Afghanistan in the face of the severe repression brought by the Taliban since August 2021.

    Independent reporters and media organizations navigate the risks posed by the Taliban’s harsh crackdown on journalism, working bravely to ensure the continuation of free press in a difficult climate. They report on significant issues affecting Afghanistan under Taliban rule, including human rights violations and the plight of women and girls, including forced marriages and bans on education.

    Established in 2020, the Canada-U.K. Media Freedom award recognises those who have championed freedom of speech and democracy.  

    Egyptian online newspaper Mada Masr won the award in 2023. Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang was named as winner in 2022, and the 2020 winner was the Belarusian Association of Journalists.  

    The announcement of the 2024 award comes during the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Week.  

    The Media Freedom Coalition, which the U.K. and Canada co-founded and now has more than 50 members, celebrated its fifth anniversary during the week’s activities. 

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: Independent Afghan journalists and media win 2024 Canada-UK Press Freedom Award

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French

    Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, and the United Kingdom’s Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Africa), HE Lord Collins of Highbury, presented the award to Amu TV CEO Lotfullah Najafizada on behalf of his fellow journalists and independent Afghan media.

    September 27, 2024 – New York, United States of America – Global Affairs Canada

    The 2024 Canada-UK Press Freedom Award was presented today to independent Afghan journalists and media outlets for their courage in reporting despite restrictions imposed by the Taliban.

    Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, and the United Kingdom’s Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Africa), HE Lord Collins of Highbury, presented the award to Amu TV CEO Lotfullah Najafizada on behalf of his fellow journalists and independent Afghan media.

    This award is a testament to Canada and the UK’s enduring commitment to supporting free and independent journalism.

    Every day, independent Afghan journalists and media continue to provide a platform for uncensored information and hope in Afghanistan in the face of severe repression by the Taliban since August 2021.

    Journalists and independent media are facing the risks posed by the Taliban’s harsh crackdown on journalism, working courageously to ensure press freedom is maintained in a difficult climate. They are reporting on the critical issues facing Afghanistan under Taliban rule, including human rights violations and the plight of women and girls, including forced marriages and denial of access to education.

    Established in 2020, the Canada–UK Press Freedom Award recognizes individuals who have defended freedom of expression and democracy.

    Egyptian online newspaper Mada Masr won the award in 2023. Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang was the winner in 2022, and the 2020 prize went to the Belarusian Association of Journalists.

    The announcement of the 2024 prize takes place during the high-level week of the United Nations General Assembly.

    The Media Freedom Coalition, which was co-founded by the United Kingdom and Canada and now has more than 50 members, celebrated its fifth anniversary during the week’s activities.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Australia: National Statement United Nations General Assembly

    Source: Australian Government – Minister of Foreign Affairs

    President, friends –

    Steeled by the horror of the most catastrophic conflict in history, humanity forged our United Nations.

    Its purpose often defined not as taking us to heaven, but saving us from hell.

    Yet we convene this week with so much of the human family enshrouded in darkness.

    More conflict than any time since World War Two.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Sudan.

    Myanmar.

    Yemen.

    Gaza.

    And now Lebanon.

    Brutal, degrading conflict ingraining hatred and division; pushing peace into the unseeable distance; and pulling neighbours into an endless, reflexive cycle of blame and retaliation.

    Such entrenched violence has its own gravity: more violence becomes the path of least resistance.

    Seeing past hatred is hard. Building trust is hard. Compromise is hard. Making peace is hard.

    But the future otherwise is not worthy of our children and the present is not worthy of ourselves.

    We must remember why we built this institution.

    The UN system is where the world comes together to agree and uphold standards and rules; to protect all of the world’s peoples and the sovereignty of all nations.

    These rules always matter – never more so than in times of conflict – when they help guide us out of darkness, back toward light.

    Back on a path towards peace, stability and prosperity.

    Not long after we last gathered here, Israel was attacked by the terrorist group Hamas, which killed 1,200 people.

    This was the greatest loss of Jewish life in a single day since the Holocaust, and Hamas continues to hold hostages.

    It was an attack that cannot and should not be justified.

    Like many countries, Australia has imposed sanctions on Hamas, its leaders and financial facilitators.

    In Israel’s response, more than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed.

    More than 11,000 children.

    Nearly two million Gazans displaced, some many times over.

    More than two million facing acute food insecurity.

    This must end.

    Palestinian civilians cannot be made to pay the price of defeating Hamas.

    All lives have equal value.

    Last month we marked 75 years since the world established the Geneva Conventions – the foundations of international humanitarian law, to limit human suffering in conflict.

    War has rules. Every country in this room must abide by them.

    Even when confronting terrorists.

    Even when defending borders.

    Israel must comply with the binding orders of the International Court of Justice, including to enable the provision of basic services and humanitarian assistance at scale.

    Australia shares the frustration of the great majority of countries, more than 77 years since the General Assembly adopted Resolution 181: a plan for two states side by side – one Jewish, one Palestinian.

    77 years later, that Palestinian state still does not exist – long held out as the promise at the end of a peace process that has ground to a halt.

    The world cannot wait.

    We must all contribute new ways to break the cycle of conflict.

    Earlier this year, Australia voted in this General Assembly in support of Palestinian aspirations for full membership of the UN.

    We have sanctioned Israeli extremist settlers and will deny anyone identified as an extremist settler a visa to travel to Australia.

    But individual country actions alone are not moving the dial.

    The international community must work together to pave a path to lasting peace.

    The world cannot keep hoping the parties will do this themselves; we cannot allow any party to obstruct the prospect of peace.

    As I have said for many months, Australia no longer sees Palestinian recognition as the destination of a peace process, but a contribution of momentum towards peace.

    Australia wants to engage on new ways to build momentum, including the role of the Security Council in setting a pathway for two-states, with a clear timeline for the international declaration of Palestinian statehood.

    Because a two-state solution is the only hope of breaking the endless cycle of violence – the only hope to see a secure and prosperous future for both peoples.

    To give the Palestinian people the opportunity to realise their aspirations through self-determination.

    To strengthen the forces for peace across the region and undermine extremism.

    A two-state solution, Israel and Palestine, is the opposite of what Hamas wants.

    Hamas does not want peace, and it does not want security for the State of Israel.

    Any future Palestinian state must not be in a position to threaten Israel’s security.

    There can be no role for terrorists. And it will need a reformed Palestinian Authority.

    Right now, the suffering across the region must end. Hostages must be released. Aid must flow.

    We have provided more than $80 million in humanitarian aid to support civilians who have been devasted by this conflict.

    But humanitarian aid is not a long-term answer.

    It is now nearly 300 days since Australia and 152 other countries voted for a ceasefire.

    Today I repeat that call.

    Just as I repeat Australia’s call for a ceasefire in Lebanon, and for parties to fully implement Resolution 1701. Lebanon cannot become the next Gaza.

    We know Australia is not a central player in the Middle East, but we seek to be a constructive voice for peace and the upholding of international law, including the protection of civilians.

    In order to protect civilians, we must also protect aid workers who deliver the food, water and medicine civilians need to survive.

    Aid workers are the best of humanity. Their selfless devotion to improving the lives of others should not cost them their own.

    Yet 2023 was the deadliest year on record for aid workers, and 2024 is on track to be even worse.

    Gaza is the most dangerous place on earth to be an aid worker.

    Australia felt this deeply with the IDF’s strike against World Central Kitchen vehicles, which killed Australian Zomi Frankcom and her colleagues.

    This was not a one-off incident. More than 300 aid workers have been killed since the start of this conflict.

    This week, Australia has convened a group of ministers to pursue a new Declaration for the Protection of Humanitarian Personnel.

    The Declaration will be developed over the coming months, to demonstrate the unity of the international community’s commitment to protect aid workers and to channel that commitment into action in Gaza, in Sudan, in Ukraine and in all current and future conflicts.

    All countries will be invited to join the Declaration.

    I want to thank my fellow ministers from Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia, Japan, Jordan, Sierra Leone, Switzerland and the United Kingdom – and the humanitarian leaders who have partnered with us in this.

    As Zomi Frankcom’s family said this week:

    “People like Zomi are rare and their bravery and selflessness should be not only celebrated but protected. They can’t be brave at any cost.”

    The world’s peoples are counting on all of us here to rededicate ourselves to international humanitarian law, and the rest of the rules we have agreed to preserve peace and security.

    Russia continues its vicious assault on the people and sovereignty of Ukraine, in flagrant violation of the UN Charter.

    Aside from terrible damage and loss of life in Ukraine, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is also propelling the global crisis in food and energy security…

    Raising the cost of living for working people all over the world.

    This year we saw Russia end the mandate of the Security Council’s Panel of Experts on the DPRK after fourteen years of unanimous support.

    The DPRK continues its unlawful activities with impunity, conducting illegal arms transfers to Russia and threatening our region, including the Republic of Korea and Japan.

    We are concerned that Russia is sharing nuclear and space information and technology with Iran.

    Rules are being blurred, undermined, and at times, blatantly violated.

    We must rally to defend these rules that protect all of us; these rules that form the character of the world that we want.

    A world where Australia and other countries have the freedom to decide our own futures, without interference and intimidation.

    A world where we can find collective solutions to our toughest problems.

    These problems are evolving and changing, but the commitment of some states to the rules underpinning the international system has not evolved for the better.

    Whether cyberattacks, interference, disinformation or economic coercion – some states circumvent the rules, putting further out of reach collective approaches to counter new and emerging threats.

    Pressing challenges like climate change, technology, poverty, reform of financial architecture – and increasingly necessary peacebuilding work.

