Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The number of private sector businesses is growing in China

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    BEIJING, June 27 (Xinhua) — The number of private sector businesses in China reached 185 million by the end of May, up 2.3 percent year on year, official data showed Friday.

    According to the State Administration for Market Regulation of the People’s Republic of China, the private sector, which includes private enterprises and sole proprietors, accounted for 96.76 percent of the total number of business entities in the country.

    The number of private enterprises has exceeded 58 million, up 5.2 percent year-on-year. These enterprises have been steadily increasing investment in technological innovation and actively developing strategic new industries such as new energy and high-tech mechanical engineering, becoming a key pillar of industrial modernization and stable economic growth.

    The number of individual entrepreneurs by the end of May this year increased by 1% year-on-year to 127 million. The department noted that flexible and diverse business models in the areas of retail, catering and household services make it possible to meet the diverse needs of the population.

    In 2024, private enterprises accounted for more than half of China’s foreign trade and tax revenue, and more than 80 percent of urban employment. More importantly, they play a major role in strengthening the country’s innovation capacity, accounting for more than 70 percent of technological achievements.

    To optimize the private sector development environment, ensure fair market competition, and promote the growth of both the private economy and entrepreneurs, China passed the Law on Encouraging the Development of the Private Sector earlier this year. The law strengthens legal guarantees and gives new impetus to the key driver of the world’s second-largest economy. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton KCB ADC FREng appointed new Chief of the Defence Staff

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton KCB ADC FREng appointed new Chief of the Defence Staff

    His Majesty The King has approved the appointment of Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton KCB ADC FREng to take over from Admiral Sir Tony Radakin KCB ADC as the next Chief of the Defence Staff, with effect from September 2025.

    His Majesty The King has approved the appointment of Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton KCB ADC FREng to take over from Admiral Sir Tony Radakin KCB ADC as the next Chief of the Defence Staff, with effect from September 2025.

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer, said:

    Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton has led the Royal Air Force to deliver on operations across the world, while championing a culture of innovation and excellence, which is why I am certain he will make an exceptional leader of our Armed Forces as Chief of Defence Staff.

    In such a rapidly changing global context, we need our Armed Forces to be more lethal, better integrated and equipped for the future as they keep our country safe, I know Rich will rise to that challenge.

    I would like to thank Admiral Sir Tony Radakin for his dedicated service and exceptional advice and service to me as Prime Minister, I wish him every success in his future endeavours.

    Defence Secretary John Healey said:

    I’m delighted to congratulate Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton on his appointment as Chief of the Defence Staff.

    As Air Chief Marshal, Sir Rich Knighton has led the RAF with distinction through a period of intense demand, with NATO operations, deployments to the Middle East and activity across the world. As Chief of the Defence Staff, he will play a critical role in delivering the transformation set out in the Strategic Defence Review. And together, we will put the men and women of our Armed Forces at the heart of our defence plans.

    I would like to thank Admiral Sir Tony Radakin for his distinguished service and counsel as Chief of the Defence Staff through an unprecedented period – in particular, his unparalleled leadership on Ukraine. I look forward to working with Air Chief Marshal Rich over the coming years to make Britain secure at home, and strong abroad.

    Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton, said:

    It is an honour to have been selected as the next Chief of the Defence Staff. I am acutely conscious of the dangers we face and the important role that the Armed Forces play in protecting the UK, our allies and our interests around the world.

    It will be an immense privilege to lead the outstanding people of our Armed Forces.

    I want to pay tribute to Admiral Sir Tony Radakin for his exceptional work in leading the Armed Forces through the most intense period of operational demand and strategic complexity, and for his unstinting support for Ukraine. I look forward to working with the Prime Minister Secretary of State, ministers and fellow Chiefs to deliver the SDR and ensure our Armed Forces are ready to fight and win.

    A biography of Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton can be found here.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Video: On the Ground with UNDSS: Supporting UN Operations in Pokrovsk

    Source: United Nations (video statements)

    Join Artem Chystiak from UNDSS in Pokrovsk, eastern Ukraine—once home to 60,000, now just 2,000. See how UNDSS supports the UN in delivering life-saving aid in one of the country’s highest-risk areas.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JjSkyRlW_E

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Security: INTERPOL-Europol operation results in global seizures of fake and illicit food

    Source: Interpol (news and events)

    14 December 2012

    A joint INTERPOL-Europol operation targeting fake and substandard food and drink, as well as the organized crime networks behind this illicit trade, has resulted in the seizure of more than 135 tonnes of potentially harmful goods ranging from everyday products of coffee, soup cubes and olive oil, to luxury goods such as truffles and caviar. A further 100 tonnes of misdeclared and/or potentially hazardous food was confiscated during investigations linked to Operation Opson II.

    Raids and inspections resulted in around 100 arrests and the seizure of more than 135 tonnes of potentially harmful goods, including everyday products such as coffee, soup cubes and olive oil.

    Illicit goods are often produced, transported and stored without any form of hygiene controls, putting the health and safety of consumers at risk.

    This year, Opson expanded beyond Europe to include countries in Africa, the Americas and Asia. Inspections were carried out at this warehouse in Thailand.

    A project under development  –  the INTERPOL Global Register  – will enable people to scan and verify the legitimacy of a product from their mobile device.

    Operation Opson targets fake and substandard food and drink and the organized crime networks behind this illicit trade.

    Cash was also seized during Opson II.

    INTERPOL and Europol representatives helped coordinate action in Madrid, Spain.

    Checks and raids were carried out at airports, seaports, shops, markets and private homes.

    The operation was supported by customs (Hungarian customs officers pictured here), national food regulatory bodies and partners from the private sector.

    The Thai Food and Drug Administration displayed the wide variety of goods seized including snacks, canned food, coffee and soft drinks.

    National police in 29 countries took part. Officers in Budapest, Hungary, were briefed on the operation.

    Opson was a week-long operation, coordinated jointly by INTERPOL and Europol.

    Operation Opson II (3 – 9 December), which involved 29 countries from all regions of the world, resulted in the recovery of more than 385,000 litres of counterfeit liquids including vodka, wine, soy sauce and orange juice in addition to fish, seafood and meat declared unfit for human consumption, as well as fake candy bars and condiments.

    With the fake and substandard food and drink often produced, transported and stored without any form of regulation or hygiene controls, consumers buying these illicit goods are risking their health and safety while the criminal networks make millions in profits which can be used to fund other illegal activities such as human and drug trafficking.

    Operation Opson II saw the number of participating countries rise from 10 in 2011 to nearly 30 this year, an increase which, says Simone Di Meo, a Criminal Intelligence Officer with INTERPOL’s Trafficking in Illicit Goods unit, reflects a growing awareness of the problem and involvement by organized crime.

    “With this year’s operation going beyond Europe and involving countries in Africa, the Americas and Asia, this will enable us to gather even more intelligence about the networks behind this criminal activity and potentially identify global links with other types of crime,” says Mr Di Meo.

    Coordinated by INTERPOL and Europol, the week-long operation was supported by customs, police and national food regulatory bodies in addition to partners from the private sector. Checks and raids were carried out at airports, seaports, shops, markets and private homes.

    “With this operation, we are showing the criminal networks involved in this line of business that they are not safe and, just as importantly, we are helping to protect public health and safety. In many cases, the quality of the packaging of the fake food and drink is so well done that consumers may not even be aware that they are buying illicit products and potentially risking their lives,” says Chris Vansteenkiste, Project Manager of the Intellectual Property Crime Team at Europol.

    Among the key aims of Operation Opson (meaning food in ancient Greek) were the development of practical cooperation between national law enforcement, food and drug agencies and private companies, the identification of the organized criminal groups behind the trafficking, and raising awareness among consumers and governments about this type of crime.

    Countries which took part in Operation Opson II are Austria, Belgium, Benin, Bulgaria, Colombia, Côte d’Ivoire, Czech Republic, Cyprus, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Jordan, Latvia, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, United Kingdom and the USA.

    Investigations are continuing in many countries and additional information on national activities can be obtained from the enforcement agencies of the countries concerned.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Big Dreams Take Flight: Delhi-NCR and Chandigarh Youth Shine at Samsung Solve for Tomorrow Open House

    Source: Samsung

    Samsung Solve for Tomorrow applicants at Chandigarh University
     
    In the buzzing classrooms of Khaitan Public School, spirited debates and whiteboard sketches gave way to something bigger — a new generation of changemakers emerging through Samsung Solve for Tomorrow. The national innovation contest, launched on April 29, 2025, continues to energize students across the country, and its recent roadshows in Ghaziabad, Delhi, Noida and Chandigarh are proving just how powerful young minds can be when given the right tools.
     
    The Samsung Solve for Tomorrow programme empowers 14-22-year-olds to identify real-world problems and build tech-based solutions using design thinking. The winning four teams receive INR 1 crore, expert mentorship from Samsung and IIT Delhi, investor connects, and prototyping support to help them bring their vision to life.
     
    In recent weeks, the Samsung team engaged with students at Khaitan Public School in Ghaziabad, Lingua Institute and Galgotias College in Delhi, and ITS College in Noida, sparking curiosity and inviting questions from teens eager to make a difference.
     
    For Ishita, a class 12 student from Khaitan Public School, the roadshow was a wake-up call. “I always thought innovation was something for scientists or tech giants. But now I see that even a student like me can solve a local issue using creativity and tech,” she said, already brainstorming a solution around water conservation in her locality.
     
    Her classmate Tanya Chaudhary came in with a rough idea to help senior citizens navigate healthcare access. “After the session, I feel like I finally know how to start. Samsung Solve for Tomorrow gave me the confidence to build something that matters,” said Tanya.
     
    Astha Nautiyal, also from Khaitan, wants to use AI to address the rise in teenage anxiety. “Mental health is something we all deal with, but no one talks about it enough. I want to create something that helps teens feel seen and supported,” she said.
     
    Enthusiasm was at its peak at Khaitan Public School in New Delhi
     
    At Galgotias, students discussed a range of topics — from pollution control to AI-based traffic solutions. One group even explored using recycled materials to build smart street furniture that serves both utility and sustainability goals.
     
    The open houses weren’t just information sessions — they were a platform for exchange, inspiration, and self-belief. Students walked out not just with ideas, but with a roadmap.
     
    “Through Solve for Tomorrow, I got the opportunity to treat my ideas not just as a concept but a working prototype. What started as a classroom project is now being shaped with feedback from mentors and experts across disciplines. Meeting other young innovators has been incredibly motivating—it made me believe that with the right support, even students like me can solve real-world problems that impact millions. I am really motivated to apply,” said Mahak Singh, Chandigarh University.
     
    As the roadshows continue to roll across India, these open houses in Delhi-NCR are proving that innovation doesn’t start in labs — it starts in classrooms, in conversations, and in the minds of students who dare to ask what if?
     
    Samsung Solve for Tomorrow isn’t just shaping ideas — it’s shaping a generation that’s ready to solve, lead, and inspire.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Africa: How New Regional Pipeline Deals are Driving Africa’s Energy Future

    Three significant developments in Africa’s energy landscape made headlines this past month: the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) reached 60% completion, the Republic of Congo finalized a pipeline cooperation agreement with Russia, and Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea signed a deal to advance a joint natural gas pipeline. These milestones underscore increasing momentum behind transnational pipeline projects in Africa, which are not only critical to unlocking hydrocarbon value chains, but also pivotal to industrial growth, regional cooperation and efforts to end energy poverty.

    With African Energy Week (AEW) 2025: Invest in African Energies set to take place in Cape Town from September 29 to October 3, recent advances in the midstream sector underscore the growing role of large-scale infrastructure in securing Africa’s energy future. AEW 2025 will provide a platform to unpack how strategic partnerships and regional integration can transform pipelines from isolated projects into engines of inclusive development.

    EACOP: Connecting Uganda to Global Markets

    The 1,443-km EACOP is set to link Uganda’s oil fields in the Lake Albert region to the port of Tanga in Tanzania, facilitating the export of up to 246,000 barrels per day. With 60% of the project now completed – including land acquisition, environmental approvals and construction – EACOP is on track to become the longest heated crude oil pipeline in the world.

    More than just a logistical asset, EACOP represents a critical economic corridor. It is expected to generate thousands of jobs, stimulate local content and unlock ancillary infrastructure such as roads, storage facilities and power lines. By enabling Uganda to monetize its crude reserves, the pipeline also enhances fiscal revenues that can be reinvested into energy access, education and healthcare. At AEW 2025, stakeholders will explore how flagship projects like EACOP can be used as case studies for balancing investment, environmental responsibility and community development, while ensuring African nations retain sovereignty over their resources.

    Russia-Congo Deal: A New Axis in Pipeline Diplomacy

    Just days after the EACOP update, Russia ratified a bilateral agreement with the Republic of Congo for the construction of the Pointe-Noire-Loutete-Maloukou-Trechot oil pipeline. The agreement lays the groundwork for joint efforts in planning, financing, construction and operation of the pipeline, set to be completed in three years. The move strengthens energy ties between the two countries and opens the door for Russian investment in Congo’s midstream sector, potentially accelerating the development of critical infrastructure needed to monetize and export the country’s hydrocarbon resources.

    It also signals a shift in Africa’s external energy partnerships, with Congo turning to non-Western allies to build out its infrastructure and secure long-term offtake agreements. It reinforces the idea that diversified geopolitical engagement can help African nations close the infrastructure gap faster, provided partnerships are structured transparently and with shared development objectives. As African countries look to strengthen global cooperation, AEW 2025 will offer a space to evaluate new alliances, discuss risk-sharing mechanisms and align infrastructure development with continental priorities under the African Union’s Agenda 2063.

    Nigeria-Equatorial Guinea: A Boost for West African Gas Integration

    A recent agreement between Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea, signed on June 18, aims to fast-track the development of a joint natural gas pipeline, designed to increase cross-border gas trade and support export capacity. This project is expected to deepen energy cooperation between the two countries, facilitate access to cleaner fuels and contribute to the diversification of energy sources in the region. It also exemplifies how collaborative infrastructure development can unlock new economic opportunities, stimulate investments and enhance regional energy security.

    Midstream infrastructure companies are also stepping up efforts to improve regional gas trade and distribution. The West African Gas Pipeline Company, backed by Chevron among other shareholders, operates a vital pipeline that transports Nigerian gas to Benin, Togo and Ghana. This pipeline supports power generation and industrial use across multiple West African countries and plays a key role in diversifying the regional energy mix and promoting cross-border gas trade. Meanwhile, the Republic of Mozambique Pipeline Investments Company, which manages the Mozambique-South Africa Gas Pipeline, recently opened a new office in Maputo, aiming to strengthen regional gas connectivity and market integration.

    Pipelines and the Fight Against Energy Poverty

    While Africa accounts for 17% of the global population, it accounts for just 3.3% of global power generation. Energy poverty remains a major constraint on industrialization, education, healthcare and entrepreneurship. Pipelines, by moving fuel to where it is needed most – across borders and into domestic markets – can help address this imbalance.

    “In addition to exporting crude, new pipelines have the potential to deliver LPG and natural gas to underserved regions, reducing dependence on biomass and accelerating the shift toward cleaner household and industrial energy,” says NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber, adding that coordinated planning between countries can ensure pipelines are multi-purpose and scalable, with clear economic multipliers for local populations.

