Category: Great Britain

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Fire at Scott Street, Perth

    Source: Scotland – City of Perth

    “I would like to send sincere condolences to the family and friends of the man who has tragically lost his life in this incident. My thoughts are also with all the other people who have been affected by this very serious fire. 

    “I wish to praise the significant immediate response from all the First Responders and especially our brave firefighters who hurried towards this major fire and put their lives at risk to rescue occupants from the building and tackle the blaze. National resources have been deployed including a dedicated height appliance which has been central to our brave firefighters’ efforts.  

    “Following the evacuation of all flats in the affected building and neighbouring properties in the early hours of Saturday, a rest centre was set up at the Salutation Hotel. Staff from our Housing Service, Perth and Kinross Health and Social Care Partnership and our social work teams have been in attendance at the hotel since the incident to give any support and practical help that we can. 

    “Importantly, we are working to make sure that everyone who has been displaced has suitable alternative accommodation in place. People have also been given food, hot drinks, clothes, replacement medication, nappies, baby milk, pay-as-you-go phones, toiletries, toys and help with their pets. 

    “A large-scale Red Cross team also attended this afternoon to provide further support for anyone that needed it, backing up the Council and HSCP effort through the night and day. 

    “I would like to thank everyone who has helped in the effort to support the householders, including our staff, volunteers and staff at the Salutation Hotel, and we will continue to do all we can to support people affected by the fire. What has been heartening to see at this sad time was the immediate practical support donated by local businesses and charities, from clothing to food and toiletries, and even a brand-new pram for one of the youngest children affected by this incident. 

    “Finally, I would also like to thank the people of Perth and local businesses for their patience and understanding as some unavoidable disruption continues in the city centre.”  

    Following the fire at Scott Street, Perth city centre roads will continue to be affected on Sunday 15th June.  

    Emergency services will remain on scene, and Scott Street and South Street will stay closed to traffic and pedestrians. 

    Detours and signage have been put in place around Perth city centre to provide guidance for drivers. Motorists and pedestrians should continue to avoid the area if possible.  

    Perth and Kinross Council will also continue to provide a range of support for people affected by the fire. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: PFMCrypto’s “1-Day Mining Contract” Sales Surge 76% – $1 Million Giveaway Ignites Community Buzz

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEWARK, N.J., June 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — PFMCrypto, the global leader in crypto asset management known for its cutting-edge AI mining technology, is entering a new era. The platform’s “1-day contract” product has seen a staggering 76% increase in sales over the past month, fueled by the trust and trial of millions of thousands of users.

    To mark this milestone, PFMCrypto has launched a massive $1 million giveaway, designed to fuel continued growth and reinforce the company’s active role in the trading and crypto communities. Every new user will receive a $10 bonus during this promotional event.

    Campaign page: https://pfmcrypto.net

    AI + Mining: PFMCrypto’s Real-World Impact
    PFMCrypto AI + mining is a remote cryptocurrency mining solution that supports a range of digital assets, Including BTC, LTC, XRP, DOGE. Users can use PFMCrypto’s mining power to earn income without investing in hardware or performing technical maintenance. Through access to high-powered mining farms, PFMCrypto enables users to benefit from ongoing crypto mining rewards as complex blockchain problems are solved in real time.

    Unlike speculative Web3 projects, PFMCrypto offers sustainable crypto asset management plans for traders in the crypto, forex, and futures markets. As the user base expands and monthly performance results continue to climb, the platform is earning trust through real, measurable success.

    May Trading Signal Performance:

    1-day contract strategy: +6.00% return

    5-day contract strategy: +6.15% return

    15-day contract strategy: +20.70% return

    30-day contract strategy: +55.6% return

    These are not hypothetical figures—they’re based on real feedback from millions of users.

    Simple Interface, Transparent Process
    As a continual innovator in the crypto mining space, PFMCrypto delivers a user-friendly experience so even beginners can easily manage their accounts.. Here’s what sets the platform apart:

    – Transparent pricing and returns for all contracts; new users can purchase with a single click.

    – Daily returns credited to users with zero fees—users keep 100% of their earnings, with no hidden costs.

    – 24/7 live support ensures that all inquiries are addressed in real time.

    PFMCrypto supports PCs, mobile phones, and tablets, offering multilingual services to over 9.2 million users in 192 countries and regions.

    Platform Advantages

    – Cutting-Edge Equipment: PFMCrypto uses top-tier mining hardware from manufacturers like Bitmain, Antminer, and other energy-efficient rigs to ensure stable and high-yield mining performance.

    – Legal and Globally Trusted: Operated by FCA-regulated Precision Financial Management (PFM) Ltd, PFMCrypto complies with all UK financial regulations and serves a global user base of over 9.2 million real users.

    – Multi-Crypto Support: Supports settlement in various popular cryptocurrencies including USDT-TRC20, BTC, ETH, LTC, USDC, BNB, USDT-ERC20, BCH, DOGE, SOL (Solana), XRP, and more.

    – Stable Daily Returns: Mining contracts yield daily returns, with principal automatically refunded upon contract expiration to protect investment security.

    – Advanced security protocols: PFM Crypto uses cold wallet storage, 2FA and smart contracts to ensure safety.

    – Affiliate Program: Invite friends and earn referral bonuses of up to $18,999.

    Limited-Time Offer: Claim Your $10 Bonus
    The bonus campaign runs until the full $1 million pool is distributed. New users who sign up before June 30 can claim their $10 reward immediately.

    About PFMCrypto
    PFMCrypto is operated by Precision Financial Management Ltd, a UK-registered and FCA-regulated entity (Company No. 11719896), headquartered in Leyland, England. Founded in 2018, PFMCrypto represents a new category of crypto platform—data-driven, performance-focused, and widely trusted. Backed by a global community of successful users, it stands out as one of this year’s most compelling digital asset opportunities for investors and traders seeking substance over hype.

    Full details and access: https://pfmcrypto.net

    Media Contact:

    Amelia Elspeth
    PFMcrypto
    info@pfmcrypto.net

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/7d9ed186-1618-426f-aa68-f67a7fa0e3c8

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/41687fbb-9ae4-47c8-987e-46179efb953a

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Lord Provost congratulates those names in King’s Honours list

    Source: Scotland – City of Edinburgh

    Edinburgh’s Lord Provost has congratulated all those named in the King’s Birthday Honours list, including former Council employee Frank Donoghue.

    Frank received the British Empire Medal in recognition of his services to the public, following 44 years working in the Council.

    He was leading the facilities team at the City Chambers when he retired in September, and played a role in Operation Unicorn after the Queen’s Death in 2022.

    Edinburgh’s Lord Provost Robert Aldridge said:

    Congratulations to all those who have been recognised in this year’s King’s Honours, whose achievements and service to the public have made such an impact.

    Our very own Frank Donoghue is a most deserved recipient. He demonstrated nothing but hard work and dedication to the city during his 44 years in service. From his original role in the then Lothian Regional Council to his retirement last year he went the extra mile to help keep the Council running.

    His varied career has taken in roles in caretaking, support services and building management, and I know that one of his more recent positions, helping to deliver Operation Unicorn following the Queen’s passing, was one of his proudest moments.

    A well-loved and loyal colleague throughout his time here, Frank has provided support to councillors, officers and members of the public, and I’m personally grateful for his commitment. Thanks to Frank for his service to the city and congratulations for this well-earned accolade.

    Read the full King’s Birthday Honours list online.

    Published: June 14th 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Boosting university spin-outs

    Source: Scottish Government

    Capitalising on Scottish innovation, ideas and expertise.

    New initiatives taking advantage of Scotland’s world-class reputation as an innovation nation have been announced by the Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes.

    Three projects, backed by £4.4 million, are designed to help turn ground-breaking research across the country’s universities and colleges into high-growth businesses that create jobs and support economic growth.

    The package includes:

    • £2.9 million for the Proof of Concept Fund which will explore the commercial potential of research projects by developing prototypes and pitching to investors, as well as analysing markets to attract further investment 
    • £800,000 for the Spinout Pipeline Project which, led by the University of Strathclyde, will help share commercialisation expertise across Scottish universities, culminating in a summit where innovators will pitch to potential investors
    • £700,000 for the Entrepreneurial Campus Blueprint which will help college students to develop business skills and link in with investors

    A further £141,000, spent over two years, will support a new course at the University of Aberdeen to train 40 high school computing teachers, better preparing future generations for careers in tech-based businesses.

    Scaling businesses account for the majority of net job creation in the UK and their annual turnover is around £1.2 trillion, highlighting the opportunity afforded to Scotland’s economy by investing in the drive to turn research findings into high-growth start-ups.

    Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes said:

    “The Scottish Government is fostering and supporting entrepreneurial talent as part of strategic investment to capitalise on Scotland’s reputation as a start-up nation. The economic opportunities presented by this are enormous.  

    “Our universities and colleges are the engines of innovation. They are known the world over as the home of some of the greatest ideas and inventions ever made and can present real solutions to the challenges we face.   

    “This new investment underlines our commitment to realising the economic potential of the incredible work taking place across Scottish universities and colleges.” 

    Chief Entrepreneur Ana Stewart said:

    “The world’s leading entrepreneurial economies are often powered by universities with strong entrepreneurial cultures. This is an ambitious package which positions Scottish institutions as drivers of start-up creation and growth.

    “I look forward to collaborating with universities to maximise the impact of this funding.”

    Professor Sir Jim McDonald, Principal and Vice-Chancellor, University of Strathclyde, said:

    “We are pleased to welcome the Scottish Government’s continued investment in universities as engines of economic growth through excellent research, innovation and production of high-quality skills. This new Proof of Concept Fund will help to translate academic innovation into real-world economic and social impact.

    “As the lead institution for the Spinout Pipeline Project, and a leading entrepreneurial campus, the University of Strathclyde is also pleased to continue to play a central role in strengthening Scotland’s entrepreneurial ecosystem.

    “By harnessing the collective expertise of our universities, we aim to accelerate the journey from breakthrough ideas to market-ready ventures – creating high-value jobs, attracting investment, and supporting the next generation of innovators.”

    Background 

    Applications to the Proof of Concept Fund are open.

    Since 2011, Scottish universities have helped to produce 240 spin-outs.

    This includes Neuranics, a 2021 joint spinout from University of Edinburgh and Glasgow, which has developed state-of-the-art sensors used across a variety of sectors, including in healthcare and gaming, and has raised $8 million to accelerate its growth. The company is also backed by an £800,000 grant from Scottish Enterprise. 

    Another, Microplate Dx, is a multiple award-winning spinout from Strathclyde, developing novel solutions to the global threat of antimicrobial resistance. 

    Programme for Government 2025-2026

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Sunderland’s Former Senior Coroner awarded OBE in King’s Birthday Honours

    Source: City of Sunderland

    Sunderland’s former Senior Coroner Derek Winter has been awarded an OBE in the King’s Birthday Honours List.

    He was awarded the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for public service after serving for 21 years as Senior Coroner for Sunderland.

    Mr Winter also served as a Deputy Chief Coroner of England and Wales from 2019 for five years until his retirement from both positions in 2024.

    As Senior Sunderland Coroner, Mr Winter oversaw thousands of investigations into violent, sudden or suspicious deaths, during his time in the role.

    Welcoming the honour, Mr Winter, said: “I am delighted with such an award not just for myself but for my family, my team and the City.”

    Chief Executive of Sunderland City Council, Patrick Melia, said: “I’m delighted to hear that Derek Winter has been awarded an OBE in the King’s Birthday Honours List.

    “As Senior Coroner for Sunderland, Derek provided an exemplary service to the city and the people of Sunderland during his 21 years in the role.

    “He was also instrumental in developing state-of-the-art facilities and technology, with the needs of families attending inquests very much at their heart, at the new HM Coroner’s Courts in Sunderland City Hall.

    “I know many families across Sunderland will have been touched by Derek’s compassion, commitment and professionalism over the years and I’d like to take this opportunity to congratulate him on behalf of everyone in the city.”

    Mr Winter who qualified as a solicitor in 1983 began his career by specialising in family law, before sitting as a Deputy District Judge from 1994 to1999.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK celebrates Welsh recipients in The King’s Birthday Honours List

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    UK celebrates Welsh recipients in The King’s Birthday Honours List

    Over 70 people from Wales who have contributed to their community and country are celebrated in His Majesty The King’s Birthday Honours List 2025.

    1215 recipients in total have been awarded for their exceptional achievements, with a particular focus this year on those who have given their time to public service. 

    This year’s recipients include dedicated community champions, role models in sport, pioneers in the arts, passionate health workers, and supporters of young people.

    Recipients from Wales make up 6% of the total number of recipients receiving honours this year. 

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:

    This year’s Birthday Honours List is a powerful reminder of the extraordinary dedication, compassion, and service that exists in every corner of our country.

    From community champions to cultural icons, each recipient reflects the very best of Britain. I extend my heartfelt congratulations and gratitude to them all.

    The Secretary of State for Wales Jo Stevens said:

    Huge congratulations to the incredible individuals from Wales who have been recognised in The King’s Birthday Honours List.

    Each award recipient has demonstrated dedication, passion, and commitment to their communities, making significant contributions that resonate far and wide.

    Your work in supporting vulnerable people, championing the arts, increasing access to sport and improving lives in countless ways, serves as an inspiration to all. Thank you for your exceptional service.

    Anyone can nominate someone for an honour. If you know someone who has achieved fantastic things worthy of recognition, go to https://www.gov.uk/honours to find out more about how you can put them forward.

    Notable recipients across Wales include: 

    Oliver Sykes, who receives an MBE for services to Access to the Arts for Underprivileged Young People. His work leading the Stories for Care programme has empowered over 5000 young people from low income backgrounds, and given them access to literary works not normally available to them.

    Muriel Morgan, who receives an MBE for services to the community in Wrexham. At the age of 88 years old she has only recently retired from her 50 year career in the Royal Voluntary Service. During her time in RVS she coordinated volunteer drivers to take elderly and vulnerable people to medical appointments they might not otherwise be able to make. She worked tirelessly throughout the pandemic to ensure the service was maintained and that even in one of the most challenging times for the service, their service users were still able to attend critical medical appointments.

    Modupeola Obilanade is awarded an MBE for services to the community in Newport. Her work leading the St Pauls Clinic has transformed the clinic into a beacon of hope in the community, during her time running the clinic, she has launched multiple community health initiatives focusing on preventative care and chronic pain management. In her spare time she continues to work for charities, providing free medical consultations and health advice to those most in need.