    We need reform of the UN system to better serve us all.

    But reform cannot become a means for disruptors to dismantle protections for smaller countries.

    No state should pretend the rules don’t apply to them;

    Ignoring international rulings;

    Using might over multilateralism;

    Ruling by power alone, not by law;

    Favouring impunity rather than facing accountability;

    Forcing outcomes by economic coercion or military muscle, rather than on the level playing field we established so carefully.

    We see some states trying to set us against each other, when the challenges demand that we come together – that we stand together in support of the security, prosperity and sovereignty of all countries.

    Australia has a different vision for the world. One where no country dominates, and no country is dominated.

    When disputes inevitably arise, we insist those differences are managed through dialogue, and according to the rules, not simply by force or raw power.

    It’s why we have consistently pressed China on peace and stability in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.

    And why we have welcomed the resumption of leader and military level dialogue between the US and China.

    Some countries may dismiss the rules as a Western construct. Our Asia-Pacific region tells a different story.

    Take the agreement between Vietnam and Indonesia to delimit their Exclusive Economic Zone after twelve years of negotiations – an example of how long-standing maritime disputes can be resolved in accordance with international law.

    Take Vanuatu’s landmark International Court of Justice initiative on climate change.

    Or Fiji and Solomon Islands maritime boundary agreements.

    Take the Bay of Bengal Arbitration where states peacefully resolved long-standing and sensitive claims under UNCLOS: the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

    Or Australia and Timor-Leste initiating the first ever compulsory conciliation under UNCLOS, leading to the resolution of our maritime boundary dispute.

    We see it in the Philippines’ decision to go to the Arbitral Tribunal, constituted under the UNCLOS – and its unanimous, clear, ruling in the South China Sea arbitration between the Philippines and China, which is final and binding on the parties.

    These cases in our region illustrate how international law has been built, defended and promoted by small and medium countries from different traditions.

    The countries of our region have embedded the rules that serve us all, and we make an ongoing contribution to maintaining and promoting them.

    Together we want to pursue peaceful ways to resolve disputes.

    We know that this doesn’t happen on its own. All of us help make it happen.

    Australia is doing this by being active, by exercising agency, and by contributing our efforts to the balance of power in our region and our world.

    Our candidacy for a non-permanent seat on the Security Council for the term 2029-2030 reflects our deep commitment to contributing to international peace and security.  

    The Security Council is a foundation of our collective peace and security. But we must reform it.

    Australia wants greater permanent and non-permanent representation for Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Asia-Pacific.

    This body must represent the world as it is in the 21st century.  

    We must also reform the peacebuilding and conflict prevention architecture. It is not working.

    That will be the focus of our coming term on the Peacebuilding Commission.

    Australia will support national prevention strategies in our term, essential for local peacebuilding.    
     
    We are providing additional resources and staff to the PBC’s support and secretariat bodies.     

    And we will increase our voluntary contribution to the UN Peacebuilding Fund to $15 million per year.

    We are committed to doing all we can to de-escalate and prevent conflict.

    We do this by responding when we, or our neighbours, are coerced or have sovereignty threatened.

    We do this by supporting our region’s security – as we did at the Pacific Islands Forum this month, when we stood side-by-side with Pacific leaders to announce a Pacific-led, Australia-backed Pacific Policing Initiative.

    We do this by backing the call of Fiji’s President for a cessation of ballistic missile testing in the Pacific.

    We do this by combining reassurance and deterrence – by working with our friends and partners, openly and transparently, so no potential aggressor thinks the pursuit of conflict is worth the risk.

    But there is so much more to do.   

    For peace to be truly durable it must be built by, and for, all of society.

    That includes women.

    Yet here, in the world’s premier peace forum, only around one in ten speakers at this dais so far this week have been women.

    Gender equality is a primary predictor of peace, even more so than a state’s wealth or political system.

    That is why Australia champions the Women, Peace and Security agenda.  

    We support initiatives that we know are working, like the Southeast Asia Women Peace Mediators, who link stakeholders to enhance the potential for constructive dialogue.

    Like the Pacific Women Mediator’s Network, a locally led, vibrant and inclusive platform to support women’s political leadership.    

    And earlier this week, with Germany, Canada and the Netherlands, Australia invoked Afghanistan’s responsibility under international law for violations of the rights of women and girls.

    The Taliban have erased women from Afghanistan’s self-portrait.

    Effectively imprisoning half their society’s population immediately halves their country’s potential.

    Depleting the soul and prospects of a nation.

    Any country that wants to develop fully must encourage the full participation of all its people.

    So we can’t pursue only parts of the 2030 Agenda: we must achieve all of the Sustainable Development Goals.

    And yet, with just over five years to 2030, over a third of the SDG’s are stalled or regressing, and finance targets are not being met. 

    In times of scarcity, we need every development dollar to count.

    This is why we need to strengthen the global financial architecture.

    This is why Australia is backing the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index and the Bridgetown initiative.

    This is why Australia is championing reforms that make Multilateral Development Banks more responsive to global shocks, and build sustainability and resilience, particularly in the smallest and most vulnerable countries.

    This year, Australia committed 492 million Australian dollars to the Asian Development Fund, working with Japan to unlock a record 5 billion US dollars in new assistance to the region’s most vulnerable countries over the next decade.

    Financial pressures are further strained by the trend of trade being used as a point of leverage rather than an opportunity, as economic interdependence is misused for strategic and political ends.

    Nearly every country in this room depends on open trade with transparent and predictable rules.

    We must keep working together to uphold these trade rules that underpin our economic growth and the livelihoods of our peoples.

    Of course it’s not just finance and unfair trade arrangements that threaten development.

    Climate change is causing more disasters, reversing years of development gains overnight.

    Extreme weather threatens food and water security, with grave implications for global stability.

    Australia is acting at home, enshrining our ambitious emissions reduction targets into legislation: 43 per cent by 2030 and net zero by 2050.

    We are transforming our economy.

    Within this decade, 82 per cent of Australia’s electricity generation will be renewable, up from around 32 per cent when I first addressed you two years ago.

    We are building new industries to accelerate our economic transition and to export reliable, renewable energy to the world.

    And we are acting internationally, to respond to our partners.

    By the end of 2025, Australia will offer Climate Resilient Debt Clauses in our sovereign loans.

    And the groundbreaking Australia-Tuvalu Falepili Union Treaty entered into force on 28 August.

    It is the first time two nations have recognised, in a legally binding treaty, continuing statehood and sovereignty, notwithstanding the impacts of sea-level rise. 

    This agreement supports Tuvaluans to live and thrive at home through land reclamation and investments in infrastructure, education and health.

    At the same time, Tuvaluans have the choice to live, study and work in Australia.

    ‘Mobility with dignity’ means ensuring people have a genuine choice to stay.   

    Pacific voices have demonstrated sustained, clear and innovative leadership, as well as tremendous resilience.

    This is why we are bidding to host COP31 in partnership with the Pacific.

    We want to show the world the unique climate challenges facing our region and amplify the voices of Small Island Developing States, the custodians of our world’s oceans.

    President, we know that along with climate change, technology will define the multilateral system and development goals for decades to come.

    We want safe, accessible technology that is used for the global good – not as a tool for censorship, surveillance, exclusion and division.

    From the start of negotiations for the Global Digital Compact, Australia has advocated that all states should boost access to digital technologies that offer benefits to our world.

    We know that if countries don’t have digital infrastructure, they will miss out.

    This is why we are building sustainable south-south connectivity, including submarine cables across the Pacific.

    We also know not all knowledge is new.

    First Nations’ people’s deep knowledge must be preserved and protected.

    Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have been innovators, inventors and knowledge-holders for over 65,000 years.

    Whether it is firestick farming used to sustainably manage Country, or the engineering of great stone fish traps across rivers and seas.

    That unbroken line of innovation has continued to this day.

    Earlier this year, Australia’s Ambassador for First Nations People helped bring countries together to finalise the World Intellectual Property Organization Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge. 

    The treaty acknowledges the link between traditional knowledge, innovation and intellectual property.

    It helps First Nations communities identify and protect the use of their knowledge by others, which will in turn spur collaboration between researchers, innovators and communities, opening up new opportunities for First Nations entrepreneurship.

    This treaty is remarkable for another reason.

    It serves as a source for optimism.

    193 member states have agreed on new rules to the world’s intellectual property system.

    That is an extraordinary achievement.

    As I said at the outset, the international outlook is framed by entrenched division.

    Where consensus often seems a lost cause.

    But we collectively moved the intellectual property system a step forward.

    Just as we collectively moved forward this week with the Pact for the Future.

    And these recent wins remind us of the gains we’ve made we that need to protect.

    Of the ways our lives are better because of the United Nations.

    Of the ways our world is better because of our collective contribution to the international system.

    It promotes economic development and makes trade more fair – together supporting job creation, overcoming poverty, and enabling small and medium countries to resist coercion.

    It guards against the spread of nuclear weapons.

    It sets the standards that keep food safe.

    It assigns the satellite orbits that take the internet to the most remote reaches.

    It sets the standards that keep 120,000 flights and 12 million passengers safely in the sky every day.

    It is resolving and preventing conflicts in 53 peacekeeping and political missions.

    Each year it saves more than 350 million children from malnutrition.

    And most of all – let us always remember – we are collectively descended from people who lived in a harsher, more dangerous world…

    Who built this UN system to confine horrors of the past to history, and to give us a better life.

    We have no option and no excuse but to find a way through our challenges today, immense and intractable as they are.

    We must work together.

    We must drive change where it is needed, transparently, together.

    We must drive change to include all the world’s peoples.