    “AEW 2025 will shine a light on the role of pipelines in achieving universal energy access, examining regulatory frameworks, project finance models and technology solutions that can make these developments more inclusive and efficient,” he notes.

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

    AEW: Invest in African Energies
    AEW: Invest in African Energies is the platform of choice for project operators, financiers, technology providers and government, and has emerged as the official place to sign deals in African energy. Visit www.AECWeek.com for more information about this exciting event.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council apartments planned for disused garage site

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    Construction partner Keon Homes has put forward the proposals on behalf of City of Wolverhampton Council for the affordable one bedroom homes off Russell Street.

    The 3 storey development, with ground floor wheelchair accessible apartments, would also border Zoar Street and Merridale Street – just a short distance from the city centre.

    Demolition of the derelict garages, that have been blighted by anti-social behaviour, has already been approved and is expected to take place later in this year.

    City of Wolverhampton Council Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for City Housing, Councillor Steve Evans, said: “Clearing and developing small brownfield sites like this is a major part of our housing strategy to deliver better homes for local people in well connected neighbourhoods.

    “It is important we deliver a range of different sized council homes across the city to cater for a variety of needs.

    “Should the plans be approved, the development will provide an uplift to the area for residents and businesses alike.”

    Jim Woodsford, Pre-Development and Planning Manager at Keon Homes, said: “Brownfield development continues to be a core driver for Keon Homes and making use of otherwise redundant sites to provide much needed, affordable housing.

    “We have worked closely with City of Wolverhampton Council to design a scheme that will make great use of the development land in Graiseley, whilst complementing the surrounding area. The proposed units will provide a safe haven for residents, whilst ensuring high levels of energy efficiency and injecting new life into the area.

    “Should a positive planning outcome for this application be achieved, it will further bolster the supply of affordable housing in Wolverhampton, and this can only be good news for everyone concerned.

    “It will also reinforce our commitment to providing local work and housing for local people.”
     

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI China: New ‘Detective Conan’ film charms fans with Chinese elements

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

    The action-packed Japanese animated mystery film “Detective Conan: One-eyed Flashback” held its Shanghai premiere on June 24, with producers attending in person and connecting via video link to nearly 10,000 audience members at post-screening events across 50 locations in China.

    The Japanese producers of “Detective Conan: One-eyed Flashback” pose with a performer dressed as Kogoro Mouri, fans and a Chinese calligraphy scroll at the film’s premiere in Shanghai, June 24, 2025. [Photo courtesy of Road Pictures]

    Directed by Katsuya Shigehara in his feature debut, the new “Detective Conan” film is the 28th installment in the popular case-solving franchise based on Gosho Aoyama’s manga series.

    The film follows Conan Edogawa and Kogoro Mouri as they investigate a case linked to Inspector Yamato Kansuke’s past and the origins of his eye injury, sustained during an avalanche after glimpsing a mysterious figure. The characters race to unlock Kansuke’s forgotten memories and reveal a dangerous conspiracy.

    Chinese fans were delighted by the film’s rich references to Chinese culture. The character Takaaki Morofushi is inspired by Zhuge Liang, also known as Kongming, the revered strategist from China’s Three Kingdoms period (220-265).

    The film’s dialogue also features wisdom from ancient Chinese classics, including Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War” and “Biographies of Assassins” from Sima Qian’s “Records of the Grand Historian.”

    Producers Shuho Kondo, Takeshi Yoshida and Yuhei Okada received loud applause when they took the stage at the premiere. Kondo revealed that, as a devoted fan of the Chinese classic “Romance of the Three Kingdoms,” he helped conceive the character Takaaki Morofushi — a fusion of Zhuge Liang’s intellect and the archetype of a Japanese military commander.

    “Eighteen years later, seeing a character I helped create take a major role in this theatrical film moves me deeply,” Kondo said.

    Later, Chinese fans presented the producers with copies of China’s Four Great Classical Novels as gifts. Kondo, visibly moved, said he loved “Romance of the Three Kingdoms” and kept two Japanese editions at home for regular reference.

    For Okada, attending the premiere in China marked his first international trip. “I arrived in Shanghai yesterday and walked through the streets, feeling everyone’s love for ‘Detective Conan.’ Seeing the audience’s passion at the premiere moved me deeply,” he noted.

    Okada said he had wanted to create a story highlighting private detective Kogoro Mouri’s abilities and made a special request to original creator Gosho Aoyama during production to bring the story to life.

    The film has received widespread praise, with some hailing it as the best “Detective Conan” theatrical release in nearly a decade. It is currently Japan’s highest-grossing film of the year.

    Producer Takeshi Yoshida said, “I believe the success of ‘Detective Conan’ comes from everyone’s love for the series and our team’s years of hard work. To repay this support, we’ll keep improving to deliver even better films.”

    The producers also presented a hand-brushed calligraphy scroll bearing the phrase “We Love Conan Here,” expressing sincere appreciation for Chinese fans.

    Audiences explore immersive installations at the “Detective Conan: One-eyed Flashback” premiere in Shanghai, June 24, 2025. [Photo courtesy of Road Pictures]

    Road Pictures, known for organizing large-scale movie events, connected fans across 50 theaters through synchronized broadcasts. The event included video greetings in Mandarin and Shanghainese from voice actors Minami Takayama (Conan Edogawa), Rikiya Koyama (Kogoro Mouri) and Wakana Yamazaki (Ran Mouri).

    The event also featured an exclusive illustration by director Katsuya Shigehara depicting the characters in Chinese-inspired attire, accompanied by the message, “Let’s meet at the cinema this summer.”

    The premiere venue featured immersive installations designed to recreate the film’s atmosphere. These included a giant ribbon scarf suspended above the theater entrance and a life-size replica of the Mouri Detective Agency stood in the lobby, alongside a five-meter snowy mountain set, ice sculpture and interactive games.

    At the end of the screening, shimmering confetti and red ribbons were released into the packed 1,000-seat theater, reflecting the film’s themes of mystery and romance.

    “Detective Conan: One-eyed Flashback” opens nationwide on June 27.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: ‘Two zones’ initiative drives Beijing’s digital economy

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

    Beijing has made significant progress in becoming a global benchmark city for the digital economy over the past five years, thanks to the “two zones” initiative, officials said at a press conference Monday.

    The “two zones” initiative refers to Beijing’s dual efforts to develop a pilot free trade zone and a national comprehensive demonstration zone for further opening up the service sector. The initiative has helped drive reform, foster a thriving digital industry ecosystem, and accelerate the application of cutting-edge technologies.

    According to Liu Weiliang, spokesperson for the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Economy and Information Technology, the city has gained a competitive edge in frontier digital technologies. General-purpose AI models such as Doubao and Kimi have achieved strong global performance, placing Beijing among the top tier of global innovators. In brain-computer interface research, Beijing’s Beinao-1 system successfully completed one of the world’s first flexible, semi-invasive, fully implanted wireless human trials and has begun clinical validation. Meanwhile, the Tiangong robot made headlines by winning the world’s first half-marathon title for humanoid robots.

    With the world’s largest and most advanced information and communication infrastructure, China has made great strides in digital connectivity, and Beijing is leading the way. The capital has built 143,900 5G base stations — ranking first in China in terms of density, with the highest number of stations per 10,000 people. With 16,000 5G-A base stations, Beijing has over 1,000 residential communities now capable of supporting 10-gigabit broadband access. 

    The Beijing International Big Data Exchange has been central to the city’s efforts in cultivating a high-quality data market. The exchange has seen rapid growth, with cumulative data transactions reaching 2,250 terabytes and an average annual growth rate of over 200% over the past three years. It has processed more than 100 million high-frequency data requests and introduced 567 high-quality datasets, of which 171 have already been traded. These include text, image, audio, and video formats, highlighting rising market demand, growing product diversity, and active participation.

    Telecommunications has also seen broader opening to foreign investment. Wang Hui, deputy director of the Beijing Communications Administration, said that 10 foreign-invested enterprises have been approved for value-added telecom service trials in the city — accounting for 40% of the national total. These approvals cover services such as internet access, online data processing, and information services, and involve well-known multinational corporations with operations in Europe, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific.

    According to Wang, these companies, many of which are local subsidiaries of global giants, are leveraging their international experience and advanced technologies to support Beijing’s goals. Some offer high-quality network solutions to build platforms for clients across supply chains; some focus on sectors like aviation and automotive manufacturing, providing specialized data and IT services; and several others use their global expertise to support Beijing-based companies in going global, while emerging internet firms are helping diversify service options for local users.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Exhibition highlights Beijing’s core area development

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

    Beijing on Thursday launched an exhibition that highlights the city’s efforts in developing its core functional areas. Hosted by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Planning and Natural Resources, the exhibition showcases the city’s development from 2020 to 2024 in urban planning, heritage preservation, public services, and smart city construction.

    In August 2020, China approved a plan for developing the core area of Beijing for the 2018-2035 period, focusing on its functions of serving central administrative organs as well as the firm and stressing the orderly relief of non-capital roles. As part of this plan, the first and second phases of municipal office relocations were completed, freeing up space for optimized land use and better public access.

    The exhibition highlights Beijing’s success in protecting its historical urban landscape. In July 2024, the Beijing Central Axis was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, marking a milestone in the city’s cultural preservation work. 

    Important heritage sites such as the Wanchun Pavilion in the Jingshan Hill and the Temple of Heaven’s Qiniandian (Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests) have been repaired. Several of these locations, including the Zhengyangmen Gate arrow tower, are now open to the public.

    In addition to protecting historical monuments, the city has revised regulations to expand protection to more ancient buildings. Exhibits highlight examples like the Tongxinghe Carpentry Shop, demonstrating how architectural conservation is combined with traditional craftsmanship. To date, authorities have identified and listed over 1,056 historical buildings across the city’s 11 districts.

    Beyond heritage preservation, the exhibition showcases improvements to local communities. These include renovation of older residential communities, the development of specialized public services, as well as new infrastructure and transportation facilities 

    In addition, the exhibition highlights how smart city technologies are shaping the future of urban governance. For example, an interactive screen in the exhibition hall shows the core functions of a digital platform for smart planning and governance. 

    This exhibition will remain a permanent feature at the Beijing Planning Exhibition Hall. It is open to the public from Tuesday through Sunday each week and closed on Mondays. Visitors can reserve tickets through the official WeChat account of the Beijing Planning Exhibition Hall.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI: KE Holdings Inc. Announces Results of Annual General Meeting

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BEIJING, June 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — KE Holdings Inc. (“Beike” or the “Company”) (NYSE: BEKE; HKEX: 2423), a leading integrated online and offline platform for housing transactions and services, today announced that each of the proposed resolutions submitted for shareholders’ approval (the “Proposed Resolutions”) as set forth in the notice of annual general meeting dated April 17, 2025 have been adopted at the meeting held in Beijing, China today.

    After the adoption of the Proposed Resolutions, all corporate authorizations and actions contemplated thereunder are approved, including, among other things, that (i) Mr. Jeffrey Zhaohui Li is re-elected as a non-executive director and Ms. Xiaohong Chen is re-elected as an independent non-executive director of the Company, and (ii) the directors of the Company are granted a general unconditional mandate to allot, issue and deal with additional Class A ordinary shares or equivalents and a general unconditional mandate to repurchase the Company’s own shares, respectively, on the terms and in the periods as set out in the notice of annual general meeting.

    About KE Holdings Inc.

    KE Holdings Inc. is a leading integrated online and offline platform for housing transactions and services. The Company is a pioneer in building infrastructure and standards to reinvent how service providers and customers efficiently navigate and complete housing transactions and services in China, ranging from existing and new home sales, home rentals, to home renovation and furnishing, and other services. The Company owns and operates Lianjia, China’s leading real estate brokerage brand and an integral part of its Beike platform. With more than 23 years of operating experience through Lianjia since its inception in 2001, the Company believes the success and proven track record of Lianjia pave the way for it to build its infrastructure and standards and drive the rapid and sustainable growth of Beike.

    Safe Harbor Statement

    This press release contains statements that may constitute “forward-looking” statements pursuant to the “safe harbor” provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements can be identified by terminology such as “will,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “aims,” “future,” “intends,” “plans,” “believes,” “estimates,” “likely to,” and similar statements. Beike may also make written or oral forward-looking statements in its periodic reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) and The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited (the “Hong Kong Stock Exchange”), in its annual report to shareholders, in press releases and other written materials and in oral statements made by its officers, directors or employees to third parties. Statements that are not historical facts, including statements about KE Holdings Inc.’s beliefs, plans, and expectations, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties. A number of factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement, including but not limited to the following: Beike’s goals and strategies; Beike’s future business development, financial condition and results of operations; expected changes in the Company’s revenues, costs or expenditures; Beike’s ability to empower services and facilitate transactions on Beike platform; competition in the industry in which Beike operates; relevant government policies and regulations relating to the industry; Beike’s ability to protect the Company’s systems and infrastructures from cyber-attacks; Beike’s dependence on the integrity of brokerage brands, stores and agents on the Company’s platform; general economic and business conditions in China and globally; and assumptions underlying or related to any of the foregoing. Further information regarding these and other risks is included in KE Holdings Inc.’s filings with the SEC and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. All information provided in this press release is as of the date of this press release, and KE Holdings Inc. does not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statement, except as required under applicable law.

    For investor and media inquiries, please contact:

    In China:
    KE Holdings Inc.
    Investor Relations
    Siting Li
    E-mail: ir@ke.com

    Piacente Financial Communications
    Jenny Cai
    Tel: +86-10-6508-0677
    E-mail: ke@tpg-ir.com

    In the United States:
    Piacente Financial Communications
    Brandi Piacente
    Tel: +1-212-481-2050
    E-mail: ke@tpg-ir.com

    Source: KE Holdings Inc.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: TC Energy commences collection of tolls on Southeast Gateway pipeline

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Final project cost is approximately US$3.9 billion, 13 per cent under original cost estimate
    • Supplies affordable, reliable and sustainable natural gas to fuel Mexico’s economic growth

    CALGARY, Alberta, June 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — News Release – TC Energy Corporation (TSX, NYSE: TRP) (TC Energy or the Company) today announced that it has commenced the collection of tolls from the Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE) for the Southeast Gateway pipeline and has been paid by the CFE for the month of May, on time in accordance with our contract. We continue to work with the newly constituted Comisión Nacional de Energía (CNE) to obtain the approval of our regulated rates as soon as possible, which is required to provide service to potential future interruptible service users on Southeast Gateway other than the CFE.

    The Southeast Gateway pipeline, a 1.3 Bcf/d, 715-kilometre natural gas pipeline, was constructed approximately 13 per cent under the original cost estimate in less than three years from the project’s final investment decision. Southeast Gateway was the first significant energy infrastructure project constructed under our successful public-private partnership with the CFE.

    “The successful completion of the Southeast Gateway pipeline reflects the unwavering commitment of our team, the CFE and the Ministry of Energy (SENER) to support Mexico’s expanding energy demand and future economic development,” said François Poirier, TC Energy’s President and Chief Executive Officer.

    To advance Mexico’s economic growth and energy security, the Government of Mexico has announced plans to add approximately 8.5 gigawatts of newly installed capacity from natural gas power plants. The Southeast Gateway pipeline, along with the Company’s other assets in Mexico, is positioned to play a vital role in supporting this initiative and the transition to lower-emission, more reliable energy sources.