    Updates to this page

    Published 14 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI China: Liverpool agrees possible UK record fee for Florian Wirtz

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

    Liverpool has agreed a fee of 100 million pounds (136 million US dollars) for Bayer Leverkusen forward Florian Wirtz, which could become a British record fee as the deal also includes a further 16 million pounds in possible add-ons.

    If the conditions, which are dependent on Liverpool winning titles during Wirtz’s time at the club, are met, that would make him more expensive that Chelsea midfielder, Moises Caicedo, who could cost a total of 115 million pounds from Brighton, while Chelsea also paid Benfica 107 million for Enzo Fernandez.

    Liverpool has held off competition to sign Wirtz, with Manchester City’s initial interest cooling at the high-cost of the deal and Wirtz reportedly preferring to move to England than sign for Bayern Munich.

    22-year-old Wirtz still has to agree personal terms and pass the club medical, but neither are expected to be a problem and the move is expected to be completed next week,

    He will move to the Premier League after scoring 57 goals in 197 appearances and seven times in 31 games for Germany.

    Last season he scored 10 goals and gave 12 assists in 31 league appearances, as Bayer finished second in the Bundesliga, while he netted six times in nine Champions League matches.

    Wirtz will be the second player to swap Bayer for Liverpool this summer after right back Jeremie Frimpong moved to Anfield for 34 million pounds to replace Trent Alexander Arnold after Alexander Arnold’s move to Real Madrid.

    Liverpool is also thought to be interested in Bournemouth left back Milos Kerkez as the club looks to strengthen the squad that won last season’s Premier League title. Enditem

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI: DNMiner Launches Revolutionary $100 Welcome Bonus on AI‑Powered Cloud Mining Platform

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    New York City, June 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —  DNMiner, a leading AI‑driven cloud mining service, today announced the launch of a $100 welcome bonus for new users, enabling access to automated, short‑term crypto mining contracts with no hardware, downloads, or tech expertise required. Visit dnminer.com to get started.

    By combining intelligent automation, ESG‑aware infrastructure, and high‑yield short‑term agreements, DNMiner empowers users to mine top cryptocurrencies—including BTC, ETH, DOGE, and XRP—with daily returns ranging from 3% to 4.8%.

    “QN‑driven cloud mining brings crypto earning to everyone,” said Erin Stevens, Executive Director at DNMiner. “Our mission is to simplify entry into mining while delivering transparent, reliable returns.”

    Another DNMiner executive added, “The $100 bonus removes entry barriers so investors can test and earn without financial risk.”

    Key Features of the DNMiner Offering:

    Zero hardware—fully cloud‑based mining

    $100 no‑deposit bonus, activated upon signup

    Flexible contracts (1–5 days) with daily yields of 3%–4.8%

    AI optimization—adaptive hash allocation and cooling

    – Eco‑friendly operations—powered by renewable energy

    Real‑time dashboards for transparent monitoring

    How It Works

    1. Register at https://dnminer.com/.

    2. Select a contract (e.g., 3‑day, $500, ~3.2% daily).

    3. Activate $100 bonus and start mining instantly.

    4. Receive daily payouts—withdraw or reinvest as desired.

    Founded in 2020, DNMiner is headquartered in Los Angeles with global infrastructure and robust regulatory compliance. With AI‑powered platforms and green energy sourcing, DNMiner aims to transform cloud mining into a mainstream passive income channel.

    About DNMiner

    DNMiner is a next‑generation cloud mining platform harnessing AI, renewable energy, and system transparency to offer accessible crypto earnings. It empowers users to mine without hardware or volatility exposure. Learn more at https://dnminer.com/

    Contact:

    Jane Doe

    Public Relations, DNMiner

    Phone: +1 310‑555‑1234

    Email:  info@dnminer.com

    Website: https://dnminer.com

    2nd Floor, Greenwood House, London Road, Bracknell, England, RG12 2AA

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Pappas, Morrison Introduce Legislation to Exempt Small Businesses from Trump’s Tariffs

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Chris Pappas (D-NH)

    Today Congressman Chris Pappas, a small business owner, and Congresswoman Kelly Morrison, a member of the House Small Business Committee, introduced the Small Business Liberation Act in the House. This legislation, which was introduced in the Senate last month, would exempt the more than 34 million U.S. small businesses from President Trump’s catastrophically high tariffs enacted on April 2, 2025, which are effectively a national sales tax. Highlighting the urgent need for this legislation, Pappas and Morrison held a press conference with small businesses from across the country, including Mark Carpenter, founder of New Hampshire small business GenTent.

    Small businesses across the country have been raising the alarm that the Trump administration’s chaotic, costly, and unpredictable tariff war will put them out of business in a matter of weeks or months if nothing is done. New Hampshire exports accounted for 7% of the state’s gross domestic product in 2023, the highest percentage of exports of any New England state, meaning that New Hampshire businesses are more vulnerable to retaliatory tariffs. 

    Earlier this week Congressman Pappas met with GenTent owner Mark Carpenter at his small business of just 12 employees to hear about the impact of tariffs on his business. It’s estimated that because of tariffs the cost of a new part his business is producing will go up by 30%, costing the company another $100,000 just in tariffs.

    “This administration’s reckless tariffs are effectively a national sales tax on businesses and families. I’ve heard directly from New Hampshire businesses about how deeply these tariffs will hurt their bottom lines. That’s why I’m pushing legislation that would rein in the President’s indiscriminate, wide-sweeping tariffs announced earlier this year,” said Congressman Chris Pappas. “The Small Business Liberation Act would exempt all small businesses from the tariffs announced by the Trump administration on Liberation Day. While the President and Republicans in Congress are turning their back on working families, I remain committed to continuing to fight to lower costs, support small businesses, and strengthen our economy.”

    “Small businesses across the country have made clear: Trump’s tariffs are posing an existential threat to their business,” said Congresswoman Kelly Morrison. “Today, we’re introducing legislation to give them the immediate relief they need to survive. Article 1 of the Constitution gives Congress the authority to levy tariffs – and it’s time Congress reclaims its power and does its job. This bill has now been introduced in the House and the Senate – and we need the Republican majority to stand up for America’s 34 million small businesses and bring this to a vote immediately. Our small business owners don’t have the luxury of time – we need to act now.”

    This legislation is endorsed by Small Business Majority and Main Street Alliance.

    “Small Business Majority’s research found that 53% of small businesses are concerned about tariffs negatively impacting their business and 77% are concerned about having a negative impact on the U.S. economy as a whole. Small Business Majority’s research found that 53% of small businesses are concerned about tariffs negatively impacting their business and 77% are concerned about having a negative impact on the U.S. economy as a whole,” said John Arensmeyer, Founder and CEO of Small Business Majority. “These concerns aren’t theoretical – millions of small firms are struggling right now with increased costs, finding new sources of supplies and navigating the uncertainty of tariffs that are on one day and put on hold the next. Small businesses have nowhere else to turn for help but Congress, and they need lawmakers to step in and stop this paralyzing and destructive cycle before irreparable harm is done to our nation’s job creators.”

    “Main Street Alliance members from across the US have been contacting our team about the real impact of tariffs on their businesses. 81.5% of respondents to our recent survey indicated that they will raise prices on consumers to offset the costs from tariffs. 31.5% of respondents indicated that they would lay off employees as a result of the tariffs. The continued unpredictability, self-dealing, and conflicting rationale for the trade war will hollow out Main Street and large Corporations will pick up the scraps. That’s why MSA strongly supports the Small Business Liberation Act. Let’s get it done,” said Richard Trent, Main Street Alliance Executive Director.

    Watch the press conference here. 

    Read the full text of the bill here.

    Background:  

    Pappas has loudly and strongly opposed President Trump’s sweeping tariffs on New Hampshire’s #1 trading partner, Canada, and U.S. allies. In April, Pappas joined colleagues to highlight the negative impact President Trump’s widespread tariffs will have on New Hampshire’s small business community and how they will raise costs for Granite Staters, calling on the administration to reverse course. Pappas has signed two discharge petitions to force a vote on legislation to overturn the Administration’s harmful tariffs on Mexico and Canada, the U.S.’s two biggest trading partners. He is also a cosponsor of the Prevent Tariffs Abuse Act, which amends the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to explicitly state that the authority granted to the President under the Act does not include the authority to impose duties, tariffs, or quotas on imports to the US.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: 20th anniversary of disappearance of Steven Williams

    Source: New South Wales – News

    Today marks the 20th anniversary of the disappearance of Steven Williams, a former president of the Gypsy Jokers.

    Steven Williams was last seen at the Gepps Cross Hotel on the afternoon of 14 June, 2005.  His white Ford Falcon was later found abandoned in the hotel car park.

    It is suspected Steven Williams was murdered.  His body has never been found, and his disappearance was declared a Major Crime.

    In late 2005, a call was made to Crime Stoppers which led police to searching a trucking company at Gillman.

    It is believed that Mr Williams, a debt collector, was dropped at Gillman by an associate – most likely to collect money from someone who worked there.

    It is likely his body was removed from the business in the rear of a white utility – covered by a tarpaulin – seen parked in a street adjacent to the property later the same day.

    Despite extensive searches over the years, no trace of him has ever been found.

    Steven Williams was 38 when he went missing, leaving behind a young daughter.

    Major Crime detectives believe this case is solvable; and that there are people who know exactly what happened to Steven Williams.

    Detective Sergeant Paul Ward, Major Crime Investigation Branch, said, “Despite the code of silence in outlaw motorcycle gangs, we have received information over the past 20 years regarding the circumstances of Steve’s disappearance, as well as potential burial sites.

    “Over the last 20 years, friendships and loyalties may have changed.  People are 20 years older, they may now have children of their own.  I ask them to put themselves in Blayze Williams’ position, growing up not knowing what happened to her father.

    “For the sake of the Steven Williams’ family, if you have information, please contact Crime Stoppers and help find his remains and bring him home to his family.”

    A $200,000 reward is still on offer for information that leads to a conviction, or the recovery of Steven Williams’ remains.

    Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or online at www.crimestopperssa.com.au – you can remain anonymous.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The King’s Birthday Honours 2025 – Police, Fire and Ambulance

    Source: Scottish Government

    Recipients of blue light service medals in Scotland.

    King’s Police Medal 

    Assistant Chief Constable Gary Ritchie, Police Scotland 

    King’s Fire Service Medal 

    Volunteer Leader Gerry Ralston, Scottish Fire and Rescue Service 

    Watch Commander John Aitchison, Scottish Fire and Rescue Service 

    King’s Ambulance Service Medal 

    Scottish Ambulance Service Corporate Risk Manager, Sarah Stevenson, Scottish Ambulance Service 


    KING’S POLICE MEDAL
     

    Assistant Chief Constable Gary Ritchie, Police Scotland 

    Former Assistant Chief Constable Gary Ritchie joined Strathclyde Police in 1991 and retired in April 2025 after 33 years’ police service. He was an experienced Major Events Commander, Strategic Firearms Commander, and Public Order Gold Commander. He was instrumental in the roll-out of naloxone to all frontline police officers, making Police Scotland the first force globally to implement a nationwide roll-out of the opioid reversing medication. Under his leadership, a national naloxone co-ordination unit was established, prior to national rollout. During his time at Police Scotland, 13,216 operational officers completed the training, more than 10,500 frontline officers were equipped with naloxone while on duty and officers administered naloxone to over 630 individual incidents involving suspected opioid overdoses.

    In 2021, ACC Ritchie was instrumental in the creation, development and delivery of Police Scotland’s International Academy and the wider international strategy for Police Scotland. He has represented and showcased Police Scotland globally, hosting visits to the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Norway, Germany, and Columbia. In 2023, he led a Scottish delegation to the Global Law Enforcement & Public Health Association Conference in Sweden where he outlined Scotland’s public health approach to addressing underlying inequalities. That same year, ACC Ritchie was appointed Executive Lead for Operational Support, a broad area of responsibility ranging from road policing to the planning and preparation for events and counter terrorism incidents. He was responsible for major events planning in Scotland and was involved in the COP-26 conference held in Glasgow, Operation Unicorn, following the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, and the Interpol General Assembly, which saw senior policing officials from across the world descend on Glasgow to discuss international cooperation.  ACC Ritchie also led on Royalty and VIP Protection in Scotland, ensuring Police Scotland worked closely with the Metropolitan Police in relation to the security of protected persons.  

    KING’S FIRE SERVICE MEDAL 

    Volunteer Leader Gerry Ralston, Scottish Fire and Rescue Service 

    Volunteer Leader Ralston is an On Call Firefighter recognised for his work at Salen Community Fire Station on the Isle of Mull, and across East and West Dunbartonshire and Argyll and Bute. The on-call firefighter joined the Salen Volunteer Unit as a Firefighter in 1988. He has helped design and deliver initiatives aimed at improving how the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service identify, recruit, and retain On Call Firefighters. Volunteer Leader Ralston also helps drive forward programmes aimed at educating and informing the community, such as CPR awareness, and delivers engagement sessions to Tobermory High School. 

    He has organised and raised over £8000 for different causes and charities including The Fire Fighters Charity, Cancer Research UK, Stroke Foundation, the Royal Hospital for Children, Glasgow and, in July this year, will tackle a 62-mile event for Cancer Research UK. During the pandemic, he facilitated test and protect at Craignure Community Fire Station, taking time out with his main employment to assist the community. He has been at the forefront of all fundraising efforts undertaken by Salen Community Fire station and regularly supports Tobermory Fire Station with their annual open day including donations supporting the Firefighters Charity and other deserving local charities and projects. 

    Watch Commander John Aitchison, Scottish Fire and Rescue Service 

    Watch Commander John Aitchison has been a member of the Fire and Rescue Service in Scotland for over 21 years – initially joining Grampian Fire Brigade – where he was first posted to Altens Fire Station, Aberdeen. He was promoted to Crew Commander in 2006, where he served at Aberdeen’s Central Fire Station. It was while working here in 2007 that he became a member of Operation Florian, a charity that organises fundraising for international humanitarian aid. In 2008, as part of the project, Watch Commander Aitchison led a convoy of donated fire engines from Aberdeen to Macedonia. On their arrival, the watch commander and his team provided two weeks of training to local fire crews with the donated equipment. He would go on to complete the trip a further two times – returning to provide further training and equipment. 