    To deploy the collective agency that this forum provides, so we combat climate change, poverty and coercion…

    So we negotiate peace.

    President, friends –

    We must not allow others to divide us for their own gain…

    To dilute the protections that are inherent in the UN Charter, that are codified in the Geneva Conventions.

    Rather, we have to reinforce those protections, in the interests of all states and civilians.

    That is what Australia is for.

    A peaceful, stable and prosperous world for all.

    Where sovereignty is respected.

    Where civilians are protected.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Press release – Hungarian Presidency debriefs EP committees on priorities

    Source: European Parliament 3

    Ministers are holding a series of meetings in parliamentary committees to present the priorities of the Hungarian Presidency of the Council.

    Hungary holds the Presidency of the Council until December 2024 included. This text will be updated regularly as the hearings take place.

    Constitutional Affairs

    On 19 September, European Union Affairs Minister János Bóka highlighted the need to reform the EU for upcoming enlargement and told MEPs that the Presidency envisions two ministerial-level discussions on the future of Europe. He raised concerns about maintaining interinstitutional balance when reforming the Framework Agreement between the EP and the Commission and mentioned the transparency of interest representation, EU accession to the European Court of Human Rights, and the EU Ethics Body as other priorities.

    MEPs debated issues including the Hungarian government’s stance on EU values and its compliance with EU Court of Justice judgments. Many speakers raised concerns on the Prime Minister’s recent visits to Moscow and Beijing, while others advocated enhancing national authorities’ role in EU decision-making. Hungary’s announcement that it will seek an opt-out from migration rules and its national assembly’s position that European elections should be abolished were also discussed.

    Environment, Public Health and Food Safety

    On 23 September, Anikó Raisz, Secretary of State for Environmental Affairs and Circular Economy, said the Presidency would push for a more competitive Europe while addressing the triple challenge of reducing pollution, mitigating climate change, and preserving biodiversity. MEPs quizzed the Minister on the EU’s greenhouse gas reduction target for 2040, the Clean Industrial Deal, COP29, recent floods in Europe, the circular economy, pollution, new genomic techniques, chemicals, the role of forests and soil monitoring.

    Péter Takács, Secretary of State for Health, highlighted, as priorities, adopting Council conclusions on cardiovascular diseases and renewing EU cooperation on organ donation and transplants. The Presidency also intends to adopt the updated Council recommendation on smoke-free environments and advance on the pharmaceutical package. MEPs quizzed the Presidency on measures foreseen on rare diseases, equal access to medicines, shortages in the healthcare workforce, the competitiveness of the EU’s pharmaceutical industry as well as mRNA vaccines.

    Development

    On 26 September Tristan Azbej, State Secretary for the Aid of Persecuted Christians, said that the Presidency would pay particular attention to the humanitarian-peace-development nexus, especially in the Sahel region. Mr Azbej also mentioned as priorities the implementation of the EU’s Samoa Agreement with the Africa, Caribbean and Pacific region, tacking the root causes of migration in partner countries, and supporting the Global Gateway initiative and the Team Europe approach to development.

    MEPs raised questions about the credibility of the Presidency’s claims to advocate for human rights and democracy, given the rule of law concerns around the government as well as its ties with China and Russia. They also raised the importance of addressing the global persecution of Christians, and plans for closer cooperation with partner countries and countries of origin on returns and readmissions.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI China: Two more service stations open in Shanghai airports

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

    Maria Costa Sanchez from Spain is served by staff members of the one-stop service station opened at Terminal 1 of Pudong International Airport in Shanghai on Friday. [Photo/chinadaily.com.cn

    Two more one-stop service stations opened on Friday to serve international travelers at Shanghai’s two airports, marking the availability of arrival service at both the city’s two aviation hubs.

    The two service stations coming into operation are situated at Terminal 1 of the Shanghai Pudong International Airport and Terminal 1 of the Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport, respectively. They will work together with the existing one at Terminal 2 of the Pudong International Airport, which was in trial operation since June 29, to provide inbound travelers with comprehensive, considerate, and efficient services upon their arrival in the city.

    Tailored for the specific requirements of inbound travelers, the three one-stop service stations are tasked to effectively improve the convenience and satisfaction of expatriates traveling working and living in Shanghai.

    A view of the one-stop service station opened at Terminal 1 of Pudong International Airport in Shanghai on Friday. [Photo/chinadaily.com.cn]

    Under a screen displaying “International Services Shanghai”, staff members work at four counters set up at each of the three stations, ready to offer services including communication, payment, tourism and transportation.

    Crucial services including purchasing local SIM cards, cash exchange and withdrawal, portable Wi-Fi equipment, mobile payment consultation and transportation pass sale are available at the stations sitting directly outside the terminals’ international arrival exit points.

    A view of the one-stop service station opened at Terminal 1 of Hongqiao International Airport in Shanghai on Friday. [Photo/chinadaily.com.cn]

    Jorge Cinco from Mexico, who just arrived at Terminal 1 of the Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport, said the services he needed most were payment consultation as well as telecommunications.

    “They are very friendly and helpful,” he said of the staff members who helped him purchase a local SIM card at the counter.

    Maria Costa Sanchez, who travelled from Spain to Shanghai to visit her daughter and three granddaughters, showed the same appreciation toward the service stations. Aided by a translation machine, she managed to exchange cash and acquire a local SIM card at Terminal 1 of the Shanghai Pudong International Airport.

    So far, the one-stop service station at Terminal 2 of the Pudong International Airport has offered inquiries and services to more than 44,000 passenger trips, and received more than 3,600 pieces of positive feedback from international travelers from countries including Russia, the United States, the United Kingdom, Denmark, and the Philippines.

    A view of the one-stop service station opened at Terminal 1 of Hongqiao International Airport in Shanghai on Friday. International travellers are served by staff members of the one-stop service station opened at Terminal 1 of Hongqiao International Airport in Shanghai on Friday. [Photo/Xinhua]

    The three one-stop service stations at Shanghai’s two airports would also respond to the upcoming seventh China International Import Expo by providing thoughtful services for exhibitors and participants of the event from all over the world.

    Shanghai’s airports received 8.07 million passenger trips in the first half, soaring 173 percent from the same period of last year.

    The stations are the result of collaboration between the Foreign Affairs Office of the Shanghai Municipal Government, Shanghai Head Office of the People’s Bank of China, Shanghai Municipal Commission of Transport, Shanghai Municipal Administration of Culture and Tourism, Shanghai Communications Administration, Shanghai Airport (Group) Co Ltd and Shanghai Foreign Service (Group) Co Ltd affiliated to Donghao Lansheng (Group) Co Ltd.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: FS concludes visit to UK (with photos/video)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         â€‹The Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, continued his visit to London, the United Kingdom (UK), yesterday (September 27, London time). In the morning, he attended a roundtable meeting organised by The CityUK, an industry-led body representing UK-based financial services. He engaged in in-depth discussions with over 20 leaders from the UK’s financial community. At the meeting, Mr Chan briefed participants on the economic situation in Hong Kong, and highlighted that the city’s financial markets are undergoing continuous reforms and innovations, with good progress achieved in the stock market, asset and wealth management, offshore renminbi business, green finance, fintech, etc. He said the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government is actively working to reinforce and enhance Hong Kong’s status as an international financial centre, and he looks forward to strengthening co-operation with the UK financial sector to promote mutual development.

         Mr Chan then attended a luncheon hosted by the Hong Kong Association of the UK, where he delivered a speech to about 150 guests from the UK political and business communities. He said that with the solid support of the Central Authorities, Hong Kong’s economy is steadily advancing, and the city is fully committed to promoting the development of the “Eight Centres”. He emphasised that financial services and innovation and technology are the city’s key future dual economic engines. Citing green finance as an example, Mr Chan highlighted that Hong Kong is developing itself into an international green tech and green finance centre; where the city fully supports the development of technologies in addition to green and sustainable financing. Hong Kong is also actively aligning with international green standards, including developing green classification frameworks, and pressing ahead with sustainability disclosure requirements in financial reporting. Mr Chan also introduced the four main areas of innovation and technology development in Hong Kong and explained how the Hong Kong Investment Corporation Limited, as “patient capital,” can leverage capital to guide more long-term private market investments into strategic industries, accelerating the development of its ecosystem.

         Mr Chan will leave London today (September 28, London time) and arrive in Hong Kong in the afternoon of September 29.            

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: PHOTOS: Capito Participates in Naturalization Ceremony for New U.S. Citizens

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito
    CHARLESTON, W.Va. – U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) today delivered remarks during a naturalization ceremony in Charleston, W.Va. Senator Capito joined Frank Volk, Chief Judge for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, and other officials where she spoke to 55 new United States citizens and their families in attendance, and helped hand out their certificates of citizenship. The new citizens represented 34 different countries.
    “From India to Brazil to the United Kingdom and elsewhere, you have come from nearly every corner of the world, united in the shared belief that in the United States your future can be anything you want it to be,” Senator Capito said to the group. “I want to thank you and your families for all the sacrifices, courage, patience, persistence, and commitment to this process. It’s both a testament to the promise of our great nation, and also to your character, in committing to America and its laws. You earned it, and I am honored to help officially welcome you, my fellow citizens, to the United States.”
    Photos from the event are included below:
    U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) participates in a naturalization ceremony in Charleston, W.Va. on Friday, September 27, 2024.
    U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) joins Chief Judge for the Southern District of West Virginia Frank Volk and members of the American Legion at a naturalization ceremony in Charleston, W.Va. on Friday, September 27, 2024.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The Great British Festival is back in Manila

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The British Embassy Manila, the British Chamber of Commerce and British Council Philippines announces the return of the Great British Festival on 19-20 October.

    The British Embassy Manila and British Chamber of Commerce, together with British Council Philippines, are excited to announce the return of the Great British Festival – a weekend celebration of British culture, creativity, innovation, and friendship – taking place on 19-20 October. This year’s festival coincides with the UK-Philippines Friendship Day, making it a special event that highlights the 88 strong years of enduring partnership between the UK and the Philippines. 

    The Great British Festival will be held at Bonifacio Global City’s Amphitheatre and C1 Park, transforming it into a literary themed hub of activities, performances, and showcases that capture the essence of British culture. The festival is open to the public and promises a weekend of fun and excitement for people of all ages.  

    Highlights of the Great British Festival:  

    • Cultural performances 

    • Food and Drink 

    • Education pavilion 

    • Innovation and Technology 

    • Sport and Games 

    • Business and trade 

    British Ambassador to the Philippines, Laure Beaufils, expressed enthusiasm for the upcoming festival, saying: 

    The Great British Festival is our way of celebrating the rich cultural ties between the UK and the Philippines. This year, we’re delighted to hold it on the same week-end as UK-Philippines Friendship Day.  We invite everyone to join us in experiencing the best of British culture at the festival – whether that be music, dance, food, education or more!  Together, we will continue to strengthen the bonds of friendship and partnership between our two countries.

    Executive Director and Trustee of the British Chamber of Commerce, Chris Nelson, said: 

    We are glad to welcome everyone again to the upcoming Great British Festival. The British Chamber along with the British Embassy Manila and the British Council have worked together to promote the growing trade and cultural relations between the UK and the Philippines. We look forward to showcasing a promising business landscape to more British investors. 

    The Great British Festival will also foster business and educational connections with dedicated zones for trade and investment, featuring UK brands and businesses, and providing opportunities for collaboration between British and Filipino businesses. Additionally, education institutions will be present, providing valuable insights and guidance for those interested in studying in the UK.

    Event details 

    • Dates: 19-20 October 2024 

    • Venue: C1 Park and Amphitheatre 

    • Time: 10:00 AM – 10:00 PM 

    • Admission: Free 

    The Great British Festival is organised by the British Embassy Manila, in partnership with the British Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines and the British Council. The Great British Festival is organised with the support of our partners at PruLife UK, Shell, Pandiman, BPI, Unilever, Corio Generation, HSBC, SSI Marks & Spencer, VFS Global, PGA Cars – Bentley, BSI, Inchcape, BDO, Standard Chartered, Jollibee Foods Corporation, Radical Motors, Union Jack Tavern, Yummy Organics Food Corporation, Tao Corporation, The Borough Pizza Pub, Gridiron Shawarma x Sausage, Ginebra San Miguel, Vogue Concepts – Charles Tyrwhitt, Nord Anglia International School Manila and Drake International, McDonald’s, Philippine Airlines and Estate Wines.

    For more information and updates on the programme and participating companies, follow the British Embassy Manila on X (@ukinphilippines), Facebook and Instagram (@ukinthephiliipines). 

    Contact:

    Cara San Pedro, British Embassy Manila – Cara.SanPedro@fcdo.gov.uk 

    Keenah Ticzon, British Chamber of Commerce Philippines – Kticzon@britcham.org.ph

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 September 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Translation: Medium-term budgetary structural plan 2025-2029

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: Government of Italy

    September 28, 2024

    The Presidency of the Council of Ministers has transmitted to the Chambers the Medium-Term Structural Budget Plan 2025-2029, as provided for in Chapter IV of Regulation (EU) 2024-1263 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2024.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Man convicted of murder after detectives retrieve CCTV that disproves his claim of self-defence

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    A man who claimed self-defence following a fatal stabbing has been convicted of murder after detectives uncovered CCTV which disproved his claim.

    Sabin Manda, 32 (27.08.92) of Popes Lane, Ealing, was found guilty of murdering 27-year-old Bajram Luli on Thursday, 26 September at Inner London Crown Court.

    The pair had been involved in a dispute over drugs in Sudbury Heights Avenue, Greenford, on 11 March 2024.

    Manda claimed he attacked Bajram in self-defence after fearing for his own life. However following the incident he went ‘off the grid’ claiming he was worried about possible retaliation.

    In the meantime, detectives had secured CCTV footage which captured the attack and showed it was unprovoked. After using various forensic techniques, Manda was located and arrested.

    Detective Inspector Adam Guttridge, Specialist Crime South, said: “The investigation team worked long and hard to locate footage of this incident that helped disprove Sabin Mandas’s claims of self-defence.

    “This was an unprovoked attack and Manda will now face many years in prison to consider the consequences of his actions.

    “I can only hope his conviction brings some comfort to Bajram’s family.”

    Manda was remanded in custody ahead of sentencing at the same court on Thursday, 11 October.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Nokia selected by Vodafone Idea as major 4G and 5G partner in India

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Press Release

    Nokia selected by Vodafone Idea as major 4G and 5G partner in India  

    • Nokia and Vodafone Idea to deploy 5G network across major Indian cities; Deal includes modernizing and expanding the 4G network.
    • Nokia to supply equipment from its energy-efficient AirScale portfolio including its MantaRay SON solution for network optimization and automation.
    • Deal will bring premium connectivity to Vodafone Idea’s subscribers.

    28 September 2024
    Espoo, Finland – Nokia today announced that it has been awarded a three-year deal by Vodafone Idea Limited (VIL) to deploy 4G and 5G equipment. The agreement includes the modernization and expansion of VIL’s 4G network of which Nokia is already a major supplier. The deployment will deliver premium connectivity to 200 million VIL customers. Nokia will increase its market share and replace the incumbent vendor in Chennai and Andhra Pradesh, making it the largest supplier covering circles that generate more that 50% of VIL’s revenue. Deployment will begin immediately.

    The deal will see Nokia deploy equipment from its comprehensive, industry-leading 5G AirScale portfolio, powered by its energy-efficient ReefShark System-on-Chip technology. This includes base stations, baseband units, and its latest generation of Habrok Massive MIMO radios. These are designed for easy deployment and will deliver premium 5G capacity and coverage. Nokia will also modernize VIL’s existing 4G network with multiband radios and baseband equipment, which can also support 5G.

    VIL will also benefit from Nokia’s industry-leading network optimization and automation platform, MantaRay SON. This uses self-configuring modules to boost network performance and efficiency and can be tailored and deployed to optimize specific software applications to address unique operational challenges. Nokia will also provide planning, deployment, integration, and network optimization services.

    Nokia is a long-term partner of VIL and has supported them with the deployment of its 2G, 3G, 4G, and now 5G networks.

    Akshaya Moondra, CEO of Vodafone Idea Limited, said: “We are committed to providing a best-in-class 4G and 5G experience to our customers and this new deal with Nokia, who has been our partner since the beginning, will help us to deliver that. 5G will bring seamless high-speed connectivity and increased capacity supporting citizens and enterprises alike. This will also enable unprecedented levels of innovation and efficiency across various sectors, empowering organizations to thrive in today’s fast-paced digital landscape.”

    Tommi Uitto, President of Mobile Networks at Nokia, said: “Nokia is proud to be Vodafone Idea’s partner in the next stage of its network evolution. This is a continuation of our long-term partnership that has lasted for over three decades and highlights their trust in our technology portfolio. They will benefit from the very latest products and innovations from our industry-leading, energy-efficient AirScale portfolio that will bring premium quality capacity and connectivity to their customers. We look forward to working with Vodafone Idea on this exciting deployment.”

    Resources and additional information
    Webpage: Nokia AirScale
    Webpage: Nokia Sustainability
    Webpage: MantaRay SON

    About Nokia
    At Nokia, we create technology that helps the world act together.

    As a B2B technology innovation leader, we are pioneering networks that sense, think and act by leveraging our work across mobile, fixed and cloud networks. In addition, we create value with intellectual property and long-term research, led by the award-winning Nokia Bell Labs.

    With truly open architectures that seamlessly integrate into any ecosystem, our high-performance networks create new opportunities for monetization and scale. Service providers, enterprises and partners worldwide trust Nokia to deliver secure, reliable and sustainable networks today – and work with us to create the digital services and applications of the future.

    Media inquiries
    Nokia Press Office
    Email: Press.Services@nokia.com

    Follow us on social media
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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Apostolic Journey of His Holiness Francis in Luxembourg and Belgium (26 to 29 September 2024) – Courtesy Visit to the King of the Belgians and Meeting with the Authorities and Civil Society in the Castle of Laeken

    Source: The Holy See

    Apostolic Journey of His Holiness Francis in Luxembourg and Belgium (26 to 29 September 2024) – Courtesy Visit to the King of the Belgians and Meeting with the Authorities and Civil Society in the Castle of Laeken, 27.09.2024
    Courtesy Visit to the King of the Belgians
    This morning, after celebrating Holy Mass privately, the Holy Father Francis transferred by car to the Castle of Laeken for the courtesy visit to the King of the Belgians, His Majesty Philippe Leopold Lodewijk Maria and Queen Mathilde d’Udekem d’Acoz.
    Upon arrival, at 9.30, a Guard of Honour on horseback accompanied him to the main entrance of the Castle, where he was welcomed by the Belgian Royals.
    After the official photographs and the signing of the Book of Honour, the private meeting took place, followed by the exchange of gifts.
    At the end of the visit, the Pope, the King and the Queen transferred to the Grande Galerie of the Castle of Laeken for the meeting with the authorities and civil society.

    Meeting with the Authorities and Civil Society
    At 10.15, in the Grande Galerie of the Castle of Laeken, the Holy Father Francis met with political and religious authorities, businesspeople and representatives of civil society and culture.
    After the speeches of the King of Belgium and the Prime Minister, the Holy Father delivered his address.
    At the end of the meeting, after taking leave of the Royals and before returning to the Apostolic Nunciature, Pope Francis visited the Home Saint-Joseph in Brussels, a residence for elderly people in financial difficulty, where the Little Sisters of Charity are working.
    The following is the address delivered by the Holy Father during his meeting with the authorities and civil Society:

    Address of the Holy Father
    Your Majesty,Mr Prime Minister,Brother Bishops,Distinguished Authorities,Ladies and Gentlemen!
    I thank Your Majesty for your cordial welcome and kind words of greeting. I am very pleased to be visiting Belgium. When I think of this country, what comes to mind is something small yet great; a country in the west that at the same time is also at the centre, as if Belgium were the beating heart of an enormous organism.
    Indeed, it would be a mistake to judge the quality of a country by its geographical size. Belgium may not be a large state, yet its particular history has been impactful. Immediately after the Second World War, the exhausted and downhearted peoples of Europe, in beginning a profound process of peace, cooperation and integration, looked to your country as a natural location to establish key European institutions. This was because Belgium was on the fault line between the Germanic and Latin worlds, sandwiched between France and Germany, two countries that had most embodied the opposing nationalistic ideals underlying the conflict.
    We could describe Belgium as a bridge between the continent and the British Isles, between the Germanic and French-speaking regions, between southern and northern Europe. A bridge enabling concord to spread and disputes to abate. A bridge where all people, with their own languages, ways of thinking and beliefs can meet others and choose conversation, dialogue and sharing as the means of mutual interaction. A bridge where all can learn to make their own identity not an idol or barrier, but a welcoming place, from which to begin and then return; a place for promoting valuable personal exchanges, seeking together new social stability and building new agreements. Belgium is a bridge that promotes trade, connects and brings cultures into dialogue. An indispensable bridge, then, for rejecting war and building peace.
    It is thus easy to see how great little Belgium really is! How Europe needs Belgium to remind it that its history comprises peoples and cultures, cathedrals and universities, achievements of human ingenuity, but also many wars and the will to dominate that sometimes led to colonialism and exploitation.
    Europe needs Belgium in order to continue along the path of peace and of fraternity among its peoples. Indeed, Belgium is a reminder to all others that when nations disregard borders or breach treaties by employing the most varied and untenable excuses, and when they use weapons to replace actual law with the principle of “might is right”, then they open Pandora’s box, unleashing violent storms that batter the house, threatening to destroy it. At this moment in history, I think Belgium plays a very important role. It seems we are close to a world war.
    Moreover, peace and harmony are never won once and for all. On the contrary, they are a duty and a mission – concord and peace is a task and a mission – one that needs to be undertaken unceasingly, with great care and patience. For when human beings forget the memory of the past and its valuable lessons, they run the dangerous risk of once again falling backwards, even after having moved on, forgetting the suffering and appalling costs paid by previous generations. Human beings forget the past, but it is curious as there are other forces, both in society and in individuals, that make us fall repeatedly into the same mistakes.
    In this regard, Belgium is more essential than ever for keeping alive the memory of the European continent. Indeed, it provides an irrefutable argument for developing a timely and continuous cultural, social and political movement that, at the same time, is both courageous and prudent. A movement that excludes from the future the idea and practice of war as a viable option with all its catastrophic consequences.
    Furthermore, history is the often unheeded magistra vitae and Belgium’s history calls Europe to return to its path, rediscover its true identity, and invest once again in the future by opening itself to life and hope by overcoming the demographic winter and the torments of war! These are the two calamities we face right now. We are seeing the nightmare of war, which can still turn into a world war. And the demographic winter; that is why we have to be pragmatic and have more children!
    In bearing witness to its faith in the Risen Christ, the Catholic Church wishes to be a presence offering individuals, families, societies and nations a hope both ancient and ever new. A presence helping everyone to face challenges and difficulties, not with frivolous enthusiasm or bleak pessimism, but with the certainty that humanity, loved by God, is not destined to collapse into nothingness, but is eternally called to goodness and peace.
    Fixing her gaze on Jesus, the Church always recognizes herself as the disciple who follows her Master with fear and trembling. While she knows that she is holy, for she has been founded by the Lord, she experiences at the same time the fragility and shortcomings of her members; saints and sinners who are never fully up to the task entrusted to them since it is always beyond their capacity.
    The Church proclaims the good news that can fill our hearts with joy. Through works of charity and countless examples of love for our neighbour, the Church seeks to offer concrete and trusted signs of the love that motivates her. Yet, she always lives in a specific culture, within the thinking of a given age that she sometimes helps to shape and to which at other times she is subjected; and her members do not always understand and live the message of the Gospel in all its purity and fullness. The Church is holy but has sinful members.
    In this perennial coexistence of sanctity and sin, light and shadow, the Church carries out her mission, often with examples of great generosity and heartfelt dedication, but sadly, at times, with the emergence of painful counter-testimonies. I refer to the tragic instances of child abuse – also referenced by the King and the Prime Minister – which is a scourge that the Church is addressing firmly and decisively by listening to and accompanying those who have been wounded, and by implementing a prevention programme throughout the world.
    Brothers and sisters, it is shameful! It is a shame that we have to address this situation, ask for pardon and solve the problem: the shame of child abuse. We think of the time of the Holy Innocents and say, “Oh what a tragedy, what did King Herod do!” but today there is this crime in the Church. The Church must be ashamed, ask for pardon and try to solve this situation with Christian humility and by putting in all the measures necessary to ensure that it does not happen again. Someone might say to me, “Your Holiness, according to the statistics, the vast majority of abuse are in the family, in the neighbourhood, in the world of sport or in school. Yet, even one case is enough for us to be ashamed! In the Church we must ask pardon for this; others can ask forgiveness for their part. This is our shame and humiliation.
    In this regard, I was saddened to learn about the practice of “forced adoptions” that also took place here in Belgium between the 1950s and the 1970s. In those poignant stories, we see how the bitter fruit of wrongdoing and criminality was mixed in with what was unfortunately the prevailing view in all parts of society at that time. This was so much the case that many believed in conscience that they were doing something good for both the child and the mother.
    Frequently, the family and other actors in society, including within the Church, thought that in order to avoid the stigma that unfortunately fell upon unmarried mothers in those times, it would be preferable for the good of both the child and the mother that the child be given up for adoption. There were even cases in which some women were not given the possibility of choosing between keeping their children or giving them up for adoption. This is actually happening today in some cultures and countries.
    As the successor of the Apostle Peter, I pray to the Lord that the Church will always find within herself the strength to bring clarity and never conform to the predominant culture, even when that culture uses, in a manipulative way, values derived from the Gospel, drawing from it inauthentic conclusions that cause suffering and exclusion.
    I pray that the leaders of the nations, by looking at Belgium and its history, will be able to learn from it. In this way, they can spare their peoples endless misfortunes and sorrow. I likewise pray that those in government will know how to take up the responsibility, the risk and the honour of peace, knowing how to avoid the danger, disgrace and absurdity of war. I pray too that they will fear the judgment of conscience, of history and of God, so that their hearts and minds will be converted so as always to put the common good first. At this time when the economy has developed so much, I would like to point out that in some countries the most profitable investments are in arms manufacturing.
    Your Majesty, Ladies and Gentlemen, the motto of my visit to your country is “En route, avec Espérance”. The fact that Espérance is written with a capital letter leads me to reflect that hope is not merely something to be carried in our luggage on a journey. Instead, hope is a gift from God, perhaps the most humble virtue – the writer said – and the one that never fails, never disappoints. Hope is a gift from God to be carried in our hearts. I would like to leave you, then, with the following wish for you and for all those living in Belgium: may you always ask this gift of hope from the Holy Spirit, and welcome it in order to walk together with hope along the path of life and history. Thank you!

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: ASIA/HOLY LAND – The relic of the blood of St. Francis brought to the Holy Land, in a pilgrimage to invoke peace

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Rome (Agenzia Fides) – “After 800 years we bring St. Francis back to the Holy Land to try to be, like him, capable of crossing borders in a wounded place, just as eight centuries ago the Poverello went on a pilgrimage to the holy places in an equally difficult time, because marked by the crusades, with the desire to build bridges and not walls”. Thus, Brother Matteo Brena, Commissioner of the Holy Land of the Friars Minor of Tuscany and coordinator of the Committee for the eight hundredth anniversary of the stigmata of Saint Francis, announces that from September 30 to October 5, together with 10 other people, including friars and lay people, he will bring the relic of the blood of Saint Francis of Assisi to the Holy Land, while war rages and while the people in these troubled territories are suffering, fear, mourning, precarious. “We leave – continues Brother Matteo – with a great desire in our hearts: to be that ‘small remnant’ that can be the bearer, in this new dramatic moment for the Middle East, of a sign of consolation and a word of hope. ‘From the wounds, new life’ was the motto of the eighth centenary of the stigmata of Saint Francis; and we, bringing to Jerusalem and Bethlehem the relic of his blood, which flowed from the signs of the passion on his body, try to tell those brothers and sisters that it is possible to inhabit the wounds with hope and with a desire for the future”. The delegation, composed of four friars and six lay people, including representatives of the Franciscan Youth and the Secular Franciscan Order, will travel between Jerusalem and Bethlehem to bring the relic to the Christian communities of the area, meeting the local people and also visiting some places that are symbols of the commitment that Christians carry out to bring peace to the land where Jesus lived. October 2 will be one of the central moments of the trip: in fact, the twinning between the Basilica of Gethsemane, a place that preserves the memory of the dramatic hours of Christ’s passion, and the Sanctuary of La Verna will be established. The twinning will also establish the bond between the two hermitages. The ceremony will be attended by Fra’ Francesco Patton, Custos of the Holy Land, and Fra’ Livio Crisci, Provincial Minister of the Friars Minor of Tuscany. “This year – adds Fra’ Brena – the Basilica of Gethsemane celebrates a century since it was built, in 1924, together with the Basilica of the Transfiguration, by the Italian architect Antonio Barluzzi, who died in 1960 in Rome in the convent of the Delegation of the Holy Land. We will therefore also include ourselves in the initiatives of this centenary.” “United in prayer, we accompany these brothers of ours on the pilgrimage between Jerusalem and Bethlehem,” affirm the Franciscan fraternities from all over Italy. Eight hundred years ago, in September 1224, Francis of Assisi received the Sacred Stigmata on Mount Verna, in the Arezzo area. On that occasion the friar was conformed to Christ Crucified and a part of his habit, soaked in the blood of the side, became an important relic, as a perpetual testimony of that event, guarded by the Friars Minor. (PA) (Agenzia Fides 28/9/2024) Share:

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: PC dismissed following misconduct hearing after assaulting child

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    A police officer has been dismissed after a misconduct panel found he assaulted a child by spanking her bare bottom on numerous occasions.

    A misconduct hearing, which concluded on Friday, 27 September, found that PC Ross Benson, attached to the North West Basic Command Unit, breached the standard of professional behaviour relating to discreditable conduct at the level of gross misconduct.

    He was dismissed without notice.

    The misconduct hearing panel, led by an independent chair, examined allegations that between April 2018 and August 2018 PC Benson administered spankings to a girl, while she was aged between 12-13 years old, and there was a sexual element to them.

    The girl was known to him and the spankings happened when he was off-duty.

    On 6 November 2020, PC Benson was arrested by Bedfordshire Police on suspicion of sexual assault. In September 2021 he was informed no further action would be taken.

    Bedfordshire Police contacted the Met’s Directorate of Professional Standards and a misconduct investigation was launched.

    Detective Superintendent Will Lexton-Jones, the acting the North West Basic Command Unit Commander, said: “My thoughts are first and foremost with the victim who displayed courage in reporting this. PC Benson’s abhorrent behaviour has led to his immediate dismissal, which is a decision I fully support.

    “I hope this outcome demonstrates how we are rooting out those who do not demonstrate the high standards we demand from our officers.”

    Following the hearing PC Benson will now be placed on the barred list held by the College of Policing. Those appearing on the list cannot be employed by police, local policing bodies (PCCs), the Independent Office for Police Conduct or His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Central London restaurants fined for mice infestation and falsifying documents | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

    Wong Kei, the well-known Chinatown restaurant has received over £40,000 in fines after cockroaches and dead mice were found in the kitchen and the owner was found to have falsified documents.  In a separate case brought by the City Council, Little Sicily on Whitehall was also prosecuted after failing to correct numerous hygiene offences, most notably a mouse infestation.

    Gosing Limited, the operators of the Chinatown stalwart pleaded guilty to four offences of failing to comply with EU food safety and hygiene regulation and was fined at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on September 4, 2024, and ordered to pay £31,503.25 in fines and costs.

    After an initial visit by Westminster City Council’s Environmental Health team in 2022, Wong Kei operating under Jexstar Limited, was served two Hygiene Improvement Notices and was asked to improve business standards. As a result, the Council was told that its director Mr. Daniel Luc had parted company with the restaurant. However, in May 2023, the restaurant which now operated under Gosing Limited was inspected again and found there was no change to the business as Mr. Daniel Luc still retained overall control.

    The restaurant was found to have issues with mice and cockroaches as well as other food hygiene offences including cross contamination of raw and precooked food, and unsanitary hygiene practices by staff. Subsequently, the court fined Mr. Luc a total of £10,803.25 for pleading guilty to all offences.  The total fines amounted to £42,306.50, and between Mr. Luc and Gosing Ltd  they pled guilty to over eleven (11) food hygiene offenses.

    In a separate matter, the director of Italian themed restaurant Little Sicily, Mr. Magdi Assif, was also charged with three food hygiene offences at Westminster Magistrates’ court on September 4, 2024, and issued with penalties totalling £20,176.50. Following a routine inspection of the eatery on Whitehall by the council there was evidence of mice droppings in the kitchen and storage areas, and mouldy food was found in the fridge. Inspectors also found sinks blocked by lettuce heads, grease dripping from cookers and mice droppings on the ground. Upon further inspection they also found cockroaches scuttling off after moving three chillers. This resulted in a Hygiene Emergency Prohibition Notice being served on the Food Business on the 26th of June 2023.

    The court heard how inspecting officers had also issued a previous Hygiene Emergency Prohibition Notice to Little Sicily Restaurant Limited on January 25th, 2023, relating to mice activity at the premises. Due to Mr. Assif’s poor history as the director of the business, it was decided, in the interest of the public to proceed with prosecution as the premises had been closed twice in 6 months.

    Westminster City Council remains dedicated to educating businesses to uphold the highest food safety standards. For more information about what the council does to ensure all establishments serve food that is safe to consume more information can be found on our website.  

    Cllr Aicha Less, Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for Children and Public Protection said:

    These fines demonstrate that Westminster Council remains committed to ensuring the safety and protection of consumers who enjoy the wide variety of food within the borough.

    Our vigilant food safety officers will continue to monitor and inspect all food-preparing and food-serving places to ensure they adhere to all laws and regulations that we as a council set.  And it is only fair that we ensure that those businesses who invest in compliance have the chance to thrive and that those who put others at risk of harm are held to account for their failures and unscrupulous practices”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: British beetroot growers to put down roots in US market

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 2

    Food and farming businesses to benefit from new export access to US

    The government has delivered a significant early victory for British farmers, securing access to the US market for UK beetroot growers. 

    Following extensive talks between the two Governments and trade representatives, this will open new opportunities for British farmers by increasing export opportunities and raising the profile of British beetroot in international markets – and is a springboard to grow the economy and expand UK trade relationships post-Brexit. 

    Daniel Zeichner met with his US counterpart, Secretary Vilsack at the G7 Ministers’ Meeting on Agriculture today to celebrate the milestone.  

    For the US, this will allow their processors to diversify their supply to satisfy demand for high-quality beetroot outside the US growing season, giving American consumers to access beetroot all year round from world-leading producers in the UK.  

    Industry estimates this new access will be worth approximately £150,000 per year in increased exports, with groups such as the NFU recently voicing their desire for the barrier to be resolved to allow British producers to benefit from the enormous potential of the US market, building on the recent successes of UK lamb in the US.  

    Minister for Food Security, Daniel Zeichner said:    

    This Government was elected on a mandate to support our farmers in trade deals – that is exactly what we are delivering.  

    This milestone marks a significant step forward for our beetroot farmers.    

    But this is only the start – over the coming weeks and months I will work tirelessly to back our British farmers and get our food exports moving again.

    NFU President Tom Bradshaw said:  

    It is great news that after many years of campaigning, British beetroot growers will have access to the market in the United States for the first time. Being able to access the US market, supplementing local production, will help to meet rising consumer demand for this healthy, nutritional crop, creating genuine growth opportunities for farmers and growers in the UK. 

    I am especially delighted that this announcement comes days after we returned from the US where we were able to make the case for UK beetroot directly to government officials. Industry collaboration with government and especially with the UK’s agri-food attaché based in Washington has been key to resolving this issue. 

    It shows the type of wins we’re able to achieve with the UK’s expanded network of agriculture attachés following a number of years of campaigning by the NFU for the creation of these positions. Long may the collaboration continue so British farmers and growers can expand into further markets and increase sales of great British food overseas.

    British businesses such as G’s Fresh will directly benefit from the opportunity to showcase their premium produce and grow their business in the US.    

    Graham Forber, Beetroot Product Director for G’s:    

    I would like to thank all involved in the assistance given to support our Love Beets beetroot development in the USA, in securing permission to import UK Beetroot. This will assist in our development and growth in processing beetroot in New York State while strengthening our supply across the USA.  

    I would like to thank all the parties who helped with this and particularly the support of the UK’s Agriculture Attaché at the British Embassy in Washington DC.

    Defra’s Agri-food attaché in the US was key to delivering this win for the UK, building on the strong relationship between the UK and US. Defra’s technical experts and global network of 16 agri-food attachés are driving sterling progress to remove non-tariff barriers to exports of high-quality UK food and drink, which are worth £24 billion per year.  

    Defra will work closely with UK beetroot growers and relevant industry bodies to ensure a smooth transition into the US market.

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 September 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Defending the right to abortion shouldn’t be a dangerous job

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Fernanda Doz Costa, Director of Gender, Racial Justice, Refugees and Migrants Rights Program at Amnesty International.

    Hate emails, stigmatization, death threats, stalking, burglaries, attacks, harassment at work and at home. Killings. This is what life is like for many who provide life-saving reproductive care, including abortions.

    Facilitating safe access to abortions has become an increasingly dangerous undertaking in most corners of the world, despite huge progress to expand access to healthcare.

    From the United States to Ethiopia, Colombia and Poland, those who defend the right to abortion, including health professionals such as midwives, nurses and doctors, have been facing a relentless backlash.

    In the USA, the National Abortion Federation recorded 11 murders, 26 attempted murders and 531 cases of assault, among many other types of attacks against people who facilitated abortions between 1977 and 2022. Since a devastating Supreme Court ruling two years ago greatly limited access to abortion services and created an environment of fear, there has been an increase in incidents like arsons, burglaries and death threats.

    From the United States to Ethiopia, Colombia and Poland, those who defend the right to abortion, including health professionals such as midwives, nurses and doctors, have been facing a relentless backlash.

    Fernanda Doz Costa, Director of Gender, Racial Justice, Refugees and Migrants Rights Program, Amnesty International

    In Sudan, abortion providers routinely face physical violence and public shaming.

    “A provider was shot by the spouse of a woman who sought an abortion,” one gynecologist recently told us. “There have been a few instances where service providers have been beaten by members of the public, even when just educating about contraception, or intervening in child marriage cases, especially in rural communities. So, providers are scared.”

    In other countries, such as Italy, anti-abortion activists organize online harassment campaigns against health professionals, which can have a deep impact offline. Attacks include barrages of insults, threats and trolling, and their profiles being reported to social media companies, in an attempt to get them banned from social media platforms.

    Another form of intimidation that is common across the world are aggressive anti-abortion protests and pickets outside health clinics, a strategy to terrorize both people seeking medical care, particularly those relying on public services, and the professionals trying to provide it.

    Not all is bad news. Over the last few decades, there has been a tremendous positive global trend towards advancing abortion rights around the world — in the past 30 years alone, more than 60 countries have liberalized their abortion laws. But, partly as a response to this, anti-rights initiatives continue to impede millions of people from accessing essential and vital health care. This happens even in countries where abortion services are legal on paper but challenging to access in practice.  

    Individuals and organizations advocating for limits to basic human rights have promoted an agenda that violently targets and stigmatizes anyone working to protect those in need of medical attention.

    As a gynecologist from Nigeria told us: “I face harassment and stigmatization for the work I do. The stigma is among fellow professional colleagues who make remarks that are demeaning to me. On the basis of religion, they preach to me about the sins committed for supporting abortion care, the killing of ‘the unborn children’ and the ‘hellfire that awaits all murderers.’”

    Similarly, Dr. Laura Gil, a doctor from Colombia, described the harassment and violence her and other colleagues who perform abortions face, even from colleagues: “They slashed one of my friend’s car tires. They glued shut a different colleague’s padlock so she couldn’t open her locker. When another friend who is a psychiatrist stood up for a patient who was asking to terminate her pregnancy because of a health risk, one of her colleagues hit her with a folder. All this mistreatment stems from the idea that people who do abortions are morally inferior.”

    Why does this matter? You may ask.

    When health professionals trying to care for their patients are prevented from doing their jobs, it is the most vulnerable who end up at high risk. It’s been long documented that limits to accessing abortion care particularly affect vulnerable populations who are unable to pay for the services in private – which is how many people access abortions in countries where the procedure is illegal.

    When health professionals trying to care for their patients are prevented from doing their jobs, it is the most vulnerable who end up at high risk.

    Fernanda Doz Costa, Director of Gender, Racial Justice, Refugees and Migrants Rights Program, Amnesty International

    These kinds of harassment campaign also have the pervasive effect of discouraging health professionals from pursuing certain specialities, which, in turn, greatly limits the availability of good quality accessible healthcare, as Dr. Gil told us.

    It’s a silent and dangerous rollback on human rights that is placing many lives at risk.

    Providing safe abortions should not be a risky job. In fact, in many countries it isn’t. There, doctors and nurses are able to care for their patients, provide information and advice about their options so they are able to make informed decisions about what is best for them and then access the services they need. Without harassment, hate campaigns and attacks, health professionals are able to do what they trained to do: save lives and support people to follow their lives plans as healthy and as free as possible.

    Over the many years we have been working, side by side millions of brave activists and organizations from across the world, to ensure abortion services are a reality for all, we asked many health professionals working in challenging environments why they do it, despite all the risks.

    Many told us of their unwavering commitment to dedicate their life to the service of humanity, to care for their patients, regardless of any considerations of creed, gender or any other factors.

    On international safe abortion day, let’s all do our part to celebrate and protect them.

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: WFP welcomes G7 commitment to food security and nutrition, especially in Africa

    Source: World Food Programme

    ROME – The United Nations World Food Programme today welcomed a renewed commitment by G7 Agriculture Ministers to work towards greater food security and better nutrition globally, noting that 309 million people face acute hunger caused by conflict, economic upheaval and the climate crisis.

    During a two-day meeting in the southern Italian city of Siracusa, which ended today, ministers agreed to work to make agriculture and food systems more productive, resilient and sustainable. They also made a specific commitment to help develop agriculture and food systems in Africa, through equitable partnerships.

    “Strategic investments by G7 nations are critical to drive the transformation in global agriculture needed to tackle widespread hunger and create food security for all. With our expertise and decades of experience, WFP is ready to play our full part in this process,“ said WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain during the ministers’ meeting. “The G7’s welcome commitments must now translate into tangible support, which helps smallholder farmers adapt to climate change and builds strong foundations for more resilient global food systems.”

    Italy, which holds the G7 presidency for the year, has historically been one of the leaders in placing food security at the core of the global agenda and hosted the first G7 Agriculture Ministers’ Meeting in 2009.

    The Italian G7 presidency held a ‘Forum for Africa’ in Siracusa aimed to strengthen cooperation in the agriculture sector between G7 members and African countries. It was attended by ministers from nine African countries, the African Union as well as international organizations including WFP.

    #                #            #

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

    Follow us on X, formerly Twitter, via @wfp_media

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: Lebanon crisis, note from Palazzo Chigi

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: Government of Italy

    September 28, 2024

    In the last few hours, the Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, has had several telephone contacts with the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Antonio Tajani, with the Minister of Defense, Guido Crosetto, and with the Authority delegated for the security of the Republic, Undersecretary Alfredo Mantovano, regarding the developments of the crisis in Lebanon.

    Despite its dramatic nature, the situation of our compatriots, military and civilians present on Lebanese territory does not show profiles different from those of the past few days. Italy confirms, in line with the position held so far, the need for every diplomatic effort in order to restart channels of dialogue between the parties in conflict.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Dan Bouncher on the impact of the Protocol on Northern Ireland’s economy

    Source: Traditional Unionist Voice – Northern Ireland

    The following is the full text of Dr Boucher’s comments quoted in today’s News Letter.

    “One of the curious things about the Northern Ireland economy since the introduction of the Protocol/Windsor Framework has been that services have done so much better than manufacturing. This is odd because the Protocol/Windsor Framework pertains to goods and not services, offering the goods component of the Northern Ireland economy the unique opportunity of ‘Dual Market Access.’ In this context one would have expected that the biggest winner since January 2021 would have been our manufacturing sector. Speaking on the View this week, the Economy Minister was challenged on this point but struggled to provide a convincing answer.

    “Dual market access is spoken of as if Northern Ireland has been afforded a uniquely privileged position because we are blessed with the opportunity of being located in two markets at the same time. Being part of a market means being able to move goods freely within it (having unfettered access) without having the expense of negotiating a customs or international SPS border. Dual Market Access was about getting this benefit for Northern Ireland both in terms of the rest of the UK and the Republic of Ireland/EU. There is, however, a small problem. The Windsor Framework does not provide Dual Market Access and can no more do so than it can provide a square circle.

    “What the Windsor Framework actually offers us is access to the Republic of Ireland/EU without having to engage with the expense of crossing a customs and international SPS border, but the price of this is the erection of a customs and international SPS border within the UK, separating Northern Ireland and Great Britain. Of course, trade can still take place within the UK between GB and NI, but there is no way of crossing the border – whether you use the Green or the Red Lane – without having an export number and having to negotiate the expense of a customs border and an international SPS border. The only concession here is that if your goods are eligible for the Green Lane, which requires negotiating additional hurdles like becoming a trusted trader, some of the other processes are made a bit simpler.

    “In response to this some might say, well, even if we don’t enjoy real dual market access, to the extent we get the benefit of being able to move goods freely within one economy, together with the option of accessing another economy for some purposes via a Green Lane which is less burdensome, surely that is a net gain? That might sound like a net gain but there are three huge problems.

    “First, up until 2020 Northern Ireland operated as a fully integrated part of the UK economy and the 67 million people in GB are our closest and most important market which we can now access subject to an international customs and SPS border. Whatever economic advantages there are of getting unfettered access to the Republic are more than offset by finding that, even in the Green Lane, our access to our main market is now fettered by a customs and international SPS border. Second, many businesses don’t regard the Green Lane as simpler and are opting either for the Red Lane or ceasing to trade with Northern Ireland. Third, our inclusion in the same single market for goods as the Republic, notwithstanding our remaining in the UK, means that we are now subject to the indignity of disenfranchisement, of having our laws made for us by 27 other countries in 300 different areas, laws that are made for us by a foreign Parliament in which we have no representation.

    “Far from presenting us with the best of both worlds, this is plainly the worst of both worlds.

    “If the UK Government had insisted on Mutual Enforcement, the means of managing the UK-ROI land border that did not involve partly disenfranchising 1.9 million of its citizens, one would expect that not only would our services sector have flourished since January 2021 but that our manufacturing sector would have also performed significantly more strongly since then.“

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Statement by Palazzo Chigi on the crisis in Lebanon

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    28 Settembre 2024

    The President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, has had a number of telephone conversations over the last few hours with the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Antonio Tajani, the Minister of Defence, Guido Crosetto, and the delegated authority for the security of the Republic, Undersecretary of State Alfredo Mantovano, regarding the developments in the crisis in Lebanon.

    Despite being dramatic, the situation of our compatriots, military personnel and civilians currently in Lebanon remains unchanged compared with the previous days. In line with its position thus far, Italy confirms the need for all diplomatic efforts to be made to reopen channels of dialogue between the parties to the conflict.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK response to the conclusion of the Global Coalition’s military mission in Iraq

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    The US and Iraq have announced the Global Coalition against Daesh’s military mission will draw to a close over the next 12 months.

    The US and Iraq have announced the Global Coalition against Daesh’s military mission will draw to a close over the next 12 months. The terrorist organisation has been territorially defeated in Iraq.

    The UK will continue to support the security of Iraq, as the Global Coalition enters a new phase. The UK will work closely with our Iraqi partners to develop an enduring bilateral relationship during the coming months, as part of the transition to a new security and defence partnership with Iraq.  

    Operation Inherent Resolve was established in 2014 to advise, assist and enable partner forces to secure the lasting defeat of Daesh and establish enduring security cooperation. This mission operates under The Global Coalition Against Daesh, consisting of 87 partners (82 governments and five member organisations).

    During the last decade, the UK has played a leading role through Operation SHADER, the UK’s contribution to Op Inherent Resolve. At the invitation of the Iraqi government, UK forces provided valuable support, training and assistance to more than 111,000 members of the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF), including more than 21,000 of the Kurdish Peshmerga, in crucial infantry, weapons maintenance, counter-IED, medical and engineering skills.

    The RAF have also conducted more than 10,000 sorties striking more than 1400 targets, as well as providing critical surveillance and reconnaissance in support of ISF ground operations. 

    We pay tribute to the professionalism of UK personnel who have played their part in the Global Coalition. 

    Thanks to the bravery and effectiveness of the Iraqi Security Forces, Peshmerga and the coalition’s continued commitment, Daesh has been territorially defeated in Iraq. The ISF has enabled the restoration of critical services for communities and the rehabilitation of conflict affected areas. With these core aims achieved, the process of moving to new security arrangements under Iraqi leadership can commence.

    Working alongside our global coalition partners, the UK remains committed to ensuring the global defeat of Daesh and its violent ideology. Our commitment to the security of Iraq and the wider region remains unwavering and we will look to develop a bilateral relationship that supports long-term stability in Iraq.

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 September 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Video: Deputy President Mashatile’s address at TUS Athlone Campus in Ireland

    Source: Republic of South Africa (video statements)

    Deputy President Mashatile’s address at TUS Athlone Campus in Ireland

    Checkout more: http://www.thepresidency.gov.za

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    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKMCCHu7tg4

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Europe: ASIA/HOLY LAND – The relic of the blood of Saint Francis brought to the Holy Land during a pilgrimage to invoke peace

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Rome (Agenzia Fides) – “After 800 years, we bring Saint Francis back to the Holy Land to try to be, like him, able to cross borders in a wounded place, just as, eight centuries ago, the Poverello went on a pilgrimage to the holy places in an equally difficult time, marked by the Crusades, with the desire to build bridges and not walls.” This is how Brother Matteo Brena, Commissioner of the Holy Land of the Friars Minor of Tuscany and coordinator of the Committee for the 800th anniversary of the stigmata of St. Francis, announces that from September 30 to October 5, together with 10 other people, brothers and lay people, he will carry the relic of the blood of St. Francis of Assisi to the Holy Land, while war rages and the populations of these troubled territories are in suffering, fear, mourning and precariousness.”We set out,” continues Brother Matthew, “with a great desire in our hearts: to be that “little remnant” that knows how to be the bearer, in this new dramatic situation for the Middle East, of a sign of consolation and a word of hope. From the wounds, a new life” was the motto of the eighth centenary of the stigmata of St. Francis; and we, by bringing to Jerusalem and Bethlehem the relic of his blood, which flowed from the signs of the passion on his body, try to tell those brothers and sisters that it is possible to inhabit the wounds with hope and with a desire for the future.”The delegation, made up of four brothers and six lay people, including representatives of the Franciscan Youth and the Secular Franciscan Order, will travel between Jerusalem and Bethlehem to bring the relic to the Christian communities of the area, meeting the local population and visiting some of the symbolic places of the commitment of Christians to pacify the land where Jesus lived. One of the highlights of the trip will take place on October 2: the twinning between the Basilica of Gethsemane, a place that preserves the memory of the dramatic hours of Christ’s passion, and the Sanctuary of La Verna will be sanctioned. The twinning will also sanction the link between the two hermitages. The ceremony will take place in the presence of Fra’ Francesco Patton, Custos of the Holy Land, and Fra’ Livio Crisci, Provincial Minister of the Friars Minor of Tuscany.”This year,” adds Brother Brena, “the Basilica of Gethsemane is one hundred years old since its construction in 1924, together with the Basilica of the Transfiguration, by the Italian architect Antonio Barluzzi, who died in 1960 in Rome in the convent of the Delegation of the Holy Land. We will therefore also participate in the initiatives of this centenary.””United in prayer, let us accompany our brothers on the pilgrimage between Jerusalem and Bethlehem,” say the Franciscan Fraternities throughout Italy. 800 years ago, in September 1224, Francis of Assisi received the Stigmata on the mountain of La Verna, near Arezzo. On that occasion, the brother conformed to the crucified Christ and a part of his habit, soaked in the blood of his side, became an important relic, a perpetual testimony of that event, preserved by the Friars Minor. (PA) (Agenzia Fides, 28/9/2024)
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  • MIL-OSI Translation: APOSTOLIC JOURNEY – Pope in Belgium: Synodal process should be a return to the Gospel, not a pursuit of “trendy” reforms

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Saturday, September 28, 2024

    Vatican Media

    Brussels (Agenzia Fides) – “The synodal process must be a return to the Gospel; it must not have among its priorities some ‘fashionable’ reform, but ask: how can we bring the Gospel to a society that no longer listens to it or has distanced itself from the faith? Let us all ask ourselves this question”. On the penultimate day of the Apostolic Journey to the heart of Europe, Pope Francis meets the Bishops, priests, deacons, consecrated men and women, seminarians and pastoral workers of Belgium in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Koekelberg, offering the local Catholic community, and the entire Western Church, a profound reflection on what he himself defines as a “crisis of faith” that the West itself is experiencing. A crisis, the Pontiff underlines, which is pushing the Catholic community “to return to the essential, that is, to the Gospel, so that the good news that Jesus brought into the world may be announced again to everyone, making all its beauty shine”. But Christ, he points out, is not a negative experience, on the contrary it is “a time that is offered to us to shake ourselves, to question ourselves and to change. It is a precious opportunity – in biblical language it is called kairòs – to be awakened from torpor and to rediscover the paths of the Spirit. When we experience desolation, in fact, we must always ask ourselves what message the Lord wants to communicate to us”. This “crisis of faith”, underlines the Bishop of Rome, shows us how the West has passed “from a Christianity placed in a hospitable social framework to a Christianity ‘of minority’, or rather, of testimony”. And this, he continues, “requires the courage of an ecclesial conversion, to start those pastoral transformations that also concern the customs, the models, the languages of faith, so that they are truly at the service of evangelization”. In this perspective, “this courage is also required of priests. To be priests who do not limit themselves to preserving or managing a heritage of the past, but pastors in love with Jesus Christ and attentive to grasping the questions of the Gospel, often implicit, as they walk with the holy People of God, a little in front, a little in the middle and a little at the back”. Hence the reflection on the synodal process, which in a few days will see a further step forward with the celebration of the XVI Ordinary General Assembly in the Vatican. Finally, the Pope recommends to the Church of Belgium to be merciful: “In the face of the experience of evil, we simply apply earthly justice that says: ‘whoever makes a mistake must pay’. However, the justice of God is superior”. And, dwelling on the concept of justice, the Pontiff also speaks of abuse (last night in the Apostolic Nunciature he met 17 victims of abuse by the Belgian clergy, ed.) thanking the Catholic community “for the great work” done “to transform anger and pain into help, closeness and compassion. Abuse generates atrocious suffering and wounds, also undermining the path of faith. And there is a need for so much mercy, so as not to remain with a heart of stone in the face of the suffering of the victims, to make them feel our closeness and offer all the help possible, to learn from them to be a Church that serves all without subjugating anyone”. In greeting those present, Francis recalls a work by Magritte, an illustrious Belgian painter entitled “The Act of Faith”. The canvas represents a door closed from the inside, which however is broken in the center, it is open to the sky: “It is a gash, which invites us to go beyond, to turn our gaze forward and upward, to never close ourselves in. This is an image that I leave you, as a symbol of a Church that never closes its doors, that offers everyone an opening to the infinite, that knows how to look beyond”. “Walk together, you and the Holy Spirit, to be a Church like this. Without the Spirit, nothing Christian happens,” concluded the Pope, who at the end of the meeting went to the royal crypt, beneath the church of Our Lady of Laeken, where the tombs of many members of the Royal House of Belgium are gathered. Welcomed by the King and Queen, the Pope stopped in front of the tomb of King Baudouin in silent prayer. Subsequently, in front of the King and those present, he praised his courage, when he chose to “leave his post as King so as not to sign a murderous law”. In 1992, in fact, the sovereign abdicated for 36 hours so as not to sign the law on the legalization of abortion. Finally, the Pope urged the Belgians to look to him at this time when criminal laws are making their way, hoping that his cause for beatification will proceed. (FB) (Agenzia Fides 28/9/2024) Share:

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

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