    About TC Energy
    We’re a team of 6,500+ energy problem solvers connecting the world to the energy it needs. Our extensive network of natural gas infrastructure assets is one-of-a-kind. We seamlessly move, generate and store energy and deliver it to where it is needed most, to homes and businesses in North America and across the globe through LNG exports. Our natural gas assets are complemented by our strategic ownership and low-risk investments in power generation.

    TC Energy’s common shares trade on the Toronto (TSX) and New York (NYSE) stock exchanges under the symbol TRP. To learn more, visit us at TCEnergy.com.

    FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION
    This release contains certain information that is forward-looking and is subject to important risks and uncertainties (such statements are usually accompanied by words such as “anticipate”, “expect”, “believe”, “may”, “will”, “should”, “estimate”, “intend” or other similar words). Forward-looking statements in this document are intended to provide TC Energy security holders and potential investors with information regarding TC Energy and its subsidiaries, including management’s assessment of TC Energy’s and its subsidiaries’ future plans and financial outlook. All forward-looking statements reflect TC Energy’s beliefs and assumptions based on information available at the time the statements were made, and as such are not guarantees of future performance. As actual results could vary significantly from the forward-looking information, you should not put undue reliance on forward-looking information and should not use future-oriented information or financial outlooks for anything other than their intended purpose. We do not update our forward-looking information due to new information or future events, unless we are required to by law. For additional information on the assumptions made, and the risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ from the anticipated results, refer to the most recent Quarterly Report to Shareholders and Annual Report filed under TC Energy’s profile on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission at www.sec.gov.

    -30-

    Media Inquiries:
    Media Relations
    media@tcenergy.com
    403-920-7859 or 800-608-7859

    Investor & Analyst Inquiries:
    Gavin Wylie / Hunter Mau
    investor_relations@tcenergy.com
    403-920-7911 or 800-361-6522

    PDF available: http://ml.globenewswire.com/Resource/Download/71eecfb6-0f18-4356-a066-6de39df05b1f

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Security: Man jailed for 7 years for rape

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    A man has been jailed for raping a 13-year-old girl following an investigation led by specialist detectives at the Metropolitan Police.

    Sorosh Amini, 21 (14.11.2003), of Station Road, Croydon was sentenced to 7 years in prison on Friday, 27 June at Croydon Crown Court, after previously being convicted of rape and sexual assault.

    He was also issued with a 10-year Sexual Harm Prevention Order.

    Amini was arrested and charged following a thorough investigation which utilised CCTV footage and specially trained forensic dogs to place him at the scene.

    He left his home address in London the day after the offence. Officers then used phone data and CCTV to locate him in Liverpool and arrested him 5 days later.

    Detective Inspector Donnett Oseni, who led the investigation, said:

    “Amini’s attack on this vulnerable girl was predatory and calculated. He has demonstrated himself to be a dangerous sexual offender and this sentence prevents him from harming anyone else.

    “I want to commend the victim for her courage in coming forward and reporting this offence to us. I hope today’s verdict will bring her and her family some semblance of closure.”

    In August 2024, Amini approached the victim in broad daylight on North End Road in Croydon, persistently tried to engage her in conversation and would not leave her alone when told. He then followed her down North End Road and into an alleyway.

    Here, he forcibly kissed her and tried to put a cannabis joint into her mouth. He also told her that he was friends with someone who recently stabbed a person in the area, making the victim scared that he may have a knife. Amini then raped her.

    The victim reported the assault to police and received safeguarding and support from specialist officers.

    Amini was convicted on Thursday, 1 January following a two-week trial at the same court.

    Under the New Met for London Plan, our mission is to deliver More Trust, Less Crime and High Standards. Central to this is transforming how we prevent harm and tackle violence against women and girls, most often committed by predatory men like Amini.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Address to the Maritime Industry Australia Decarbonisation Summit, Melbourne

    Source: Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions

    **CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY**

    Thank you, Angela for your kind introduction, and congratulations to you and your team on organising this important event for the maritime industry.

    I begin by respectfully acknowledging the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we meet today. 

    I pay my respects to their Elders past and present, and I extend that respect to any and all First Nations people joining us today.

    Australia’s First Nations people were our first maritime traders. 

    This rich and deep history included trade with Macassan ships from Indonesia along our Northern frontier, and seafaring trade in the Torres Strait, and along the coast of Papua New Guinea. Our modern maritime industry builds on this tradition.

    I’d also like to acknowledge, from the Victorian Government, Melissa Horne MP, Minister for Health Infrastructure, Ports and Freight, and Roads and Road Safety.

    And Professor Rod Sims AO, from the Crawford School of Public Policy at the ANU – thank you for joining us today.

    The theme of this Summit is ‘progress’ and we come together on the International Day of the Seafarer. 

    It couldn’t be more timely given the current geopolitical state of the world and the imperative of decarbonisation. 

    These are the realities of our times.

    It is more important than ever for Australia to have a strong and sovereign maritime sector, and for us to embrace both the challenges and the opportunities of decarbonisation. 

    The maritime industry is absolutely vital for Australia’s prosperity. 

    As the lyrics of our national anthem state, ours is a nation ‘girt by sea’.

    Our coastline extends across some 60,000 kilometres and includes 12,000 islands.

    It is the great sea roads and maritime highways leading from our shores that connect Australia with the world, and centres us in the Asia-Pacific region. 

    Our society and economy depend utterly on the ships that ply these routes. 

    These are our supply chains.

    Shipping is responsible for over 99 per cent of our nation’s international trade.

    We are the fifth largest user of shipping services in the world, and the world’s largest bulk commodities exporter.

    Our ports handle over 1.6 billion tonnes of cargo, and welcome 29,000 visits every year from international trading ships. 

    A substantial proportion of our domestic freight also depends on coastal shipping. 

    And let’s not forget that the maritime sector is an important employer – ports activities alone account for an extraordinary one in 20 jobs in our country.

    This morning, I’d like to give you an overview of what our government is doing to support your vital industry.

    The Prime Minister has made clear a major focus this term would be supporting industries across the economy to drive productivity, and to do that while also lifting job security and job quality. 

    In the lead up to the Treasurer’s upcoming Reform Roundtable, I intend to host a meeting with key transport and logistics industry representatives, including the maritime sector, to discuss ways to grow the economy and increase productivity. 

    We want to build an economy where growth, wages and productivity rise together.

    And we are committed to modernising Australia’s maritime sector; including through its regulatory framework.

    The Shipping Registration Act came into being in 1981, in very different times.

    Modernising it is another of our Government’s priorities, to ensure it is fit for purpose and supports the long-term sustainability of an Australian strategic fleet. 

    Our independent review of the Shipping Registration Act is now complete. 

    I’d like to thank its leaders — Former Public Service Commissioner Lynelle Briggs, and Nicholas Gaskell, Emeritus Professor of Maritime and Commercial Law at the University of Queensland — for their efforts.

    Lynelle and Nick conducted comprehensive stakeholder consultation as part of their review, and they have incorporated extensive feedback into their report. 

    They are continuing with their parallel review of the Coastal Trading Act 2012, which is due to report later this year.

    Another crucial step we are taking to improve maritime resilience and capability is the establishment of a strategic fleet ― 12 Australian flagged and crewed vessels that will enable the movement of critical cargo during crises and emergencies.  

    Our Government committed funding in the 2024-25 Budget to establish a five-year Strategic Fleet Pilot Program comprising three vessels.

    These will be privately owned, commercially operated and will be available to the Australian Government to requisition in times of need. 

    Tenders for the Pilot program are currently being evaluated through a competitive, open and transparent process that will ensure the government achieves value for money.

    The Strategic Fleet provides the opportunity for growth and transformation in Australia’s maritime sector in a way that supports Australia’s economic prosperity, security and way of life well into the future.

    The Pilot will provide an evidence-base for future proposals to expand the fleet and fully deliver on our Government’s commitment.

    Once procurement for the Pilot Fleet is complete we will make a public announcement regarding the outcome and indicative timing for the first vessels on the water.

    Industry has been heavily involved in shaping the government’s Strategic Fleet policy through consultation processes, and this engagement will continue in the implementation stage.

    Our domestic policy needs to progress our national interests, and it also needs to be in-step with global developments.

    Australia’s presence at International Maritime Organisation enables this.

    Shipping is by nature a global industry, and Australia’s interests are represented in this world forum.

    Australia’s presence at the IMO also enables our engagement with international efforts to reduce emissions and prevent ship-based pollution of all kinds.

    During our first term, our Government supported the IMO to adopt a Revised Strategy on the Reduction of Emissions from Ships, and reach Net Zero emissions by 2050.

    The Strategy’s decarbonisation pathway includes mid‑term measures such as annual fuel intensity targets, a greenhouse gas emissions economic measure, and a reward system for sustainable fuel adoption.

    It sets target reductions of 30 per cent by 2030 and 80 per cent by 2040 compared to 2008 levels, as well as a target of 10 percent for the uptake of zero-emission fuels by 2030.

    In April, the IMO made the historic decision to circulate measures that will achieve these targets.

    Interestingly, the measures also include a ‘feebate’ mechanism that will subsidise green maritime fuels, which supports our Government’s Low Carbon Liquid Fuels policy.

    As our Government was in caretaker mode in April, Australia abstained from voting on these measures at the time. 

    They will be further considered by IMO in October, and if agreed will establish the world’s first ever truly international carbon market. 

    The Government is carefully considering what role it will play in October, and I understand that my department is hosting a roundtable with industry later this week to continue the conversation on how the measures might impact industry.

    The Secretary-General of the IMO is also visiting Australia in August and I hope to catch up with him to discuss Australia’s maritime interests.

    The year 2030, the deadline for the first of the IMO’s targets, is not that far away.

    Our government recognised this in our first term, and we laid plans to ensure that Australia’s maritime industry is prepared for the future, ready to contribute to our national emissions targets, and able to thrive in a decarbonised global economy.

    Now in our second term, we have a strong mandate to continue the work we’ve started.

    There are challenges to meet on the road to decarbonisation, but also incredible opportunities in new jobs and new industries. 

    Our Government’s ambition for a Future Made in Australia will form a comprehensive, coordinated and practical strategy to seize all the benefits on offer.

    As part of the Future Made in Australia plan, the Government is fast-tracking support for our nation’s growing domestic Low Carbon Liquid Fuels, or LCLFs. 

    In March, we announced the delivery of $250 million to accelerate the pace of Australia’s growing domestic LCLF industry. 

    This funding is part of the $1.7 billion Future Made in Australia Innovation Fund, and is being provided as grants to support pre-commercial innovation, demonstration and deployment.

    Australia has all the ingredients to support a thriving biofuels sector – especially if the IMO measure for a global subsidy is adopted and provided.

    We have an abundance of renewable energy resources and significant refining and port infrastructure.

    We have the potential to grow LCLF production for domestic consumption and for export.

    And our Government is committed to supporting a sovereign biofuel industry that Australia controls, and which serves our interests.

    Our Government is committed to maritime decarbonisation, as part of our drive to reach our legislated target of Net Zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

    Our Government will soon release its Net Zero Plan for the economy, along with six sector-decarbonisation plans.

    Amongst these sector plans is one for the Transport and Infrastructure Net Zero Roadmap.

    And within that plan is one that speaks specifically to the unique challenges and opportunities of the maritime industry – the Maritime Emissions Reduction National Action Plan, or MERNAP for short.

    The MERNAP will outline how we aim to support Australia’s national emissions reduction targets, contribute to the global decarbonisation of shipping, and future-proof the Australian maritime sector to avoid costly and disruptive transitions later.

    It will ensure an equitable transition, particularly for the maritime workforce, and it will safeguard jobs and skills for the future.

    Our vision is that by 2050, Australia will fully leverage the global maritime decarbonisation transition, for the benefit of our ports, vessels, and the broader energy sector.

    Work on the MERNAP began in 2023-24, with an industry consultation process, and the MERNAP Consultative Group has played a vital role in shaping this action plan.

    They engaged with us on topics such as:

    • regulatory challenges and gaps
    • energy sources and technologies
    • skills and training
    • and international partnerships.

    I’d like to thank those stakeholders who were part of the group, and especially Angela Gilham and MIAL for the key role they’ve played in this process. 

    I am now considering the MERNAP, and the timing of its release. 

    Our next step will be to develop an implementation plan to progress the MERNAP’s proposed action items. 

    Our Government will continue to progress reform in the maritime sector. We must. 

    There are so many cross currents reshaping global maritime trade right now, and addressing these requires comprehensive and future-focused action.

    No doubt these issues ― and the opportunities ― facing the sector will be discussed at length in coming days, and I wish you well in these.

    Thank you once again for the invitation to speak this morning. 

    I look forward to working with all industry stakeholders in our government’s second term. 

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Outstanding local government achievements recognised

    Source: Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions

    Outstanding achievers in local government have been recognised today, with 13 category winners announced for the 2025 National Awards for Local Government. 

    Now in their 39th year, the awards celebrate inspirational service delivery, acknowledging the important role local government plays in improving the daily lives of Australians.

    Ninety-five local governing bodies across Australia made a total of 192 submissions for projects addressing critical topics such as regional growth, road safety and environmental sustainability.

    Joining these topics as a category for the first time this year was affordable housing, to recognise projects addressing housing needs for communities. 

    The outstanding rural and remote council category was also new this year, to honour the achievements of smaller remote or rural councils with a population of 15,000 people or less, who entered any of the other 12 award categories.   

    The list of this year’s category winners is below, with more details on each project available at www.infrastructure.gov.au/territories-regions-cities/local-government/national-awards-local-government.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Regional Development and Local Government, Kristy McBain MP:

    “This year saw the most submissions ever received in the history of these awards, showcasing the hard work of local governments in delivering targeted, quality services to their communities – even in the face of adversity like natural disasters. 

    “I’d like to congratulate the category winners, and all the applicants, for this year’s local government awards. 

    “Your projects and the enormous efforts behind them are having real and positive impacts for communities, bringing them together and elevating local amenity.”  

    2025 National Awards for Local Government category winners:

    Category Winning Council Winning project name
    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People’s Recognition West Arnhem Regional Council West Arnhem Youth Leadership Summit
    Addressing Violence against Women and Children City of Stirling Naala Djookan Healing Centre
    Affordable Housing Palm Island Aboriginal Shire Council Palm Island Housing Investment Scheme
    Arts and Culture City of Gosnells 2024 Fusion Food and Culture Festival
    Cohesive Communities City of Stirling Walking Together Local Convos
    Disaster Readiness and Recovery City of Wanneroo Mariginiup Bushfire – From preparedness to recovery, a community-first approach
    Environmental Sustainability Town of Victoria Park Bird Waterers – Cockitroughs
    Outstanding Rural and 
    Remote Council
    Parkes Shire Council Fleet Optimisation and Innovation – A smarter approach to asset management
    Productivity through Infrastructure City of Stirling Hamersley Public Golf Course Redevelopment
    Regional Growth Shire of Murray The Exchange Hotel, Pinjarra
    Road Safety Blacktown City Council Risks of NOT planting trees along our streets
    Women in Local Government City of Wanneroo Kirsten Thrush & Katie Russell – Leading the disaster recovery from Mariginiup Bushfire
    Workforce and Skills Burwood Council Breaking Barriers – Growing the Learn to Swim workforce

    Photographs from the award ceremony available here: https://communicationsgovau.box.com/s/j5ljark5bnehu4au5pn6zwlzx7k0vxlg

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Press conference, Bauple

    Source: NGARKAT HIGHWAY, NGARKAT (Grass Fire)

    CATHERINE KING MINISTER FOR INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORT, REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT: Well, good, okay, thanks, everybody. I’m Catherine King. I’m the Federal Minister for Infrastructure and Transport, and I’m delighted to be here, joined today by my Queensland counterpart, Brent Mickelberg. 