    In 2011, Watch Commander Aitchison joined the United Kingdom International Search and Rescue as a Crew Leader and Sector Medic, and is on standby to attend national and international emergencies. As a member of this team, he was sent to help the response to the Nepal Earthquake in 2015 and the earthquake in Türkiye in 2023. His work in this area led to difficulties with his mental wellbeing. Determined to not let this define him, he went on to co-found Talk Group 20 Aberdeen – a peer support group for firefighters which aims to safeguard mental wellbeing. He also co-founded the organisation, Fire Aid Nepal, a project which aims to support, and future prepare the Nepalese community following the devastating quake 10-years-ago. In 2023, he played an integral role in forming the first ever fire and rescue service for the Mount Everest region and, in 2024, received a Pride of Scotland Award for his work in Nepal which has also attracted letters of thanks from King Charles III. He was promoted to Watch Commander in 2020, where he is currently a national urban search and rescue instructor. 

    KING’S AMBULANCE SERVICE MEDAL  

    SAS Corporate Risk Manager, Sarah Stevenson, Scottish Ambulance Service 

    As Corporate Risk Manager for the Scottish Ambulance Service, Ms Stevenson has worked tirelessly to embed robust and effective risk management arrangements across the organisation, embedding this at local and board levels. 

    She also recently led a significant project to replace a 20-year-old IT risk management system to record risk and adverse events. This two-year project has resulted in substantial improvements for all staff, including easier reporting access and annual recurring savings of more than £13000.  

    Ms Stevenson personally led the training and awareness programme for the new system, leading staff engagement sessions and developing video tutorials and other tools to assist staff and improve accountability and responsibility. The system – which went live in March this year – has received positive feedback from Scottish Ambulance Service staff.  

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The King’s Birthday Honours 2025

    Source: Scottish Government

    First Minister congratulates Scotland’s Honour recipients.

    First Minister John Swinney has paid tribute to Scotland’s recipients in The King’s Birthday Honours list.

    This year’s awards celebrate individuals making exceptional contributions to public life or their community in keeping with the theme of ‘public service’.  

    Professor Ursula Martin has been appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire for services to science and education.

    Those being awarded a CBE include Professor Ewan Beattie OBE, Professor and Head of the Healthy Working Lives Group at the University of Glasgow for services to Occupational Medicine and reducing health inequalities; Professor Julie Fitzpatrick, Chief Scientific Adviser to Scottish Government; and businessman and philanthropist Dr John Watson OBE for services to education and charity.  

    Among those receiving an OBE are Lorna and John Norgrove, Co-founders of the Linda Norgrove Foundation for services to Women and Children Abroad and in Scotland; Karen Watt, lately Chief Executive Officer for the Scottish Funding Council for public service and Peter MacDonald, Head of Research for Scottish Tartans Authority is recognised for services to the tartan industry.

    Those receiving MBEs include Jennifer Gill, Founder of LoveOliver for services to families affected by childhood cancer, and Alistair Moffat, founder of Borders Book, Lennoxlove Book Festivals and Kelso Arts Festival for services to literature and culture.

    Among those honoured with a BEM are the co-founders of Calums Cabin, husband and wife Duncan and Caroline Speirs and Duncan’s twin sister Jenna, for services to charitable fundraising; Shirley Jamieson, former school crossing patrol person in Juniper Green, Edinburgh and Karen Wylie, Founder of the Grub Club for services to ending hunger in the community in Lochside.

    Gary Ritchie, Assistant Chief Constable Police Scotland will receive The King’s Police Medal. The King’s Fire Service Medal will be awarded to Scottish Fire and Rescue Service’s Volunteer Leader Gerry Ralston, and Watch Commander John Aitchison. Sarah Stevenson, Scottish Ambulance Service Corporate Risk Manager, will receive The King’s Ambulance Service Medal.

    The First Minister said:

    “My congratulations and thanks to The King’s Birthday Honours recipients who have each made outstanding contributions to community and public life in Scotland.  

    “The recipients of The King’s Police, Fire or Ambulance Service Medals demonstrate lives dedicated to keeping others safe and supporting communities. I sincerely thank them for their service and commitment.”

    Background
    Honours are announced twice annually, in June on the Monarch’s official birthday, and at New Year.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: RECIPIENTS FROM SCOTLAND IN HM THE KING’S BIRTHDAY HONOURS LIST

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    RECIPIENTS FROM SCOTLAND IN HM THE KING’S BIRTHDAY HONOURS LIST

    Over 110 people from Scotland who have contributed to their community and country are celebrated in His Majesty The King’s Birthday Honours List 2025 today. 

    1215 recipients in total have been awarded for their exceptional achievements, with a particular focus this year on those who have given their time to public service. 

    This year’s recipients include dedicated community champions, role models in sport, pioneers in the arts, passionate health workers, and supporters of young people.

    Recipients from Scotland make up 9% of the total number of recipients receiving honours this year. 

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:

    This year’s Birthday Honours List is a powerful reminder of the extraordinary dedication, compassion, and service that exists in every corner of our country.

    From community champions to cultural icons, each recipient reflects the very best of Britain. I extend my heartfelt congratulations and gratitude to them all.

    The Secretary of State for Scotland, Ian Murray, said:

    I am delighted to congratulate all those recognised in the King’s Birthday Honours list, particularly John and Linda Norgrove on their well-deserved OBEs for their extraordinary humanitarian work in Afghanistan through the Linda Norgrove Foundation. Their dedication to improving the lives of Afghan women and girls, born from personal tragedy, exemplifies the very best of Scottish compassion and resolve.

    Communities across Scotland benefit from the extraordinary effort of those honoured. From Dr Richa Sinha Chair of the Scottish Hindu society and their work to tackle Hinduphobia, to Zahrah Mahmood Chair of the Rambling Society to Heather Hall founding The Usual Place in Dumfries. 

    I would also like to extend special recognition to Scotland Office’s own Moira Vance on receiving her MBE. Moira’s unwavering commitment to public service has been instrumental in the work of our department for 44 years, and this honour reflects her exceptional contribution to the people of Scotland.

    The Honours list showcases the remarkable achievements of individuals across Scotland who have gone above and beyond in their respective fields. Their service to our communities represents the spirit of dedication and excellence that makes Scotland proud.

    Anyone can nominate someone for an honour. If you know someone who has achieved fantastic things worthy of recognition, go to https://www.gov.uk/honours to find out more about how you can put them forward.

    Notable recipients across Scotland include:  

    Zahrah Mahmood from Glasgow who at 34 receives an MBE for voluntary service. She is the president of Ramblers Scotland and known as ‘The Hillwalking Hijabi’ for her work addressing the barriers faced by ethnic minorities and providing practical advice to beginners, demonstrating her commitment to making the outdoors accessible to all.

    Duncan, Caroline and Jenna Speirs from Argyll and Bute who each receive a BEM for services to charitable fundraising. They provide holiday homes for children with cancer through Calum’s Cabin as well as flats in Glasgow close to cancer treatment centres, allowing families from across the country to stay together in welcoming, home-from-home surroundings during extended periods of treatment. The idea was inspired by their son, and Jenna’s brother, Calum, who passed away from a brain tumour. 

    Scottish historian Alistair Moffat from Ettrick and Lauderdale receives an MBE for services to literature and culture. He is the author of more than 40 books on Scottish history and played a prominent role in the creation of The Great Tapestry of Scotland. He also founded the Borders Book Festival, one of the most highly regarded literary festivals in the UK. 

    Paula Mary Daly from Ayrshire and Arran who receives an MBE for services to Fishermen and their Families. Paula manages the Fishermen’s Mission’s regional centre in the Port of Troon where she works to connect the isolated and marginalised with the services they need. 

    Monty Cowen from Giffnock, who at 92 receives an MBE for services to the Jewish Community. He assisted with the merger of the synagogue in Giffnock to a bigger building now known as Giffnock Newton Mearns Hebrew Congregation, is Honorary President of the Glasgow Hebrew Burial Society and is actively involved with the Association of Jewish Ex Servicemen and Women. 

    ENDS

    Notes to editors:

    • Anyone can nominate someone for an honour here: https://www.gov.uk/honours.
    • If you would like to interview a member of one of the honours committees about increasing representation from your area, please contact the Cabinet Office on pressoffice@cabinetoffice.gov.uk

    Updates to this page

    Published 13 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The Military division of The King’s Birthday Honours List 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    The Military division of The King’s Birthday Honours List 2025

    A number of military personnel have been granted state honours in the King’s Birthday Honours list for their work in the Armed Forces.

    Royal Navy Awards

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most honourable order of the Bath

    As Companions

    • Rear Admiral Steven MCCARTHY
    • Rear Admiral Robert George PEDRE

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most excellent order of the British Empire

    As Commanders

    • Commodore Paul Edward DUNN, OBE
    • Commodore Philip Gordon GAME
    • Commodore Timothy Cooper GREEN, ADC

    As Officers

    • Commander Jon James BROWETT
    • Commander Christopher Charles EVANS
    • Lieutenant Colonel Paul Stanley FITZPATRICK
    • Captain Pollyanna HATCHARD
    • Lieutenant Colonel Liam Michael METCALFE
    • Captain Eugene Peter MORGAN, RD, Royal Naval Reserve
    • Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Nicholas POUNDS

    As Members

    • Lieutenant Commander William George BARKER
    • Major Lewis BODYCOTE
    • Chief Petty Officer Air Engineering Technician (Avionics) Rhys DYAS
    • Commander Daniel GLOVER
    • Warrant Officer 1 Information Operations Robert GOVIER, Royal Naval Reserve
    • Warrant Officer 1 Air Engineering Technician (Mechanical) Michael HART
    • Commander Carla Lisa HIGGINS
    • Warrant Officer 1 Warfare Specialist (Underwater Warfare) Robin MCCOLL
    • Lieutenant Commander Hugo Christopher MITCHELL-HEGGS
    • Surgeon Commander Matthew Alec OSBORNE
    • Major  Lee Andrew STEWART
    • Commander James TIBBITTS
    • Chief Petty Officer Air Engineering Technician (Mechanical) Robert Lee WARNETT
    • Chief Petty Officer Warfare Specialist (Abovewater Warfare Weapons) Michael WATSON

    King’s Volunteer Reserves Medal

    • Warrant Officer 1 Logistician (Supply Chain) Samantha MARTIN, VR, Royal Naval Reserve

    King’s Commendation for Valuable Service

    • Warrant Officer Class 2 Engineering Technician (Marine Engineering) Michael John BARKER
    • Lieutenant Commander Matthew Peter JOHNSON

    Non-Operational Gallantry

    King’s Gallantry Medal

    • Leading Logistician (Catering Services) Dave Neala LA CROIX
    • Petty Officer (Diver) Craig Antony MADDOCK

    King’s Commendation for Bravery

    • Petty Officer (Diver) Paul Anthony Damian CARTWRIGHT

    Army Awards

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most honourable order of the Bath

    As Companion

    • Major General Zachary Raymond STENNING, OBE

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most excellent order of the British Empire

    As Knight Commander

    • Lieutenant General Charles Seymour COLLINS, DSO, OBE

    As Commanders

    • Colonel Nicholas Owen FITZGERALD, MBE, Army Reserve
    • Colonel Iain Edward GIBB, KHS
    • Colonel Graham John SEFTON
    • Brigadier Alexander James SMITH

    As Officers

    • Colonel Patrick Andrew ALLEN
    • Lieutenant Colonel Rupert Timothy ANDERSON, The Royal Gurkha Rifles
    • Major Paul Christopher CARNEY, Corps of Royal Engineers
    • Lieutenant Colonel Joanne Patrice D’ARCY, Royal Army Medical Service
    • Colonel Stephen Weatherley DAVIES, Army Reserve
    • Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Jon Young ELFORD, The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment
    • Lieutenant Colonel James Robert GREEN, Grenadier Guards
    • Lieutenant Colonel Glenis Jane Helena MALONEY, Royal Corps of Signals, Army Reserve
    • Lieutenant Colonel Douglas Andrew Wyville NELSON, Corps of Royal Engineers
    • Colonel Richard David NEWLAND
    • Lieutenant Colonel Steven Carnell PENGILLY, The Rifles
    • Lieutenant Colonel Frank Stanley REEVES, MBE, The Royal Regiment of Scotland

    As Members

    • Warrant Officer Class 2 Mehmet Alan ASIR, VR, The Parachute Regiment, Army Reserve
    • Major Timothy Richard BARKER, Royal Tank Regiment
    • Lieutenant Colonel Kevin Kenneth BINGHAM, VR, The Royal Logistic Corps, Army Reserve
    • Major Stephen Barry BROWN, Royal Corps of Signals
    • Staff Sergeant Gordon Alexander BRUCE, Royal Army Physical Training Corps
    • Lieutenant Colonel Stephen John CANDLIN, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Army Reserve
    • Major William Edward COOK, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
    • Major Christopher Michael Roy DANBY, The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers
    • Major Neil Alan Richard DONAGHY, Royal Corps of Signals
    • Captain Michael Wayne EYNON, VR, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Army Reserve
    • Major Alexander James FARRALL, The Royal Regiment of Scotland
    • Warrant Officer Class 1 Tracy Anne FREER, VR, Adjutant General’s Corps (Staff and Personnel Support Branch), Army Reserve
    • Major Douglas James GRAHAM, The Queen’s Royal Hussars
    • Major William Peter HODGSON, Adjutant General’s Corps (Staff and Personnel Support Branch)
    • Captain Thomas William HULME, General Service Corps, Army Reserve
    • Warrant Officer Class 1 Adam JOHNSTON, The Royal Logistic Corps
    • Warrant Officer Class 2 Stephen Alan JONES, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Lieutenant Colonel Bharat Sunil KARA, The Royal Logistic Corps, Army Reserve
    • Major David James LOVE, Adjutant General’s Corps (Royal Military Police)
    • Lieutenant Colonel James David LYON, Royal Army Medical Service
    • Major Jonathan Matthew MARSAY, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Warrant Officer Class 2 Donald Scott Cameron McGREGOR, Royal Army Physical Training Corps, Army Reserve
    • Sergeant Christopher John MORGAN, The Welsh Guards, Army Reserve
    • Major Amelia Anne MORRISSEY, Adjutant General’s Corps (Army Legal Services Branch)
    • Major Martin James MURPHY, The Royal Logistic Corps
    • Staff Sergeant Emmanuel OPPONG, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
    • Lieutenant John William PICKERING, Army Cadet Force
    • Major Andrew Victor POULTON, Adjutant General’s Corps (Staff and Personnel Support Branch)
    • Major James William REANEY, The Rifles
    • Major Marcus Alexander Rokeby ROBERTS, The Royal Regiment of Scotland, Army Reserve
    • Captain Richard Michael St John SHEEHAN, The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
    • Warrant Officer Class 1 Colin Peter James Giblin SINCLAIR, The Royal Logistic Corps, Army Reserve
    • Lieutenant Colonel Katherine Frances BADHAM-THORNHILL, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
    • Major Luke William TURRELL, JP, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Major Tom Paterson WATSON, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Major William WELSH, Army Cadet Force
    • Corporal Ceiron Alexander WILLIAMS, The Parachute Regiment
    • Lieutenant Colonel Stephen WILSON, The Queen’ Royal Hussars
    • Major Paul William YOUNG, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers

    Royal Red Cross

    As an Ordinary Associate of the Royal Red Cross, Second Class

    • Warrant Officer Class 1 Ashley Grant COULL, Royal Army Medical Service

    King’s Volunteer Reserves Medal

    • Warrant Officer Class 2 Mark Vere EBDON, VR, The Royal Welsh, Army Reserve
    • Colonel Alexander John Grindlay FORBES, TD, VR, Army Reserve
    • Warrant Officer Class 2 James Charles McMILLEN, VR, The Royal Logistic Corps, Army Reserve
    • Colonel Andrew James Gerard RYAN, TD, VR, Army Reserve
    • Warrant Officer Class 1 Nathan John TOMS, VR, Corps of Royal Engineers, Army Reserve

    King’s Commendation for Valuable Service

    • Major Brent Stephen William CARTER, Royal Army Medical Service
    • Corporal Connor-James Derek DAVIDSON, The Royal Regiment of Scotland
    • Lieutenant Colonel Matthew Cameron LONG, QGM, The Royal Logistic Corps
    • Major Jonathan Grant STUDWELL, MBE, Intelligence Corps
    • Major Paul Robert WOOSTER, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers

    Non-Operational Gallantry

    King’s Commendation for Bravery

    • Lance Corporal Charley Dean DRAPER, Corps of Royal Engineers
    • Lance Corporal Rhys Jamie PETERSEN, Corps of Royal Engineers

    Royal Air Force Awards

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most honourable order of the Bath

    As Knight Commander

    • Air Marshal John Jackson STRINGER, CBE

    As Companions

    • Air Vice-Marshal Mark William James CHAPPELL
    • Air Vice-Marshal Alastair Peter Thomas SMITH

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most excellent order of the British Empire

    As Commanders

    • Group Captain Andrew BURTON
    • Air Commodore Ian James SHARROCKS, OBE

    As Officers

    • Group Captain Andrew Phillip BARON
    • Group Captain Paul BARONI
    • Group Captain Hannah Mary BISHOP
    • Group Captain Rachel Louise DIXON
    • Wing Commander Gemma Ann LONSDALE
    • Wing Commander Timothy Charles PAGE
    • Wing Commander Ankur Narendra PANDYA

    As Members

    • Corporal Emile-Josiah BANGURA
    • Squadron Leader Charles Benjamin Marr EMMERSON
    • Warrant Officer Craig HAMILTON
    • Sergeant Gareth Lloyd JONES
    • Flying Officer David Colin McCRAE
    • Flight Lieutenant Raj Kiran MEHTA
    • Flight Lieutenant Marcus William NORMAN
    • Squadron Leader Joseph Robert RUSHTON
    • Squadron Leader Thomas Anthony SMITH
    • Squadron Leader Mark David SUGDEN
    • Squadron Leader David James TAUDEVIN
    • Squadron Leader James Kevin WILYMAN

    Royal Red Cross

    As an Ordinary Associate of the Royal Red Cross, Second Class

    • Flight Sergeant Stephanie Louise ROBERTS

    King’s Volunteer Reserves Medal

    • Sergeant Darren James TYLER

    Distinguished Flying Cross

    • Flight Lieutenant Jason Aaron CHADWICK

    King’s Commendation for Valuable Service

    • Flight Sergeant Jonathan Paul GRAHAM
    • Squadron Leader Garry Ross MCKAY
    • Wing Commander Ieuan Donald Eddy ROBINSON
    • Squadron Leader Benjamin Robert Michael TRIPP

    Non-Operational Gallantry

    Air Force Cross

    • Squadron Leader Jonathan Mark Gerald HAWKINS
    • Flight Lieutenant Stephen Benjamin WATSON

    King’s Commendation for Bravery in the Air

    • Flight Lieutenant Michael Martin Tenison HOWELL

    Updates to this page

    Published 13 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Welch, Colleagues Introduce Legislative Package to Improve Medicaid for Kids, Seniors, and Families 

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Peter Welch (D-Vermont)

    As Republican Bill Takes Away Health Care from Millions of Americans, Senate Democrats Offer Common Sense Improvements to Medicaid and Empower Federal Watchdogs to Fight Real Fraud 
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Peter Welch, a member of the Senate Finance Committee, this week joined Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and eleven Senate Democrats in filing legislative proposals to strengthen and invest in the Medicaid program for children, seniors, Americans with disabilities and working families. Senator Welch’s Expanded Coverage for Former Foster Youth Act, which would expand Medicaid coverage for former foster care youth up to the age of 26, was included as part of Democrats’ legislative package. 
    “In the midst of a nationwide affordability crisis, we should do everything in our power to help more folks get the health care they need. Instead, Republicans’ budget cruelly attacks the lives and well-being of families and seniors, ripping health care away from millions–including nearly 20,000 Vermonters on Medicaid. As if slashing funding for Medicaid wasn’t egregious enough, Republicans’ budget will also tank our economy, and it does nothing to combat waste, fraud, and abuse,” said Senator Welch. “I’m proud to join Senate Democrats in introducing these bills to protect, improve, and expand Medicaid.” 
    “The Republican bill is rotten to the core when it comes to health care. Not only does the Republican bill break their promise not to cut benefits for Americans with Medicare and Medicaid, it also fails to accomplish their stated goal of cracking down on waste, fraud and abuse,” said Senator Wyden. “Senate Democrats say there’s a better way: let’s make the Medicaid program work better for moms, kids and seniors while investing in fraud fighters who have a track record of rooting out fraud where it actually occurs, and returning taxpayer dollars where they belong.” 
    The legislation comes as congressional Republicans continue to jam their reconciliation through the House and Senate behind closed doors. Republicans falsely claim the bill addresses waste, fraud and abuse in the health care system, but in reality, it rips away affordable health care from millions of Americans without doing anything meaningful on health care fraud.  
    The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has found that virtually all of the health care cuts in the legislation come as a result of families that count on Medicaid losing their coverage or benefits, not eliminating waste, fraud and abuse. It’s the largest cut to American health care in history, all to fund tax breaks for the ultra-wealthy. 
    Senator Welch is a cosponsor of every bill introduced this week introduced by Senate Democrats to improve Medicaid: 

    The Keeping Obstetrics Local Act, legislation to address hospital labor and delivery unit closures by increasing Medicaid payments for eligible rural and high-need hospitals.  

    The Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control (HCFAC) Act, legislation to address funding shortfalls and ensure long-term stability of health care fraud, waste and abuse prevention work at HHS, CMS and DOJ, which returns $11 for every $1 invested. 

    The Stabilize Medicaid and CHIP Coverage Act, legislation to provide continuous eligibility for all individuals enrolled in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) for 12-months.  

    The HCBS Relief Act, legislation to temporarily increase the federal Medicaid match for home- and community-based services by ten percentage points for two years.  

    The Advancing Student Services in Schools Today (ASSIST) Act, legislation to increase the federal Medicaid match for mental health and substance use disorder services provided in schools to 90%.  

    The Expanded Coverage for Former Foster Youth Act, legislation to expand Medicaid coverage for certain former foster care youth up to the age of 26.  

    The Medicare and Medicaid Dental, Vision, and Hearing Benefit Act, legislation to require Medicaid and Medicare to cover dental, vision, and hearing.   

    The Easy Enrollment in Health Care Act, legislation to allow individuals to check eligibility for and enroll in Medicaid or subsidized Affordable Care Act coverage through submitting their federal tax return.  

    The Disaster Relief Medicaid Act, legislation to ensure that individuals eligible for Medicaid who are forced to relocate due to a disaster are able to continue accessing Medicaid-supported services. 

    The Maximizing Opioid Recovery Emergency, legislation to enhance coverage for opioid treatment for Medicaid, Medicare, and private health plan enrollees, including increasing the federal Medicaid match for opioid medication treatment to 90%.  

    The Helping Tobacco Users Quit Act, legislation to require state Medicaid programs to cover tobacco cessation services without cost-sharing.  

    The State Public Option Act, legislation to give states the option to create a Medicaid buy-in program for state residents regardless of their income.   

    The Postpartum Lifeline Act, legislation to require state Medicaid programs to provide coverage up to 12-months postpartum.  

    Senator Welch has been a leading voice in calling to protect Medicaid and health care in the Senate. Last week, Senator Welch took to the Senate floor to slam Republicans’ tax bill, which will rip away health care coverage for more than 16 million Americans, including 29,000 Vermonters. 
    Earlier this month, Senator Welch joined Planned Parenthood of Northern New England (PPNNE) for a virtual roundtable highlighting the harmful consequences of Republicans’ reconciliation bill for patients in Vermont. In May, Senator Welch denounced Republicans disastrous proposed budget plan to limit ACA Premium Tax Credits which help low- and moderate-income Vermonters access health coverage.   
    Last month, Senator Welch joined Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Senators Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), and Protect Our Care for a press conference condemning the Republican budget. Senator Welch also recently spoke on the Senate floor about how health care is at risk for millions, and challenged President Trump to join him and Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) in working to lower prescription drug prices through his recently introduced Fair Prescription Drug Prices for Americans Act. 
    This Congress, Senator Welch has led the introduction of several bills to make health care more accessible and affordable for Vermonters, including the Strengthening Medicare and Reducing Taxpayer (SMART) Prices Act, Fair Prescription Drug Prices for Americans Act, End Price Gouging for Medications Act, Creating Opportunities Now for Necessary and Effective Care Technologies (CONNECT) for Health Act, Protecting Pharmacies in Medicaid Act, Fair Funding for Rural Hospitals Act, and the Rural Hospital Support Act. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: KGNCLOUD Introduces Zero Threshold Gold Mining for Crypto’s New Era

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    New York City, NJ, June 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —

    The cryptocurrency market is undergoing a new round of explosive changes—Bitcoin has broken through the $100,000 mark, the US has relaxed regulations, and Russia has fully legalised mining. These monumental shifts are reshaping the global financial landscape. In response, cloud mining is increasingly recognized as a pivotal pathway for ordinary investors seeking entry into the market, offering compelling advantages such as zero hardware investment and freedom from ongoing operation and maintenance costs. The following key trends and strategies will help you seize the unique opportunities presented by this evolving digital economy.

    This period of explosive growth is not merely a fleeting surge but signals a profound maturation of the cryptocurrency sector, driven by emerging global forces. A “Global Vision: New Mining Forces in 2025” highlights critical developments:

    • Political Capital Entry: The Trump family and Hut 8 have jointly established American Bitcoin Corp (ABTC), with a Nasdaq listing countdown approaching. This strategic alignment predicts Bitcoin will exceed $170,000 in 2026, signaling significant mainstream validation.
    • Game Between Energy Countries: Russia is strategically leveraging the US mining machine tariff war to absorb global computing power, while Canada and Kazakhstan, with their low-electricity price areas, are becoming the primary power sources for the migration of mining sites, creating new hubs of digital asset production.

    At the heart of KGNCLOUD’s offering is its revolutionary Zero Threshold Digital Gold Mining initiative, embodying an inclusive solution designed to dismantle barriers to entry. This groundbreaking feature empowers users with:

    • Free Trial Mining: Register today to receive $100 in experience money, allowing users to verify KGNCLOUD’s profit model without any initial risk.
    • No Hardware/Electricity Pressure: The platform fully bears all operation and maintenance costs, ensuring users enjoy pure profit sharing, free from the burdens of significant hardware investment, energy consumption, or technical upkeep.
    • Flexible Withdrawal in Multiple Currencies: KGNCLOUD supports rapid withdrawals of 11 major cryptocurrencies, including USDT, BTC, and ETH, with funds credited to user accounts within a swift 5 minutes.

    “This is a transformative period for digital assets,” commented Joy Bennett, “The shift in market dynamics and regulatory landscapes creates unprecedented opportunities, making accessible solutions like cloud mining increasingly vital for broader participation. We are witnessing a convergence of mainstream finance and decentralized technology, opening doors that were previously unimaginable for stable digital asset accumulation.”

    The benefits of KGNCLOUD’s platform extend far beyond just eliminating hardware and operational costs. It significantly reduces investment risk, broadens accessibility to diverse demographics—from students and busy professionals to retirees—and offers a truly global reach. KGNCLOUD leverages secure, state-of-the-art infrastructure across geographically distributed data centers, ensuring operational resilience and transparent reporting. This robust framework guarantees reliable service and empowers users with real-time insights into their mining performance.

    Take the leading platform KGNCLOUD Mining as an example (the first user growth rate in 2025):

    Contract type Investment amount Cycle (days) Expected income
    Free experience $100 1 $100+$1
    Classic computing power (primary) $500 4 $500+$100
    Classic computing power (advanced) $1200 5 $1200+$240
    Smart miner $2800 6 $2800+$660
    Innovative mining machine $5580 7 $5580+$2506

    For more miner plans, please open the KGNCLOUD website to view.

    KGNCLOUD defines this as a “New Era of Cryptocurrency”—one focused on sustainability, mainstream adoption, and true financial inclusion, moving beyond mere speculative trading towards long-term wealth building. KGNCLOUD’s role in this era is not just as a service provider but as an educator and a trusted partner, committed to fostering an informed and confident community of digital asset holders, aligning with the evolving global forces.

    To empower investors with practical guidance in this dynamic landscape, KGNCLOUD offers a straightforward Action Guide: Start Cloud Mining in Three Steps:

    1. Registration: Simply visit the KGNCLOUD Mining official website to register and immediately receive your $100 trial mining gold.
    2. Choose Contract: Select an investment level that matches your goals, with options starting from just $100.
    3. Income: Monitor your panel data daily and initiate immediate cash withdrawals once your target profit is met.

    A Critical Policy Window Period Reminder: The looming Federal Reserve debt crisis, which stands at an staggering $37 trillion, may significantly accelerate the monetization process of Bitcoin reserves. This scenario positions early computing power layouters to capture substantial excess dividends, making informed and timely entry into cloud mining crucial for maximizing potential returns in this unprecedented economic climate.

    About KGNCLOUD

    KGNCLOUD is a visionary leader in global cloud mining services, dedicated to fostering a transparent, accessible, and secure environment for digital asset accumulation. Committed to innovation and user empowerment, KGNCLOUD provides state-of-the-art cloud mining solutions that enable individuals worldwide to participate confidently in the burgeoning cryptocurrency market, driving a new era of financial inclusion and digital wealth creation.