    We’ve been working very closely together since the election of the Queensland Crisafulli Government to make sure we honour the commitment that Prime Minister Albanese and I, and the Treasurer made just down the road from here in Gympie back in January this year, that we’re going to fix the Bruce Highway.

    Our $7.2 billion commitment now also contributed to by the Queensland Government, bringing it up to a $9 billion Bruce Highway safety package. And we’re delighted to be here today in Bauple with the early works package well and truly underway.

    What we’re trying to do with this package is to improve, particularly the widening of the road, intersections, so improving behind us, right hand and left hand turning lanes, making sure that we can get this road as safe as we possibly can.

    We know on the Bruce Highway, this is unfinished business for both levels of government, where we want to make sure that we see a reduction in road deaths on this highway.

    It was a tragedy that last year we saw over 42 people die along the Bruce Highway.

    This is affecting communities right the way along the highway, families who have not had loved ones at their Christmas table, communities that are affected every time this happens, emergency service workers as well. 

    So, this $9 billion package is really starting to get underway.

    Announced in January, we announced the $9 billion.

    Back in March, I think it was, we announced the fairly first tranche was out for tender, and here we are with construction well and truly underway.

    I want to particularly acknowledge the Queensland minister, Brent, for the work that he’s done, but also TMR, I know that many of the people who are working on this road live locally, live in this community, so they are building safety for not just their families, but generations of families to come, I’ll hand over to the state minister.

    QUEENSLAND MINISTER FOR TRANSPORT AND MAIN ROADS BRENT MICKELBERG: Thank you very much.

    Brett Mickelberg, Minister for Transport and Main Roads. 

    Well, it’s tremendous to be here today with the Federal Minister, showcasing the work that is happening here on the Bruce Highway. 

    We’re really, really pleased that we’re able to get work underway to make the Bruce Highway better and safer.

    And these works here at Bauple are just one of 16 projects up and down the Bruce Highway part of the $200 million early works package.

    I’ve got another $100 million of work going underway in relation to designing future stages of work here on the Bruce Highway.

    And we simply cannot accept that the spine of Queensland the Bruce Highway can be dangerous.

    As the minister said, 42 people lost their lives on the Bruce Highway last year.

    We won’t accept that.

    As the Queensland Government, I know the federal government have the same view as well, and our communities expect us to deliver a safe and resilient Bruce Highway, and that’s exactly what we are focused on doing. Hand in hand with the federal government, we’re really pleased that the federal government have listened to our call for 80:20 funding and the $7.2 billion commitment from the federal government, along with the $1.8 billion commitment from the Queensland Government, will make a meaningful difference to making the Bruce Highway safer. 

    Over 60% of Queensland has used the Bruce Highway every single year, and I know Queenslanders understand how important this road is, both to our economy but also to our communities, and I want to reassure people that the Queensland Government understand that as well.

    We’re focused with getting on with the job.

    All of the money in this $9 billion package will be spent north of Gympie.

    All of it will be spent upgrading safety and capacity on the Bruce Highway.

    And I think it’s also important to note that this is just one part of our commitment to the Bruce Highway.

    We’re also doing additional work, both in relation to the disaster recovery works after recent disaster impacts, but also building capacity up and down the Bruce Highway on those important areas that simply can’t cope with the volume of traffic on the Bruce Highway.

    So it’s a really pleasing day to be able to stand here with the federal minister getting on with the job of building a better Bruce Highway, happy to take any questions.

    JOURNALIST: So there’s aspects of widening the lane, but is there actually possibilities to double lane majority of the Bruce Highway?

    BRENT MICKELBERG: So this package is about upgrading safety on the Bruce Highway, so things like wide centre line treatment, overtaking lanes, rest areas, intersection upgrades, pavement strengthening, those areas of the highway that are simply unsafe to drive on because the pavement is not up to the required standard.

    That’s what this work will deliver.

    While we’re doing that, we’re always mindful of ensuring that wherever we build these upgrades, they’re going to be able to future proof as well.

    So, in areas where, for example, we might be able to build overtaking lanes off the existing line of traffic to then potentially down the track be duplicated, that’s also areas that the work that is going on within the Bruce Highway upgrade program office to ensure that whatever we do through this massive program effort lasts for the long term as well. 

    JOURNALIST: How are you determining these areas of the Bruce Highway [indistinct]

    BRENT MICKELBERG:  Sorry, yeah, great question.

    So, one of the commitments we made before the last state election was to re-establish the Bruce Highway Advisory Council.

    We’ve had two meetings of the Bruce Highway Advisory Council already, and I’m really pleased the federal minister attended the last meeting I attended and chaired it as well.

    We’ve had involvement with the federal government at each of those meetings that we’ve had.

    So on the Bruce Highway Advisory Council, we have industry representatives, people like the Queensland Trucking Association, the RACQ local government representation through the Local Government Association of Queensland.

    But perhaps even more importantly, we have local representatives from each of the regions that the Bruce Highway passes through, and we’ve used that body to talk about how we can make the Bruce better. 

    So, it’s not just about building a better Bruce, it’s also about how we can manage the highway better.

    And at our last meeting in Rockhampton, we worked through what are the current issues on the Bruce Highway, and how can we best allocate this money to get the best bang for our buck in building a better Bruce.

    We literally went through from north to south and looked at each of the different sections of the Bruce Highway.

    What are the issues, what are the priorities?

    And off the back of that input, the Bruce Highway upgrade program office within my department, have then worked up a package of works.

    Now this initial work that we’ve got on with already is projects that had already been advanced and were ready to go.

    We just didn’t have funding for so we’re able to pull the trigger on them quite quickly.

    The next package of works are things where we’ve had to do the design work and we’re going to get on with the job in relation to fixing those projects as well.

    What we want to see is a rolling package of works over coming years, where local contractors in particular, can deliver a lot of this work.

    So, a lot of work has been done in relation to the procurement method to ensure that, rather than give all of this money to one big contractor, we can ensure that local involvement is a big part of this program as well.

    And we think that’s a really important contributor to our regional economies, but also important message to our communities, as the Minister spoke about, many of the people working on these projects live in these communities, and they understand the challenges, and it’s great to see upgrades which will benefit not just the regional communities, but all Queenslanders who use the Bruce Highway so frequently.

    JOURNALIST: And just here locally, these works that are underway now, is there a rough timeline as to when they’ll be complete? 

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Look, there’s about another 12 months of work here at this particular site.

    I think it’s really important to know, and it was remiss me not to say we have tragically lost lives on this section of the Bruce Highway.

    So, these upgrades will make the Bruce Highway safer, and we want to see a reduction.

    We want to see zero lives lost on the Bruce Highway.

    That’s ultimately the goal.

    But look, there will be inconvenience to motorists as we do these works.

    I want to acknowledge that inconvenience, but I just ask motorists to be patient with us as we work to build a better Bruce Highway.

    JOURNALIST: [indistinct]

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Yeah, look, I was really pleased to be able to meet with the Tiaro community a couple of months ago now, with John Barounis and the federal member here as well to listen to their concerns in relation to the current highway through Tiaro, it’s well acknowledged that it doesn’t have the capacity and there have been significant safety issues.

    And every peak period of the year, whether it’s Christmas or Easter or the school holidays.

    Tiaro is a well known bottleneck, and hence why the Tiaro bypass is so necessary.

    It’ll also build flood immunity as well into this section of the Bruce Highway.

    So, we committed, as part of our 2032 delivery plan to delivering the Tiaro Bypass.

    We expect to go to procurement, early stage procurement in early 2026 and we will be working with the federal government in relation to the environmental approvals and future stages for that project.

    But I want to make it really, really clear, we’re committed to delivering the Tiaro Bypass.

    We know how important it is to build capacity into this part of the Bruce Highway and also to deliver those safety upgrades. It’s not tenable to have heavy vehicles such as those we see passing behind us going through school zones and areas like Tiaro.

    You’ve got a pedestrian crossing there, every time someone wants to use it, it creates a traffic jam.

    That’s what the Tiaro Bypass will fix, and we’re focused with getting on with the job of delivering those important upgrades. 

    JOURNALIST: And the notorious Walker Street intersection [indistinct] what was the process of that?

    Because originally there was a roundabout.

    What’s the update? 

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Yeah.

    Look, we’ve, I think I’ve gone to Walker Street about four times since I became the minister.

    Look, the reason it’s such a focal point is tragically, they’ve been lives lost there in recent years, and we’re focused on delivering upgrades to the Walker Street intersection.

    It is unsafe as it sits right now, and what do those upgrades look like?

    Well, that works currently underway.

    That design work is underway.

    What I want to see is a solution that will ensure that we don’t have a repeat of multiple lives lost at that intersection, as has happened a couple of years ago.

    It’s something that John Barounis, our local state MP, has been campaigning for very strongly, both before the election, and one of the reasons I’ve been there four times since the election is because John is incredibly passionate to deliver this for his community.

    We know it’s a genuine safety risk, and we know it is also an important upgrade that will support the Maryborough community. 

    And we will come back to the community once we have those finalised designs on what it looks like. 

    JOURNALIST: So, the 60 kilometre is kind of a temporary fix at the moment? 

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Yeah, look, obviously we make we change speed limits to mitigate risk wherever it’s deemed necessary.

    And having lost lives there at that particular intersection in recent times, those decisions have been made with the with the recommender on the recommendations of a road safety experts and engineers. 

    What I want to see in the long term is a solution that makes that section of road safer, and not just mitigations that reduce the risk right now. 

    JOURNALIST: Are you able to take questions on something else? 

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Yeah, okay, or if you’ve got anything else on this? Yep, what else have you got for me? 

    JOURNALIST: Your response to the CFMEU protests entering their second day?

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Well, I think Queenslanders have had enough of the CFMEU and their bullying and thuggery, and that was recognised with the decision of the High Court two days ago.

    The CFMEU need to get on with the job of building the infrastructure that we need here in Queensland. Queenslanders are not going to tolerate the intimidation and the approach taken by the CFMEU over recent days.

    The Queensland Government are not going to tolerate that behaviour.

    It’s one of the reasons that we removed the CFMEU tax, the BPIC CFMEU tax in November, and we have also removed and reintroduced 24 hour right to entry provisions so they cannot be using those disruptive and bullying tactics on job sites.

    I will not stand by and watch CFMEU thugs intimidate workers who are just trying to get on with their job, and I will not stand by and watch CFMEU thugs disrupting our commuters in Brisbane.

    This is nothing more than a dummy spit by the CFMEU because the court ruled correctly that their conduct was unacceptable, and my message to the CFMEU is, get back on with the job.

    JOURNALIST: And how much does each day of this lost work actually cost?

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Well, we know there’s a massive program of works required here in Queensland already underway, big jobs, but also smaller jobs as well.

    And there is a real cost to the disruptive and bullying behaviour by the CFMEU.

    If I look at the Centenary Bridge upgrade, a large project on the western side of Brisbane, the actions of the CFMEU.

    And I’m not going to quantify it in terms of dollars, but it is multiple millions of dollars that the CFMEU have added to the cost of that project.

    We have had to hire additional security because workers were unsafe and not thought they were unsafe.

    They were unsafe.

    We have had workers threatened by CFMEU on that job site.

    I want to make it really clear, the majority of our construction workers just want to get on with the job and deliver the infrastructure that we need here in Queensland.

    It is that small minority of CFMEU thugs who are deliberately trying to destroy productivity here in Queensland and across Australia, and we won’t stand for it.

    JOURNALIST: So, you said just that one project is millions of dollars.

    How about all those other projects across the state?

    A rough figure at all?

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Well, as I said, I’m not going to put a dollar figure on it, but you can see through the delays that have occurred under the former government and what we’re dealing with now, the cost is in the many millions of dollars due to the CFMEU’s conduct.

    And it is their business model.

    Let’s be very clear, they rely on disrupting job sites in order to be able to get the outcomes that they seek.

    Now, I have no problem with unions who want to conduct themselves and advocate for their members in accordance with the law.

    Unions are an important stakeholder in Queensland’s industrial relations environment, but the CFMEU.

    And I will single out the CFMEU, the conduct of the CFMEU relies on bullying and thuggery, and we will not accept that here in Queensland. 

    JOURNALIST: Do you think anyone will actually feel sympathy towards these workers or just [indistinct]

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Well, I suspect anyone sitting in traffic just trying to get to work today in Brisbane or across Queensland will only feel resentment towards the CFMEU for their conduct, and let’s be clear, they did it yesterday.

    They tried to make their point yesterday.

    They’re going to do it again today, and no doubt, they’ll continue with this campaign of trying to disrupt and cause fear in our community.

    We’ve seen instances where people have been assaulted on job sites by CFMEU thugs in recent months here in Queensland, we won’t stand by and let this continue.

    It’s why we took action quickly upon forming government, and we’ll continue to ensure that our job sites are safe and that the community are able to go about their business, getting to work, getting on with the job, just as they should be able to.

    And if the CFMEU are genuinely committed to trying to build the things that we need here in Queensland, the message is just get on with the job.

    Get back on the tools. Get on with the job, and Queenslanders will recognise that as it sits right now, I think all they’re doing is driving people away from their course. 

    JOURNALIST: [indistinct]

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Look, we have an ongoing conversation with the federal government in relation to the priorities that we are delivering through the program of works here in Queensland.

    As I made it clear on Tuesday when I spoke about the format that QTRIP will be reported in, we are making some changes in order to drive better value for money for the taxpayer, and we’re working collaboratively with the federal government to deliver projects here in Queensland, but we also deliver a lot of projects that are not federally funded as well.

    And ultimately, my job as the Minister for Transport and Main Roads, is to ensure that we deliver on those priorities, those commitments we took to the Queensland public before the last election, things like the Bruce Highway upgrade program, the Olympics infrastructure required to deliver a successful games in 2032 in relation to the transport projects, that’s my focus, and we’ve been very clear with Queenslanders that that will require us to make some hard decisions in relation to potentially delaying projects that we might have otherwise done.

    But I want to make it really clear there will be no cuts in QTRIP next week.

    What we need to do is manage a program.

    We commissioned an independent reviewer, Rodd Staples to give us advice on the best way to deliver the significant program of works here in Queensland.

    QTRIP next week will be the largest QTRIP Queensland’s ever seen.

    So that that is without doubt, and it will only grow in coming years, as well as we need to build more as we approach 2032 we’ve made some commitments in relation to the Bruce Highway here.

    We’ve said that this work will be done, and we want it done as soon as possible, but that, but if everything is a priority, nothing is a priority, and my job as the Minister of Transport and Main Roads is to manage all of those works, ensuring that we address the critical concerns and those commitments we made, and we’ll be open and transparent with Queenslanders as we do that.

    JOURNALIST: For the project, should there be details [indistinct]?

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Well, in relation to I take you referring to the changes we’ve made in QTRIP?

    So what we’ve one of the recommendations we received was that we needed to drive better competition, better competitive tension in the pre-tendering stage, or in the tendering stage.

    Once a contract is awarded, we’re going to publish that number, and Queenslanders will be able to see that in black and white on QTRIP.

    But what we don’t want to do is signal to contractors that we’re prepared to pay a certain amount.

    No one goes and to a builder and says, Hey, I’ve got $500,000 to build new house.

    What can you build for me?

    You say, I’d like a four bedroom house with two bathrooms.

    What’s the cost?

    And that’s what we’ve been doing today.

    We’ve been saying, Hey, I’ve got $500,000 to build a new house.

    What can you build for me?

    That’s not where we need to be.

    And the advice that we received from Rodd Staples was the that was that this would introduce better competitive tension.

    We’re still going to be signalling to the market that this is the kind of job that they’ll be able to compete for, that this sits within the price bracket of jobs and capability that they’re capable of bidding on, and we’re still going to be engaging with industry face to face as we as we have done over recent months as well.

    So this is just one part of trying to restore value for money for the taxpayer, respecting taxpayer, respecting taxpayer dollars.

    And my job, we made some really clear commitments around being open and transparent.

    I’ll be publishing the contracted amount for these projects.

    You’ll see it next week in QTRIP.

    But what I’m not going to do is destroy value for money for the taxpayer by signalling to the market beforehand that we’re prepared to pay more than they might otherwise be able to build some of these jobs for. 

    JOURNALIST: For e-scooters, RACQ has made a submission to the state’s e-mobility safety inquiry, calling on the government to urgently address safety concerns.

    What’s your response to this submission? 

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Well, I welcome RACQ’s submission to the e-mobility inquiry.

    The reason we established the inquiry is it’s very clear there’s considerable community concern, whether it’s e-bikes or e-scooters or other e-mobility devices.

    Community concern in Queensland is justified.

    Tragically, eight people lost their lives using these devices on Queensland footpaths and roads last year, and we’ve seen a considerable increase in the number of people being injured as well, over 100% increase between 2021 and 2024 so we had to do something different.

    This inquiry is about listening to the voices of the community.

    RACQ are a really important stakeholder when it comes to the use of these devices, and obviously, road safety matters, and I welcome their submission, but so too, and I’d encourage those, albeit submissions close today, but I would encourage people to make a submission to the inquiry, whether it is the family who’s concerned about what it might mean for their children getting to and from school, or medical experts who have had to deal with the fall out of injuries and potentially fatalities as a consequence of e-mobility devices.

    Anyone who has an opinion in relation to this matter should make a submission to the e-mobility inquiry.

    We will also, after those submissions have been received, be doing public hearings up and down the Queensland coast and across Queensland to ensure that people have an opportunity to have their say.

    We’ll listen to those recommendations of the committee and we’ll act on them when we receive them, and I think that’s what Queenslanders expect. 

    JOURNALIST: I just have one more question, yeah, on the secret polling.

    So over half a million dollars to spend on behalf of research [indistinct].

    Why did the government spend more than half a million dollars on secret polling [indistinct]? 

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Look, I think it’s really important that we are listening to the voices of Queenslanders, and part of that is doing quantitative research and qualitative research.

    Another part is things like the parliamentary inquiry in relation to e-mobility I just mentioned.

    So, we will use whatever tools are available to us to listen to the voices of Queenslanders and then act on them.

    This is one tool, but it’s only one part of the way that Queensland Government listen to the community and then act on their concerns, 

    JOURNALIST: [indistinct] pushing the Labor party [indistinct] to release their results to the market research.

    Do you think that the Crisafulli government should do the same? 

    BRENT MICKELBERG: Well, we made it very clear that we intend to be open and transparent with Queenslanders.

    The premier has made that very clear to me as the Minister for Transport and Main Roads, that wherever possible, we should be releasing information, and we’re committed to do that.

    JOURNALIST: Would you be able to provide a response on those CFMEU [indistinct]

    CATHERINE KING: Yeah, well, certainly, you know, we were very pleased, and you would have seen Amanda Rishworth, the Industrial Relations Minister.

    We’ve welcomed the High Court decision, which has upheld the legislative basis on which the Commonwealth has moved to put the CFMEU into administration.

    We have no tolerance for illegal activity within the union movement, and certainly not on any of our building sites.

    I understand that people are not happy about that decision, but that is the decision of the High Court, and it allows now the administrator to get on with their job with surety, because we want people to have safe workplaces.

    We want people to come into the construction industry.

    We want to grow the industry.

    We want it to be a place where people get decent pay and conditions, but we don’t want it to be a hotbed for illegal activity, for bullying or behaviour that we have seen, and what has caused the CFMEU to be put into administration in the first place.

    So, my message really clearly, is that, you know, construction workers want jobs.

    They want safe, secure jobs.

    They want to go home to their families.

    They don’t want to see the sort of activity we saw from the CFMEU that put it into administration in the first place.

    And protesting the decision of a high court?

    Well, that’s a decision for the people who are protesting, but I don’t think that it’s particularly helpful in getting the building industry back into actually being an industry that is a safe, secure and great place for people to work.

    JOURNALIST: What funding will the federal government provide for transport and infrastructure [indistinct]  

    CATHERINE KING: Well, we are already providing $27 billion of infrastructure here in Queensland, more than any other state in the country.

    And then, in addition to that, our $3.4 billion package of games infrastructure is being delivered as well.

    On transport infrastructure, of that $27 billion there’s $12 billion already going into transport infrastructure.

    We don’t have a budget until next year.

    States and territories across the country continue to put their transport bids to us, and we’ll work with state governments on that, but we’re already doing a lot here in Queensland. 

    JOURNALIST: I just have some questions from Canberra.

    Is the government happy with how the social media age range trial is working? 

    CATHERINE KING: Well, obviously, we’ve seen reports today around the social media trial that will now go to the E-Safety Commissioner for her to have a look at we do think, as you’ve heard us say, you know, this is a really important commitment that we have made, to really clean up the safety of social media for particularly young people and our teenagers.

    And that work is continuing, but the trial work, the results of that will now go to the E-Safety Commissioner, and we’ll have more to say once she’s had a look at it.

    JOURNALIST: After that trial has been complete, is it still the same plan to have that implemented by December?

    CATHERINE KING: Certainly, that’s my understanding from the Minister, but you’d need to direct that question directly to Minister Wells the Minister for Communication.

    JOURNALIST: And now we discuss some questions about Rex. 

    CATHERINE KING: Yep.

    JOURNALIST: How close do you think we are to finding a successful [indistinct] Rex?

    CATHERINE KING: Well, we know that it’s progressing really positively in terms of the administration.

    They have narrowed the bidders in terms of the commercial bidders for Rex, but they have asked the federal court for some additional time to get that work finalised.

    That will be a matter for the federal court, in order to make sure that that actually occurs, we’ll await the decision of the federal court, but it has been, as I understand it, from the administrators, progressing positively. 

    JOURNALIST: And if we take that kind of turn, how close is the government to taking over and maybe even bailing it out?

    CATHERINE KING: Well, as we’ve said, really clearly, we’re in a voluntary administration process at the moment.

    What we have said, you know, it’s unusual for a government to engage itself in an administration of what is a private company, but we know how important Rex is to regional aviation.

    In some areas, it is the only airline that actually flies in to a community, and so we have stepped in to assist in the administration to get an outcome.

    Our preference has always been for a commercial outcome, and that’s what the administration is aimed to.

    But we have clearly said, if that is not able to be delivered, we will then step in, but we’re still in the process of the voluntary administration and seeking a commercial outcome at the moment.

    JOURNALIST: And what do you expect Rex 2.0 to look like?

    CATHERINE KING: Well, I want to see it continue to fly into the regions.

    I’d like to see at some point it expand its services.

    But at the moment, we’re in the decision making process of a voluntary administration to keep Rex going, but what the Commonwealth has been at pains to do is ensure that we provided a guarantee to Rex passengers, that they could continue looking with surety to continue to get those services.

    And I’m incredibly grateful to the many loyal Rex customers who continue to use the airline, continue to book with surety, because that has allowed the possibility of a commercial opportunity for Rex to continue, and we’re really pleased to have been able to provide that continue to give my message that that guarantee is in place.

    Continue to book with surety as we work our way through the administration process.

    JOURNALIST: And do you see issues arising with the airline’s aging fleet and Saab aircraft?

    Quite a few have been out of service for a while? 

    CATHERINE KING: Yeah, well, obviously that is one of the issues that any potential bidder has had to consider.

    I think the aging fleet, you know, Saabs are aging everywhere, so that is certainly one of the issues that any potential bidder has had to put into place, about what does fleet extension and fleet renewal – what does that look like? And that’s really been an important part, I know of the administrators assessing each of the bids as they’ve come forward.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI News

  • India’s electricity use may hit 4 trillion units in a decade: report

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    India’s electricity demand is projected to triple to a staggering 4 trillion units (TWh) by 2035, driven by industrial expansion, urbanisation, and the electrification of transport, according to a report released on Friday by OmniScience Capital.

    By 2035, three transformative sectors—electric vehicles (EVs), data centres (DCs), and railways—are expected to be among the largest consumers of electricity, collectively consuming around 500 TWh, or 12–13 per cent of India’s total projected power demand.

    This marks a pivotal shift in the country’s energy landscape, where traditional industrial and residential consumption is now being complemented by these emerging drivers.

    The report underscores the importance of India’s energy transition for a sustainable future. Policy initiatives such as the Net Zero target, the 500 GW renewable energy goal, EV adoption, and the rooftop solar push are playing a critical role in driving this transformation.

    India’s per capita electricity consumption is expected to nearly double—from 1,400 kWh in 2024 to 2,575 kWh by 2035—driven by rapid economic growth, urbanisation, and rising household incomes.

    “India’s electricity demand reaching four trillion units by 2035 is a signal of the country’s accelerating industrial growth, digital transformation, and rising quality of life,” said Ashwini Shami, Executive Vice President at OmniScience Capital. “This trend unlocks significant investment potential in energy infrastructure, renewable energy, and modernising the grid.”

    As more people migrate to cities and adopt energy-intensive appliances, and as industries expand under initiatives like Make in India, electricity consumption is set to increase significantly. The push for digital infrastructure, EVs, and rural electrification is expected to further drive this growth.

    The report also notes that the transition to cleaner and more accessible energy sources will make electricity more affordable and widely available, leading to increased consumption across all sectors.

    India’s commercial and service sectors are emerging as major engines of electricity demand. From 181 TWh in 2023, consumption in these segments is projected to rise to 798 TWh by 2035, marking a 4.4x increase and a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.2 per cent—the second-fastest among all sectors. This would raise their share to nearly 20 per cent of total electricity usage, reflecting India’s rapid shift toward a service-led, digitally connected economy.

    The transport sector—comprising EVs and railways—is projected to become the fastest-growing consumer of electricity, with usage expected to surge from 25 TWh in 2022 to 162 TWh by 2035, representing a CAGR of 16.8 per cent. The main drivers include accelerated EV adoption, the expansion of charging infrastructure, and railway electrification, the report added.

    —IANS

  • India’s electricity use may hit 4 trillion units in a decade: report

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    India’s electricity demand is projected to triple to a staggering 4 trillion units (TWh) by 2035, driven by industrial expansion, urbanisation, and the electrification of transport, according to a report released on Friday by OmniScience Capital.

    By 2035, three transformative sectors—electric vehicles (EVs), data centres (DCs), and railways—are expected to be among the largest consumers of electricity, collectively consuming around 500 TWh, or 12–13 per cent of India’s total projected power demand.

    This marks a pivotal shift in the country’s energy landscape, where traditional industrial and residential consumption is now being complemented by these emerging drivers.

    The report underscores the importance of India’s energy transition for a sustainable future. Policy initiatives such as the Net Zero target, the 500 GW renewable energy goal, EV adoption, and the rooftop solar push are playing a critical role in driving this transformation.

    India’s per capita electricity consumption is expected to nearly double—from 1,400 kWh in 2024 to 2,575 kWh by 2035—driven by rapid economic growth, urbanisation, and rising household incomes.

    “India’s electricity demand reaching four trillion units by 2035 is a signal of the country’s accelerating industrial growth, digital transformation, and rising quality of life,” said Ashwini Shami, Executive Vice President at OmniScience Capital. “This trend unlocks significant investment potential in energy infrastructure, renewable energy, and modernising the grid.”

    As more people migrate to cities and adopt energy-intensive appliances, and as industries expand under initiatives like Make in India, electricity consumption is set to increase significantly. The push for digital infrastructure, EVs, and rural electrification is expected to further drive this growth.

    The report also notes that the transition to cleaner and more accessible energy sources will make electricity more affordable and widely available, leading to increased consumption across all sectors.

    India’s commercial and service sectors are emerging as major engines of electricity demand. From 181 TWh in 2023, consumption in these segments is projected to rise to 798 TWh by 2035, marking a 4.4x increase and a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.2 per cent—the second-fastest among all sectors. This would raise their share to nearly 20 per cent of total electricity usage, reflecting India’s rapid shift toward a service-led, digitally connected economy.

    The transport sector—comprising EVs and railways—is projected to become the fastest-growing consumer of electricity, with usage expected to surge from 25 TWh in 2022 to 162 TWh by 2035, representing a CAGR of 16.8 per cent. The main drivers include accelerated EV adoption, the expansion of charging infrastructure, and railway electrification, the report added.

    —IANS

  • India’s electricity use may hit 4 trillion units in a decade: report

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    India’s electricity demand is projected to triple to a staggering 4 trillion units (TWh) by 2035, driven by industrial expansion, urbanisation, and the electrification of transport, according to a report released on Friday by OmniScience Capital.

    By 2035, three transformative sectors—electric vehicles (EVs), data centres (DCs), and railways—are expected to be among the largest consumers of electricity, collectively consuming around 500 TWh, or 12–13 per cent of India’s total projected power demand.

    This marks a pivotal shift in the country’s energy landscape, where traditional industrial and residential consumption is now being complemented by these emerging drivers.

    The report underscores the importance of India’s energy transition for a sustainable future. Policy initiatives such as the Net Zero target, the 500 GW renewable energy goal, EV adoption, and the rooftop solar push are playing a critical role in driving this transformation.

    India’s per capita electricity consumption is expected to nearly double—from 1,400 kWh in 2024 to 2,575 kWh by 2035—driven by rapid economic growth, urbanisation, and rising household incomes.

    “India’s electricity demand reaching four trillion units by 2035 is a signal of the country’s accelerating industrial growth, digital transformation, and rising quality of life,” said Ashwini Shami, Executive Vice President at OmniScience Capital. “This trend unlocks significant investment potential in energy infrastructure, renewable energy, and modernising the grid.”

    As more people migrate to cities and adopt energy-intensive appliances, and as industries expand under initiatives like Make in India, electricity consumption is set to increase significantly. The push for digital infrastructure, EVs, and rural electrification is expected to further drive this growth.

    The report also notes that the transition to cleaner and more accessible energy sources will make electricity more affordable and widely available, leading to increased consumption across all sectors.

    India’s commercial and service sectors are emerging as major engines of electricity demand. From 181 TWh in 2023, consumption in these segments is projected to rise to 798 TWh by 2035, marking a 4.4x increase and a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.2 per cent—the second-fastest among all sectors. This would raise their share to nearly 20 per cent of total electricity usage, reflecting India’s rapid shift toward a service-led, digitally connected economy.