    Act now → KGNCLOUD Mining official website entry channel

    Name: Joy Bennett
    Email: info@kgncloud.com
    Website: http://www.kgncloud.com
    Address: Copper House 150 Neath Road, Landore, Swansea, Abertawe, Wales, SA1 2BD

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Stablecoin USDC Goes Live on XRP Ledger, PFMCrypto Launches XRP Cloud Mining to Secure Daily Stable Returns

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Farington, England, June 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The integration of USDC and the XRP ecosystem signals a market shift toward low volatility and high certainty. PFMCrypto’s innovative XRP cloud mining emerges as the rational choice for prudent investors.

    In June 2025, USDC, the second-largest stablecoin in the U.S., officially integrated with the high-performance public blockchain XRP Ledger—one of the most closely watched developments in the crypto space this year. This integration marks the convergence of two widely adopted, compliance-oriented ecosystems, signifying a shift in the crypto industry from speculative volatility toward practical utility and stable returns. XRP has long been favored by institutional investors for its strengths in cross-border payments and enterprise use. With USDC now available on the XRP Ledger, this perception is reinforced, ushering in a wave of investment strategies centered around “certainty over speculation.”

    PFMCrypto Seizes the Moment with XRP Cloud Mining to Match Tech Momentum with Market Demand
    At this pivotal moment, leading global crypto mining platform PFMCrypto announced the launch of its XRP cloud mining service, introducing USDC as a supported settlement option. This innovative offering targets users seeking stable and low-barrier passive income through crypto.

    The service leverages PFMCrypto’s global smart mining infrastructure and the XRP Ledger’s low-cost, high-speed network to maximize mining efficiency and yield. Users can receive payouts in USDC or XRP and optionally choose from 11 major cryptocurrencies—including BTC, BCH, SOL, DOGE, and ETH—for their mining rewards.

    Why Are Prudent Investors Turning to PFMCrypto’s XRP Mining?
    – XRP is increasingly viewed as a “crypto bond”—stable, regulated, and utility-driven
    – USDC provides a volatility-resistant settlement anchor, ideal for conservative strategies
    – Beginner-friendly onboarding: No technical experience required. New users get a $10 signup bonus
    – Daily stable returns: Profits withdrawable daily; principal is fully refunded at contract maturity
    – One-stop solution: PFMCrypto covers all electricity, maintenance and operation needs. Institutional-grade mining for individual users—without the complexity, so that individual users can also enjoy professional cloud mining dividends like institutions;

    This model greatly reduces the technical threshold and is particularly suitable for the “first step” of traditional financial management users to enter the encryption field. ——Even novices can start mining in a few minutes.

    Five Key Advantages of PFMCrypto XRP Cloud Mining
    Strong Mining Power: PFMCrypto operates 20 green, low-energy mining farms worldwide with highly efficient power allocation
    Transparent Earnings: Daily profits are publicly verifiable and instantly credited to user accounts via mobile or desktop
    Flexible Settlements: Deposits and withdrawals are supported in 11 major cryptocurrencies, including stablecoins
    Flexible Contracts: Multiple durations available (1-day, 2-day, 5-day, 9-day, etc.) to suit different investment strategies
    Top-tier Fund Security: Robust architecture with hot/cold wallet separation and multilayer asset protection

    Sample Investment Plans:
    Trial Contract: Investment: $100 | Net Profit: $106.6
    Classic Contract: Investment: $500 | Net Profit: $530.75
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    How to Start XRP Cloud Mining in 3 Simple Steps?
    1. Create an account at https://pfmcrypto.net 
    2. Choose a mining plan: Flexible packages available; all support 11 major cryptocurrencies
    3. Make a payment and start earning: Daily automated mining returns, viewable in real-time via your dashboard

    Even users new to crypto or mining can start generating stable mining income in under 10 minutes.
    About PFMCrypto
    PFMCrypto is a global leader in crypto mining and passive income infrastructure, serving both retail and institutional clients with transparent, efficient, and stable cloud mining solutions. To date, PFMCrypto has served more than 9.2 million users worldwide and processed over $1 billion in mining payouts. With operational hubs across Asia, Europe, and North America, and partnerships with leading mining farms and data centers, PFMCrypto is committed to reshaping how users interact with crypto investments.

    PFMCrypto’s mission: “Make crypto earnings as simple and reliable as a savings account.”
    Visit https://pfmcrypto.net now and claim your $10 crypto bonus to get started.

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this press release does not constitute an investment solicitation, nor does it constitute investment advice, financial advice, or trading recommendations. Cryptocurrency mining and staking involve risks and the possibility of losing funds. It is strongly recommended that you perform due diligence before investing or trading in cryptocurrencies and securities, including consulting a professional financial advisor.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Highland Conference To Focus On Online Safety Of Children and Young People

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    On Tuesday 17 June, the Highland Child Protection Committee will be hosting their annual conference at Eden Court Theatre in Inverness.  The event will bring together over 150 practitioners from across Highland to consider emerging issues in child protection.

    The day will pay a particular focus to the online safety of children and young people and prevention of child sexual abuse online.

    The keynote speech will be delivered by Chris Hughes, Hotline Director from the Internet Watch Foundation, an international organisation who aim to eliminate child sexual abuse images from the internet. Chris said: “I am delighted to be visiting the Highlands and meeting with everyone. Online child sexual abuse and exploitation knows no boundaries and can have significant impact on children, young people and their families. It is vital that services know how to recognise and respond to any emerging risks effectively.”

    The event will also consider other emerging issues and approaches to child protection including child exploitation, neglect, misogyny, child sexual abuse, early protective messaging and ICON, a programme to support parents/carers and prevent head trauma in babies.

    Mhairi Grant, Independent Chair of the Child Protection Committee said: “We are pleased to be hosting such an important event to update practitioners about the work being undertaken by partners and provide opportunities for networking and relationship building. It is crucial that priorities for protecting children in Highland are shared by all agencies and services.”

    Chair of the Highland Council’s Health, Social Care and Wellbeing Committee and a member of the CPC, Councillor David Fraser added: “ We all can play a part to keep children safe. The discussions regarding on-line safety, especially the key insights from Chris of young people’s experiences, will help us all in supporting our vulnerable young people and their journey into adulthood. I wish everyone taking part a very successful conference.”

    Local services will be showcasing a range of poster presentations highlighting good practice across Highland.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pioneering traditional music school marks 25 years

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    A major milestone in Highland musical education is to be celebrated with a special concert in Inverness.

    The National Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music in Plockton is celebrating its 25th anniversary and on Thursday (19 June) past and present students will come together at Eden Court Theatre in a showcase of the very best from the Scottish traditional scene.

    Known as Sgoil Chiùil na Gàidhealtachd, the Centre has been a cornerstone in nurturing some of the country’s most talented young musicians while preserving Scotland’s rich musical heritage. This celebratory performance highlights the Centre’s legacy as the only one of its kind in Scotland.

    Highland Council vice convener Cllr Biz Campbell said: “Congratulations to Sgoil Chiùil na Gàidhealtachd, the national centre of excellence in traditional music based at Plockton High School.

    “The school has done such marvellous work to support traditional music and culture in our region and what better place to have this precious asset than at Plockton High, in the heart of the Highlands.

    “Some of our very best musicians have come through the school and it is fantastic to see them teaming up with the next generation to celebrate the 25th anniversary. Here’s to many more.”

    The concert will feature a stellar line-up of alumni who have gone on to forge highly successful careers. Returning to perform alongside current students are:

    • Innes White (originally from Dingwall & he will be the Musical Director the event), multi-instrumentalist known for collaborations with Julie Fowlis, Eddi Reader, Karen Matheson, Sian, Siobhan Miller and many others
    • Kim Carnie (Oban), singer-songwriter, member of popular folk group, Mànran, and TV presenter
    • Ewan Robertson (Carrbridge) and Conal McDonagh (Poolewe) of award-winning folk group, Breabach
    • Catriona Hawksworth (Perthshire) and Megan Macdonald (Lairg), members of six-piece band, Heisk
    • Malin Lewis (Skye), acclaimed piper and instrument maker
    • Mairearad Green, Achiltibuie musician, composer and artist
    • Charlie Grey (Fort Augustus) and Joseph Peach (Achiltibuie), celebrated fiddle and piano duo
    • Deirdre Graham (Breakish, Skye), Gaelic singer and tutor at the Centre, who will also act as Bean an Taighe (host) for the evening

    These musicians will be joining the current intake of talented young musicians back in Plockton for rehearsals prior to the event, where the future generation will learn from the alumni.

    The concert will also mark the official launch of the Centre’s 24th album, Mic’d Up, featuring performances by the current students. Recorded last year, the album is a collection of traditional and contemporary material that showcases the skill, creativity, and collaboration at the heart of the Centre’s work.

    Mike Vass, Centre Manager, said: “It’s a real honour to celebrate 25 years of the Centre with so many of our talented alumni and current students.

    “This event is not just a celebration of our past, but a testament to the strength and future of traditional music in Scotland.

    “The fact that so many former students have gone on to successful careers – and are now returning to perform – is incredibly moving and a powerful reminder of what this Centre is all about.”

    The Centre opened in May 2000 with just nine students, including Breabach’s Ewan Robertson, who returns as both tutor and performer, offering intensive training led by some of Scotland’s foremost traditional musicians.

    Today, the Centre continues to offer exceptional musical education, with tuition from a team of renowned tutors such as fiddler Gordon Gunn; Gaelic singers Deirdre Graham and Rachel Walker; singer-songwriter Siobhan Miller; multi-instrumentalist Hamish Napier; fiddle player/guitarist Innes Watson; harpist Ingrid Henderson; pianist Mhairi Hall; and composer/producer Mike Vass, who also serves as Centre Manager.

    The 25th anniversary celebration takes place at Eden Court Theatre, Inverness, on 19th June.

    Tickets are available now online via the Eden Court website.

    For more information about the Centre, visit www.plocktonmusicschool.com.

    About The National Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music

    • Sgoil Chiùil na Gàidhealtachd (National Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music) is the only Centre of Excellence in Scotland dedicated exclusively to Scottish traditional music.
    • The Centre offers first-class tuition and a comprehensive learning experience including individual instruction, ensemble work, masterclasses, performance, recording, and music history.
    • The Centre aims to provide high-quality education, support career pathways in traditional music, and foster strong links within both the local and wider traditional music communities.
    • In 1999, the Scottish Executive established its Excellence Fund for education, and invited the 32 Scottish local authorities to submit bids for appropriate projects. Recognising the wealth of traditional music activity generated by the Fèis movement and others, The Highland Council submitted a bid for a residential Centre of Excellence specialising in traditional music.
    • The bid was successful, and the National Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music was established at Plockton High School in May 2000 with funding of £500,000 over three years from the Scottish Executive’s Excellence Fund, with additional input from The Highland Council.

    Issued by Katie Mackenzie PR and by Highland Council

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Highland Cross 2025 road closures

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Road users are advised that temporary traffic restrictions will come into operation on Saturday 21 June 2025 between 06:00 and 19:00 for the Highland Cross 2025 event.

    The C1112 Glen Affric Road will be temporarily closed to vehicles from 11:00 to 17:00, from its junction with the C1110 Cannich Fasnakyle – Kerrow Wood Road to the north side of the bridge over the Abhainn Gleann nam Fiadh.

    The following roads will also be temporarily closed from 12:45 to 18:00:

    • A862 Ardullie – Dingwall – Beauly – Inverness Road, closed between its junction with the A831 Drumnadrochit – Cannich – Beauly Toll Road and its junction with the U2288 Mid Street, Beauly
    • A831 Drumnadrochit – Cannich – Beauly Toll Road, closed between its junction with the A862 Ardullie – Dingwall – Beauly – Inverness Road and its junction with the U1480 Altyre Road

    Beauly Square will also be closed from 06:00 to 19:00.

    The closures affect vehicle access only.  Pedestrian access and access for emergency vehicles will not be affected.

    13 Jun 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Government must retain and retrain Alexander Dennis workers

    Source: Scottish Greens

    The workers whose jobs are at risk must be protected by our governments

    The Scottish and UK governments must take immediate actions to retain the highly skilled workforce from Alexander Dennis if their factories in Falkirk and Lambert close, the Scottish Greens have said.

    Writing to the Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes, Mark Ruskell MSP said that the closure put 400 direct jobs at risk, and up to 1,600 more indirectly in the wider Falkirk and Grangemouth area. 

    Speaking after sending the letter, Mr Ruskell said:

    “The factories in Falkirk and Lambert are putting electric buses on roads across Europe. Their closure would be a devastating blow to local communities at a time when our green economy should be booming.

    “Manufacturing could continue here profitably for years to come, and the Government must leave no stone unturned to keep them working. But if their owners are determined to move, then Ministers need to recognise the importance that retaining a skilled workforce has for Scotland’s future.

    “We recognised this at Grangemouth, and when the refinery closed Forth Valley College received funding to offer support and training. This helped keep these essential skills in our communities and economy.

    “The First Minister has said he’ll do “everything he can” to support the workers. But we must now see those words transform into action with a proper plan, community and trade union involvement, and significant investment. To do anything else would be a betrayal of Scotland’s future.”

    Text of letter sent to DFM Kate Forbes by Mark Ruskell

    Dear Deputy First Minister,  

    I write to you following the news that bus manufacturer Alexander Dennis, which has 
    factories in Falkirk and Larbert, announced that it was considering moving 
    manufacturing to a site in Scarborough.

    This decision is a further devastating blow to hundreds of workers and to a community 
    that already feels like it has been abandoned following job losses at the nearby INEOS 
    site in Grangemouth. 

    From conversations with Unite the Union representatives there is understandable worry 
    around the uncertainty and many of their members want answers and action from their 
    elected representatives.

    The workers from ALD, similarly to those from Grangemouth, could have a crucial role to 
    play in our green future. But warm words alone about a just transition won’t pay the 
    bills, it needs investment, and it needs a proper plan. To achieve our climate targets, we 
    must retain the workers, and urgently upscale their knowledge and skills needed to 
    deliver them. 

    I believe that there is life in the current Falkirk and Larbert sites, and that manufacturing 
    in Scotland can continue for many years to come. However, if the Canadian owned firm 
    have their sights set on England, then I would hope that the Scottish and UK 
    Governments would support workers at risk of redundancy with skills and training.

    These workers are highly skilled and have an important contribution to make locally and 
    nationally. 
     