    The transport sector—comprising EVs and railways—is projected to become the fastest-growing consumer of electricity, with usage expected to surge from 25 TWh in 2022 to 162 TWh by 2035, representing a CAGR of 16.8 per cent. The main drivers include accelerated EV adoption, the expansion of charging infrastructure, and railway electrification, the report added.

    —IANS

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Eastern Cape June floods declared a national disaster

    Source: South Africa News Agency

    The Eastern Cape Province has officially been declared a national disaster zone in response to the widespread destruction caused by recent severe weather events.

    Eastern Cape Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA) MEC, Zolile Williams said the declaration, made under the Disaster Management Act (Act No. 57 of 2002), comes amid heavy rainfall, flooding, strong winds, and snowfall that have battered large parts of the country, with the Eastern Cape being the hardest hit.

    Highlighting the provincial government response to the June disaster, Williams said the Department of Social Development, in partnership with private sector organisations, has extended crucial psychosocial support to displaced families, bereaved communities, and schools affected by the loss of learners.

    “These services, which encompass counselling and emotional debriefing, are foundational to the healing and recovery process. Given the profound impact of the incident, we recognise this journey may be prolonged for those most deeply affected,” the MEC said. 

    The Department of Health has also deployed on-site healthcare services, providing medical assistance and replacing chronic medication that was swept away by the floods to those in need.

    Ongoing assessments are also being conducted to assess health risks in temporary shelters.

    Over 400 ID applications received

    Williams also reported that the Department of Home Affairs has been active in various shelters across the Amathole and OR Tambo districts, assisting families with applications for essential documents, including Identity Documents (ID), birth and death certificates.

    To date, 478 identity document replacement applications have been submitted, through assistance from three mobile units deployed in each of the two districts.

    Local schools have resumed classes and provisions were made for learners who missed exams due to the disaster. Postponed examination papers were also written on 23 June 2025.

    “Through the Department of Education, we have begun to deliver Learner and Teacher Support Material lost or destroyed during the disaster. We are also ensuring that uniform sets for learners in the flood affected schools has also resumed through the Provincial Department of Education.” 

    Restoration of basic services 

    Despite the devastation, significant progress has been made with the restoration of water and electricity in affected areas. 

    According to Williams, the electricity supply has been restored to over 80% of affected customers, with over 95% of the water supply having been restored in OR Tambo and Amathole District Municipalities, which were the most affected areas. 

    However, Williams noted that the floods caused significant damage to roads, schools, and healthcare facilities.

    He said the costs of repairing damaged infrastructure is estimated at R5. 1 billion, and this include about R3. 2 billion required across sector departments and R 1. 8 billion for the Municipal Infrastructure, as per MISA [Municipal Infrastructure Support Management] assessments. 

    A total of 6 869 households were affected, with 4 724 people left homeless across the province, except for the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, whilst 2 145 homes were partially damaged.

    “R461 million is required for Temporary Residential Units (TRUs), however, the province has R120 million rand, and we are looking to national government for an intervention in this area,” Williams said.

    Housing support and temporary shelters

    The Department of Human Settlements, in partnership with OR Tambo District Municipality, has activated mass-care shelters, including community halls and bed-and-breakfast facilities for displaced families in OR Tambo and Mnquma. 

    Williams said these arrangements will be operational for at least 30 days.

    “The Provincial Government is [also] securing land to facilitate the delivery of Temporary Residential Units and permanent housing, ensuring that our response addresses both urgent needs and long-term stability for these vulnerable communities. 

    “Currently, land has been identified in Mnquma for approximately 1 100 temporary residential units, while in the King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality, land has been identified and we await a council resolution on the matter,” the MEC said.

    The floods caused extensive damage to road infrastructure, with the total repair estimated at R935 million. The Department of Transport has reprioritised R102 million from its budget, leaving a shortfall of R832 million.

    Emergency road clearance operations are underway, but 29 roads in Chris Hani and 22 in OR Tambo districts remain impassable. Internal teams began major repairs on 23 June 2025, and alternative routes are currently being used.

    In terms of public facilities, 431 schools and 69 health centres have been affected across the province. suffered damage. Repair work to the value of R600 000 has been completed on healthcare facilities.

    In the agricultural sector, interventions have been made in terms damage assessment, provision of veterinary services and technical advice.

    “In the main, farmers have lost 1 339 units of livestock, 1 803 hectares of crops have been destroyed, suffered damages to machinery, irrigation material such as pipes and risers, water tanks and fencing materials,” Williams said. – SAnews.gov.za 

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Poland, divided between Trump and the EU

    Source: The Conversation – France – By Jacques Rupnik, Directeur de recherche émérite, Centre de recherches internationales (CERI), Sciences Po

    Karol Nawrocki in the Oval Office with Donald Trump on May 25th 2025, ten days before the first round of the Polish presidential election. It is very rare for a sitting US president to receive a candidate in a foreign election.
    White House X account

    Nawrocki’s narrow victory (50.89%) over Trzaskowski, the mayor of Warsaw and candidate of the government coalition, illustrates and reinforces the political polarisation of Poland and the rise of the populist “Trumpist” right in Central and Eastern Europe. Since the start of the war in Ukraine, there has been much speculation about whether Europe’s geopolitical centre of gravity is shifting eastwards. The Polish election seems to confirm that the political centre of gravity is shifting to the right.

    A narrow victory

    We are witnessing a relative erosion of the duopoly of the two major parties, Civic Platform (PO) and Law and Justice (PiS), whose leaders – the current Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, and Jarosław Kaczyński respectively – have dominated the political landscape for over twenty years.

    Kaczyński’s skill lay in propelling a candidate with no responsibilities in his party, who was little known to the general public a few months ago, and, above all, who is from a different generation, to the presidency (a position held since 2015 by a PiS man, Andrzej Duda). Nawrocki, a historian by training and director of the Polish Institute of National Remembrance, has helped shape PiS’s memory policy. He won the second round, despite his troubled past as a hooligan, by appealing to voters on the right.

    In the first round, he won 29.5% of the vote, compared to Trzaskowski’s 31.36%, but the two far-right candidates, Sławomir Mentzen (an ultra-nationalist and economic libertarian) and Grzegorz Braun (a monarchist, avowed reactionary, and anti-Semite), won a total of 21% of the vote. They attracted a young electorate (60% of 18–29-year-olds), who overwhelmingly transferred their votes to Nawrocki in the second round.



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    Despite a high turnout of 71% and favourable votes from the Polish diaspora (63%), Trzaskowski was unable to secure enough votes from the first-round candidates linked to the governing coalition, including those on the left (who won 10% between them) and the centre-right (Szymon Hołownia’s Third Way movement, which won 5% in the first round).

    A Tusk government struggling to implement its programme

    There are two Polands facing each other: the big cities, where incomes and levels of education are higher, and the more rural small towns, which are more conservative on social issues and more closely linked to the Catholic Church.
    The themes of nationhood – Nawrocki’s campaign slogan was “Poland first, Poles first” – family, and traditional values continue to resonate strongly with an electorate that has been loyal to PiS for more than twenty years. The electoral map, which shows a clear north-west/south-east divide, is similar to those of previous presidential elections and even echoes the partition of Poland at the end of the eighteenth century. The PiS vote is strongest in the part of the country that was under Russian rule until 1918. A more traditional Catholicism in these less developed regions, coupled with a strong sense of national identity, partly explains these historical factors.

    The economic explanation for the vote is unconvincing. Over the past 25 years, Poland has undergone tremendous transformation, driven by steady economic growth. GDP per capita has risen from 25% to 80% of the EU average, although this growth has been unevenly distributed. Nevertheless, a relatively generous welfare state has been preserved.

    Clearly, however, this growth, driven by investment from Western Europe (primarily Germany) and European structural funds (3% of GDP), does not provide a sufficient electoral base for a liberal, centrist, pro-European government.

    It is precisely the government’s performance that may hold the key to Trzaskowski’s failure. Having come to power at the end of 2023 with a reformist agenda, Donald Tusk’s government has only been able to implement part of its programme, and it is difficult to be the candidate of an unpopular government. Conversely, the governing coalition has been weakened by the failure of its candidate.

    The main reason for the stalling of reforms is the presidential deadlock. Although the president has limited powers, he countersigns laws and overriding his veto requires a three fifth majority in parliament, which the governing coalition lacks.

    The president also plays a role in foreign policy by representing the country, and above all by appointing judges, particularly to the Supreme Court. This has hindered the judicial reforms expected after eight years of PiS rule. It is mainly in this area that Duda has obstructed progress. The election of Nawrocki, who is known for his combative nature, suggests that the period of cohabitation will be turbulent.

    What are the main international implications of Nawrocki’s election?

    Donald Tusk is now more popular in Europe than in Poland; in this respect, we can speak of a “Gorbachev syndrome”. In Central Europe, the Visegrad Group (comprising Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia) is deeply divided by the war in Ukraine, but it could find common ground around a populist sovereignty led by Hungary’s Viktor Orbán. Orbán was the first to congratulate Nawrocki on his victory, followed by his Slovak neighbour Robert Fico. The Czech Republic could also see a leader from this movement come to power if Andrej Babiš wins the parliamentary elections this autumn. Nawrocki would fit right into this picture.

    Since Donald Tusk returned to power, particularly during Poland’s EU presidency, which ends on 30 June, the focus has been on Poland’s “return” to the heart of the European process. Against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine and Poland’s pivotal role in coordinating a European response, the Weimar Group (comprising Paris, Berlin, and Warsaw) has emerged as a key player. Three converging factors have made this possible: the French president’s firm stance toward Russia; the new German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, breaking a few taboos on defence and budgetary discipline; and Donald Tusk, the former president of the European Council, regaining a place at the heart of the EU that his predecessors had abandoned. A framework for a strategic Europe was taking shape.

    However, President Nawrocki, and the PiS more generally, are taking a different approach to the EU: they are positioning themselves as Eurosceptic opponents defending sovereignty. They are playing on anti-German sentiment by demanding reparations 80 years after the end of the Second World War and asserting Poland’s sovereignty in the face of a “Germany-dominated Europe”. The Weimar Triangle, recently strengthened by the bilateral treaty between France and Poland signed on 9 May 2025, could be weakened on the Polish–German flank.

    As a historian and former director of the Second World War Museum in Gdansk and the Institute of National Remembrance, Nawrocki is well placed to exploit this historical resentment. He has formulated a nationalist memory policy centred on a discourse of victimhood, portraying Poland as perpetually under attack from its historic enemies, Russia and Germany.

    While there is a broad consensus in Poland regarding the Russian threat, opinions differ regarding the government’s desire to separate the traumas of the past, particularly those of the last war, from the challenges of European integration today.

    Memory issues also play a prominent role in relations with Ukraine. There is total consensus on the need to provide military support to Ukraine, under attack: this is obvious in Poland, given its history and geography – defending Ukraine is inseparable from Polish security. However, both Nawrocki and Trzaskowski have touched upon the idea that Ukraine should apologise for the crimes committed by Ukrainian nationalists during the last war, starting with the massacre of more than 100,000 Poles in Volyn (Volhynia), north-western Ukraine) by Stepan Bandera’s troops.

    Alongside memory policy, Nawrocki and the PiS are calling for the abolition of the 800 zloty (190 euros) monthly allowance paid to Ukrainian refugees. Poland had more than one million Ukrainian workers prior to the war, and more than two million additional workers have arrived since it started, although around one million have since relocated to other countries, primarily Germany and the Czech Republic.

    Prior to the second round of the presidential election, Nawrocki readily signed the eight demands of the far-right candidate Sławomir Mentzen, which included ruling out Ukraine’s future NATO membership. Playing on anti-Ukrainian (and anti-German) sentiment, alongside Euroscepticism and sovereignty, is one of the essential elements of the new president’s nationalist discourse.

    A Central and Eastern European Trumpism?

    Certain themes of the Polish election converge with a trend present throughout Central and Eastern Europe. We saw this at work in the Romanian presidential election, where the unsuccessful far-right nationalist candidate, George Simion, came to Warsaw to support Nawrocki, just as the winner, the pro-European centrist Nicușor Dan, lent his support to Trzaskowski. Nawrocki’s success reinforces an emerging “Trumpist” movement in Eastern Europe, with Viktor Orbán in Budapest seeing himself as its self-proclaimed leader. A year ago, Orbán coined the slogan “Over there (in the United States), it’s MAGA; here, it will be MEGA: Make Europe Great Again”. The “Patriots for Europe” group, launched by Orbán last year, is intended to unify this movement within the European Parliament.

    American conservative networks, through the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), a gathering of international hard-right figures, and the Trump administration are directly involved in this process. Shortly before the presidential election, Nawrocki travelled to Washington to arrange a photo opportunity with Trump in the Oval Office.

    Most notably, two days before the election, Kristi Noem, the US Secretary of Homeland Security, was dispatched on a mission to Poland. Speaking at the CPAC conference in Rzeszów, she explicitly linked a vote for Nawrocki to US security guarantees for Poland:

    “If you (elect) a leader that will work with President Donald J. Trump, the Polish people will have a strong ally that will ensure that you will be able to fight off enemies that do not share your values. […] You will have strong borders and protect your communities and keep them safe, and ensure that your citizens are respected every single day. […] You will continue to have a U.S. presence here, a military presence. And you will have equipment that is American-made, that is high quality.”

    “Fort Trump”, that is how the outgoing President Andrzej Duda named the US military base financed by Poland after a bilateral agreement was signed with Donald Trump during his first term in office, in 2018. Similarly, the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs sent a letter to the President of the European Commission accusing her of applying “double standards”, pointing out that EU funds had been blocked when the PiS was in power, and claiming that European money had been used to influence the outcome of the Polish presidential election in favour of Trzaskowski. The letter was posted online on the State Department website. Prioritising the transatlantic link at the expense of strengthening Europe was one of the issues at stake in the Warsaw presidential election.

    CPAC is playing a significant role in building a Trumpist national-populist network based on rejecting the “liberal hegemony” established in the post-1989 era, regaining sovereignty from the EU, and defending conservative values against a “decadent” Europe. Beyond the Polish presidential election, the goal seems clear: to divide Europeans and weaken them at a time when the transatlantic relationship is being redefined.

    Jacques Rupnik ne travaille pas, ne conseille pas, ne possède pas de parts, ne reçoit pas de fonds d’une organisation qui pourrait tirer profit de cet article, et n’a déclaré aucune autre affiliation que son organisme de recherche.

    ref. Poland, divided between Trump and the EU – https://theconversation.com/poland-divided-between-trump-and-the-eu-260007

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Medication dispensing enhanced

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Hospital Authority (HA) announced today that starting July 3, selected medications prescribed for “as needed” use will be dispensed with a maximum of eight weeks’ supply.

    The selected medications under the new measure, including laxatives, medications to loosen sputum, topical preparations for bruises and pain, are mainly for relieving the symptoms of episodic illnesses.

    HA Chief Pharmacist William Chui said patients may stockpile medications at home, particularly those for use “as needed”. The new arrangement can avoid wastage and lead to more efficient use of medication resources.