    Forth Valley College has received funding from the Scottish and UK Governments to 
    support the Grangemouth workers and this should be no different for those employed 
    by Alexander Dennis. For every job in bus manufacturing, it is estimated that there is a 
    multiplier of three to four jobs in the wider supply chain and support services. The 
    closure announcement on this basis put up to 1,600 jobs at risk in the wider Falkirk and 
    Grangemouth area. 

    I hope that Ministers will work with the trade unions to retain jobs and skills in the 
    community and to ensure that it is workers and local people who are leading the 
    process.  

    Could I ask when the Government is planning to meet with workers and trade unions? It 
    would be beneficial to get all parties round the table, including the current employers, 
    to explore the next steps. 

    Kind regards, 

    Mark Ruskell MSP 
    MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Senators Hassan, Shaheen Urge Coast Guard to Delay Removal of Navigational Buoys

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Hampshire Maggie Hassan
    (Washington, DC) – U.S. Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and Maggie Hassan (D-NH) joined a bipartisan cohort of the New England Senate Delegation led by Senator Angus King (I-ME) in urging the United States Coast Guard (USCG) to delay the removal of navigational buoys off the coast of New England so they can better engage with stakeholders and understand the safety impacts of the proposal. In a letter to Acting Coast Guard Commandant Kevin Lunday, the Senators ask for USCG to extend the comment period for public input, undertake more extensive outreach and enhance the compilation of data before making any final decisions on the removal of the navigational buoys.
    The Senators wrote, in part: “We write regarding our concerns with the First District Coastal Buoy Modernization Initiative and related efforts. Principally, we have reservations about how this would affect the safety of mariners throughout District One, the timeline the agency is proposing and the sufficiency of the agency’s communications with stakeholders of the proposed changes. We understand the need to modernize the Aids-to-Navigation (ATON) system, and we commend the agency for proactively initiating a program to assess current systems and to propose appropriate changes. However, we urge the agency to slow down this effort to ensure that the agency understands the needs of the communities and mariners in our states. Therefore, we urge you to extend the public comment period and increase public and Congressional engagement as outlined in this letter.”
    They continued: “We understand that Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), Electronic Navigation Charts (ENC), Electronic Charting Systems (ECS) and smartphone navigation applications have changed many facets of navigation. However, prudent mariners continue to depend on non-electronic and traditional means of navigating, including charts and visual navigation aids like buoys and related ATON.”
    The Senators concluded: “With respect to the First District Coastal Buoy Modernization Initiative, we are troubled that the current proposal would discontinue 916 buoys and beacons (309 Coastal and 607 Harbor buoys) in District One as soon as this year and into 2026. We appreciate the need to modernize, but the Coast Guard and other stakeholders need to maximize navigation safety utilizing all available means – electronic and visual. As you are well aware, mishaps continue to show the need for mariners to competently pilot their vessels, and effective coastal piloting relies on GPS, Radar and visual navigational aids including buoys, beacons, lights, ranges and lighthouses.”
    The USCG launched the Coastal Buoy Modernization Initiative in April 2025, a component of its broader Short-Range Aids-to-Navigation Modernization effort. This initiative proposed the discontinuation of 351 coastal buoys across New England (Maine accounts for the largest share at 145 buoys). In parallel, an additional 2,349 buoys and beacons are under review for future removal as part of the Harbor Buoy Modernization Initiative and the Shallow Water Level of Service Study (SWLOSS), scheduled for phased implementation from 2026 through 2029. In total, some 2700 buoys are up for consideration for removal along the New England coast.
    These efforts collectively represent a significant reconfiguration of the region’s maritime navigational infrastructure affecting both commercial and recreational mariners; despite the technical justifications for the initiative, the USCG approach has raised concerns throughout New England’s maritime community, including commercial fisherman and recreation vessels that rely on the navigation buoys during emergencies.
    Joining Shaheen, Hassan and King on the letter are Senators Chris Murphy (D-CT), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Jack Reed (D-RI), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Ed Markey (D-MA) and Susan Collins (R-ME).
    The full of the text of the letter can be found here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Nine-year-olds in England sit timed multiplication test – but using times tables is about more than quick recall

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Camilla Gilmore, Professor of Mathematical Cognition, Loughborough University

    Halfpoint/Shutterstock

    What’s seven times nine? Quick, you’ve got six seconds to answer.

    This June, over 600,000 children in England in year four, aged eight and nine, will be expected to answer questions like this. They will be sitting the multiplication tables check (MTC), a statutory assessment of their multiplication fact recall.

    The MTC was introduced in 2022 with the aim of driving up standards in mathematics. It’s an online test that children take on a tablet or computer, made up of 25 questions with six seconds per question.

    Being able to quickly recall multiplication facts is valuable. Not having to think about seven times nine, just knowing that it’s 63, frees up a child’s mental thinking space. This means they can focus on different aspects of the mathematics they are doing, such as completing multi-step problems or using reasoning to solve context-based problems.

    Being able to quickly recall multiplication facts is also the foundation for more advanced mathematics topics that children will encounter at secondary school.

    Our research shows that the MTC is an accurate reflection of children’s multiplication fact recall. But the learning they do for this test doesn’t necessarily help them apply this knowledge in other areas of mathematics. What’s more, focus on the MTC may be diverting teaching time away from other maths knowledge.


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    Since the multiplication tables check was introduced in 2022, the average score in the test has increased year-on-year from 19.8 in 2022 to 20.6 in 2024. This suggests that schools are placing more emphasis on children’s multiplication fact recall – and on preparing them for this test.

    Teaching union the NAHT (National Association of Head Teachers) has suggested that the test is unnecessary, and that it places too much emphasis on fact recall at a cost to other areas of mathematics. The union has also expressed concerns that it disadvantages some children for reasons such as digital accessibility.

    Our research has investigated whether the MTC is a good way of testing children’s recall of multiplication facts. We have found that children perform just as well on a more traditional paper-and-pencil timed fact test as on a computer test equivalent to the MTC. However, having a time limit per question – which is only possible with a computerised test – is essential to assess recall, rather than fast calculation.

    There was no evidence that any children were particularly disadvantaged by the computerised test. However, we did find that children’s attention skills and how quickly they could enter numbers into the tablet they were using did influence their scores.

    This suggests that, for it to be a fair test, it is important that children are familiar with the technology they are using to complete the test. Given that there are stark differences in access to technology in schools, this may pose an issue for some children.

    The purpose of introducing the MTC was to improve children’s broader mathematics attainment by improving their multiplication fact recall. But performance in the year six Sats tests, which assess a range of mathematical skills, shows little change.

    Crucially, improving children’s multiplication fact recall through retrieval practice doesn’t equate to improving their ability to use the multiplication facts they know. If posed a question such as “Tara has seven books. Ravi has four times as many. How many books do they have altogether?” Children who can recall that 5 x 7 = 35 may still not be able to solve the problem.

    Time pressure

    What’s more, because the MTC is a timed test, teachers and parents may use similar time-pressured approaches to prepare children and help them improve their multiplication fact recall. But our research showed that while practice with a computerised game can support children’s fact recall, the benefits to learning are the same whether or not children are encouraged to answer as quickly as possible.

    In research not yet published in a peer-reviewed journal, we found that children who were anxious about mathematics learnt less when practising with time pressure compared to children without mathematics anxiety. Without time pressure, anxiety levels were not related to the amount of learning. Doing some regular multiplication fact retrieval practice is more important than the type of practice, for all learners.

    Even though the MTC is a timed assessment, it doesn’t mean that children only need to do timed practice to prepare for this. Some children may benefit more from less time pressure when practising.

    Multiplication fact recall is just one element of mathematics and so having a good balance is important. Fact recall and testing should go hand in hand with other areas of mathematics learning such as understanding concepts, choosing strategies and solving applied problems.

    Recalling multiplication facts doesn’t automatically help children to apply their knowledge. So, although working towards the multiplication tables check can support fact recall, children will need extra support in knowing how to use and apply these facts.

    Camilla Gilmore receives funding from the Economic and Social Research Council.

    Lucy Cragg receives funding from the Economic and Social Research Council.

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

    ref. Nine-year-olds in England sit timed multiplication test – but using times tables is about more than quick recall – https://theconversation.com/nine-year-olds-in-england-sit-timed-multiplication-test-but-using-times-tables-is-about-more-than-quick-recall-258320

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Living on Mars: are there lessons from the terrible conditions of prisons?

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Lucy Berthoud, Professor of Space Systems Engineering, University of Bristol

    I have been researching the possibility of living on Mars for several years. But it took an invitation to give a talk about space at HMP Erlestoke in England – a category C men’s prison – to make me realise that there are a surprising number of similarities between the challenges that would be faced by would-be Martians and daily life in jail.

    The talk was part of a literary festival called “Penned Up”. As I discussed the parallels between Mars and prison with those incarcerated at HMP Erlestoke, the men agreed with me that, despite seeming so different, they both would share long-term isolation, confinement and psychological challenges (not to mention bad food).

    So, as plans for exploration of Mars advance and we consider how to survive on this distant and hostile world, could there be important lessons from an environment closer to home – the modern prison? Understanding this overlap could be critical for ensuring the wellbeing of those we send to Mars. We know the terrible conditions of prisons can have a severe impact on people, and perhaps we can learn from that to help keep others safe and well.

    It’s important to recognise the fundamental distinction between prisons and space exploration. Prisons are a punitive measure, depriving individuals of their freedom, while space exploration is a highly selective, paid endeavour undertaken by choice. As I saw, living in prison is a profoundly challenging environment. Despite legal minimum standards, overcrowding and shortages mean many prisons fail to uphold them.


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    The profoundly negative impact of poor prison conditions highlights the urgent need for effective solutions. But the knowledge gained from this could also then help support people in other challenging and remote environments, such as space exploration.

    We have many years’ experience of studying psychological and team challenges from isolated, confined and extreme environments such as submarines, polar research stations, space simulators on Earth and space stations. But few people have looked to the public prisons on our doorstep for what we can learn.

    Extreme routine

    Daily life in both a prison and in space is governed by structured routines. In prisons, days are often planned down to the minute, dictating everything from waking to sleeping. This rigid scheduling is mirrored by mission-controlled timetables for astronauts.

    Mandatory work is another common thread. Prison routines often include assigned tasks, such as kitchen or laundry duty, which serve the needs of the facility. Similarly, Martian astronauts would need to perform scientific experiments, equipment maintenance and resource production duties. Mandatory work can sometimes lead to resentment if there’s little autonomy.

    Basic food and limited sleep is another common factor. When I asked the inmates what the food was like, they laughed. A staff member explained that the budget is £3.08 per person (the government benchmark figure is even less at £2.70 per person per day). Prison food can be of low nutritional value and meal times are fixed, impacting both health and morale.

    The author, Lucy Berthoud, giving a talk at HMP Erlestoke.
    Photo by Andy Aitchison., CC BY-SA

    On Mars, astronauts would consume carefully planned dehydrated meals, which would no doubt have a higher budget and be nutritionally richer, but it is not as good as freshly cooked food back on Earth.

    Sleep, a fundamental need, can also be elusive in both environments. In prisons, it can be disrupted by noise and poor conditions. Astronauts aboard the International Space Station are continuously exposed to an average noise level of 72 decibels, which is equivalent to the sound of motorway traffic from a distance of 15 metres.

    Limited space

    Prison cells are famously small, often measuring little more than a few square metres, and frequently housing several people. They offer minimal personal space and little privacy. The European standard – if it’s upheld – is a minimum of four square metres per person in a single cell.

    Similarly, Martian habitats, designed to function with the minimum resources and with a focus on life support, will also be challenging space-wise.

    For example, the Apollo Command and Service module which went to lunar orbit had a volume of just 6.2 cubic metres for three astronauts. This lack of personal space and privacy in both settings can lead to heightened stress levels and challenges to emotion regulation.

    Both places also provide a potentially high-risk environment. The threats may be different – often interpersonal in prisons – from violence, sexual assault, and extortion to potential staff abuse-, mainly environmental – radiation, cold and lack of air on Mars. But they can lead to a persistent state of vigilance which can significantly impact mental well-being in both cases.

    Dealing with isolation

    Perhaps the biggest parallels lie in the psychological challenges arising from prolonged isolation. Imprisonment involves a significant separation from family, friends, and the outside world, leading to feelings of isolation and loneliness.

    While astronauts on a mission to Mars are highly trained professionals and have chosen to go, they too will operate under a significant degree of control. With a likely round trip time of two years, astronauts embarking on a mission to Mars may also experience isolation. This could lead to feelings of disconnection and homesickness, as has been studied in volunteers on Earth.

    Prisoners experience a near-complete lack of control over even the most basic aspects of their daily existence. You can see the importance of feelings of control in the fact that even astronauts and cosmonauts sometimes rail against or even disobey mission control’s strict guidelines, as the Nasa astronaut Clayton Anderson has written about in his candid book The Ordinary Spaceman.

    Social dynamics

    Both groups require living in close quarters with a limited, unchanging set of companions. In prison, people are confined to a relatively small social environment, which can lead to complex subcultures and the potential for interpersonal conflict and violence, though supportive relationships can also be a crucial resource.

    Equally, for Martian crews, strong group cohesion and mutual support will be absolutely essential. However, the inherent stress of the mission, confined living conditions and significant communication delays with Earth could still lead to tensions.

    So we see that lessons learned from studying the experiences of people in jails can provide valuable insights for mitigating the negative impacts of life on Mars.

    Strategies such as designing habitats to maximise personal space and privacy, improving food and maximising autonomy will be needed for Martian travel. It will be important to provide access to meaningful activities to combat monotony, ensuring access to comprehensive mental health support and fostering strong social connections and support networks. These have all been studied in prisons.

    By trying to improve prison conditions and continuing to learn from prisons, we can better prepare our pioneers for the unprecedented challenges of making a home on Mars, improving their chances of survival and their ability to thrive.

    Lucy Berthoud receives funding from UK Space Agency and UKRI.

    ref. Living on Mars: are there lessons from the terrible conditions of prisons? – https://theconversation.com/living-on-mars-are-there-lessons-from-the-terrible-conditions-of-prisons-258502

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: China’s Everest obsession: following Mallory’s footsteps a century on, I saw how tourism and climate change are transforming the mountain

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Carl Cater, Associate Professor in Tourism Marketing, Swansea University

    Chinese tourists at Everest’s northern base camp, Rongbuk in Tibet, photograph the world’s highest mountain. Carl Cater, CC BY-NC-ND

    To the discerning eye, other mountains are visible – giants between 23,000 and 26,000 feet high. Not one of their slenderer heads even reaches their chief’s shoulder. Beside Everest they escape notice, such is the pre-eminence of the greatest. (George Mallory, 1922)

    The climbing season on Mount Everest peaks in late May and early June every year. Extreme weather patterns at this location and altitude mean the main climbing season is remarkably short, perhaps only a few weeks between the winter freeze and monsoon storms.