    This medications list will be regularly reviewed and updated as necessary. Visit the HA website for more details.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Disaster Recovery Center Opening in Hazelwood

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: Disaster Recovery Center Opening in Hazelwood

    Disaster Recovery Center Opening in Hazelwood

    A Disaster Recovery Center with FEMA Individual Assistance staff is opening in St

    Louis County to help people affected by the May 16 tornado and storms

    The Disaster Recovery Center opens this Friday, June 27

    At all locations, FEMA and the U

    S

    Small Business Administration will help impacted residents with their disaster assistance applications, answer questions, and upload required documents

    An additional location in St

    Louis County will be announced in the coming days

    Opening Friday, June 27LOCATIONHOURS OF OPERATIONSt

    Louis County Library – Prairie Commons Branch915 Utz Ln

    Hazelwood, MO 63042Monday-Thursday: 8 a

    m

    -7 p

    m

    Friday-Saturday: 8 a

    m

    -5 p

    m

     Sunday: ClosedLocations Currently Open in St

    Louis CityLOCATIONSHOURS OF OPERATIONSumner High School — Parking Lot                             4248 Cottage Ave

    St

    Louis, MO 63113Monday-Saturday: 8 a

    m

    -7 p

    m

    Sunday: 8 a

    m

    -6 p

    m

     Union Tabernacle M

    B

    Church626 N

    Newstead Ave

    St

    Louis, MO 63108Monday-Saturday: 8 a

    m

    -8 p

    m

    Sunday: ClosedTo save time, please apply for FEMA assistance before coming to a Disaster Recovery Center

    Apply online at DisasterAssistance

    gov or by calling 800-621-3362

     If you are unable to apply online or by phone, someone at the Disaster Recovery Center can assist you

     You may visit any location, no matter where you are staying now

    If your home or personal property sustained damage not covered by insurance, FEMA may be able to provide money to help you pay for home repairs, a temporary place to live, and replace essential personal property that was destroyed

    sara

    zuckerman
    Thu, 06/26/2025 – 22:03

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Newsom announces appointments 6.26.25

    Source: US State of California 2

    Jun 26, 2025

    SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:

    Kira Younger, of Fair Oaks, has been appointed Chief Financial Officer and Director of the Finance and Accounting Division at the California Department of Social Services. Younger has been Chief of Fiscal Forecasting at the California Department of Social Services since 2021, where she has held several roles since 2016, including Budget Officer and Staff Services Manager. She was Financial Manager at the California Office of Systems Integration from 2018 to 2019. Younger earned a Master of Business Administration degree in Strategic Management and a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in Accounting from Western Governors University. This position does not require Senate confirmation, and the compensation is $176,160. Younger is a Democrat. 

    Lauren Gavin Solis, of Los Angeles, has been appointed Deputy Director of the Office of Medicare Innovation and Integration at the Department of Health Care Services. Solis has been Acting Group Director for the Medicare-Medicaid Coordination Office at Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services since 2025, where she has held several roles since 2013, including Team Lead and Health Insurance Specialist. She was a Health Policy Scholar at the National Coalition on Health Care from 2012 to 2013. Solis was a Presidential Management Fellow at the National Institutes of Health from 2011 to 2013. She held several roles at Triage Consulting Group from 2005 to 2010, including Legal Services Manager, Senior Associate, and Associate. Solis earned a Master of Public Health degree in Health Systems and Policy from Johns Hopkins University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from the University of California, Davis. This position does not require Senate confirmation, and the compensation is $187,020. Solis is a Democrat. 

    Julia Parish, of Oakland, has been appointed Deputy Director of Legislation, Regulation, and Policy at the California Civil Rights Department. Parish has been a Senior Staff Attorney at Legal Aid at Work since 2019, where she has held multiple positions since 2011, including Staff Attorney, and Equal Justice Works AmeriCorps Legal Fellow. She was a Research Assistant to Professor David Oppenheimer at University of California, Berkeley School of Law in 2010. Parish earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of California, Berkeley School of Law, a Master of Science degree in Education from Pace University, and a Bachelor of the Arts in Political Science and Spanish from University of California, Berkeley. This position does not require Senate confirmation, and compensation is $146,268. Parish is a Democrat.

    Juliet Michelson Wahleithner, of Fresno, has been appointed Director of Research, Evaluation, and Assessment at the Commission on Teacher Credentialing. Wahleithner has been a Special Consultant for the Office of Policy and Continuous Improvement at the Commission on Teacher Credentialing since 2025. Wahleithner has been an Associate Professor for Literacy Education at California State University, Fresno since 2021, where she has held several roles since 2015 including Director of Educator Preparation and Accreditation, Director of San Joaquin Valley Writing Project, and Assistant Professor. She held several roles at University of California, Davis School of Education from 2008 to 2015, including Postdoctoral Researcher, Lecturer, Accreditation coordinator, and Graduate Student Assistant. Wahleithner held several roles at Lodi Unified School District from 1999 to 2007, including Differentiated Instruction Curriculum Coach and an English and Journalism Teacher. She is a Member of the American Educational Research Association, California Council on Teacher Education, and Board of Directors of Saint Agnes Child Development Center. Wahleithner earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Education, a Master of Arts degree in Education, and a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from University of California, Davis. This position does not require Senate confirmation, and the compensation is $163,788. Wahleithner is a Democrat.

    Sophear Price, of Santa Rosa, has been appointed Skilled Nursing Facility Administrator at the Yountville Veterans Home of California. Price has been the Standards Compliance Coordinator at the Yountville Veterans Home of California since 2018. Price held multiple roles at the Sonoma Development Center from 2014 to 2017, including Community Programs Specialist II and Individual Programs Coordinator. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from California State University, Sonoma. This position does not require Senate confirmation, and the compensation is $159,120. Price is registered without party preference. 

    Press releases, Recent news

    Recent news

    News What you need to know: La Passeggiata on Lindsey Street in Stockton is the latest site to be transformed from excess, underutilized state land into affordable housing under Governor Newsom’s executive order. STOCKTON — Today, state leaders broke ground on a new…

    News What you need to know: There are many disingenuous claims swirling about California gas prices “set to soar” – the truth is that gas prices won’t come anywhere close to increasing by 65 cents, as many would have you believe.   SACRAMENTO – California gas prices…

    News What you need to know: Governor Newsom announced $135 million is available for wildfire prevention grants – protecting communities from catastrophic wildfire at the same time as President Trump adds new strain to firefighting resources. SACRAMENTO – As President…

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Office of the Governor – News Release – Gov. Green Bolsters the Judiciary Through Signing of Key Legislation

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    June 26, 2025

    HONOLULU – Governor Josh Green, M.D., signed three bills into law today in support of the Hawai‘i State Judiciary’s efforts to facilitate fair and effective justice, promote rehabilitation and reduce recidivism.

    The signed legislation includes the Judiciary’s budget bill, which appropriates funds to meet the resource needs — ensuring that the courts function efficiently and continue to serve the people of our state at a time when demand for judicial services is increasing. Additional measures support initiatives aimed at bridging gaps in the justice system, particularly for nonviolent offenders who are disproportionately affected and face a higher risk of recidivism due to their circumstances.

    “This is a proud moment. Signing these bills demonstrates the power of collaboration between all branches of government to advance legislation that strengthens Hawai‘i’s judiciary and benefits the people we serve,” said Governor Green. “We are not only facilitating change — we are doing so through a restorative approach that addresses the root causes of recidivism.”

    “These justice reform bills strengthen the support systems that help people avoid legal trouble in the future and make the community safer,” said Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Karl Rhoads (District 13 – Dowsett Highlands, Pu‘unui, Nu‘uanu, Pacific Heights, Pauoa, Punchbowl, Pālama, Liliha, Iwilei, Chinatown and Downtown). “By expanding key programs like the Adult Client Services Branch, Community Outreach Court and Women’s Court, we are building a more effective justice system that helps keep our communities in Hawai‘i safer and stronger.”

    HB 400: RELATING TO THE JUDICIARY
    House Bill 400, Act 227, appropriates $214 million for fiscal year 2026 and $212 million for fiscal year 2027 for the Judiciary’s operating budget. The funds established in this bill will support operating costs and new permanent staff positions, including an additional District Court Judge and support staff in Kona. The bill also funds the permanent establishment of three specialty courts on O‘ahu: Women’s Court, Driving While Impaired Court, and Truancy Court and Early Education Intervention Court, as well as essential support for cybersecurity and technology costs across the judiciary.

    Additional funds are appropriated in the budget for the planning and design of a new South Kohala District Courthouse to improve access to judicial services for residents on the Hawaiʻi island.

    By signing this measure, Governor Green ensures that residents across the island chain continue to have access to essential judicial services that grow in step with the evolving needs of the judicial system.

    HB 727: RELATING TO THE WOMEN’S COURT
    In response to the increasing number of women in the criminal justice system, a need arose to assist nonviolent women in the criminal justice system by providing resources and guidance to those who have suffered abuse, trauma, poverty, substance-use disorders and mental illness. From Session Laws of Hawai‘i 2022, Act 243 established Mohala Wahine, a three-year pilot program that offers women at high risk of recidivism access to critical resources such as substance abuse treatment, housing assistance, and therapy, while helping nurture and educate participants throughout the program.

    HB 727, now Act 228, makes the Mohala Wahine pilot program permanent in the First Circuit Court of O‘ahu, continuing its invaluable work supporting the most vulnerable women. To further expand access to trauma-informed, evidence-based practices, HB 727 additionally establishes a two-year Women’s Court pilot program in the Third Circuit Court in Kona. This new program addresses a critical need for community-based services on Hawai‘i Island and offers the same supportive services established under Mohala Wahine. This measure appropriates $514,900 for fiscal year 2026 and $557,000 for fiscal year 2027.

    “HB727, championed by the Women’s Legislative Caucus, seeks to permanently establish the Mohala Wahine program in the First Circuit as a proven alternative to incarceration and a pathway to reintegration for women,” said Representative Mahina Poepoe, introducer of the bill and vice chair of the House Judiciary and Hawaiian Affairs Committee. “I believe that all women who find themselves in a position of being involved with our court system for nonviolent offenses could benefit from having the option of a pathway that avoids incarceration. Many of these women are mothers and caregivers  and with personalized, supportive care focused on healing rather than punishment, we can help them rehabilitate. Expanding this program to Hawaiʻi Island will strengthen families and communities across our state.”

    The complete list of bills signed includes the following. Click the links to see full details of the bills enacted into law.

    HB280 HD3 SD1 CD1 RELATING TO THE COMMUNITY OUTREACH COURT – Act 229

    HB398 HD1 SD2 CD1 – RELATING TO COMPENSATION FOR COURT-APPOINTED REPRESENTATION – Act 230
    HB399 HD1 SD2 CD1 – RELATING TO DISTRICT COURT JUDGES – Act 231
    HB401 HD1 SD2 CD1 – RELATING TO DISTRICT COURT JUDGES – Act 232
    SB304 SD1 HD2 CD1 – RELATING TO THE JUDICIARY – Act 233

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Ghana Charts Path for Ethical, Regular Labour Mobility at High-Level Dialogue

    Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    Accra, 27 June 2025 – The Government of the Republic of Ghana, in collaboration with the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the African Union Commission (AUC), convened a National Policy Dialogue on Labour Mobility Pathways aimed at turning the potential of labour migration into sustainable development outcomes.

    In 2019, more than 970,000 Ghanaians lived abroad, sending money home, sharing skills, and investing in the country. At the same time, Ghana hosted over 466,000 international migrants, mostly from countries in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), demonstrating its strong ties to the region’s labour market. With an active diaspora, a growing youth population, and strong regional partnerships, Ghana is well placed to use labour mobility to boost its economy and support development across West Africa.

    “The National Policy Dialogue on Labour Mobility pathways marks a historic milestone in our collective pursuit for safe, orderly, and regular migration pathways,” said Dr. Abdul Rashid Hassan Pelpuo, Minister, Labour Jobs and Employment. “This initiative will undoubtedly contribute to empowering people, bolstering economies, and advancing sustainable development aspirations.”

    The three-day discussions brought together senior policymakers, regional and international organizations, the World Bank, diaspora representatives, the private sector, civil society actors, migrants, and diplomatic missions of major destination countries for Ghanaian migrants to build a coordinated vision for safe, regular, and dignified labour mobility not only in Ghana but also across West and Central Africa. 

    “This dialogue comes at a critical time for Ghana and the region,” said Fatou Diallo Ndiaye, IOM Ghana Chief of Mission. “At a time when irregular migration continues to expose migrants to risks of exploitation and abuse, expanding regular migration pathways is both a humanitarian necessity and a development opportunity,” she added.

    As a Champion Country in the implementation of the Global Compact on Migration, Ghana continues to innovate and lead in providing protection to Ghanaians abroad, as well as migrants living in the country. In recent years, Ghana has aligned its legal policies with global and regional frameworks, including the AU Agenda 2063, the AU Migration Policy for Africa and key instruments such as the National Labour Migration Policy, the Human Trafficking Act, the Immigration Act, the National Migration Policy, and the Diaspora Engagement Policy.

    Ghana is also deepening international cooperation through the development of Bilateral Labour Migration Agreements (BLMAs) and Skills Mobility Partnerships with comprehensive support through the AU-IOM-ILO Joint Labour Migration Programme (JLMP), reinforcing its commitment to safe, regular, and mutually beneficial labour mobility.

    The High-Level Policy Dialogue identified key priorities, including stronger coordination among agencies and stakeholders, improved data sharing, and innovative approaches to labour mobility such as skills partnerships, complementary pathways, and schemes that combine education with work or protection.

    As labour markets evolve and migration dynamics shift across West and Central Africa, IOM remains committed to its role as a trusted convener, supporting governments, communities, and partners in co-creating solutions that ensure migration is safe, regular, and beneficial for all.

    The National Policy Dialogue on Labour Mobility Pathways in Ghana was implemented with support from the JLMP and funded by the Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency.
     

    For more information, please visit IOM’s Media Centre. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Small businesses have everything to lose from disasters, and everything to offer in building resilience

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    When I reflect on my visits to disaster-affected areas over the past thirty years, certain images return again and again: a small poultry farm flattened by the strong winds of a cyclone, scattered with the bodies of lifeless birds; a flattened betel nut plantation facing six months of toil to regain production capacity; a local musical instrument maker whose entire inventory, tools and workshop lay crushed under rubble after an earthquake.

    Technically, the owners of these small and micro-enterprises are neither below poverty line nor considered amongst the “most vulnerable.” Yet even the mildest economic disruption can push them into poverty.

    On the edge of insolvency

    In the aftermath of disasters, micro-, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) often face crippling disruptions to local markets and supply chains, disrupting their ability to operate. Many of them use borrowed capital, and the interruption of business only exacerbates their debt burden, pushing them closer to insolvency.

    Despite the scale of economic loss and closure among MSMEs following disasters, they have little access to recovery finance, whether in the form of affordable credit or assistance from government and relief agencies. This widespread collapse of micro- and small businesses remains under-recognized, despite the long-term consequences for local employment and economic recovery.

    Policy blind spot

    A fundamental problem lies in how these enterprises are positioned within post-disaster frameworks. Assistance tends to focus on households and public infrastructure, and few norms exist for assistance to MSMEs – even defining such norms would be complicated, given the varied nature of these enterprises.

    They are often not considered poor enough to qualify for social protection schemes, yet they lack the financial capacity to afford commercial insurance products. This leaves them in a policy blind spot.

    Yet, when MSMEs do begin to recover, their communities do too. They create jobs, they stimulate local markets, they restore confidence, and instill a sense of agency.

    In short, the resilience of MSMEs is a building block of community resilience.

    Five action points for business resilience

    Today, on Micro-, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day, I take the opportunity to propose a five-point agenda for the resilience of MSMEs in the face of disaster risk.

    The agenda reflects the lived reality of MSMEs. An overwhelming majority in developing and high-risk settings operate in the informal sector – unregistered, unaccounted for, and uninsured. Many are in the micro and nano categories, often operating within cash economies, with minimal savings or access to credit – but nonetheless they are often the economic backbones of their communities. The most vulnerable are frequently women-led local enterprises.

    • First, we need to work with formal and informal local MSME associations to develop accessible tools for risk self-assessment – both for physical disaster risks, and the financial risks they trigger. These tools should help MSMEs assess the risks to their own businesses and to all those who depend on them for their livelihood.
    • Second, we need a suite of solutions to reduce the risks identified by the assessments. This toolkit should be coupled with access to affordable finance so MSMEs can implement resilience measures in a prioritized and graded manner.
    • Third, we should create locally appropriate risk-transfer solutions. This may require aggregation across a large number of enterprises, and perhaps even the creation of risk pools.
    • Fourth, disaster recovery finance systems must include provisions for support to MSMEs – through a judicious combination of grants and low-interest loans.
    • Fifth, MSME owners should be given a clear role in developing and implementing local level disaster risk reduction and recovery strategies. In post-disaster recovery, MSMEs should be encouraged to create new and more robust livelihood opportunities in their communities. The notion of “building back better” should apply to creating more resilient MSMEs after disasters. In the broader disaster risk reduction discourse, locally-led approaches are gaining prominence. MSMEs should be leading these approaches.

    We can harness innovation

    Across all five of these actions, emerging digital technologies and innovative insurance models can play a catalytic role – while opening business opportunities for resilience-focused entrepreneurs.

    From digital payments and financial inclusion to participatory mapping and localized risk assessments, new digital tools could help bring informal and under-served enterprises into resilience-building frameworks – and ensure they are seen, supported, and strengthened before the next crisis hits.

    MSMEs need access to group-based, subsidized insurance models that pool risk across similar enterprises to reduce premiums. Governments could actively promote and enable such group-based insurance mechanisms, tailored for MSMEs, to support business continuity and faster recovery in the face of disasters.

    In most regions of the developing world, there is little availability of smaller scale property insurance; and where they exist, policy structures usually fail to reward risk reduction. Insurance offers should provide incentives for investment in risk reduction (like strengthening business premises against cyclones) with lower premiums.

    Parametric insurance schemes – which pay out on a pre-agreed threshold (such as storm strength) – have been shown to be successful in eliminating costly loss assessments, payout delays and disputes, providing innovative and responsive solutions for MSMEs and other small-scale policy holders.

    A network for resilient businesses

    For the past 15 years, UNDRR has been supporting a global community of MSMEs who prioritize disaster risk reduction through the ARISE Network. Network members have demonstrated remarkable innovation to address disaster risk in their enterprises.

    It is important that we further strengthen and expand such efforts to help the small businesses that are so vulnerable to disasters, but who can offer so much in building resilience for their communities.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-Evening Report: The sentencing of Cassius Turvey’s killers shows courts still struggle to deal with racism

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Thalia Anthony, Professor of Law, University of Technology Sydney

    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains names and images of deceased people.


    The brutal homicide of 15-year-old Noongar Yamatji boy, Cassius Turvey, by a group of white men revealed the racial schisms in Western Australian society. Turvey was walking home from school in October 2022 when he was abruptly beaten to death.

    On Friday, the Western Australian Supreme Court sentenced the three perpetrators. Twenty-nine-year-old Brodie Palmer and 24-year-old Jack Brearley were found guilty of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.

    A third man, 27-year-old Mitchell Forth, was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 12 years behind bars.

    This was an opportunity for the Supreme Court to send a strong message against racial violence. While the punishment of the men involved is clear, the role of race, and what legally qualifies as racially motivated crime, is muddier.

    Wrong place, wrong time?

    Racism has been front and centre of the public discussion of this tragedy from the outset.

    Shortly after the 2022 attack, Western Australian Police Commissioner Col Blanch said of the homicide:

    it may be a case of mistaken identity, it may be a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    This was met with strong condemnation from the First Nations community.

    Rallies in solidarity with Turvey’s family were held across the country, with Gumbaynggirr, Bundjalung, and Dunghutti activist Lizzie Jarrett declaring:

    no black child is ever, ever, ever in the wrong place at the wrong time on their own land.

    Racism at trial

    Over the course of the trial, the court heard Turvey and his peers, a group of Aboriginal high school students, were approached by an angry group.

    This comprised the three men convicted and a woman, 23-year-old Aleesha Gilmore, who was acquitted of homicide, and 21-year-old Ethan McKenzie, who with Gilmore, was convicted of other offences relating to the attack.

    Turvey was chased and Brearly fatally beat him with a metal pole.

    Earlier this year, the trial of the three perpetrators heard arguments by the defendants that the actions were not racially motivated.

    Rather, the defence argued they were acting out of self-defence on the basis that Brearly had his car window smashed a few days prior.

    In contrast, the prosecution brought evidence of a phone call that revealed Brearley was bragging about beating Turvey, stating that “he learnt his lesson”.

    The prosecution argued the homicide was not a personal gripe, but a collective response.

    The prosecution didn’t allege the attack was racially motivated, but it was open to the judge to consider this basis for the homicide.

    At trial, 91 witnesses came forward. Witnesses gave evidence that the accused were using racial slurs.

    This direct racism raises the issue of race as a motive in the attack, and is consistent with evidence of systemic racism in Western Australia.

    The killing of Turvey comes after 14-year-old Elijah Doughty was targeted and killed in Kalgoorlie in 2016.

    Both cases show white male motorists seeking to avenge Aboriginal children for alleged vehicle offences.

    This is reinforced by a penal system in which Aboriginal children are 53 times more likely to be detained than non-Aboriginal children.

    What did the judge say?

    On the morning of the sentence hearings, Cassius Turvey’s mother, who described her son as respected, bright, loving and compassionate, said the killing was a “racially motivated” and based on “discriminatory targeting”.

    This sentiment has been echoed across the country, including by June Oscar, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social justice commissioner at the Australian Human Rights Commission, in 2022.

    Chief Justice Peter Quinlan strongly condemned the attacks.

    However, he stated the attack was not racially motivated, despite recognising that the perpetrators were “calling them n-words and black c—ts — you in particular Mr Brearley used language like that”.

    He noted that it creates a “fear” of racial vilification:

    it’s no surprise […] that the kids would think they were being targeted because they were Aboriginal, and the attack would create justifiable fear for them and for the broader community that this was a racially motivated attack.

    This amounts to a message of general deterrence about violence and vigilante behaviour.

    But messages to deter racial targeting and racial violence specifically were omitted from the public safety concerns expressed by the court.

    Making racial violence invisible

    Munanjahli and South Sea Islander professor Chelsea Watego, and colleagues, have remarked that the Australian psyche is more comfortable with an “abstract concern with racism; racism without actors, or rather perpetrators”.

    This, they argue, sanitises racial violence and holds no one responsible.

    The court demonstrated this abstract concern for racism.

    This Supreme Court’s reasoning has set an impossibly high bar for racial vilification, and specifically racial violence, to be identified, denounced and redressed.

    The judgement seems to relegate racism to being an unfortunate and unintended incident of co-existence, rather than willed harm.

    The failure to regard the racial slurs, the targeting of a group of Aboriginal children, and the killing of one of these children, as “racially motivated”, upholds the idea that white people’s racist treatment and crimes against Aboriginal people exist in a vacuum free of a long history of colonial violence, massacres and occupation.

    Thalia Anthony receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    Matthew Walsh 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. The sentencing of Cassius Turvey’s killers shows courts still struggle to deal with racism – https://theconversation.com/the-sentencing-of-cassius-turveys-killers-shows-courts-still-struggle-to-deal-with-racism-259541

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: The sentencing of Cassius Turvey’s killers shows courts still struggle to deal with racism

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Thalia Anthony, Professor of Law, University of Technology Sydney

    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains names and images of deceased people.


    The brutal homicide of 15-year-old Noongar Yamatji boy, Cassius Turvey, by a group of white men revealed the racial schisms in Western Australian society. Turvey was walking home from school in October 2022 when he was abruptly beaten to death.

    On Friday, the Western Australian Supreme Court sentenced the three perpetrators. Twenty-nine-year-old Brodie Palmer and 24-year-old Jack Brearley were found guilty of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.

    A third man, 27-year-old Mitchell Forth, was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 12 years behind bars.

    This was an opportunity for the Supreme Court to send a strong message against racial violence. While the punishment of the men involved is clear, the role of race, and what legally qualifies as racially motivated crime, is muddier.

    Wrong place, wrong time?

    Racism has been front and centre of the public discussion of this tragedy from the outset.

    Shortly after the 2022 attack, Western Australian Police Commissioner Col Blanch said of the homicide:

    it may be a case of mistaken identity, it may be a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    This was met with strong condemnation from the First Nations community.

    Rallies in solidarity with Turvey’s family were held across the country, with Gumbaynggirr, Bundjalung, and Dunghutti activist Lizzie Jarrett declaring:

    no black child is ever, ever, ever in the wrong place at the wrong time on their own land.

    Racism at trial

    Over the course of the trial, the court heard Turvey and his peers, a group of Aboriginal high school students, were approached by an angry group.

    This comprised the three men convicted and a woman, 23-year-old Aleesha Gilmore, who was acquitted of homicide, and 21-year-old Ethan McKenzie, who with Gilmore, was convicted of other offences relating to the attack.

    Turvey was chased and Brearly fatally beat him with a metal pole.

    Earlier this year, the trial of the three perpetrators heard arguments by the defendants that the actions were not racially motivated.

    Rather, the defence argued they were acting out of self-defence on the basis that Brearly had his car window smashed a few days prior.

    In contrast, the prosecution brought evidence of a phone call that revealed Brearley was bragging about beating Turvey, stating that “he learnt his lesson”.

    The prosecution argued the homicide was not a personal gripe, but a collective response.

    The prosecution didn’t allege the attack was racially motivated, but it was open to the judge to consider this basis for the homicide.

    At trial, 91 witnesses came forward. Witnesses gave evidence that the accused were using racial slurs.

    This direct racism raises the issue of race as a motive in the attack, and is consistent with evidence of systemic racism in Western Australia.

    The killing of Turvey comes after 14-year-old Elijah Doughty was targeted and killed in Kalgoorlie in 2016.

    Both cases show white male motorists seeking to avenge Aboriginal children for alleged vehicle offences.

    This is reinforced by a penal system in which Aboriginal children are 53 times more likely to be detained than non-Aboriginal children.

    What did the judge say?

    On the morning of the sentence hearings, Cassius Turvey’s mother, who described her son as respected, bright, loving and compassionate, said the killing was a “racially motivated” and based on “discriminatory targeting”.

    This sentiment has been echoed across the country, including by June Oscar, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social justice commissioner at the Australian Human Rights Commission, in 2022.

    Chief Justice Peter Quinlan strongly condemned the attacks.

    However, he stated the attack was not racially motivated, despite recognising that the perpetrators were “calling them n-words and black c—ts — you in particular Mr Brearley used language like that”.

    He noted that it creates a “fear” of racial vilification:

    it’s no surprise […] that the kids would think they were being targeted because they were Aboriginal, and the attack would create justifiable fear for them and for the broader community that this was a racially motivated attack.

    This amounts to a message of general deterrence about violence and vigilante behaviour.

    But messages to deter racial targeting and racial violence specifically were omitted from the public safety concerns expressed by the court.

    Making racial violence invisible

    Munanjahli and South Sea Islander professor Chelsea Watego, and colleagues, have remarked that the Australian psyche is more comfortable with an “abstract concern with racism; racism without actors, or rather perpetrators”.

    This, they argue, sanitises racial violence and holds no one responsible.

    The court demonstrated this abstract concern for racism.

    This Supreme Court’s reasoning has set an impossibly high bar for racial vilification, and specifically racial violence, to be identified, denounced and redressed.

    The judgement seems to relegate racism to being an unfortunate and unintended incident of co-existence, rather than willed harm.

    The failure to regard the racial slurs, the targeting of a group of Aboriginal children, and the killing of one of these children, as “racially motivated”, upholds the idea that white people’s racist treatment and crimes against Aboriginal people exist in a vacuum free of a long history of colonial violence, massacres and occupation.

    Thalia Anthony receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    Matthew Walsh 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. The sentencing of Cassius Turvey’s killers shows courts still struggle to deal with racism – https://theconversation.com/the-sentencing-of-cassius-turveys-killers-shows-courts-still-struggle-to-deal-with-racism-259541

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Government honours Mama Abigail Kubeka with tribute concert

    Source: South Africa News Agency

    Government honours Mama Abigail Kubeka with tribute concert

    The Department of Sport, Arts and Culture (DSAC), through its Van Toeka Af Living Legends Recognition Series, will host a landmark tribute concert in honour of the iconic Mama Abigail Kubeka, celebrating an extraordinary 68-year contribution to South Africa’s music, arts, and cultural landscape.

    This tribute forms part of the department’s ongoing commitment to “give them their flowers while they can still smell them” — a core principle of the Van Toeka Af Living Legends Recognition Series. 

    Launched in 2023, the Van Toeka Af Living Legends Recognition Series recognises artists whose work has left an indelible mark on South Africa’s cultural heritage. It also provides sustainable support through platforms such as the Living Legends Legacy Fraternity Trust (LLLFT). 

    This one-night-only event will unite more than 25 legendary performers, all offering their time and talent in tribute to a woman whose voice, grace, and artistic influence have helped shape the soul of South African culture.

    Directed by renowned saxophonist and composer Khaya Mahlangu, the concert will feature performances from luminaries, such as Yvonne Chaka Chaka, Faith Kekana, Mandisa Dlanga, Khanyo Maphumulo, and Stella Khumalo. 

    The audience can also look forward to musical contributions from icons, including Sipho Mabuse, McCoy Mrubata, Babsy Mlangeni, and Fana Zulu, with a powerful opening performance by Zenzi Makeba Lee alongside the Miriam Makeba Band.

    “Mama Abigail Kubeka is more than a performer — she is a living archive of our nation’s cultural memory. For nearly seven decades, her voice has carried the spirit of resistance, healing, and hope. Honouring her is both a duty and a privilege, reminding us that our greatest cultural treasures still walk among us, guiding us with wisdom and unmatched artistry.

    “The Van Toeka Af programme is about legacy, memory, and dignity. It says to our artists: we see you; we thank you, and we honour you. It ensures that future generations know whose shoulders they stand on and gives recognition to those who created beauty and meaning during some of South Africa’s darkest hours,” the department said.

    Kubeka’s career began in the 1950s, and she remains one of the last surviving artists to have performed alongside greats such as Miriam Makeba and Hugh Masekela during the apartheid era. Her body of work spans film, television, jazz, theatre, and activism — a legacy that continues to uplift and inspire generations.

    The concert will take place on Saturday, 5 July 2025, at 6pm at the South African State Theatre in Pretoria.

    This tribute follows in the footsteps of past Van Toeka Af honours bestowed on cultural giants, including Dr John Kani and Dr Tete Mbambisa. 

    These recognition events serve not only as emotional homecomings for the honourees, but also as national moments of reflection on the country’s cultural journey and future – SAnews.gov.za

    nosihle

    MIL OSI Africa