    Even within that time, the precise location of the jetstream that accelerates wind speeds at the summit creates pinchpoints of ideal climbing conditions, leading to images of long queues of mountaineers at particularly challenging points such as the Hillary Step – named after one of the two men who first climbed Everest on May 29 1953.

    In the 30 years after Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay first stood at the summit, only 150 men and women matched their feat. But since then, the number of climbers has sky-rocketed. In 2019, a record 877 people summited the mountain, and in 2024 ascents were only just shy of this.

    Rebecca Stephens, the first British woman to climb Everest in 1993, has described how the “global obsession with the world’s highest mountain is shaping its future and the future of the people who work on it”.

    Stephens said her ascent in 1993, when there was only one commercial expedition on the mountain, felt like a watershed moment. Since then, commercial expeditions have mushroomed on Everest’s southern base camp on the Khumbu glacier (altitude: 5,364 metres), which now boasts a wide range of facilities including coffee shops and party tents.

    The explosion of interest in climbing Everest has been aided by the fact that, despite its altitude and dangers, it is far from the most difficult high-altitude mountain. A member of the Tibet Mountaineering Association who had summited five times told me, on a good day, Everest was “very straightforward” – and that climbing Denali in Alaska (North America’s tallest peak) had been much more difficult.

    By the end of 2024, there had been 12,884 ascents and 335 deaths on Everest, a survival rate of 97.4%. But the so-called “death zone” above 8,000 metres, combined with avalanches, extreme weather and frostbite, will always present significant hazards to the people who visit these slopes.




    Read more:
    Fifty years ago, Junko Tabei became the first woman to summit Everest – why do so few people know her story?


    This climbing season, a Scottish former marine described quitting his attempt 800 metres below the summit after encountering two dead climbers. Meanwhile, four other ex-British special forces soldiers including UK government minister Alastair Carns used xenon gas and hypoxia training to travel to Everest and summit in under a week – leading to concerns that this could further increase the number of people attempting to scale the increasingly crowded mountain.

    But while images of high-altitude queues and stories of occasional fatalities hog the headlines, most visitors to Everest do not attempt to climb it. And by far the majority of these tourists are on the “other side of Everest”, in China-administered Tibet.

    Unlike a century ago, Everest is now easily accessed by tarmacked roads. (To compare the images, move the white bar right and left.) Sandy Irvine/Royal Geographical Society (1924)/Carl Cater (2024)

    China’s “economic miracle”, combined with its desire to develop peripheral regions, has meant that Qomolangma (the Tibetan name for Everest) is now easily accessible, with tarmacked roads all the way to the northern base camp at Rongbuk (altitude: 5,150 metres).

    From having lower numbers of visitors than the Nepalese side 20 years ago, the Tibetan side of Everest now welcomes more than half a million tourists a year – the vast majority from mainland China. Short Chinese holidays mean most of these visits are whistlestop trips that also take in the nearby high-altitude cities of Lhasa and Shigatse. Because of the lack of altitude acclimatisation time, many tourists carry oxygen bottles or wear oxygen backpacks during their visits.

    Retracing the earliest routes

    To better understand the impact of tourism on Everest, I visited the Tibetan side in June 2024 as a guest of Linsheng Zhong, professor of human and tourism geography at China’s Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Research.

    The date of our visit was significant, being a century since the disappearance of early Everest adventurers George Mallory and Sandy Irvine on June 8 1924. We set out to examine both the human and environmental changes that have occurred over the intervening hundred years – using century-old journals and photographs as a baseline.

    As geographers rather than high-altitude mountaineers, our aim was to retrace some of the reconnaissance routes used by the British in the 1920s – a time when Nepal was closed to foreign visitors. Between 1921 and 1924, three expeditions organised by the Royal Geographical Society and the Alpine Club visited Tibet with the aim of being the first recorded people to climb Mount Everest. None, as far as we know, reached the top – and the remains of the two leaders of the final expedition, Mallory and Irvine, were only discovered on Everest many years later.

    While the vistas are equally spectacular today, climate change has had a significant impact on glaciers throughout the region. Recent scientific estimates suggest that there has been between a 26% and 28% reduction in the glaciers surrounding Everest between the 1970s and 2010.

    In 1921, the leader of the first expedition, Charles Howard-Bury, camped just below the Langma pass – the highest but most direct easterly route to Everest – and photographed “a peak of black rock with a glacier just below it”. It is apparent from this “slider” comparison, using a photograph I took from the same spot, how much this hanging glacier has retreated over the past century.

    This glacier to the south of the Langma pass has retreated significantly. Charles Howard-Bury/Royal Geographical Society (1921)/Carl Cater (2024)

    The human impact on Everest

    Everest’s permanent northern base camp at Rongbuk in Tibet now welcomes up to 3,000 visitors a day in high season. Tourists are initially disgorged into a regimented tented village – modern versions of Tibetan yak herder accommodation.

    Some of these jet-black tents, made from thick yak hair which breathes when dry and is waterproof when wet, provide simple (but heated and oxygenated) accommodation for the hardier tourists who want to be at the mountain early for the best photo opportunities.

    Wandering up the astroturf lining the central boulevard, we meet a range of souvenir sellers before reaching the “world’s highest post office” and a circular plaza commemorating the various scientific and political achievements of the region. The near-landscape is largely brown: when he was here, Mallory described the contrast between the rain-shadowed “monotonously dreary, stony wastes” of Rongbuk with the beauty of the snowy mountains looming above.

    Today, a boardwalk takes tourists marginally further to Rongbuk monastery – founded in 1902 and rebuilt after being damaged during the Chinese Cultural Revolution – and a final viewpoint of the north face of Everest. A yellow sandstone band is clearly visible just below the summit – evidence that this mighty mountain was once at the bottom of the ocean.

    An astroturf walkway in the tourist village at Everest’s northern base camp, Rongbuk in Tibet.
    Carl Cater, CC BY-NC-ND

    The mood on our trip was a sharp contrast to my visit in November 2007, when our Tibetan guide had been keen to evade any security checkpoints (albeit to maximise his personal profit, rather than any ethical standpoint). With only a few thousand annual, mostly international, visitors, the facilities back then were very limited, beyond a warning to tourists to proceed no further or face significant fines – and a shiny new sign proclaiming mobile phone coverage.

    However, we were able to walk to the snout of the Rongbuk glacier, a jumble of shattered sandstone rocks at the terminal moraine. Today, tourists cannot go far beyond the monastery and are corralled on new boardwalks.

    Tourism has brought rapid economic change to this region of the Tibetan plateau – including diversifying from traditional livelihoods. Central government efforts to reduce overgrazing in the fragile ecosystem have led to a system of payments to traditional herders – and a drop in livestock numbers from a peak of nearly 1 million in 2008 to below 700,000 today.

    In contrast, the permanent human population of the Qomolangma National Nature Preserve (the protected area that includes the Tibetan side of Everest) has more than doubled since the 1950s to more than 120,000 people, with especially accelerated growth over the last decade coinciding with the rise in tourism. The Pang La pass which crosses into the Rongbuk valley, described as “desolate” by English mountaineer Alan Hinkes in the 1980s, is now festooned with souvenir shops and mobile coffee baristas.

    Concern about the environmental impacts of these tourists led to the introduction of a fleet of electric buses in 2019, with visitors instructed to park their vehicles in the small town of Tashi Dzom before taking a 30-minute electric bus ride to the northern Everest base camp.

    Tourists are brought up the mountain to Rongbuk in electric buses.
    Carl Cater, CC BY-NC-ND

    Now there are plans to move the bus transfer station to a gleaming new park centre closer to the main highway, to save tourists having to drive the numerous switchbacks over the Pang La pass to Tashi Dzom, then negotiate traffic jams and parking challenges nearer the peak.

    This is partly to cope with another western import to China: the concept of the “road trip”. For Chinese car enthusiasts, the 5,000-kilometre Route 318 from Shanghai to the foot of Everest is now one of their most popular long-distance drives.

    ‘The most beautiful valley in the world’

    We visited the east and north faces of Everest in Tibet armed with photographs and accounts from those three early British expeditions more than a century ago – the first recorded attempts to climb the world’s highest mountain.

    The first (1921) expedition led by Howard-Bury, an army lieutenant-colonel, botanist and future Conservative MP, was a detailed scientific and topographical survey of the area. In their attempts to find a route to the summit, approaches via the northern (Rongbuk) and eastern (Kama) valleys were reconnoitred.

    Views of Kharta, location of the 1921 expedition’s second base camp. Charles Howard-Bury/Royal Geographical Society (1921)/Carl Cater (2024)

    Although less visited than the Khumbu base camp in Nepal or the Rongbuk base camp in Tibet, the eastern approach to Everest via the Kama valley is a wonderful trek with unobstructed views of the immense eastern face of Everest. Howard-Bury described the allure of the valley which remains today:

    We had not been able to gather much information locally about Mount Everest. A few of the shepherds said that they had heard that there was a great mountain in the next valley to the south … They called this the Kama valley, and little did we realise at the time that in it, we were going to find one of the most beautiful valleys in the world.

    The valley is accessed from the settlement of Kharta, a small-but-booming town on the banks of the Bong Chu-Arun river. Just below Kharta, the river enters a steep gorge, dropping from nearly 4,000m to 2,000m as it enters Nepal. Today, the Kama valley route is becoming popular with Chinese trekkers, although there are very limited facilities to deal with their impact on the area – notably, the human and plastic waste.

    The 1921 expedition selected Kharta as the location of its second base camp after several months of exploration at Rongbuk. All were relieved to find such an amenable climate and greenery after the dry and cold of the Tibetan plateau. With the help of the dzongpen (village head) and a local fixer, they rented a farmhouse where many of the photos from the expedition were later developed. Located in a grove of poplar and willow with small streams trickling along its boundary, we also visited this farmhouse – now owned by a Tibetan farmer who cheerily showed us around and introduced the three generations of his family.

    Three generations of the Tibetan family who now own the farm used by the 1921 British expedition.
    Carl Cater, CC BY-NC-ND

    The British expeditions’ investigations of the Kama valley are of particular interest as this valley sits on the climatic boundary between drier and wetter areas to the north and south of the Himalayan range. Howard-Bury described thick mists coming up the Kama valley each evening, providing significant moisture to the region:

    As usual, in the evening, the clouds came up and enveloped us in a thick mist … When we started the following morning, there was still a thick Scotch mist which made the vegetation very wet … On the opposite side of the valley were immense black cliffs descending sheer for many thousand feet.

    A profusion of mountain plant life.
    Carl Cater, CC BY-NC-ND

    Still evident today, this precipitation, combined with great variations in altitude and temperature, supports a profusion of plants – as well as animal life that our predecessors described as “extraordinarily tame”. Now as then, in summer, the hillsides are covered with the yellow, white and pink flowers of rhododendrons and azealas, and huge juniper trees grow in the lower valley. Howard-Bury described spending “the whole afternoon lying among the rhododendrons at 15,000 feet – admiring the beautiful glimpses of these mighty peaks revealed by occasional breaks among the fleecy clouds”.

    Adorned with prayer flags, the high passes are still used by local people as portals to the sacred Kama valley. In 1921, when he crossed the Langma pass to enter this “sanctuary”, Mallory wrote that the grumblings of his previously stubborn porters had suddenly transformed into “great friendliness” and “splendid marching” – such that they were “undepressed with the gloomy circumstance of again encamping in the rain”. Descending into the Kama valley, Howard-Bury effused:

    To the west, our gaze encountered a most wonderful amphitheatre of peaks and glaciers. Three great glaciers almost met in the deep green valley that lay at our feet. One of these glaciers evidently came down from Mount Everest.

    While the topography here remains largely unchanged, the very significant reduction in the volume of the central glacier is evident in these comparison images:

    The spectacular Kama valley photographed from below the Langma pass. Mount Everest is the distant right peak. Charles Howard-Bury/Royal Geographical Society (1921)/Carl Cater (2024)

    In 1921, the expedition wrote that the outflow from the Kangshung glacier (which descends from Everest) had to “hurl itself into a great ice cavern” in order to flow under the Kandoshang glacier (from Makalu, the world’s fifth-highest peak) and become the Kama river. Today, as a result of glacial retreat, that ice cavern is no longer present and the main stream from the Kangshung glacier flows unimpeded along the snout of the Kangdoshang glacier.

    Further up the valley, the 1921 expedition established another base camp in the high meadows towards the head of the valley at Pethang Ringmo, which, as well as a final camp stop for trekking groups today, remains an important grazing area for migratory yak herders. These herders were important sources of information for the early explorers, but today there is some evidence of overgrazing. Howard-Bury commented:

    We found ourselves among pleasant grassy meadows – it was a most delightfully sunny spot at 16,400 feet, right under the gigantic and marvellously beautiful cliffs of Chomolönzo – now all powdered over with the fresh snow of the night before and only separated from us by the Kangshung glacier, here about a mile wide. Great avalanches thunder down its sides all day long with a terrifying sound.

    A century later, avalanches continue to show us this is a dynamic landscape in a state of constant flux. Often, we would glimpse the rapid tumbling of ice and snow in a long white cloud, rushing down the steep couloirs seconds before the terrifying sound reaches you – reminding us of one of the major threats to climbers.

    The ‘gigantic’ cliffs of Mount Chomolönzo viewed from Pethang Ringmo. Charles Howard-Bury/Royal Geographical Society (1921)/Carl Cater (2024)

    At the head of the Kama valley, the Kangshung face of Everest is perhaps the most impressive of all the sides of the mountain, towering some two miles above the glacier below. Both the north-east (Tibetan) and south-east (Nepalese) ridges – the most popular routes to the summit – are clearly visible from here. The Kangshung face itself was not climbed successfully until an assault by an American team in 1983, and the first British ascent of Everest without oxygen by Stephen Venables in 1988.

    While initially, the mountains and peaks look remarkably similar to the 1920s, the drop in the level of the glacier quickly becomes apparent. The ordered glacial flow has been replaced by rocky detritus and numerous perched lakes, leaving a lunar-like landscape.

    During his first visit, and despite having spent much of his life in the mountains of Europe, Mallory wrote that he was in awe of the vista here:

    Perhaps the astonishing charm and beauty here lie in the complications half-hidden behind a mask of apparent simplicity, so that one’s eye never tires of following up the lines of the great arêtes, of following down the arms pushed out from their great shoulders, and of following along the broken edge of the hanging glacier covering the upper half of this eastern face of Everest.

    This view of the south-east ridge of Mount Everest shows the retreating Kangshung glacier. George Mallory/Royal Geographical Society (1921)/Carl Cater (2024)

    While Everest was the prize sought by all the expeditions, the sight of the Makalu massif, dominating the Kama valley to the south, appears to have had a greater impact on both the climbers. Howard-Bury claimed it was by “far the more beautiful mountain of the two”, while Mallory “saw a scene of magnificence and splendour even more remarkable than the facts suggest”. He wrote:

    Among all the mountains I have seen, and, if we may judge by photographs, all that ever have been seen, Makalu is incomparable for its spectacular and rugged grandeur. It was significant to us that the astonishing precipices rising above us on the far side of the glacier as we looked across from our camp – a terrific awe-inspiring sweep of snow-bound rocks – were the sides not so much of an individual mountain, but rather of a gigantic bastion or outwork defending Makalu.

    In fact, according to Howard-Bury, “the shepherds would insist that Makalu was the higher of the two mountains, and would not believe us when we said that Mount Everest was the higher”.

    The future of the Everest region

    This historical comparison of hundred-year-old images and quotes represents both the enduring mountains but also the rapid changes that the Himalayas now face. Forces of tourism on one hand and climate change on the other are posing huge challenges for these marginal environments.

    Our research shows that tourist and climbing activity is having significant impacts on the region. The causes are both directly at the mountain but also at home, particularly in the damage that all of our consumptive lifestyles are having on Himalayan glaciers.

    Of course, these activities have also brought much-needed development opportunities to local populations, and the residents of both the Nepalese and Tibetan sides are generally much better off than populations in less-visited areas of their respective countries.

    The expected redesignation of the Qomolangma National Nature Preserve as a national park in the current Chinese central government plan may bring opportunities for further management locally as the crowds continue to grow. However, we also identified a shortfall in protecting the significant cultural heritage and longstanding spiritual relationship to the mountain, which is often eclipsed by its physical size.

    Perhaps a more balanced relationship to the mountain and its people is required, one that reevaluates our rather unhealthy obsession with just one peak. Reading the accounts from the 1920s, one is aware that there was a deep reverence for the region – not only from local people but also from its British visitors.

    Journeys through Tibet’s Kama valley to Mount Everest more than a century apart. Video: Carl Cater and Linsheng Zhong.

    In the intervening years, summit bids on the Tibetan side have historically been much lower than in Nepal. Closed to outsiders for much of the latter half of the last century, Tibetan ascents briefly became more popular in the 1990s and 2000s, with a few well-organised commercial operators. But closures in 2008 during Olympic preparations, and again during the COVID pandemic from 2020 to 2023, once again meant a much-reduced number of attempts.

    Combined with less reliance on foreign exchange, China has been able to exert much more control on the climbing industry, and in 2024 did not charge a permit fee at all, preferring to ensure climbers were appropriately experienced. There may be merit in this approach, as no one was killed on the Tibetan side in 2024, as opposed to the eight climbers who perished on the southern side.

    But on both sides of the mountain, it is highly unlikely that our global obsession with Everest will wane. As longtime chronicler Alan Arnette notes, the mountain has an “immutable attraction that is oddly perverse”. So, it is important we continue to monitor the changes in this dynamic landscape wrought by both its visitors and climate change.

    To counter the rising commercialisation of both mountaineering and mountain tourism requires, above all, greater respect for our mountains and the people who reside on them. According to Lakhpa Puti Sherpa, president of the Nepal Mountain Academy, notes:

    The Himalayan mountains are holy spots – and we, the Sherpas, worship them. Before climbing any mountain we worship it, begging apologies on having to step on it on the top, and asking to absolve the sin we are going to incur from this particular violence.

    Watch more image comparisons of the Everest expeditions here. All historical photographs are published courtesy of the Royal Geographical Society. Slider comparisons built using Juxtapose.


    For you: more from our Insights series:

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    Carl Cater received funding from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ President’s International Fellowship Initiative. With thanks to Linsheng Zhong, Professor of Human and Tourism Geography at the Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

    ref. China’s Everest obsession: following Mallory’s footsteps a century on, I saw how tourism and climate change are transforming the mountain – https://theconversation.com/chinas-everest-obsession-following-mallorys-footsteps-a-century-on-i-saw-how-tourism-and-climate-change-are-transforming-the-mountain-257656

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Five reasons you should give up alcohol if you’re recovering from an injury

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By John Kiely, Department of Physical Education & Sport Sciences, University of Limerick

    If you’ve sustained an injury while exercising, giving up alcohol while you recover could be key. Andrey_Popov/ Shutterstock

    Rest, rehab and patience are cornerstones of injury recovery. But should quitting alcohol be a part of any recovery plan? This is what England cricket captain Ben Stokes has done – saying he’s given up alcohol in a bid to quickly recover from a serious hamstring injury.

    While this may seem extreme, emerging research shows that even small amounts of alcohol can interrupt recovery and delay healing in five key ways:

    1. Disrupting immune function

    Alcohol disrupts immune cells’ ability to reach and repair injured tissues – slowing the regeneration of healthy muscle, tendons and ligaments. This delays the clean-up of damaged cells and also prolongs swelling and sensitivity, which further delays the process of repair.

    The effect of heavy drinking (more than four or five drinks at one time) on the immune system can leave your body vulnerable to infection and delay repair for between three to five days afterwards. Even moderate drinking (one to three drinks at one time) stalls tissue regeneration and prolongs swelling and tenderness in the injured area.


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    2. Interfering with muscle rebuilding

    Muscle protein synthesis – the process of repairing and rebuilding muscle – is reduced for 24 to 48 hours after even moderate alcohol consumption. In one study, muscle protein synthesis was shown to be reduced by 24-37% after drinking.

    When this process is impaired, muscle regeneration slows. This results in persisting weakness, soreness and greater susceptibility to re-injury.

    3. Delaying bone and tissue healing

    When bones, ligaments, tendons and muscles are damaged, signals from these injured tissues trigger natural repair processes. But alcohol disrupts these signalling pathways and interferes with the body’s natural repair mechanisms, delaying healing and increasing swelling and scarring of the injured tissues.

    Heavy drinking can prolong healing from a bone fracture by one to two weeks, and extend recovery from sprains and strains by two to three weeks.

    4. Disrupting hormonal balance

    Hormones are chemical messengers that coordinate many of the body’s recovery processes – including tissue repair, inflammation and muscle growth. Two especially helpful healing hormones are testosterone and growth hormone. Both help rebuild muscle and other connective tissues after injury.

    Alcohol lowers circulating levels of these hormones and blunts the body’s ability to regenerate damaged tissues.

    At the same time, alcohol raises cortisol levels. Cortisol is the body’s primary stress hormone. Elevated cortisol levels convince the brain that there’s an immediate threat. The brain subsequently seeks to mobilise available energy in preparation for a “fight” or “flight” response.

    Alcohol interferes with hormones that aid recovery.
    PeopleImages.com – Yuri A/ Shutterstock

    Spikes in cortisol increase energy availability by diverting energy away from other bodily functions – such as injury recovery. Cortisol also promotes the break down of healthy tissues (especially muscle) into simpler chemicals that can be rapidly converted to energy. These imbalances can persist for days after drinking and significantly slow tissue repair.

    5. Increasing risks of re-injury

    Clear communication between the brain and body is essential for smooth, precise and coordinated movement. But alcohol interferes with this communication.

    As a result, coordination, balance and reaction times all plummet. The subtle movement impairments caused by even moderate drinking can linger for a couple of days afterwards. These increase the risk of movement errors and re-injury to the already vulnerable tissues.

    Alcohol and injury recovery

    Current research illustrates that there’s no safe threshold of alcohol consumption during rehabilitation. Even low-to-moderate drinking impairs athletic performance and injury recovery for a couple of days, depending on the dose, the person and the aspect of recovery being measured.

    Binge drinking (periods of abstinence followed by consuming four or five drinks in one session) causes substantial short-term damage. Low-to-moderate drinking causes subtler disruptions, but these disruptions typically happen more frequently.

    Stokes’ decision to abstain from alcohol is not an overreaction – it’s a clear-headed, evidence-led commitment to optimal recovery. As new evidence reshapes our understanding of alcohol’s multiple impacts, the message is simple: rehabilitation doesn’t happen in the pub. Whether you’re a professional athlete, a recreational runner or an enthusiastic “weekend warrior”, every drink counts.

    When returning from an injury, the less you drink, the better your chances of a complete recovery. If a rapid and complete recovery is your goal, then less is better, and none is best.

    Deciding to drink alcohol during rehabilitation is a personal choice. But if healing is the priority, one of the simplest, most controllable ways to skew the odds in your favour is to follow Stokes’ lead and skip that drink.

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

    ref. Five reasons you should give up alcohol if you’re recovering from an injury – https://theconversation.com/five-reasons-you-should-give-up-alcohol-if-youre-recovering-from-an-injury-257194

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Closed notice to improve: Lakes College West Cumbria

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Correspondence

    Closed notice to improve: Lakes College West Cumbria

    A financial health notice to improve issued to Lakes College West Cumbria.

    Applies to England

    Documents

    Details

    This notice to improve is now closed.

    This letter and its annex serve as a written financial health notice to improve at Lakes College West Cumbria.

    Sign up for emails or print this page

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Ministers discuss ‘AI in Reform and Transformation’ at 43rd BIC Summit13 June 2025 The Chief Minister, Deputy Lyndon Farnham, and Minister for External Relations, Deputy Ian Gorst, represented Jersey at the British-Irish Council, BIC, Summit in Northern Ireland on Thursday 12 to… Read more

    Source: Channel Islands – Jersey

    13 June 2025

    The Chief Minister, Deputy Lyndon Farnham, and Minister for External Relations, Deputy Ian Gorst, represented Jersey at the British-Irish Council, BIC, Summit in Northern Ireland on Thursday 12 to Friday 13 June. 

    The 43rd Summit, hosted by the First Minister of Northern Ireland, Michelle O’Neill, and the Deputy First Minister, Emma Little-Pengelly, brought together all the representatives of the BIC administrations, including the Irish, Welsh, Scottish and UK Governments, the Northern Ireland Executive, and the Governments of Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man.

    The theme of the meeting was ‘The Role of AI in Reform and Transformation’. 

    After the summit, Deputy Farnham said: “The British-Irish Council remains a vital forum that brings together member administrations to discuss, and address, our many joint challenges and opportunities. Deputy Gorst and I had useful conversations with ministers from across the British Isles against the backdrop of challenging global and national events. 

    “I would like to thank the First Minister and Deputy First Minister for the kind hospitality that we were shown throughout the Summit.” 

    Deputy Gorst added: “It was immensely worthwhile to discuss how AI can enhance our public services, particularly in health diagnosis and prevention of illness. We will be sharing expertise with other jurisdictions which are exploring advances in many of the same areas.”​

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Premier Returns to Boston to Promote Life Sciences Sector, Meet With Northeastern Governors

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Premier Tim Houston will be in Boston this weekend to attend the BIO Boston International Convention, the largest biotechnology conference in the world, and meet with northeastern U.S. governors to discuss shared priorities.

    At the conference, the Premier will host an event for international biopharma representatives to showcase Nova Scotia’s commitment to advance the life sciences sector and highlight the importance of the sector’s role in promoting both health outcomes and economic growth.

    The meeting with northeastern U.S. governors follows an invitation they extended to eastern Canadian premiers in early May amid concerns over tariffs and maintaining strong trade relations.

    “The New England region has always been an important trade partner to Nova Scotia, and it will continue to be even as we forge new relationships and create new opportunities for hard-working Nova Scotians,” said Premier Houston. “Our ties to New England run deep, and Nova Scotia has a lot to offer – from expertise in the biotech sector, to high-quality seafood, to wind energy that can help power New England’s energy needs, and so much more.”

    Premier Houston has cited New England as an example of a region with massive energy needs that could benefit from Nova Scotia’s plan to construct offshore wind turbines.

    Premier Houston continues to discuss the removal of interprovincial trade barriers, improved labour mobility and diversifying to new markets with other premiers and the federal government. Several jurisdictions have already agreed to remove trade barriers.

    As part of Budget 2025-26, the Province will work to strengthen Nova Scotia’s self-reliance by investing in critical minerals, wind resources and the seafood sector, in addition to investing more money to grow the Nova Scotia Loyal program. The Province will also develop a comprehensive trade action plan to facilitate internal trade, enhance productivity and drive critical sectors with input from businesses and industry.


    Quick Facts:

    • in 2024, Nova Scotia exports to the New England states reached $1.2 billion, and imports from this region were almost $64 million
    • the annual BIO International Convention attracts more than 20,000 industry leaders from across the globe; last year the Premier attended the event in San Diego
    • seven Nova Scotian companies have confirmed their attendance at BIO International Convention 2025
    • mission delegates from the Province include Premier Houston; Michelle Thompson, Minister of Health and Wellness; Nicole LaFosse Parker, Chief of Staff and General Counsel, Premier’s Office; Tracey Taweel, Executive Deputy Minister; and Jean MacEachern, Special Advisor to the Minister of Health and Wellness

    Additional Resources:

    BIO International Convention 2025: https://eventannual.com/bioconference/

    News release – Premier to Promote Nova Scotia Opportunities in New York, Boston: https://news.novascotia.ca/en/2025/03/12/premier-promote-nova-scotia-opportunities-new-york-boston


    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Councillor Clarke looks forward to a right Royal Saturday in Carrickfergus

    Source: Traditional Unionist Voice – Northern Ireland

    Statement by TUV Carrickfergus councillor David Clarke:

    “This Saturday is the annual Royal Landing festival in Carrickfergus. Carrickfergus is a town very proud of its rich culture, heritage and history.

    “It is a long-running Orange pageant which marks the arrival of King William on his way to the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. Over 40 bands and lodges are expected to partake in the parades in the famous east Antrim costal town.

    “The Royal Landing is a wonderful day where history and heritage come alive in the historic walled town of Carrickfergus. It is a proud day for the town and everyone is invited to join in for what is sure to be a positive family fun day out with live music, dancing and history. There will also be ample food stalls available.

    “Given this is a family event for everyone, it is expected that all who attend will help to create a safe, respectful and positive day celebrating our culture.

    “I want to place on record my thanks to Mid and East Antrim Borough Council for helping to fund this event along with other contributors. Without their generosity this event would not be possible.

    “Whatever the weather, it is sure to be a day to remember.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom