Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI Security: Jury Convicts Ohio Men For Conspiring To Distribute More Than Five Kilograms Of Cocaine

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Tampa, FL – United States Attorney Gregory W. Kehoe announces that a federal jury has found Virgil Cooper (42, Cleveland, OH) and Angelo Jordan (49, Euclid, OH) guilty of conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine and attempting to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine. Each faces a minimum penalty 15 years’ imprisonment, due to prior serious drug or violent felonies, and a maximum penalty of life in federal prison. The sentencing hearings have not yet been set. 

    According to testimony and evidence presented during the four-day trial, Cooper established contact with a former federal prison cellmate who had been deported to his native country of Colombia after serving his sentence. Cooper wanted to purchase multiple kilograms of cocaine directly from Colombia at a discount rate. The former cellmate introduced Cooper to a Drug Enforcement Administration confidential source who helped arrange for a viewing of 10 kilograms of cocaine with undercover officers in Tampa in February 2023. Because Cooper was still serving the remainder of his sentence in a halfway house, he sent his friend, Jordan, to view the cocaine. After repeated communications and Cooper’s release from the halfway house, Cooper and Jordan traveled from Cleveland to Tampa on August 3, 2023, to deliver a down payment of $120,000 for an initial 30 kilograms of cocaine, and they were arrested.

    This case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration, with assistance from the Tampa Police Department. It is being prosecuted by Special Assistant United States Attorney David Rehfuss and Assistant United States Attorney E. Jackson Boggs, Jr.

    This case was part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at www.justice.gov/OCDETF.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: BATON ROUGE MAN SENTENCED TO 120 MONTHS IN FEDERAL PRISON FOR A FIREARM VIOLATION

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Acting United States Attorney April M. Leon announced that Judge John W. deGravelles sentenced Ledale Deanthony Sawyer, age 35, of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to 120 months in federal prison following his conviction for possession of a stolen firearm. The Court further sentenced Sawyer to serve three years of supervised release following his term of imprisonment and ordered the firearm seized by law enforcement be forfeited.

    According to admissions made as part of his guilty plea, on July 16, 2023, Baton Rouge Police officers were dispatched to a residence in Baton Rouge in response to a domestic disturbance. The caller, identified as Victim-1, told dispatch that Sawyer was inside her residence armed with an AR-15 rifle. Upon arrival, officers spoke with Victim-1, who stated that Sawyer possessed a firearm. Victim-1 said that she hid the firearm from Sawyer and showed officers its location. Officers recovered the firearm, identified as a Wise Arms, Model WA-15B rifle. Shortly thereafter, officers located an individual matching Sawyer’s description at a house approximately one block from Victim-1’s residence. The individual was positively identified as Sawyer by both Victim-1 and by the distinctive tattoo on his neck with the name “Sawyer” at which time Sawyer was arrested.

    A trace on the firearm indicated that the firearm had previously been reported stolen on June 22, 2023. In that case, the victim, identified as Victim-2, stated that she met an individual to sell him a television. The individual pulled a firearm from his waistband, pointed it at Victim-2 and her partner, and took the firearm from the backseat of her vehicle.

    ATF agents also located pictures of Sawyer in possession of a firearm that were posted on his public social media profile on June 30, 2023. Agents compared these images to photos of the firearm seized in this case. Based on the markings and distinctive scratch marks, agents determined the firearm from Sawyer’s social media photos was the same firearm seized upon his arrest on July 16, 2023.

    This matter was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives and the Baton Rouge Police Department, and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Kristen Lundin Craig.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Met releases CCTV of missing 17-year-old in urgent witness appeal

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    The Met is releasing CCTV of a 17-year-old boy who’s been missing for more than a month as his family appeal for information about his whereabouts.

    Deante James left his home in Enfield at around 23:00hrs on Monday, 31 March and was reported missing to the Met the following morning.

    Officers began an investigation and recovered CCTV which identified a sighting in The Courtfield Pub in Earl’s Court Road in Earl’s Court at around 20:00hrs on Thursday, 3 April. Further footage showed he had also visited a nearby McDonald’s.

    In the footage, Deante is seen wearing a black ‘Trapstar’ cap, a blue jacket, black tracksuit and black trainers. He was carrying a Nike backpack and Nike cross body bag.

    As part of our investigation, officers have already viewed over 18 hours of CCTV footage, including multiple cameras across the public transport network. Officers are still awaiting further CCTV which officers will review once it becomes available.

    While officers believe that Deante is not carrying a mobile phone, enquiries have been carried out to obtain historic mobile phone date, in order to identify and associates that could know about Deante’s whereabouts.

    As well as Enfield, Deante has links to Romford, Dagenham, Hackney, Ilford and Earl’s Court. He may have also travelled to Brighton.

    Deante’s mum, Vandana Bhogowoth, said:

    “To Boo (Darell Deante, sun son) wherever you are please know that we love you unconditionally and just want you home safe. You are not in any trouble, you are missed beyond words! We are desperate to know you are okay, and all your family are waiting with wide open arms and heart!

    “If anyone has seen my son or has any information please contact the police or us immediately. We are desperate for your help. Every piece of information matters. He is very vulnerable as of recent and just want him home so he can get the love, help and support he desperately needs. All our lives are on standstill until he is home safe.”

    Detective Chief Inspector Elsa Mak, from the missing person’s team in north London, said:

    “Deante has been missing for more than a month as we are increasingly concerned for his welfare. He has not been in contact with any of his family or friends and left without any traceable items which means we have limited opportunity to identify his movements.

    Anyone with information that could assist the investigation is asked to call 101 quoting the reference 01/7330181/25. Report immediate sightings by calling 999.

    You can also contact the Missing People charity online or by calling 116 000.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: Reform enters local government for the first time with UK mayoral election wins

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Alex Nurse, Reader in Urban Planning, University of Liverpool

    The UK now has two regional mayors representing the Reform party, following English local elections on May 1. This is the first time anyone from the party has held a government position at any level.

    Andrea Jenkyns, formerly a Conservative government minister, is now the mayor of Greater Lincolnshire following an election win on May 1. She becomes the first Reform and Luke Campbell is now mayor of Hull and East Yorkshire. Both are new mayoralities, created as part of the government’s developing devolution plans.

    The creation of more mayoralties meant that, perhaps inevitably, the near-monopoly that Labour held on mayors after the 2024 local elections has ended. But with an unproven track record, it’s reasonable to ask what we might expect from the new reform mayors as they take office.

    Since the first devolution deals were signed back in 2014, English devolution has always been about the ability of local governments to convince Westminster to let go of power. The result has been that devolution deals have varied in strength across the country.

    In broad terms, city regions have tended to get more powers, while others get slightly less. This means that not every new regional (also known as metro) mayor will be a budding Andy Burnham – though in practice most can expect to have core powers of housing, transport and education. Over time we have seen how the existing mayors have sought to inhabit those powers in their own way, and bring about their own priorities.

    So, we now wait to see what that means for the new mayors as they take power. We already know that Jenkyns’ election manifesto touched upon the key powers the mayor will hold (transport, education and the economy) but her agenda on these was painted only in the broadest of brush strokes.

    For example, there were promises to upgrade major roads, and to secure more funding for transport – although achieving both would require a willing Labour government to play nice. More realistic promises include more frequent buses which better serve parts of what is a large rural area, and creating skills bodies to work with local employers.


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    Elsewhere, however, the manifesto delved into the realm of memes and bogeymen. For example, Jenkyns has proposed creating “DOGE Lincolnshire”, mirroring Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency in the US.

    This promises to cut government waste and “ensure efficiency”. Yet, given the combined authority she heads was only constituted in February, it’s not quite clear what inefficiencies Jenkyns is referring to.

    Another pledge is to push back against net zero – something that Reform seems to be using as their protest lodestar now that Brexit is no longer fertile feeding ground. Here, the policies seem to be to fight against national government policy on net-zero rather than anything really specific.

    Playing nicely with central government

    A regional mayor’s fate often hinges on their ability to interact effectively with central government – either by trying to secure concessions from it, or resisting it. Here, it will be very interesting to watch how Jenkyns, Campbell and the new Conservative mayor of Cambridge and Peterborough, Paul Bristow, assimilate.

    They are now members of the Council of the Regions – which for the last 12 months has been largely a cosy cabal of Labour mayors (and Tory Ben Houchen).

    How will Reform mayors – and Jenkyns in particular do business with the others? She is known as a disruptor so it could change the dynamic significantly.

    English local government is littered with examples of national government visiting retribution on local authorities for perceived transgressions. For example, most famously, Margaret Thatcher’s government abolished the Metropolitan Councils in 1986 for getting a bit too big for their boots. While there is no suggestion that will happen this time, current devolution deals are heavily premised on trust and ability to work with government.

    The other issue will be how what started as a protest party deals with the minutiae of governing. Mario Cuomo, a former governor of New York, once famously said that you campaign in poetry and govern in prose. Sometimes, however, local government can be about the grammar – dealing with those minor details.

    I remember interviewing a local councillor who once told me most of the time people want to talk about dog poo and bins. Equally, things like potholes are shown to be what residents want to see fixed.

    From now on, Jenkyns and other reform-led councils will have a record that they will have to defend. Ultimately, while a manifesto that is half-built on memes might grab attention on election day, it probably isn’t going to make the buses run on time.

    Alex Nurse receives funding from the ESRC.

    ref. Reform enters local government for the first time with UK mayoral election wins – https://theconversation.com/reform-enters-local-government-for-the-first-time-with-uk-mayoral-election-wins-255731

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Bingeable comedy, a Jim Crow-era vampire thriller and William Morris mania – what to watch, read and do this week

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Naomi Joseph, Arts + Culture Editor

    I recently bought a Now TV subscription because we are in prime prestige TV season and I needed it to watch The White Lotus and The Last of Us. Deep into those big, confronting shows (which are brilliant but, let’s be honest, a lot), I was looking for something that was comforting and easy. If this is what you are also craving right now, I could not recommend Hacks more.

    Hacks is a whip-smart and hilarious show with 30-minute episodes. It follows Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder), an edgy comedy writer who isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, and spiky Las Vegas comedy veteran Deborah Vance (Jean Smart). This pair are shoved together by their shared manager when Ava is fired from a writing gig for making an off-colour joke on social media, and Deborah loses her headline slot on the Vegas strip as the city moves on without her.

    The trailer for season four of Hacks.

    Since its first season, Hacks has provided insightful commentary on the male-dominated world of comedy. The push and pull relationship between Ava and Deborah is hilarious as they clash over generational differences on everything from comedy to sexuality. The show has been rightly lauded for its brilliant writing, which manages to go all the way up to the line without being hateful – a skill many comedians who argue that it’s hard to make comedy in our politically correct age could learn from.

    Now in its fourth season, our reviewer, Jacqueline Ristola, an expert in the media industry and comedy, says Hacks has managed to maintain the quality (and hilarity) while finding new ground to explore women’s precarious place in the entertainment industry.




    Read more:
    Hacks season four tackles late-night TV – and is as funny and perceptive as ever



    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    If you are in the mood for something a bit moodier and serious, then Sinners might be for you. The film follows twin brothers Smoke and Stack (both played by Michael B. Jordan) who have returned home to Mississippi in an attempt to leave their troubles behind. What they find waiting for them, however, is much worse.

    Sinners is set in Jim Crow-era Mississippi, a time of harsh segregation and racial injustice. While the horrors of this period are certainly enough to scare anyone, director Ryan Coogler has decided to tell a story grounded in supernatural evil. Vampires aside, there is a lot of history in Sinners too. Criminology expert Rachel Stuart found it interesting how the real stories of Irish and Choctaw oppression informed the film.




    Read more:
    Sinners: how real stories of Irish and Choctaw oppression inform the film


    The trailer for Sinners.

    If you’re looking for something to read, we recommend the memoir Red Pockets. In this piece, Alice Mah, a professor in urban and environmental studies, writes about why she was inspired to create this book after a personal detour to her ancestral village she took while on a research trip.

    In Red Pockets, Mah chronicles her journey from the rice villages of south China back to postindustrial England. Her research on pollution leads to growing eco-anxiety, and paired with this trip leaves her in spiritual crisis. Part memoir, part cultural history and environmental exploration, this book explores what we owe our ancestors and also future generations.




    Read more:
    Travelling to my ancestral home in China unearthed tragedy tinged by the climate crisis – it inspired me to write Red Pockets


    Inky worlds and popular patterns

    Also moody and brilliant is the Victor Hugo exhibition at the Royal Academy in London. I did not know that the French writer was an avid artist, and this exhibition is a wonderful and rare opportunity to gaze into the dark and surreal world of the mind behind Les Misérables and The Hunchback of Notre Dame.

    Hugo’s inky paintings and drawings of townscapes and watery underworlds invoke a sort of nightmarish and apocalyptic reality. The low lighting in which these extremely fragile works must be kept adds to the whole foreboding atmosphere. The exhibition’s title comes from Van Gogh’s opinion of Hugo’s work as “astonishing things”, and they really are. Our review, expert in fine art Martin Lang, found “the sense of uncertainty to feel oddly relevant to today”.




    Read more:
    Astonishing Things: The Drawings of Victor Hugo at the Royal Academy is dark and brilliant


    Another man whose art has had enduring appeal is designer William Morris. Most people probably have or know of someone who owns something adorned with one of his hypnotising patterns. His work has remained incredibly popular since he first started producing it in the 1860s. A new exhibition at the William Morris exhibition, Morris Mania: How Britain’s Greatest Designer Went Viral, explores how his work proliferated to such a degree.

    While you may be able to spot a Morris, you might not know much about the man. He was a fervent socialist who championed a principle of handmade production that didn’t chime with the Victorian era’s focus on industrial “progress”. These ideals sit in opposition to how his work has come to be used today.

    Our reviewer, an expert in applied art, found that the exhibition was sensitive to this, championing “ethical and bespoke production, while confronting the darker currents that move objects around our world”.




    Read more:
    William Morris: new exhibition reveals how Britain’s greatest designer went viral


    ref. Bingeable comedy, a Jim Crow-era vampire thriller and William Morris mania – what to watch, read and do this week – https://theconversation.com/bingeable-comedy-a-jim-crow-era-vampire-thriller-and-william-morris-mania-what-to-watch-read-and-do-this-week-255742

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Tajikistan: Staff Concluding Statement for the 2025 Article IV Mission

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    May 2, 2025

    A Concluding Statement describes the preliminary findings of IMF staff at the end of an official staff visit (or ‘mission’), in most cases to a member country. Missions are undertaken as part of regular (usually annual) consultations under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, in the context of a request to use IMF resources (borrow from the IMF), as part of discussions of staff monitored programs, or as part of other staff monitoring of economic developments.

    The authorities have consented to the publication of this statement. The views expressed in this statement are those of the IMF staff and do not necessarily represent the views of the IMF’s Executive Board. Based on the preliminary findings of this mission, staff will prepare a report that, subject to management approval, will be presented to the IMF Executive Board for discussion and decision.

    Washington, DC: An International Monetary Fund (IMF) mission led by Mr. Matthew Gaertner held the 2025 Article IV consultation and discussions on the second review under the Policy Coordination Instrument (PCI) with the Tajikistan authorities during April 2-15, 2025, in Dushanbe. At the conclusion of the mission, Mr. Gaertner issued the following statement:

    Economic Developments, Outlook and Risks

    Strong broad-based growth continued in 2024, and the external position remained favorable. Real GDP increased 8.4 percent in 2024, marking the fourth consecutive year of growth above 8 percent, as strong momentum in mining, manufacturing and agriculture was underpinned by public and private investment. Strong financial inflows, including remittances, have also supported domestic demand and liquidity and contributed to a current account surplus of 6.2 percent of GDP in 2024. This alongside the NBT’s purchases of domestic gold production has boosted FX reserves from $3.6 billion at end-2023 to $4.7 billion at the end of February 2025, amounting to 7 months import coverage.

    Inflation remains well contained within the NBT’s target range. Twelve-month inflation stood at 3.7 percent in February, within the NBT’s updated target range of 5 percent (±2 percent) for 2025, reflecting stable prices for imported food and fuel and an appreciation of the somoni against key trading partner currencies. Reserve money growth has moderated since mid-2024 as the NBT stepped up its sterilization efforts but remained strong at 32 percent (y/y) in February, boosted by the NBT’s gold purchases.

    Banks’ asset quality continued to improve in 2024, amid strong growth in consumer lending. Banks’ NPL ratio declined to 7.0 percent in February as they continued to clean up their balance sheets, largely through write-offs of legacy NPLs. Credit to the private sector grew at 29 percent (y/y) in February, boosted by a continued expansion of banks’ deposit base. This has been primarily driven by household loans in local currency, supported by the introduction of new retail lending products.

    The medium-term outlook appears positive. Real GDP is projected to increase by 7 percent in 2025, retaining the current strong momentum. Twelve-month inflation (y/y) is projected to remain close to the mid-point of the NBT’s target range in 2025 and 2026, in line with stable inflation expectations. The current account surplus is expected to narrow in 2025 as financial inflows stabilize, with FX reserves projected to remain at comfortable levels. Financial inflows are expected to normalize over the medium term after the strong inflows experienced since 2022, heightening the importance of continuing to advance structural reforms to strengthen potential growth over the medium-term.

    Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside, in the context of significant regional and global uncertainty. A pronounced decline in financial inflows due to a less favorable environment for remittances or a slowdown in Tajikistan’s key trading partners would adversely affect growth, fiscal performance, and the banking sector. More frequent and severe natural disasters and heightened security risks can also strain budget resources. On the upside, continued strength in gold prices and rising demand for rare earth metals could attract increased investment in the mining sector.

    Fiscal Policy

    Fiscal performance remained well within the program target in 2024, with a fiscal surplus of 0.3 percent. The favorable fiscal outturn was underpinned by stable revenue growth despite a reduction in the VAT rate from 15 to 14 percent, while externally financed capital spending was lower than planned. Revenue collection reflected continued improvements in tax and customs administration supported by digitalization measures. The 2025 budget envisages a fiscal deficit of up to 2.5 percent of GDP, conditional on available financing. In this context, continuing to expand the domestic debt market is key to diversifying sources of financing. The MOF successfully launched market-based auctions of government securities in 2024; establishing a robust secondary market for these instruments will help to expand the investor base and further deepen the market.

    The fiscal deficit target of 2.5 percent of GDP remains an important anchor to ensure that debt remains on a favorable medium-term trajectory. Prudent fiscal policy coupled with strong GDP growth has contributed to a notable reduction in the public debt ratio over the past few years, with public debt declining to 25 percent of GDP at the end of 2024. Public debt is assessed as sustainable but remains at high risk of distress due to large debt service obligations during 2025-2027; the first semi-annual Eurobond repayment was completed as planned in March. Building fiscal buffers is key to mitigating fiscal risks from potential shocks to revenue and expenditure in the context of the uncertain external environment, with contingency plans for spending reprioritization to protect social assistance and other critical spending.

    Improved revenue mobilization and spending efficiency are key to increasing fiscal space for priority social and development projects. The Medium-Term Revenue Plan (MTRP) aims to raise total revenues by at least 2 percentage points to 26 percent of GDP in 2026 through a combination of tax policy, tax administration and SOE reform measures. In line with the MTRP, the MOF has taken steps to improve revenue mobilization through the expansion of digitalization of payments. Moreover, tax exemptions granted to several large investment projects were discontinued in 2024. A time-bound action plan is essential to anchor a further streamlining of tax exemptions and customs preferences over the medium-term. On the expenditure side, strengthening appraisal, selection and oversight of internally financed capital projects are crucial for enhancing the efficiency of public investment.

    Strong corporate governance and oversight is essential to strengthen SOE efficiency and minimize fiscal risks. Recent reforms include the expansion of the MOF’s financial monitoring coverage from 27 SOEs to 77 entities with state participation, and amendments to the regulations for SOE board composition to ensure that board members are appointed through transparent and competitive procedures in line with best practices. The MOF has also continued to expand the scope of the annual fiscal risk statement, which provides an overview of SOE performance, including profitability, leverage, and budget allocations to SOEs. The publication of an updated SOE list and completion of the ongoing sectorization exercise will also improve monitoring and oversight.

    Greater efforts are needed to improve the financial performance of the electricity sector. Low collection rates for key electricity consumers, together with high technical and commercial losses and end-user tariffs that are below cost recovery levels has led the state electricity generation company Barki Tojik to accumulate sizable arrears to suppliers and creditors. Reducing quasi-fiscal losses in the electricity sector will require sustained efforts to improve collection rates for the largest electricity consumers, as well as implementation of the authorities’ strategy to roll-out smart metering, increase penalties for electricity theft and improve cost controls across the electricity sector. The electricity tariff was increased by about 15 percent in April 2025, and further annual tariff adjustments are envisaged to reach cost recovery by 2027.

    Monetary, Exchange Rate and Financial Sector Policies

    Inflation remains well contained, but strong credit growth warrants continued vigilance. The NBT lowered its inflation target from 6 to 5 percent (±2 percent) for 2025 to reflect well-anchored inflation expectations, and the policy rate was lowered by 25 basis points to 8.75 percent in February 2025 as inflation remains close to the lower bound. Although the real policy rate is still relatively high at about 5 percent (based on realized inflation), monetary policy should remain data-driven and vigilant to potential upward demand pressure on inflation from strong credit growth and robust financial inflows. Proactive liquidity management also remains essential to moderate the impact of the NBT’s gold purchases and FX interventions on the money supply.

    Enhancing exchange rate flexibility is essential to build resilience to external shocks. The NBT has taken several measures to modernize the local FX market, including ending auctions of inward transfers improving the mechanism for executing public sector FX transactions; enhancing the dissemination of information on FX rates; and introducing price-based auctions for FX interventions to facilitate price discovery. The NBT should also aim to limit its FX operations only to avoid disorderly market conditions to facilitate development of the FX market and further support greater exchange rate flexibility.

    Strong macroprudential oversight and banking supervision are key to mitigating external risks to financial stability. The banking system has strengthened its balance sheet following the resolution of two troubled banks but may face possible challenges from the volatile external environment and any reversal of recent inflows. Strong lending to households warrants careful oversight of macroprudential norms to ensure prudent lending standards, and close monitoring of maturity mismatches and funding- and asset-side concentration risk. The planned introduction of macroprudential tools and forward-looking stress tests is essential to manage risks posed by strong credit growth.

    Structural Reforms

    Governance and transparency reforms across economic sectors aim to foster sustainable and inclusive growth. Structural reforms are underway to close existing governance gaps across the public and private sectors through upgrades to the legal and regulatory frameworks. The reforms aim to (i) improve public sector efficiency; (ii) foster financial and private sector development; and (iii) promote an enabling investment climate for private sector-led growth.

    Transparent governance and policy frameworks and robust financial safety nets are key to further strengthen trust in public institutions. Good governance fosters macro-financial stability both directly and indirectly by enhancing the credibility and effectiveness of macroeconomic policies. Transparent corporate ownership is critical to promote an enabling business climate based on the rule of law and prudent AML-CFT standards.

    Timely and comprehensive macroeconomic data is essential to economic policymaking. The authorities have started publishing fiscal statistics in line with GFS standards and broadened the coverage of state-owned enterprises. Compilation of quarterly demand-side GDP data and expanding the use of GFS-based fiscal data would further strengthen data quality.

    Discussions on the policies to complete the second review under the PCI are well advanced and will continue following this mission. The mission would like to thank the Tajik authorities for their hospitality and close collaboration and express its appreciation for the constructive and insightful discussions.

     

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Angham Al Shami

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/05/02/mcs-tajikistan-staff-concluding-statement-for-the-2025-article-iv-mission

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Miller-Meeks, Carey Introduce Bill to Unleash American Energy and Boost Iowa Biofuels

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mariannette Miller-Meeks’ (IA-02)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Representatives Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-IA) and Mike Carey (R-OH) introduced legislation to extend critical tax incentives that support Iowa’s biofuels industry and advance American energy independence.

    “Iowa’s biofuels industry powers America and supports thousands of good-paying jobs across our state. We lead the nation in renewable fuel production, and it’s time our tax code reflected that strength. By extending tax incentives for biodiesel and second-generation biofuels,” said Miller-Meeks. “We’re delivering certainty for Iowa farmers and producers and furthering President Trump’s America First agenda for energy dominance. I’m proud to lead this effort during Renewable Fuels Month and will keep fighting to get this bill to the President’s desk.”

    “Biodiesel is a homegrown resource that can support our long-term energy independence and support farmers, producers, and energy workers right here in Ohio,” said Rep. Carey. “With America’s energy dominance at stake, we’re working to strengthen our supply of biodiesel for years to come.”

    “With the continued delay in the implementation of the 45Z tax credit, extending the 2nd Generation Biofuel Producer Tax Credit for two years is a much-needed bridge to a new tax regime, and would provide some certainty for many ethanol producers across this country,” said RFA President & CEO Geoff Cooper. “We applaud Reps. Miller-Meeks and Carey for taking action to protect the market for cellulosic ethanol made from grain fiber, which is the lowest-cost, lowest-carbon liquid fuel available in the marketplace today.”

    Background:

    Iowa leads the nation in both ethanol and biodiesel production. These renewable fuels are primarily made from Iowa-grown corn and soybeans and emit significantly less carbon than petroleum-based fuels—cutting emissions by over 70% in many cases.

    The Biodiesel Tax Credit and Second-Generation Biofuel Producer Tax Credit support innovation, reduce emissions, and create rural jobs by incentivizing the production and blending of renewable fuels. The bill has earned support from national industry leaders, including the American Trucking Associations, Renewable Fuels Association, and Clean Freight Coalition.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: The month of May brings a pair of inspiring new docs to nfb.ca: Saturday, by Jessica Hall, and Incandescence, by Nova Ami and Velcrow Ripper. Plus, special programming to mark Asian Heritage Month, and more.

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    May 1, 2025 – Montreal – National Film Board of Canada (NFB)

    Continue to Stream Canadian in May on nfb.ca! This month, explore two new documentaries from Yukon and British Columbia. Each in its own way offers an inspiring perspective:

    • In Saturday, by Jessica Hall, the filmmaker explores the joyful, creative life of her sister, who has an intellectual disability.
    • Incandescence, by Nova Ami and Velcrow Ripper, leads us to a new understanding of massive wildfires, a worldwide challenge.

    May is also Asian Heritage Month in Canada, which will be celebrated with a rich themed channel. The NFB wants to highlight the importance of sharing the distinctive stories and important contributions of people from Asian communities across the country. This is all the more crucial in the wake of the terrible attack on Vancouver’s Filipino-Canadian community on April 26, Lapu-Lapu Day.

    In addition, a blog post in conjunction with Mental Health Week (May 5–11) will explore animation filmmakers’ perspectives on the subject.

    Is Montreal on your itinerary? Starting Thursday, May 8, stop by the Alanis Obomsawin Theatre in the Quartier des Spectacles to enjoy a few gems from the NFB’s collection on the big screen, at the Hello Film! series. Free films, first-come, first-wowed!

    Remember, nfb.ca is home to more than 7,000 streaming films and a collection of over 100 interactive works.

    NEW ONLINE RELEASES

    Starting May 16

    Saturday by Jessica Hall (2025, NFB)
    Documentary (13 min 8 s) / Press kit

    • Filmmaker Jessica Hall’s sister Katherine manages her intellectual disability by leading an independent, creative and joyful life. Saturday documents her story. An inspiring tribute to a daughter and mother’s close and supportive relationship.
    • The film has been screened at a number of Canadian festivals, including the Available Light Film Festivalin Whitehorse, where it was shot.

    Starting May 26

    Incandescence by Nova Ami and Velcrow Ripper (2024, NFB)
    Documentary (105 min 22 s) / Press kit

    • Wildfires are burning with increasing intensity around the world. Following the rhythms of the seasons, the film is an immersive cinematic experience, weaving on-the-ground footage with extraordinary stories of survival and adaptation that transform our understanding of wildfire. From the flightpath of bees to an osprey’s aerial perspective, floating over the landscape: the Earth comes back.
    • The doc has been selected for festivals in Canada and the US, including the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. This spring, it played at sold-out screenings across British Columbia.
    • Incandescence will be shown in Montreal on Thursday, May 22,* as part of the Hello Film! series at the NFB’s Alanis Obomsawin Theatre.

    SPECIAL PROGRAMMING
    THEMED CHANNEL AND BLOG POSTS

     Marking Asian Heritage Month

    Channel: Asian-Canadian Perspectives

    Watch close to 30 NFB animated films and documentaries that centre around Asian communities and stories told from Asian perspectives. The selection includes Eisha Marjara’s Am I the skinniest person you’ve ever seen?, which won the prestigious Betty Youson Award for Best Canadian Short Documentary at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival.

    Celebrating the NFB’s 86th anniversary

    • English Collection Curator Camilo Martín-Flórez is publishing a new blog post on April 30.

    Marking Mental Health Week (May 5–11)

    • French Collection Curator Marc St-Pierre will publish the blog post “An Animated Journey into Mental Health, available soon.

    HELLO FILM! – FREE SCREENINGS IN MONTREAL

    Free admission (reservations required)

    Details: events.nfb.ca/hello-film-free-screenings-at-the-nfb

    Each of the films below will be preceded by a short to open the program.

    • Marking Asian Heritage Month

      Thursday, May 8, 2025, 7 p.m.:

      The Apology by Tiffany Hsiung (104 min)

      The film follows three former “comfort women” who were among the 200,000 girls and young women kidnapped and forced into military sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II.

    • Marking the International Day of Families

      Thursday, May 15, 2025, 7 p.m.:

      Seguridad by Tamara Segura (76 min)

      Once dubbed “Cuba’s youngest soldier” in a militia publicity stunt, Tamara Segura uncovers family secrets and portrays her troubled relationship with her father.

    • Looking ahead to Father’s Day in June

      Thursday, May 29, 2025, 7 p.m.:

      Sons by Justin Simms (70 min)

      As Donald Trump is elected to a first term in 2016, a first-time dad wrestles with traditional methods of raising boys. How do we teach our boys to become better men?

    The Hello Film! series will continue through July 31, with more films to discover or rediscover.

    To get to the NFB’s Alanis Obomsawin Theatre

    1500 Balmoral Street
    Montreal
    Place-des-Arts Metro

    Accessible to persons with reduced mobility.

    – 30 –

    Media Relations

    Jennifer Mair
    NFB Publicist
    C.: 416-436-0105
    j.mair@nfb.ca | @NFB_Jennifer

    Katja De Bock
    NFB Publicist
    C.: 778-628-4890
    k.debock@nfb.ca@NFB_Katja

    Lily Robert
    Director, Communications and Public Affairs, NFB
    C.: 514-296-8261
    l.robert@nfb.ca

    Stay Connected

    Online Screening Room: nfb.ca
    NFB Facebook | NFB Twitter | NFB Instagram | NFB Blog | NFB YouTube | NFB Vimeo
    Curator’s perspective | Director’s notes

    About the NFB

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Pressley, Tonko Demand Investigation Into Trump’s Attack on Smithsonian Museums, Brazen Attempt to Whitewash History

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07)

    Lawmakers Warn Funding Cuts, Politically Motivated Attacks Will Undermine Integrity of Smithsonian, Accuracy of Exhibits

    “Conditioning funding on adherence to prescribed, right-wing ideology jeopardizes the Smithsonian’s legal compliance oversight and its capacity to document American history and culture accurately,”

    Text of Letter (PDF) | Pressley Floor Speech (YouTube)

    WASHINGTON – Today, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07) and Congressman Paul Tonko (NY-20), Co-Chair of the Congressional Museum Caucus, led 69 of their colleagues on a letter to the Inspector General of the Smithsonian Institution demanding an investigation of the impact of Donald Trump’s harmful Executive Order attacking Smithsonian museums – namely, the American Art Museum, the American Women’s History Museum, and the National Museum of African American History and Culture – attempting to erase histories of marginalized communities.

    Earlier this year, Rep. Pressley delivered a floor speech slamming Trump’s attack on Smithsonian museums and affirming that Black history is American history.

    Created by Congress in 1846, the Smithsonian Institution has a clear mandate to operate as a non-partisan and autonomous museum, education, and research complex, free from political influence. Not only is it home to dozens of museums, libraries, education and research centers, and the National Zoo within Washington, D.C., but the Smithsonian also coordinates with over 200 affiliate organizations in nearly every state – all of which could be impacted by the proposed cuts and erasure of race and culture in the Executive Order.

     “On March 27, 2025, President Trump signed Executive Order 14253, which would infringe on the independence of the Smithsonian Institution to carry out its core mission to provide Americans and the world with the tools and information we need to forge our shared future,” the lawmakers wrote in their letter to Smithsonian Inspector General Nicole Angarella. “The funding cuts and content directives will undoubtedly have a devasting impact on the preservation and integrity of American history and culture.”

    The Trump Administration’s executive order specifically directs the Smithsonian Institution to remove exhibits and narratives it considers ‘divisive’ or ‘race-centered’, politicizing the Smithsonian’s foundational purpose and eroding public trust. Both the National Museum of African American History and Culture Act and the National Museum of the American Latino Act were enacted with strong bipartisan support, reflecting a shared commitment across party lines to explore, document, and interpret the central role of race and cultural identity in American history. Additionally, the funding cuts and content mandates would have a significant trickle-down effect on local museums and cultural organizations across the United States, diminishing the Smithsonian’s ability to provide guidance, professional development, and travel exhibits to smaller museums.

    “Conditioning funding on adherence to prescribed, right-wing ideology jeopardizes the Smithsonian’s legal compliance oversight and its capacity to document American history and culture accurately,” the lawmakers continue. “It is both ironic and self-defeating to demand that the Smithsonian Institution adhere to content mandates banning race, as doing so undermines the very rationale for the creation of these museums.”

    The lawmakers are requesting an inspector general investigation and report on findings including:

    • An audit of the operational and financial implications of the proposed content mandate and funding cuts, including the consequences on the Smithsonian Affiliates;
    • An audit of the expected impact on existing contractual obligations;
    • An analysis of EO 14253’s compliance with statutory requirements established by Congress;
    • Any documentation of deaccessioned artifacts following EO 14253 and plan to prevent the destruction or sale of cultural and historical artifacts; and
    • A recommendation for the Smithsonian Board of Regents on how to adhere to statutory law and the institutions’ public trust responsibilities.

    “Our shared responsibility is to ensure that the Smithsonian remains a source of inspiration and learning for all, free from undue political interference,” the lawmakers wrote.

    The letter was also signed by Representatives Gabe Amo (RI-01), Nanette Barragán (CA-44), Joyce Beatty (OH-03), Donald Beyer (VA-08), Suzanne Bonamici (OR-01), Julia Brownley (CA-26), Shontel Brown (OH-11), Troy Carter (LA-02), Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (FL-20), Judy Chu (CA-28), Yvette Clarke (NY-09), Emanuel Cleaver (MO-05), Jasmine Crockett (TX-30), Danny Davis (IL-07), Maxine Dexter (OR-03), Debbie Dingell (MI-12), Veronica Escobar (TX-16), Lizzie Fletcher (TX-07), ValeriE Foushee (NC-04), Laura Friedman (CA-30), Maxwell Frost (FL-10), Jesús García (IL-04), Steven Horsford (NV-04), Chrissy Houlahan (PA-06), Jared Huffman (CA-02), Jonathan Jackson (IL-01), Henry Johnson (GA-04), Julie Johnson (TX-32), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (CA-37), William Keating (MA-09), Robin Kelly (IL-02), Ro Khanna (CA-17), Teresa Leger Fernandez (NM-03), Lucy McBath (GA-06), Jennifer McClellan (VA-04), Betty McCollum (MN-04), James McGovern (MA-02), Gregory Meeks (NY-05), Grace Meng (NY-06), Kweisi Mfume (MD-07), Gwen Moore (WI-04), Jerrold Nadler (NY-12), Eleanor Norton (DC-AL), Ilhan Omar (MN-05), Scott Peters (CA-50), Chellie Pingree (ME-01), Stacey Plaskett (VI-AL), Mike Quigley (IL-05), Delia Ramirez (IL-03), Jamie Raskin (MD-08), Linda Sánchez (CA-38), Mary Gay Scanlon (PA-05), Janice Schakowsky (IL-09), Robert Scott (VA-03), Terri Sewell (AL-08), Suhas Subramanyam (VA-10), Shri Thanedar (MI-13), Bennie Thompson (MS-02), Dina Titus (NV-01), Rashida Tlaib (MI-12), Jill Tokuda (HI-02), Derek Tran (CA-45), Marc Veasey (TX-33), Nydia Velázquez (NY-07), Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25), Maxine Waters (CA-43), Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ-12), Nikema Williams (GA-05), and Frederica Wilson (FL-24).

    A copy of the letter is available here.

    Rep. Pressley has been an outspoken champion for intellectual freedom and diversity, equity, and inclusion program, and has been on the front lines of the fight against Trump and Republicans’ efforts to ban books and erase Black history.

    In April, Rep. Pressley delivered a floor speech slamming Trump’s attack on Smithsonian museums and affirming that Black history is American history.

    Rep. Pressley is also the author of the Books Save Lives Act legislation to confront the rise of book bans in America and ensure inclusive learning environments.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Lamont Directs Flags To Half-Staff Sunday for the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Service

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    (HARTFORD, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont today announced that he is directing U.S. and state flags in Connecticut lowered to half-staff from sunrise to sunset on Sunday, May 4, 2025, in recognition of the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Service, an annual ceremony hosted by the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation that serves as the official national tribute honoring all firefighters in the U.S. who have died in the line of duty.

    Accordingly, since no flag should fly higher than the U.S. flag, all other flags – including state, municipal, corporate, or otherwise – should also be lowered during this same duration of time.

    During this year’s ceremony, which will be held at the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Park in Emmitsburg, Maryland, a plaque containing the names of 140 fallen firefighters who died in the line of duty in 2024 and previous years will be added to the memorial, becoming a permanent part of the federal park. Among the names included will be one firefighter from Connecticut: Robert “Sharky” E. Sharkevich, Sr., an engineer from the Wethersfield Volunteer Fire Department and retired member of the Hartford Fire Department who died in the line of duty while operating at a brush fire at Lamentation Mountain in Berlin on October 22, 2024.

    “Firefighters go to work every day ready to risk their lives to protect the lives and homes of complete strangers, and we owe it to them to honor and recognize their fearlessness,” Governor Lamont said. “During this year’s memorial ceremony, we especially pay tribute to one of Connecticut’s own, Robert Sharkevich, Sr. of the Wethersfield Volunteer Fire Department, who lost his life in the line of duty. I am immensely thankful for the firefighters who protect Connecticut, and I am especially grateful for the families of firefighters who make many sacrifices themselves over the course of their loved one’s call to duty. I urge everyone in our state to reflect upon the bravery of firefighters who have given their lives in service.”

    “We are humbled by our firefighters’ sense of duty and commitment to keeping their communities safe,” Lt. Governor Susan Bysiewicz said. “They are truly heroes, demonstrating an unparalleled commitment to leadership, bravery, and dedication. Today, let us all take a moment to honor the sacrifice of our fallen firefighters and hold their loved ones in our hearts.”

    Flags will be at half-staff on the Connecticut State Capitol building and all other state-operated buildings, grounds, and facilities statewide. Individuals, businesses, schools, municipalities, and any other private entities and government subdivisions are encouraged to lower their flags for this same duration of time.

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: ESET Wins 2025 SC Award for Ransomware Remediation

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN DIEGO, May 02, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ESET, a global leader in cybersecurity, is proud to announce that ESET Ransomware Remediation has won a 2025 SC Award for Best Business Continuity, Disaster, Ransomware Recovery Solution. Presented on April 29 during the SC Awards Reception at RSAC™ 2025, this award recognizes ESET’s advanced Ransomware Remediation technology and its pivotal role in helping organizations mitigate ransomware threats and recover swiftly from attacks. The SC Awards program, now in its 28th year, recognizes the solutions, organizations, and individuals that have demonstrated outstanding achievement in advancing the security of information systems.

    “We are truly honored by this recognition, which affirms our belief that ransomware defense must go beyond prevention and empower speedy, seamless recovery,” said Ryan Grant, VP of Marketing and Sales at ESET North America. “With ESET Ransomware Remediation, we’ve built a solution that not only stops attacks in their tracks but also gives businesses the ability to bounce back quickly and confidently. It’s a critical step toward a future where organizations aren’t just reacting to threats, but are truly resilient in the face of them.”

    ESET Ransomware Remediation, part of the ESET PROTECT platform, distinguishes itself by creating temporary encrypted backups in a sequestered environment, enabling rapid data recovery even in the event of encryption by ransomware. Unlike solutions reliant on the Windows Volume Shadow Copy service, ESET’s proprietary approach works post-execution, in concert with ESET Ransomware Shield, to detect, block, and recover from ransomware attacks with minimal disruption.

    The SC Awards celebrate the most outstanding achievements in cybersecurity, from innovative technologies to forward-thinking organizations and individuals. The 2025 entries were evaluated across 33 specialty categories by a distinguished panel of judges, comprised of cybersecurity professionals, industry leaders, and members of the CyberRisk Alliance CISO community, representing sectors such as healthcare, financial services, education, and technology. The judging process emphasized technical merit, market impact, and the ability to solve real-world cybersecurity challenges. View the full list of 2025 SC Awards winners here: www.scworld.com/sc-awards.

    “This year’s winners rose to the top, but they did so in a field crowded with standout talent, bold ideas, and hard-earned innovation,” said Tom Spring, Senior Editorial Director, SC Media. “With more than 160 finalists and hundreds of submissions, the 2025 SC Awards reflect the depth, diversity, and dynamism of the cybersecurity community.”

    “SC Awards are recognized worldwide by the cybersecurity community, and we are honored to take home the Best Business Continuity, Disaster, Ransomware Recovery Solution award this year,” said Tony Anscombe, Chief Security Evangelist for ESET. “Cybersecurity solutions are evolving at breakneck speed, and these innovations are on full display this week at RSAC 2025. It was a pleasure to be recognized alongside some of the most innovative cybersecurity vendors in the industry at the SC Media Awards Ceremony.”

    For more information on ESET’s award-winning Ransomware Remediation solution, visit www.eset.com.

    About ESET

    ESET® provides cutting-edge digital security to prevent attacks before they happen. By combining the power of AI and human expertise, ESET stays ahead of emerging global cyberthreats, both known and unknown— securing businesses, critical infrastructure, and individuals. Whether it’s endpoint, cloud, or mobile protection, our AI-native, cloud-first solutions and services remain highly effective and easy to use. ESET technology includes robust detection and response, ultra-secure encryption, and multifactor authentication. With 24/7 real-time defense and strong local support, we keep users safe and businesses running without interruption. The ever-evolving digital landscape demands a progressive approach to security: ESET is committed to world-class research and powerful threat intelligence, backed by R&D centers and a strong global partner network. For more information, visit www.eset.com or follow our social media, podcasts and blogs.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Decision on The Blue Note Jazz Club | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

    The new premises licence application for The Blue Note Jazz Club was approved by the Licensing Sub-Committee yesterday (1st May).

    A Westminster City Council spokesperson said:

    Westminster is home to some of the capital’s most loved music venues and we want to ensure late night entertainment can continue to thrive.

    “Every licensing decision is carefully considered, based on the evidence presented to committee and keeping in mind the needs of residents.”

    “In this case it was clear that venue management have engaged extensively with local people to improve their application and address the concerns that were raised by the police.

    We’re pleased that, following the approval of this application, jazz lovers will soon be able to enjoy the Blue Note Jazz Club.”

    The council has launched its first ever Westminster After Dark Strategy to improve the city’s evening and night-time environment. The draft strategy, sets out a roadmap to ensure Westminster remains a world-class destination between 6pm and 6am, balancing a thriving economy with the needs of residents, businesses, and visitors.

    Speaking as Westminster City Council Cabinet Member for Planning and Economic Development, Cllr Geoff Barraclough said: 

    This is exactly the kind of venue we want to see more of in Westminster and which is encouraged in our After Dark strategy as part of a more varied evening and night time offer across the city. As a jazz lover I can’t wait to visit.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Harrisburg Man Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Firearms and Drug Trafficking

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    HARRISBURG – The United States Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Pennsylvania announced that Antoine Manning, age 46, of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, was      sentenced by United States District Judge Jennifer P. Wilson to 15 years of imprisonment on one count each of possession with intent to distribute cocaine and possession of a firearm in furtherance of drug trafficking.

    According to Acting United States Attorney John C. Gurganus, on February 17, 2020, Harrisburg police officers responded to a report of an armed man at a rooming house. As officers arrived, they saw Manning step onto the porch of the residence and throw an object. The officer who retrieved that object identified it as a loaded Sig Sauer semiautomatic pistol. After taking Manning into custody, police searched him and found 4.22 grams of cocaine, a digital scale dusted with white powder residue, a cellular phone, and $223 in cash.

    The case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Harrisburg Police Department. Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Scalera prosecuted the case.

    # # #

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: Reform enters government for the first time with mayoral election wins

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Alex Nurse, Reader in Urban Planning, University of Liverpool

    The UK now has two regional mayors representing the Reform party, following English local elections on May 1. This is the first time anyone from the party has held a government position at any level.

    Andrea Jenkyns, formerly a Conservative government minister, is now the mayor of Greater Lincolnshire following an election win on May 1. She becomes the first Reform and Luke Campbell is now mayor of Hull and East Yorkshire. Both are new mayoralities, created as part of the government’s developing devolution plans.

    The creation of more mayoralties meant that, perhaps inevitably, the near-monopoly that Labour held on mayors after the 2024 local elections has ended. But with an unproven track record, it’s reasonable to ask what we might expect from the new reform mayors as they take office.

    Since the first devolution deals were signed back in 2014, English devolution has always been about the ability of local governments to convince Westminster to let go of power. The result has been that devolution deals have varied in strength across the country.

    In broad terms, city regions have tended to get more powers, while others get slightly less. This means that not every new regional (also known as metro) mayor will be a budding Andy Burnham – though in practice most can expect to have core powers of housing, transport and education. Over time we have seen how the existing mayors have sought to inhabit those powers in their own way, and bring about their own priorities.

    So, we now wait to see what that means for the new mayors as they take power. We already know that Jenkyns’ election manifesto touched upon the key powers the mayor will hold (transport, education and the economy) but her agenda on these was painted only in the broadest of brush strokes.

    For example, there were promises to upgrade major roads, and to secure more funding for transport – although achieving both would require a willing Labour government to play nice. More realistic promises include more frequent buses which better serve parts of what is a large rural area, and creating skills bodies to work with local employers.


    Want more politics coverage from academic experts? Every week, we bring you informed analysis of developments in government and fact check the claims being made.

    Sign up for our weekly politics newsletter, delivered every Friday.


    Elsewhere, however, the manifesto delved into the realm of memes and bogeymen. For example, Jenkyns has proposed creating “DOGE Lincolnshire”, mirroring Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency in the US.

    This promises to cut government waste and “ensure efficiency”. Yet, given the combined authority she heads was only constituted in February, it’s not quite clear what inefficiencies Jenkyns is referring to.

    Another pledge is to push back against net zero – something that Reform seems to be using as their protest lodestar now that Brexit is no longer fertile feeding ground. Here, the policies seem to be to fight against national government policy on net-zero rather than anything really specific.

    Playing nicely with central government

    A regional mayor’s fate often hinges on their ability to interact effectively with central government – either by trying to secure concessions from it, or resisting it. Here, it will be very interesting to watch how Jenkyns, Campbell and the new Conservative mayor of Cambridge and Peterborough, Paul Bristow, assimilate.

    They are now members of the Council of the Regions – which for the last 12 months has been largely a cosy cabal of Labour mayors (and Tory Ben Houchen).

    How will Reform mayors – and Jenkyns in particular do business with the others? She is known as a disruptor so it could change the dynamic significantly.

    English local government is littered with examples of national government visiting retribution on local authorities for perceived transgressions. For example, most famously, Margaret Thatcher’s government abolished the Metropolitan Councils in 1986 for getting a bit too big for their boots. While there is no suggestion that will happen this time, current devolution deals are heavily premised on trust and ability to work with government.

    The other issue will be how what started as a protest party deals with the minutiae of governing. Mario Cuomo, a former governor of New York, once famously said that you campaign in poetry and govern in prose. Sometimes, however, local government can be about the grammar – dealing with those minor details.

    I remember interviewing a local councillor who once told me most of the time people want to talk about dog poo and bins. Equally, things like potholes are shown to be what residents want to see fixed.

    From now on, Jenkyns and other reform-led councils will have a record that they will have to defend. Ultimately, while a manifesto that is half-built on memes might grab attention on election day, it probably isn’t going to make the buses run on time.

    Alex Nurse receives funding from the ESRC.

    ref. Reform enters government for the first time with mayoral election wins – https://theconversation.com/reform-enters-government-for-the-first-time-with-mayoral-election-wins-255731

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE ERO Newark arrests illegally present Venezuelan wanted overseas for homicide

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    NEWARK, N.J. — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Enforcement and Removal Operations officers in Newark arrested Juan Luis Ramos Marin, 23, an illegal alien and Venezuelan fugitive wanted for homicide in his home country, in East Orange April 29.

    “This illegal alien wanted for a violent crime committed overseas was placed into removal proceedings for violating immigration law by illegally entering the United States,” said ICE Newark Field Office Director John Tsoukaris. “Ramos is a criminal alien with multiple charges for crimes committed on the East Coast primarily related to theft. We are dedicated to keeping our public safe from fugitives who think they can hide in the U.S.”

    On an unknown date and an unknown place, Ramos entered the United States, without being inspected, admitted or paroled by an immigration officer.

    Ramos has criminal convictions in the United States for disorderly conduct and petit larceny, with pending charges for multiple theft-related offenses, including property theft valued between $100 and $25,000, and possession of stolen property with intent to sell.

    On April 9, the U.S. Border Patrol referred Ramos to ICE Newark, identifying him as a fugitive from justice in Brazil.

    ICE Newark, with assistance from Homeland Security Investigations Newark and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, arrested Ramos April 29 and served him with a notice to appear before a Department of Justice immigration judge. He is detained in ICE custody without bond.

    Members of the public can report crimes and suspicious activity by dialing 866-DHS-2-ICE (866-347-2423) or completing the online tip form.

    Learn more about ICE’s mission to increase public safety in our communities on X at @ERONewark.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Murray Statement on President Trump’s Preliminary Budget Request

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington State Patty Murray
    Murray: “This is a proposal to raise costs and make life harder—and worse—for working people in every part of the country.” 
    Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, issued the following statement on President Trump’s fiscal year 2026 preliminary budget request, which proposes slashing critical investments in non-defense programs that matter immensely to families and our country’s competitiveness and future.  
    The Trump administration says this proposal will cut domestic funding by $163 billion (-23%); however, the real cut may be far worse—potentially exceeding a 30%, or more than $200 billion, cut to non-defense discretionary (NDD) spending. This preliminary request is very light on details. It fails to delineate funding levels for thousands of key programs, including programs like Head Start, which Trump reportedly wants to eliminate—and it is critical that this administration promptly provide its full budget request. 
    “President Trump has made his priorities clear as day: he wants to outright defund programs that help working Americans while he shovels massive tax breaks at billionaires like himself and raises taxes on middle-class Americans with his reckless tariffs.  
    “This budget proposal would set our country back decades by decimating investments to help families afford the basics, to keep communities safe, and to ensure America remains the world leader in innovation and lifesaving research. Donald Trump wants to slash funding for research into treatments and cures for cancer and other devastating diseases that have saved millions of patients’ lives, and he wants to kick hundreds of thousands of Americans out of their homes. He’s proposing to divest from America’s small businesses, ax funding for families to afford their energy bills, and rip resources away from students and teachers. Trump wants to rip away funding to safeguard Americans’ health, protect our environment, and to help rural communities and our farmers thrive. This president wants to turn our country’s back on Tribes—and let trash pile up at our national parks. Trump is even proposing to cut investments to prevent violent crime, go after drug traffickers, and tackle the opioids and mental health crises. 
    “This is a proposal to raise costs and make life harder—and worse—for working people in every part of the country, and it is a proposal to fundamentally make America less safe, healthy, and strong. China’s President Xi Jinping is no doubt thrilled at Trump’s proposal to halve our investments in scientific and biomedical research—and abandon America’s global leadership role. 
    “This president believes we should shred at least $163 billion in investments here at home that make all the difference for families and have been essential to America’s success—but that we should hand billionaires and the biggest corporations trillions in new tax breaks. That is outrageous—and it should offend every hardworking American who wants their tax dollars to help them live a good life, not pad the pockets of billionaires.
    “This preliminary budget proposal is exceptionally light on details we desperately need—but this much is clear: Trump wants to eviscerate programs that matter most to working families. 
    “I will work with my colleagues in Congress to firmly reject Trump’s draconian proposal to slash investments in families and America’s future. But that alone is not enough because, at this very moment, Trump is brazenly ignoring our laws and blocking hundreds of billions of dollars owed to the American people—and we need Republicans in Congress to finally join us to force Trump to put an end to his devastating funding freeze.” 
    More specifics on President Trump’s budget request will be available HERE later today. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: WTAS: Stakeholders Applaud Ciscomani’s Efforts to Protect Medicaid

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Juan Ciscomani (Arizona)

    “I cannot, and will not, support any legislation that reduces Medicaid benefits for vulnerable populations the program was intended to serve, like the working poor, individuals with disabilities, single mothers, and the elderly.”

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Local and national stakeholders are praising U.S. Congressman Juan Ciscomani for his efforts to protect Medicaid and ensure that vulnerable populations, like the working poor, single mothers, the elderly, continue to receive the benefits they depend on. 

    Recently, Ciscomani and 12 Republican colleagues sent a letter to House Republican leadership and Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Brett Guthrie making it clear that they will not vote for legislation that reduces Medicaid coverage for those who need it. You can read the full letter here

    “Medicaid benefits are a lifeline for our vulnerable populations, and I am committed to continue working to ensure these individuals are able to access the healthcare and support they need,” said Ciscomani. “While I support targeted reforms to fix flaws in the program, improve the delivery of care, and reduce the rate of improper payments, I cannot, and will not, support any legislation that reduces Medicaid benefits for vulnerable populations the program was intended to serve, like the working poor, individuals with disabilities, single mothers, and the elderly.” 

    This effort builds upon a previous letter Ciscomani sent to Speaker Mike Johnson making it clear that slashing or underfunding Medicaid, “would have serious consequences, particularly in rural and predominantly Hispanic communities where hospitals and nursing homes are already struggling to keep their doors open.” 

    This effort is supported by a number of local and national stakeholders including: El Rio Health, Banner Health, United Cerebral Palsy of Southern Arizona (UCPSA), Chiricahua Community Health Centers, Carondelet Health Network, the Arizona Association of Providers for People with Disabilities, the National Medical Association, Advocates for Community Health, the American Cancer Society in Arizona, the Federation of American Hospitals, American Health Care Association, America’s Essential Hospitals, the American Network of Community Options and Resources (ANCOR), the Arc of Tucson, and Advocates for Community Health. 

    WHAT THEY ARE SAYING 

    Clint Kuntz, Chief Executive Officer of El Rio Health: “We applaud Congressman Juan Ciscomani for taking action in support of preserving Medicaid coverage.  Medicaid is a vital lifeline for millions of Americans and even small cuts to this program could cause catastrophic effects for both the physical and economic health of our local communities. As a Community Health Center, El Rio Health is proud to serve these patients every day and ensure they receive the care they need to live healthy, productive lives.” 

    Amy Perry, President and Chief Executive Officer of Banner Health: “The Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS), Arizona’s version of Medicaid, is essential for millions of Arizonans to access high quality healthcare. Today, AHCCCS covers 26% of the state’s population, and proposed cuts to this program threaten access to care. This includes infants, children, pregnant women, the elderly, disabled, veterans, and the working poor. Reducing federal funding will leave our vulnerable community members without support and hospitals, rural care sites, and other critical access providers in peril.” 

    Dr. Cindy Mars, PhD, Chief Executive Officer of UCPSA: “At UCPSA, we are encouraged by Representative Ciscomani’s support in opposing cuts to Medicaid. His action demonstrates a clear understanding of the essential role Medicaid plays in ensuring that individuals with disabilities can live with dignity and independence in their communities. We appreciate his commitment to protecting the services that uplift families and sustain the workforce that cares for our most vulnerable.” 

    Rhonda Murray, Chief Operating Officer of UCPSA: “The health, independence, and very futures of people with disabilities depend on the strength of Medicaid. Cutting it would have heartbreaking and irreversible consequences. We thank Representative Ciscomani for standing up for our communities and ask him to continue his support to protect Medicaid and the people who rely on it every day.” 

    Dr. Virginia Caine, President of the National Medical Association: “Medicaid helps to ensure that hospitals and other healthcare providers can serve those in need. The National Medical Association believes it is important not to sacrifice the health and dignity of our most vulnerable neighbors. Doing so could negatively impact health outcomes, including mortality rates, and management of chronic diseases. We are in full support of Medicaid and advocate for its continued use.” 

    Chiricahua Community Health Centers: “Congressman Juan Ciscomani once again showed courage by signing onto a second letter calling for the protection of Medicaid. It builds on his earlier advocacy with the Congressional Hispanic Conference and signals meaningful leadership. But this fight isn’t over. We’re counting on Congressman Ciscomani to keep standing strong for the health of Arizona’s families by protecting Medicaid – health insurance that not only supports those who qualify but additionally supports the entire structure of rural healthcare access.” 

    Carondelet Health Network: “We appreciate Congressman Ciscomani’s work to oppose cuts to the Medicaid program that would harm constituents, providers, and Arizona’s economy. He signed onto a letter to House Leadership making it clear that he will not vote in favor of legislation that reduces Medicaid benefits. We appreciated the opportunity to discuss the impact of cuts to the Medicaid program and for his leadership on this critical issue.” 

    The American Cancer Society in Arizona: “Thank you Rep. Ciscomani for publicly stating the importance of Medicaid for your constituents and people nationwide in your letter to House leadership. Medicaid is a lifeline for cancer patients and all those at risk of developing this disease.” 

    The Arc of Tucson: “Thank you Rep. Ciscomani for your courageous stand, along with twelve other members of the U.S. House of Representatives, by writing a letter urging Congress to protect Medicaid during budget negotiations. We commend these leaders for their commitment to protecting Medicaid.” 

    ANCOR: “ANCOR appreciates Representative Ciscomani’s leadership in speaking out at this crucial time as cuts to Medicaid threaten the ability of people with disabilities to remain in their homes and communities. We are grateful to the Congressman for his firm commitment to protecting Medicaid from cuts that would have harmful impacts on our communities, families, and the provider network that supports people with disabilities through critical long-term services and supports.” 

    The Federation of American Hospitals: “Thank you, Rep. Ciscomani, for your commitment to protecting coverage and access to healthcare for your 207,131 constituents on Medicaid and the millions more seniors, children, and people with disabilities who rely on the program.” 

    American Health Care Association: “Thank you to the twelve Republicans who are standing up for seniors and our most vulnerable on Medicaid, especially those in nursing homes. In a new letter, they draw a red line – protect Medicaid or risk losing support for the reconciliation bill.” 

    ### 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Northwest Arkansas Business Owners Plead Guilty to Scheme to Defraud Pandemic Relief Loan Programs

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime News

    FAYETTEVILLE —A Florida couple, formerly of Northwest Arkansas, pleaded guilty Monday to defrauding Pandemic Relief Loan Programs. U.S. District Judge Timothy L. Brooks presided over the plea hearing, in which Fawaad Welch, age 41, and Julia Youngblood, age 41, both waived indictment and pleaded guilty to a criminal information.  Welch pled to wire fraud and Youngblood pled to misprision of a felony related to the scheme.

    According to court documents and statements made in court, between May of 2020 through October of 2021, Welch and Youngblood applied for Pandemic Relief Loan Programs through their Arkansas business, Slipstream Creative, LLC, which was a Northwest Arkansas advertising and marketing company located in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

    Throughout the applications, Welch provided the lenders with false statements regarding their assets and liabilities and the intended use of funds received through the SBA7(a), Economic Injury Disaster Loan and Main Street Loan Programs.  Youngblood them signed those application on behalf of the business.   According to the information filed by the Government, after receiving the loan funds, Welch then diverted large parts of the loan proceeds for the personal benefit of the couple.  For example, in the applications submitted for these loans, the couple failed to disclose material information such as tax liabilities and the fact that they were receiving loans from the other loan programs.  Also, within months of receiving $1.5 million in “working capital” Economic Injury Disaster Loan funds in October 2021, Welch transferred $1.3 million of that loan to the couple’s personal bank account.  The couple then purchased a home in Florida using $445,000 of those Government program loan funds.  

    According to the plea agreement entered into by Welch, after being asked by Generations Bank officials if Welch and Youngblood take salaries and informed that “the Fed restricts changes to your salaries with the [Main Street Loan Program] and doesn’t allow distributions, Welch replied, “Yes sir we do at 10k a month so all is good there.  5k a piece.”  After receiving the $3 million in program funds, within a month Welch had transferred $950,000 in Main Street Loan Program funds out of the business and to himself. 

    In the plea agreements with the Government, the couple agrees that pursuant to this scheme, they should be held accountable for more than $3.5 million but less than $9.0 million in intended loss.

    Following the preparation of a presentence investigation report by the U.S. Probation Office, Welch and Youngblood will be scheduled to be sentenced at a later date. Welch faces a maximum penalty of twenty (20) years in prison, and Youngblood faces a maximum penalty of three (3) years in prison.  Both individuals will also be assessed a period of supervised release, monetary penalties, and restitution. U.S. District Judge Timothy L. Brooks will determine the couple’s sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    United States Attorney David Clay Fowlkes announced the change of plea hearings.

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation, Office of Inspector General for the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and the Special Inspector General for Pandemic Relief investigated the case.

    U. S. Attorney David Clay Fowlkes and Assistant U.S. Attorney Ben Wulff are prosecuting the case for the United States.

    The Fraud Section leads the Criminal Division’s prosecution of fraud schemes that exploit the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). Since the inception of the CARES Act, the Fraud Section has prosecuted over 150 defendants in more than 95 criminal cases and has seized over $75 million in cash proceeds derived from fraudulently obtained PPP funds, as well as numerous real estate properties and luxury items purchased with such proceeds. More information can be found at

    Justice.gov/OPA/pr/justice-department-takes-action-against-covid-19-fraud.

    Related court documents may be found on the Public Access to Electronic Records website at www.pacer.gov.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Father Sentenced to Life Plus 10 Years for First Degree Murder and Assault; Sons Sentenced for Their Involvement

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    TULSA, Okla. – A father was sentenced after being convicted by a jury of first-degree murder and assault, announced U.S. Attorney Clint Johnson.

    U.S. District Judge Gregory K. Frizzell sentenced James William Buzzard, 52, to life imprisonment, plus 10 years, after a jury convicted Buzzard of First Degree Murder in Indian Country, Assault with a Dangerous Weapon with Intent to do Bodily Harm in Indian County, and Carrying, Using, or Discharging a Firearm During and in Relation to a Crime of Violence.

    Before the trial began, James Buzzard’s co-defendants and sons pleaded guilty to their involvement in the murder of Jerry Tapp.

    Cody Dwayne Buzzard, 31, pled guilty to Second Degree Murder in Indian Country, and Carrying, Using, Brandishing, and Discharging a Firearm During and in Relation to a Crime of Violence. Judge Frizzell ordered Cody Buzzard to serve 300 months’ imprisonment, followed by five years of supervised release.

    Dakota Chase Buzzard, 23, pled guilty to Conspiracy to Carry, Use, Brandish, and Discharge a Firearm During and in Relation to a Crime of Violence. Judge Frizzell ordered Dakota Buzzard to serve 78 months’ imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised release.

    In August 2019, the Delaware County Sheriff’s Office responded to a 911 call about a shooting. Upon arrival, deputies discovered Jerry Tapp deceased in his front yard with multiple gunshot wounds. Deputies found a second victim alive, who was shot in the arm. 

    Witness interviews led law enforcement to Dakota Buzzard, who was driving a white, 4-door Altima, matching the description of the vehicle seen leaving. Law enforcement found spent casings in the yard, driveway, and roadway. They also found additional casings in the vehicle and the rifle used in the shooting.

    Court documents showed that the defendants waited for Jerry Tapp to return home from work. Once Jerry Tapp exited the vehicle, James Buzzard shot at Jerry, and handed the gun to Cody Buzzard, who continued shooting.

    The FBI, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, and the Delaware County Sheriff’s Office investigated the case, and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Reagan Reininger and Eric O. Johnston prosecuted the case.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Foreign Exchange and Liquidity and Monthly Balance Sheet, April 2025

    Source: Danmarks Nationalbank

    THE FOREIGN-EXCHANGE RESERVE

    In April 2025, the foreign-exchange reserve increased by kr. 5.5 billion to kr. 661.4 billion. The increase reflects Danmarks Nationalbank’s net purchase of foreign exchange for kr. 6.3 billion, and the central government’s net repayment of foreign debt for kr. 0.8 billion, cf. table 1.

    For settlement in April, Danmarks Nationalbank has not intervened in the foreign exchange market.

    Danmarks Nationalbank’s net foreign-exchange purchases and the change in the foreign-exchange reserve – table 1

    Kr. billion April 2025 January 2025 – April 2025
    Danmarks Nationalbank’s interventions* to purchase foreign exchange, net 0.0 0.0
    Other** 6.3 6.2
    Danmarks Nationalbank’s net foreign-exchange purchases 6.3 6.2
    The central government’s net foreign borrowing*** -0.8 0.8
    Change in the foreign-exchange reserve 5.5 6.9

    Note: Details may not add because of rounding and previously published figure may have been revised. All transactions as per settlement date.

    * Intervention takes place when Danmarks Nationalbank purchases and sells foreign exchange for Danish kroner in the foreign-exchange market in order to stabilise the exchange rate.

    ** Comprises e.g. interest accrued on the foreign-exchange reserve, the central government’s net payments in foreign exchange, and changes in the banks’ deposits in euro-denominated accounts at Danmarks Nationalbank.

    *** Including net payments to the central government in foreign exchange as a result of currency swaps.

    DEVELOPMENT IN LIQUIDITY

    In April, the central government’s net financing requirement amounted to kr. 30.7 billion. Since the turn of the year, the central government’s net financing requirement has been kr. -39.0 billion, cf. table 2.

    The net position of the banks and mortgage-credit institutes vis-à-vis Danmarks Nationalbank increased by kr. 29.7 billion in April, to an outstanding amount of kr. 226.7 billion. In April, the central government’s liquidity impact increased the net position by kr. 24.9 billion.

    Impact of various factors on the net position of the banks and mortgage-credit institutes via-a-vis Danmarks Nationalbank – table 2

    Kr. billion April 2025 January 2025 – April 2025
    The central government’s net financing 30.7 -39.0
    Redemption on domestic central-government debt* 2.5 25.9
    Net bond purchases by the government funds and own portfolio and financing of social housing -2.4 -3.2
    Other** 0.1 0.9
    The central government’s gross domestic financing requirement 30.9 -15.4
    The central government’s gross domestic borrowing*** 6.0 26.2
    The central government’s liquidity impact 24.9 -41.6
    Danmarks Nationalbank’s net foreign-exchange purchases 6.3 6.2
    Danmarks Nationalbank’s net bond purchases -1.5 -1.0
    Other factors**** 0.1 2.6
    Change in net position 29.7 -33.8

    Note: Details may not add because of rounding and previously published figure may have been revised. All transactions as per settlement date.

    * Including krone-denominated payments by the central government in currency swaps.

    ** Comprises foreign net financing requirement and changes in net collateral for the government’s swap portfolio.

    *** Gross long-term borrowing, net short-term borrowing and krone-denominated payments to the central government in currency swaps.

    **** Comprises e.g. changes in banknotes and coins in circulation.

    DANMARKS NATIONALBANK’S INTEREST RATES

    Since 22 April 2025 the discount rate has been 1.85 pct. p.a., since 22 April 2025 the current-account interest rate has been 1.85 pct. p.a., since 22 April 2025 the lending rate has been 2 pct. p.a. and since 22 April 2025 the rate of interest on certificates of deposit has been 1.85 pct. p.a.

    Enquiries can be directed to press advisor Teis Hald Jensen on tel. +45 3363 6066.

    BALANCE SHEET OF DANMARKS NATIONALBANK 30 APRIL 2025

    Assets 2025 2025
    1000 kr. 30/04 31/03
    Stock of gold 40,309,044 40,309,044
    Foreign assets 567,242,187 566,903,540
    Claims on the International Monetary Fund 59,630,332 58,795,259
    Claims related to banks’ and mortgage credit institutes’ TARGET accounts in ECB 35,894 31,871
    Monetary-policy lending 1,000 42,500,000
    Other lending 1,160,292 1,115,648
    – Banks’1) 1,160,292 1,115,648
    – Miscellaneous loans
    Domestic bonds 32,869,523 34,339,090
    Financial fixed assets, etc. 131,550 131,550
    Tangible and intangible fixed assets 715,435 713,929
    Other assets 5,170,251 4,708,505
    707,265,508 749,548,436

    1) Other lending to banks include loans for cash deposits.

    Liabilities 2025 2025
    1000 kr. 30/04 31/03
    Banknotes 46,730,241 46,643,535
    Coins 6,088,949 6,099,641
    Monetary-policy deposits 226,668,294 239,426,941
    – Current accounts 226,668,294 239,426,941
    – Certificates of deposit
    Other deposits 15,175,216 14,825,201
    – Deposits related to banks’ and mortgage credit institutes’ TARGET accounts in ECB 35,894 31,871
    – Other deposits from banks’ and mortgage credit institutes’ 947,726 1,105,229
    – Miscellaneous deposits 14,191,596 13,688,101
    Central government 254,056,564 279,684,059
    Foreign liabilities 5,801,316 10,131,593
    Counterpart of Special Drawing Rights allocated by the IMF (SDR) 45,039,776 45,039,776
    Other liabilities 6,866,227 6,858,765
    Capital and reserves 100,838,925 100,838,925
    707,265,508 749,548,436

    Note: The monthly balance sheet is calculated at beginning of year values +/- accumulated transaction values. The monthly balance does not include value adjustments and accruals, as these are only calculated at year-end, cf. Danmarks Nationalbank’s accounting principles.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI USA: A Call for New Research in the Area of Nutritional Standards in SNAP

    Source: US Congressional Budget Office

    The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) provides benefits that help eligible low-income households purchase food. Most enrolled households supplement SNAP benefits with personal funds (Tiehen, Newman, and Kirlin 2017). The Congressional Budget Office estimates that in 2025, an average of 42.5 million people will receive SNAP benefits each month, with an average monthly benefit of $188 per recipient (CBO 2025).

    SNAP benefits can be used to buy many foods, although some items, such as hot prepared meals, are excluded. Lawmakers have asked CBO how adding nutritional standards to SNAP might affect the federal budget. Such standards would restrict purchases of foods linked to poor health outcomes, such as sugar-sweetened beverages, using SNAP benefits. New research would help the agency assess their budgetary effects.

    How Would Nutritional Standards in SNAP Affect the Federal Budget?

    To assess the budgetary effects of adding nutritional standards to SNAP, CBO would estimate:

    • The costs of implementing the policy,
    • Any offsetting savings resulting from the improved health of SNAP recipients, and
    • Any savings from reduced participation in the program.

    Estimating savings from improved health requires evidence about changes in food purchases and consumption and how those changes affect diet quality, health outcomes, and spending on health care. The federal budgetary effects would depend on SNAP recipients’ health insurance coverage and federal subsidies for that coverage. Although CBO’s cost estimates focus on a 10-year period, the agency would, if practicable, assess longer-term budgetary effects.

    To gather that evidence, the agency examined two main types of research: randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and simulation models specific to the SNAP population. In CBO’s assessment, that research literature has limitations stemming from the relatively small number of existing studies and from differences in conclusions among studies that have used different methodological approaches.

    CBO also reviewed the literature on how taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages affect food consumption, health, and health care spending. If restrictions on SNAP purchases effectively raise the prices of targeted items, people may respond much as they do to those taxes. Although other interventions also aim to reduce the consumption of unhealthy foods, CBO focused on sugar-sweetened beverage taxes because of the strength and depth of the evidence in that area.

    What Have RCTs Found About the Effects of Nutritional Standards in SNAP or Similar Programs on Diet Quality?

    In CBO’s assessment, the evidence on how SNAP beneficiaries would respond to restrictions on items that are eligible for purchase with SNAP benefits is unclear. Two RCTs found that restrictions on sugary foods alone did not improve the diets of low-income households receiving SNAP-like benefits (Harnack and others 2024; Harnack and others 2016). The lack of an effect may have been due to recipients’ use of their own funds to buy restricted items or their substitution of similar foods.

    Those studies also examined the combined effects of restrictions and incentives (that is, additional funds for the purchase of healthier foods), with mixed results. The 2016 study showed improved diet quality, but the 2024 study found no improvement. Methodological differences could explain those inconsistent findings.

    Direct evidence that incentives can improve food consumption among SNAP recipients has come from the Healthy Incentives Pilot, a 2011 RCT involving a large group of SNAP recipients. In that study, participants who received an additional 30 cents for every SNAP dollar spent on certain fruits and vegetables consumed about 25 percent more of those items daily than participants who received standard SNAP benefits (Bartlett and others 2014).

    What Do Simulation Models Suggest About the Effects of Nutritional Standards in SNAP on Health and Health Care Spending?

    Diet quality can affect health. For certain populations, such as people with diet-related chronic diseases, dietary improvements can have clear benefits in the near term (see, for example, Estruch and others 2018; Appel and others 1997). For other populations, such as children, some evidence suggests that improvements in diet quality, including lower exposure to sugar, can improve health over the longer term (Gracner, Boone, and Gertler 2024; Gertler and Gracner 2022).

    Three simulation studies have estimated how nutritional restrictions in SNAP would affect health and health care spending (Choi, Wright, and Bleich 2021; Mozaffarian and others 2018; Basu and others 2014). Those studies modeled how SNAP recipients would change their consumption behavior in response to changes in program rules, accounting for the fact that recipients often shift some spending between SNAP benefits and personal funds when SNAP policies change. The studies linked the projected changes in consumption to expected health outcomes and health care costs, using evidence from prior research.

    Findings from those simulation studies suggest that restricting purchases of sugar-sweetened beverages with SNAP dollars would improve health outcomes. One study found that restrictions would lead to lower obesity rates and lower incidence of type 2 diabetes (Basu and others 2014). Another suggested that restrictions would reduce cases of cardiovascular disease and health care spending (Mozaffarian and others 2018). The third study found that restricting purchases of sugar-sweetened beverages would reduce dental cavities among children, but the effects on obesity would vary depending on food substitutions (Choi, Wright, and Bleich 2021).

    Two of those three studies also modeled the effects of incentives alone, with mixed results: One found that incentives on their own would not change health outcomes (Basu and others 2014), whereas the other found that incentives would lead to improvements in health and reductions in health care spending (Mozaffarian and others 2018).

    What Have Research Studies Found About the Effects of Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Taxes on Health?

    Eight cities or areas in the United States have imposed taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages (World Bank 2023). There is substantial evidence showing that taxes reduce sales of such beverages but limited evidence linking those reductions in sales to improvements in health (Hoffer and Macumber-Rosin 2025; Cawley and Frisvold 2023). Improvements in health may be limited because people substitute the taxed beverages with other high-calorie products or travel to areas without such taxes to purchase them (Hoffer and Macumber-Rosin 2025; Cawley and others 2019).

    SNAP participants may respond to restrictions on unhealthy food purchases similarly to how consumers react to sugar-sweetened beverage taxes—by reducing consumption—if they perceive those restrictions as price increases. That perception depends on whether participants view SNAP benefits as equivalent to cash. If they do, they may simply use cash to buy restricted items. But people often treat SNAP benefits and cash differently (Hastings and Shapiro 2018). In that case, restrictions may effectively raise the perceived cost of targeted products, decreasing their consumption.

    What New Research Would Be Especially Useful?

    Additional research on how nutritional standards affect SNAP recipients’ food choices, health outcomes, and health care spending would help CBO provide more complete information to the Congress. Key areas that would benefit the agency’s analysis include the effects of the consumption of specific foods on overall diet quality; the extent to which changes in diet alone affect health, when many factors influence health; differences in policy effects among subgroups of people (based on age or prevalence of chronic conditions); and the near- and long-term implications of nutritional standards for health and health care spending. Research on how SNAP enrollment changes in response to nutritional standards is also needed. Restrictions could make the program less desirable, potentially reducing enrollment. Evidence on such changes in enrollment would help CBO estimate the effects on the program’s costs. And additional evidence on how participants substitute between SNAP benefits and cash would further inform the agency’s projections of the likely effects of nutritional standards in the program.

    Different study designs could help fill those gaps:

    • New RCTs would be valuable. Ideally, studies would randomly assign SNAP benefits with and without nutritional standards to large numbers of recipients across geographic areas, track purchases of food with SNAP benefits and with personal funds, and collect information on consumption. Linking that information to health metrics, health care spending, disability claims, and employment records would allow CBO to examine a wide range of near- and long-term outcomes.
    • Studies using simulation models could illustrate the sensitivity of results to different inputs and assumptions. CBO would also benefit from reviewing the code underlying those models.
    • Natural experiments, in which policy changes subject some people to an intervention but not others, would also be useful. Those studies would compare outcomes in areas where nutritional standards are adopted with outcomes in similar areas where they are not adopted.

    Because each design has strengths and limitations, those different designs are complementary. For example, RCTs are considered ideal for isolating the effects of an intervention, but their relevance can be limited by small sample sizes, short time frames, and high attrition rates. Simulation models can use survey data to assess larger samples over longer time frames, but they require simplification of complex behavioral and physiological mechanisms and are dependent on the quality of inputs and assumptions. A mix of designs would therefore strengthen the evidence base.

    Noelia Duchovny is an analyst in CBO’s Health Analysis Division. This blog post includes contributions from the following CBO staff: Susan Yeh Beyer, Elizabeth Cove Delisle, Jennifer Gray, Tamara Hayford, Rebecca Heller, Jeffrey Kling, Aditi Sen, Emily Stern, Julie Topoleski, Chapin White, and Heidi Williams (a consultant to CBO).

    As part of the legislative process, CBO supplies the Congress with cost estimates for legislation, economic and budget projections, and other economic assessments. Information from the research community is an important element of CBO’s analyses. This is the 11th in a series of blog posts discussing research that would enhance the quality of the information that CBO uses in its work. (Earlier posts in the series discussed the need for new research in the areas of energy and the environment, finance, health, hepatitis C, labor, macroeconomics, national security, new drug development, obesity, and taxes and transfers.) Please send comments to communications@cbo.gov.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NCDHHS and Hazel Health Kick-Off Partnership to Provide More Than 400,000 North Carolina K-12 Students with Virtual Mental Health Services

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: NCDHHS and Hazel Health Kick-Off Partnership to Provide More Than 400,000 North Carolina K-12 Students with Virtual Mental Health Services

    NCDHHS and Hazel Health Kick-Off Partnership to Provide More Than 400,000 North Carolina K-12 Students with Virtual Mental Health Services
    hejones1

    The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS), Harnett County Schools and Hazel Health are gathering on Wednesday, May 7, to officially kick off their partnership that will bring virtual mental health care services to over 400,000 of North Carolina’s K-12 student population. 

    Any student who is enrolled within participating districts can access one of Hazel’s on-staff, licensed therapists before, during and after the school day. Hazel services are also available to students throughout the summer break.

    Services are live at Harnett County Schools and Durham Public Schools, with more districts to be added in the coming weeks.

    This initiative, supported through an investment by UnitedHealthcare, is part of a broader effort announced last year to provide virtual school-centered mental health care for up to one million students across select states nationwide. Read more about the official partnership in NCDHHS’ news release.

    More than 1 in 3 high school students in North Carolina have reported feeling sad or hopeless, along with almost 1 in 3 middle school students. While there are early signs signaling improvement, the numbers still paint a grim picture of the health and well-being of our nation’s youngest generation.

    Speakers include: Dr. Dev Sangvai, Secretary, NCDHHS 
                                            Stacie Forrest, Child Behavioral Health Unit Manager, Division of Child and Family Well-Being (DCFW), NCDHHS
                                            W. Brooks Matthews, Superintendent, Harnett County Schools
                                            Jermaine H. White, III, Ed.S., Assistant Superintendent, Student Support Services, Harnett County Schools
                                            Anita Bachmann, CEO, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of North Carolina
                                            Kevin Winters, VP of Strategic Growth, Hazel Health

    Date: Wednesday, May 7
                 2 – 3 p.m.  

    Location: Lillington – Shawtown Elementary School
                         855 Old US Hwy 421
                         Lillington, NC 27546
                         (Google Map)

    Members of the Hazel team will be on site to provide a walk through of how students are able to access Hazel services through the end of the 2024-25 school year and throughout the summer.

    To learn more or to request b-roll or photos of the event, please reach out to Liz Austin at elizabethaustin@hazel.co or call (203) 339-2992. 

    ###

    About Hazel Health: 
    Hazel Health is the nation’s largest and most trusted provider of school-based telehealth. By partnering with districts and health plans across the country, Hazel transforms schools into the most accessible front door to pediatric healthcare. Today, Hazel’s licensed providers deliver teletherapy and virtual care (in school or at home) to over five million K-12 students, regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay. Hazel aims to remove all barriers to the mental and physical health care that children need to thrive: in school, at home, and in life.

    May 1, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: USS Cape St. George Arrives in San Diego after Modernization

    Source: United States Navy Pacific Fleet 1

    SAN DIEGO – The Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Cape St. George (CG 71) arrived Apr. 22 in its new homeport of Naval Base San Diego, California from Naval Base Everett, Washington, after conducting phased modernization at Vigor Shipyard in Seattle. This move was a permanent change of station for the crew and family members.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: April Consumer Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Filings Increase 16 Percent from Previous Year

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, May 02, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The 30,961 individual chapter 7 filings in April 2025 represented a 16 percent increase over the 26,781 filings recorded in April 2024, according to data provided by Epiq AACER, the leading provider of U.S. bankruptcy filing data.

    Total individual bankruptcy filings increased 10 percent in April 2025, to 47,323, up from the April 2024 individual filing total of 43,030. The 16,246 individual chapter 13 filings in April 2025 represented a slight increase from the 16,175 individual chapter 13 filings last April.

    “The 9 percent increase in total bankruptcy filings in April 2025, particularly the 16 percent surge in individual chapter 7 filings, reflects the mounting financial strain on households, elevated prices, and higher borrowing costs,” said Michael Hunter, Vice President of Epiq AACER. “While commercial filings have softened, the uptick in small business Subchapter V elections signals persistent distress among smaller businesses navigating an uncertain economic landscape.

    “April 2025’s data underscores a continued rise in individual bankruptcies, with 47,323 filings driven by economic pressures like inflation and geopolitical uncertainties,” Hunter said. “Although commercial Chapter 11 filings declined, the 4 percent growth in subchapter V filings highlights the ongoing challenges for small businesses seeking relief, pointing to a broader need for accessible restructuring options.”

    Total bankruptcy filings were 49,588 in April 2025, a 9 percent increase from the April 2024 total of 45,615. Conversely, total April commercial filings dipped 12 percent to 2,265 from the 2,585 total commercial filings the previous year. Commercial chapter 11 bankruptcy filings decreased 20 percent in April 2025, declining to 434 from the 542 filings registered in April 2024. Small business filings, however, captured as subchapter V elections within chapter 11, increased 4 percent in April 2025, to 218 from the 210 filings recorded in April 2024.

    “While filings still remain below pre-pandemic levels, elevated prices, higher borrowing costs and uncertain geopolitical events compound the economic challenges faced by families and businesses,” said ABI Executive Director Amy Quackenboss. “We look forward to providing Congress with the research, information and statistics to re-establish higher debt thresholds for financially distressed small businesses and consumers to access the fresh start of bankruptcy.”

    ABI has partnered with Epiq Bankruptcy to provide the most current bankruptcy filing data for analysts, researchers, and members of the news media. Epiq Bankruptcy is the leading provider of data, technology, and services for companies operating in the business of bankruptcy. Its Bankruptcy Analytics subscription service provides on-demand access to the industry’s most dynamic bankruptcy data, updated daily. Learn more at https://bankruptcy.epiqglobal.com/analytics.

    About Epiq
    Epiq, a technology and services leader, takes on large-scale and complex tasks for corporate legal departments, law firms, and business professionals by integrating people, process, technology, and data. Clients rely on Epiq to streamline legal and compliance, settlement, and business administration workflows to drive efficiency, minimize risk, and improve cost savings. With a presence in 19 countries, our values define who we are and how we partner with clients and communities. Learn how Epiq’s approximately 8,000 people worldwide create meaningful change at www.epiqglobal.com

    About ABI 
    ABI is the largest multi-disciplinary, nonpartisan organization dedicated to research and education on matters related to insolvency. ABI was founded in 1982 to provide Congress and the public with unbiased analysis of bankruptcy issues. The ABI membership includes nearly 10,000 attorneys, accountants, bankers, judges, professors, lenders, turnaround specialists and other bankruptcy professionals, providing a forum for the exchange of ideas and information. For additional information on ABI, visit www.abi.org. For additional conference information, visit http://www.abi.org/calendar-of-events.

    Press Contacts
    Carrie Trent
    Epiq, Senior Director of Corporate Communications and Public Relations
    Carrie.Trent@epiqglobal.com

    John Hartgen
    ABI, Public Affairs Officer
    jhartgen@abi.org

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Best Guaranteed Installment Loans For Bad Credit – Online Approval No Credit Check Direct Lenders Only – By Green Trust Cash

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LAS VEGAS, May 02, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Do you want to apply for a loan that gives you an easy repayment option? Then you must apply for installment bad credit loans with guaranteed approval. Fortunately, direct lenders have made it possible for you to get cash easily and instantly as they have removed all the hectic formalities.

    Today’s Top Direct Lender For Installment Loans With Guaranteed Approval

    Here are the leading direct lender that provide guaranteed installment loans for people with bad credit:

    #1 Green Trust Cash – is known for offering no credit check installment loans . Green Trust Cash provides emergency funding of up to $5000, with a straightforward application process that can lead to quick approvals. Also specializes in bad credit installment loans with guaranteed approval. Their application process is designed to be simple and quick, requiring only a few minutes to complete. Importantly, they do not conduct hard credit checks, making them a viable option for many borrowers.

    Click Here To APPLY For Guaranteed Installment Loan >>

    Guaranteed Installment Loans For Bad Credit

    Installment loans with guaranteed approval are becoming more and more popular among borrowers with bad credit histories. Because basically this is an unsecured loan i.e. you don’t need to pledge collateral for the borrowed money. All the risk is taken by installment loan lenders. That’s why these loans are available to you with high interest rates.

    The reimbursement term for this loan type is quite convenient. You can make a settlement in easy monthly installments. Unsecured format allows you to have cash even in the absence of collateral. Under this format you can get cash in the range of $100-$5000 without any hassle. So if you are a citizen of the USA, your age is above 18 years and you have a valid bank account then you can easily get guaranteed approval for installment bad credit loans.

    Key Features of Guaranteed Bad Credit Installment Loans

    1. Accessibility: One of the primary advantages of no credit check installment loans is their accessibility. These loans do not require a formal review of the borrower’s credit history or score, making them an attractive option for those with poor or no credit.
    2. Quick Approval Process: The absence of a credit check often leads to a faster approval process. Borrowers can receive funds quickly, which is particularly beneficial in emergencies or when immediate financial assistance is needed.
    3. Predictable Payments: With fixed monthly payments, borrowers can budget more effectively. This predictability helps in planning finances and avoiding the pitfalls of fluctuating payments associated with other types of loans.
    4. Larger Loan Amounts: Many lenders offer substantial loan amounts through installment loans, allowing borrowers to cover significant expenses, such as medical bills, home repairs, or unexpected emergencies.
    5. Potential for Credit Improvement: While these loans do not require a credit check, timely repayments can positively impact a borrower’s credit score over time. This can open doors to better financing options in the future.

    Click Here To APPLY For Guaranteed Installment Loan >>

    Installment Loans With No Credit Check

    No credit check installment loans are actually meant for those persons who are facing some monetary problems and want them to be resolved within a short period of time. These installment loans help them in solving their difficulties in a single day and the best part is that their past credit profile will not interfere with recent credit worthiness.

    Getting a loan is not a problem these days. The problem is with repayment of the loan. Most of the short term loans are to be repaid within a month or so. They are usually to be repaid in one go only. This is where the problem starts. Borrowers generally find it very difficult to repay the debt taken with interest in a single part. To overcome this today lenders have introduced installment loans with no credit check. This type of personal loan is very simple to obtain and then the loan may be repaid in easy weekly or bi-weekly or monthly installments.

    Considerations When Choosing No Credit Check Installment Loans

    While the benefits are appealing, borrowers should also be aware of certain considerations:

    • Interest Rates: Installment loans no credit check may come with higher interest rates compared to traditional loans. It is essential for borrowers to understand the total cost of borrowing before committing.
    • Loan Terms: The terms of these loans can vary significantly between direct lenders. Borrowers should carefully review the repayment terms, including the duration and any associated fees.
    • Lender Reputation: It is crucial to choose a reputable direct installment loan lender. Researching reviews and ratings can help ensure that borrowers are working with trustworthy institutions.

    Click Here To APPLY For No Credit Check Installment Loan >>

    Online Installment Loans Direct Lenders Only

    The direct lender installment loans with no credit check, is the fastest way to get instant cash. It is the best financial support for people in tough times. You can repay this money in small and easy cash installments.

    What Are Direct Lenders?

    Direct lenders are financial institutions or companies that provide loans directly to consumers without involving intermediaries. This means that borrowers can apply for installment loans, receive approval, and manage their repayments all through the same entity. Working with direct lenders can simplify the borrowing process and often leads to more favorable terms.

    Today you can easily find numerous installment loan providers on the internet. You just need to discover the one who can offer you credit with easy terms and circumstances and a low rate of interest. Some of the top direct lenders available today are listed in this guide. You can select one of them to meet your financial needs and apply for an installment loan online.

    Pros of Choosing Direct Lenders for Installment Loans

    When considering installment loans, opting for direct lenders only can offer several advantages:

    1. Streamlined Process: Borrowers can complete the entire loan process—from application to funding—without dealing with third parties, which can reduce delays and confusion.
    2. Transparent Terms: Direct lenders typically provide clear information regarding interest rates, fees, and repayment schedules, allowing borrowers to make informed decisions.
    3. Potentially Lower Costs: By eliminating intermediaries, direct lenders may offer more competitive rates and lower fees compared to loans obtained through brokers.
    4. Flexible Options: Many direct lenders provide a range of loan amounts and repayment terms, catering to the diverse needs of borrowers.

    Benefits Of Guaranteed Bad Credit Installment Loans Online

    Guaranteed bad credit installment loans offer a range of benefits that can significantly aid individuals struggling with poor credit. From the opportunity to rebuild credit scores to predictable repayment terms and quick access to funds, these loans can serve as a crucial financial tool

    1. Credit Building Opportunities
      • One of the most significant advantages of guaranteed bad credit installment loans is the potential for credit improvement. By making regular, on-time payments, borrowers can gradually enhance their credit scores. This improvement can open doors to better financial opportunities in the future, such as lower interest rates and more favorable loan terms.
    2. Predictable Monthly Payments
      • Installment loans typically come with fixed interest rates and set repayment schedules. This predictability allows borrowers to budget effectively, as they know exactly how much they need to pay each month. This can alleviate the stress often associated with variable-rate loans.
    3. Access to Larger Loan Amounts
      • Unlike some short-term loans, installment loans often provide access to larger sums of money. This can be particularly beneficial for individuals facing significant expenses, such as medical bills, home repairs, or other urgent financial needs. The ability to cover larger expenses can help borrowers avoid falling into deeper financial distress.
    4. Quick Funding Process
      • Many lenders offering guaranteed bad credit installment loans have streamlined their application processes, allowing for quick funding. This means that borrowers can receive the funds they need in a timely manner, which is crucial in emergency situations.
    5. No Collateral Required
      • Most guaranteed bad credit installment loans are unsecured, meaning borrowers do not need to provide collateral to secure the loan. This feature makes them accessible to a broader range of individuals, including those who may not have valuable assets to pledge.

    A little research is recommended to be done before applying for such loans. This may be done on the internet too. Here you may compare the rates and other charges of different lenders like Green Trust Cash available in the market and can select the best one for the loan.

    Requirements For No Credit Check Installment Loans For Bad Credit

    While these loans do not require a credit check, there are still several essential requirements that applicants must meet:

    1. Proof of Income: Direct lenders typically require documentation of a stable income source, such as pay stubs or bank statements, to ensure the borrower can repay the loan.
    2. Age and Residency: Applicants must be at least 18 years old and a resident of the state where they are applying for the loan.
    3. Bank Account: A valid checking account is often necessary for the disbursement of funds and for automatic repayment of the loan.
    4. Identification: Borrowers must provide valid identification, such as a driver’s license or state ID, to verify their identity.

    One of the best parts of guaranteed installment loans is there is no matter if you contain a bad credit record. Lenders offer the loan without any credit check procedure. People with a poor credit history are eligible for this credit facility, but they have to pay a slightly higher interest rate in comparison to normal borrowers.

    So the conditions that are laid down by the direct lenders for being eligible to avail such loans are simple and can be easily qualified upon. It includes conditions such as:

    • The borrower should be citizen of U.S
    • The borrower should be of 18 years of age or above
    • The borrower should be having a bank account in his own name

    Even if you are not able to fulfill all the conditions, still you can approach the lender and can ask for an exception by showing your repayment capability to the lender. It can be easily done by showing your current income which is the basis of granting such loans.

    How To Apply For Easiest Installment Loans From Direct Lenders Only

    A market research and comparison of the rates and charges of different lenders would help you in getting the best lender at least rate.

    These loans are widely available over the web. You just need to fill up an online application form that provides mandatory information about the borrower like name, age, gender, bank account number, contact information, income proof, employment status, etc. and submit it online. The online direct lender will verify the details and if satisfied, he will transfer the requested loan amount into your bank account within 24 hours.

    Click Here To APPLY For Easiest Installment Loan For Bad Credit >>

    Frequently Asked Questions

    1. What are guaranteed installment loans for bad credit?

    Guaranteed installment loans are loans that claim to approve applicants regardless of their credit history. These loans provide fixed repayment terms, meaning borrowers repay in scheduled installments instead of a lump sum.

    2. Are guaranteed installment loans truly guaranteed?

    No legitimate lender can 100% guarantee approval without reviewing an applicant’s income, financial situation, and ability to repay. Some lenders may have high approval rates, but responsible lenders still assess risk.

    3. How do installment loans differ from Green Trust Cash loans?

    Installment loans have longer repayment periods, often ranging from 3 months to several years, allowing borrowers to make regular payments. Green Trust Cash loans typically require full repayment within 14–30 days, making them riskier.

    4. Do guaranteed installment loans require a credit check?

    It depends on the lender. Some may perform a soft credit check, which doesn’t affect credit scores, while others may skip credit checks altogether but evaluate income and employment stability.

    5. What are the typical interest rates for these loans?

    Interest rates can be high, often ranging from 30% to 300% APR, depending on the lender, loan type, and borrower’s credit profile. Borrowers should compare rates and read the terms carefully.

    6. Can I get an installment loan with no job?

    Most lenders require proof of steady income, but some may accept alternative income sources like government benefits, pensions, or self-employment earnings.

    Media Details:
    Project Name: Green Trust Cash
    Website: https://www.greentrustcashs.com/
    Contact Person: Latonya M Bowman
    Email Id: L_Bowman@greentrustcashs.com
    Address: 9620 Las Vegas Blvd S Las Vegas, NV 89123

    Disclaimer: This announcement contains general information about Green Trust Cash services and should not be considered financial advice. Green Trust Cash services does not guarantee loan approval, and loan terms may vary by applicant and lender requirements.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/ed547b54-0f92-4913-9859-9d5cdcf58b0c

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Newhouse Leads Effort to Preserve Investments in Nuclear Energy

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Dan Newhouse (4th District of Washington)

    Headline: Newhouse Leads Effort to Preserve Investments in Nuclear Energy

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-WA) led his colleagues in a letter to House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith (R-MO) advocating for the preservation of critical tax credits for nuclear energy development.  

    “The United States is facing unprecedented demand for energy, and empowering nuclear development is critical in becoming truly energy dominant,” said Rep. Newhouse. “The federal investment we have seen so far is already delivering results by unlocking billions of dollars in private investments and putting the United States on track to be the global leader of reliable, affordable nuclear energy. Preserving these investments unleashes American energy and charts a course for production capabilities unlike anything we have ever seen.”  

    The letter, advocating for the preservation of Sections 45U, 45Y, and 48E of the Internal Revenue Code, was signed by 25 Members of Congress.  

    Read the full letter here

    ###  

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: SCS visits Census & Statistics Dept

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Secretary for the Civil Service Ingrid Yeung today visited the Census & Statistics Department (C&SD) to exchange views with staff representatives and learn more about how it applies artificial intelligence (AI) and data science in statistical work to enhance operational efficiency and service quality.

    Accompanied by Permanent Secretary for the Civil Service Clement Leung, Mrs Yeung met Commissioner for Census & Statistics Leo Yu and directorate staff for an update on the department’s latest developments and key initiatives.

    Starting from the 2026 Population Census, the C&SD will make more extensive and systematic use of the administrative data collected from various departments, including immigration records, public housing rentals and welfare payments to reduce the cost of data collection.

    It is estimated that the total cost incurred for the 2026 and 2031 population censuses will be reduced by about 40%, saving around $680 million.

    Mrs Yeung was then briefed on the department’s data science development strategy, which involves exploring and applying cutting-edge technologies such as image recognition, web scraping and computer vision technology for intelligent data collection and processing.

    Staff also introduced to her two sets of in-house developed AI models, one of which can accurately validate the classification and the unit value of commodities on import/export declarations within a short period of time, thereby enhancing the quality and efficiency of the data validation process.

    The other set of AI models is applied to the Electronic System for Cargo Manifests to assist in matching the corresponding import/export declarations and cargo manifests.

    The use of the two sets of AI models has reduced the department’s required manpower by nearly half. Some of the saved resources will be reallocated to further drive the development of data science and the statistical areas involving big data, with a view to enabling the department to provide higher-quality statistical services to the community.

    Mrs Yeung said: “As the expectations and demands of the community on the Government and the civil service have continuously grown, the workload of the Government has been increasing while all departments have to reduce expenditure and streamline manpower at the same time.

    “Innovative thinking and flexibility are key to keeping up with the complicated and ever-changing environment.”

    On the premise of maintaining efficient public services, Mrs Yeung requested the government departments to make good plans and review the necessity of all their posts, leverage technology, and optimise manpower arrangements through reorganisation and reprioritisation of work.

    The civil service chief encouraged the C&SD to continue applying innovative technology to further enhance the timeliness and accuracy of official statistics while streamlining the workflow to meet the demand for statistical information from the Government, the industrial and business sectors and the public.

    Concluding her visit, Mrs Yeung met staff representatives from various grades to exchange views on matters of concern.

    With the 2025 Voter Registration Campaign under way, she reminded colleagues to actively register as electors and cast their votes in the 2025 Legislative Council General Election at the end of this year. 

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: The Atlantic Council hosted French Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Noël Barrot on Europe and the new world order.

    Source: France-Diplomatie – Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Development

    Frederick Kempe: Good afternoon to those joining us in our headquarters, our relatively new global headquarters here in Washington today. Good evening to those watching online from Europe and the globe, to everyone joining us from throughout the world. My name is Frederick Kempe. I’m President and CEO of the Atlantic Council, and I’m delighted to welcome you to Atlantic Council Front Days. This is our premier platform for global leaders. And it’s an honor to host today the Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs of the French Republic, Jean-Noël Barrot. Today’s discussion turns our attention to one of the most enduring and consequential bilateral relationships in U.S. history.

    In the nearly two and a half centuries since France became the first country to formalize diplomatic relations with the newly born United States. Next year, Mr. Minister, is the anniversary of the revolution here. France became the first country to formalize diplomatic relations with the newly born United States. Since that time, this pillar of the transatlantic relationship has seen moments of triumph and moments of trial. From Lafayette and Washington to the beaches of Normandy, the United States, and France have forged partnership unlike any other based on common values in history. However, this relationship goes beyond just sentiment. At each major inflection point in recent history, our countries have stood together, not just because of friendship, but because of shared interests. And now, facing a war on European soil, basing an unfolding trade war, potentially rapidly evolving technological disruptions, and more, the United States and France must consider how to recalibrate and perhaps how to reinvent its partnership and the broader Atlantic alliance with it in order to achieve our common goals of security, prosperity, and freedom.

    As we think through how best to address these challenges, we are delighted to welcome Minister Barrot for today’s event and on the occasion of his first visit to the United States in his current role. The Minister has held numerous positions in the French government, including most recently Minister Delegate for Europe and then Minister Delegate for Digital Affairs, making him well-placed to share the French perspective on the political dynamics at the EU level as well as critical issues of digital and tech policy, and it may help in these times also to be a policy. Minister, welcome to the Atlantic Council. Before we begin let me just say to our audience that we will be taking questions. First, the Minister will make some opening comments Then I will join him on the stage and ask a few questions and then turn to the audience for questions. For those in person, we’ll have a microphone to pass around. For those online, please go to askac.org, askac.org to send your question in virtually. Minister Barrot, it’s always a pleasure to have someone speak at the end of meetings in Washington instead of the beginning of the meetings in Washington. So we look very much forward to your attention.

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Thank you very much, Mr. President. Hello, everyone. One week from now, on May 8th, we mark an important anniversary, the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe. This was the starting point of an extraordinary endeavor, a formidable building, a building of rule-based international order, a building of multilateralism. Who was the architect of this formidable building? Well, the architect of this building were the United States of America. They did not do this out of charity. They did this as out of enlightened self-interest. They collected substantial dividends from multilateralism throughout the eight decades that have just passed by. The dividends of multilateralism. Think about security. Thanks to the nonproliferation treaty, we collectively have avoided a raise to the nuclear bomb that would have caused so much instability and raised the cost of defense for all our countries.

    NATO has allowed the US, alongside its European partners, to ensure security in the North Atlantic, but also to offer major investment opportunities for its defense industry. Think about trade. WTO has allowed the US economy to grow, has allowed US services to thrive, digital services, financial services around the world. Think about currency. The Bretton Woods framework has made the dollar a global reserve currency. What does it mean to be a global reserve currency? It means that everyone wants to hold it. So that the yields on your treasury bonds are the lowest on earth. And even more than that, when there is a crisis, even when there is a crisis in the US, people rush to buy your treasury bonds, and the cost of borrowing goes down. This exorbitant privilege, as a French president coined it, is part of the dividends of multilateralism that the US brought to the world and that they also benefited from.

    This formidable building, the building of multilateralism, was designed 80 years ago for a unipolar world, where a benevolent hegemon, the United States of America, was the guarantor of rule-based international order. A world in which US leadership was unchallenged, untested. But eight years later, indeed, the world has changed. It has become multipolar, US leadership is challenged, And sometimes multilateralism seems powerless or unfit for power. And therefore, and gradually, a temptation arises for the US to perhaps let go of multilateralism, quit multilateralism, to pull back, to restrain it. This is our choice that belongs to the American people. But this would be a major shift, a major shift for the US, who would not be able to collect the dividends of multilateralism any longer, a major shift for the world, because the multilateralism will survive whether or not the US quits multilateralism. And so someone will fill the void starting with China, which was already getting ready to step up and to become the new hegemon of this new era of multilateralism, in the case where the US would decide to let them play this role.

    Now there is another route, there is an alternative route. Rather than quitting multilateralism, reshaping it, adjusting it, making it fit for the 21st century. The first step, and this is a difficult step, is accepting to share the power. in order not to lose it altogether. This means reforming the UN and its Security Council, reforming the financial infrastructure to make space for big emerging countries and share the burden with them, but also hold them responsible because they have part of the burden to share in handling the global issues and challenges. The second step when building multilateral for a multipolar world is to be ready to build coalitions of the willing to overcome obstruction in multilateral forum like the UN Security Council when they arise. It’s not because something won’t happen at the UN, at the IMF, or the World Bank, that you cannot design a coalition of the willing with willing and able countries in order to overcome this obstruction. This is the new era of multilateralism. This is the route that Europe is willing to take and that Europe is hoping to take alongside the United States of America.

    One week from now, we’ll celebrate another anniversary, not on May 8th, but on May 9th, the 75th anniversary of the birth of Europe. On May 9th of 1950, my distant predecessor, Robert Schuman, woke up in a country, France, that was five years past World War II, where tensions were rising with the neighbor and rival, Germany. Germany was recovering from the war faster than France was. And so what was the tendency in Paris on that day, in that year? Well, the tendency was protectionism, was raising tariffs, raising barriers to prevent Germans from thriving and fully recovered. And so Robert Schuman, as he was heading to the Council of Ministers, he had this crazy idea in mind to put in common steel and coal across France and Germany, swimming against the tide to favor cooperation over confrontation. At the Council of Ministers, he barely mentioned his initiative for his prime minister not to prevent him from announcing it. And at 6 p.m., in a one-minute and 30-second speech, he made this unilateral offer to create the European steel and coal community and make the foundation of a multilateral, cooperative European Union. So you see, when times are hard, and when the tendency is to restrain, pull back, raise barriers, Those visionary men that brought us prosperity and that brought us peace in the European continent, they swung against the tide and offered innovative models for cooperation. So let us find inspiration in the great work of these visionary people. Thank you very much.

    Frederick Kempe : I feel that was a very important statement and I’m gonna start with that. You see by the audience and standing room only that there was a lot of interest in this conversation and what you had to say : 75th anniversary of the birth of Europe, the 80th anniversary of the E.A., all next weekend, we’re calling attention to that. And it seemed really to be a call to your American allies and to the current administration to stay the course on multilateralism and transatlantic engagement, et cetera. So, A, do you intend to do that? And it’s no accident that no one in this audience who’s following the news, everyone knows that there are doubts right now in the transatlantic stream. Not all of them do I share, but I just wonder if you could give us a little bit more of the context of your statement.

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Well, we deeply care about the world-based international model of multilateralism. So I spent two days in New York at the Security Council as we were wrapping up our presence. You know, 15 members of the Security Council, they get one month’s presidency every 15 months. And so we try and make the most of your months-long presence. And to give you a sense of what our commitment is, I am, we are very committed to the three fundamental missions of the United Nations, peace and security, human rights, sustainable development. That’s why we had three bottom security meetings, Ukraine, Middle East, but also non-proliferation, in a closed-door Security Council meeting that was on proliferation. that was first convened in 15 years, or last convened in 15 years, 15 years ago. On human rights, we brought together, mentioning coalitions of the wing, international humanitarian law is under attack, let’s say. And we brought together countries from all around the world, east, south, west, and north, in a coalition of the willing to support politically and better implement in practice the rules of international humanitarian law. And then third, on sustainable development, we took this opportunity to bring together the countries that are the most committed, like we are, to the preservation of oceans, 40 days ahead of the third United Nations Conference on Oceans that will take place in Nice, south of France, and that is aimed to be the equivalent for ocean as what the Paris Accord has been for carbon emissions. So we’re very ambitious with this event as many countries as possible to rally some of the key deliverables of these countries. And so I decided I would spend some time at the UN talking about that.

    So we think this is the right way to go, adjusting multilateralism to make it more efficient in the multi-border world that we’re living in. And I hear that the new leadership in the US is considering what its course of action is going to be. And I think amongst friends that are actually oldest friends, we owe each other an honest discussion on what we see our common interest to be. And I think that was the sense of my introductory remarks. Thank you so much.

    Frederick Kempe : And I think you’ve seen a signal of commitment today, I think, toward the United Nations with the nomination of National Security Advisor Mike Walz to be the UN ambassador, so also an interesting piece of news. Speaking of news, you have had meetings here. We do have media, French, US, other here, and I wonder whether you could tell us your perspective on what do you take away from the conversations, Secretary Rubio, others, anything specific that we can take away from that? And then in that context, as you’re looking at what your greatest challenges are, what were the priorities in your conversations with U.S. leadership?

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Well, I mentioned the 9th of May and 75th anniversary of this declaration by Robert Truman. This year will be Ukraine, because I think a very important, significant chunk of our future, and I’m not talking about the future of Europeans only, depends on how this war of aggression is going to end. So we’ll be with my fellow European ministers of foreign affairs there to express our support to Ukraine and our willingness for this war to end in accordance with the UN Charter international rule. So that was clearly an important topic that I discussed with the US leadership at the State Department as well as Capitol Hill. But we also discussed Middle East, where France and the US have been leading the efforts to put an end to the war that was basically destroying Lebanon eight months ago. We managed to broker a ceasefire five months ago to monitor the ceasefire through a joint mechanism. We managed to bring the conditions for the end of the political crisis with the election of President Joseph Aoun. that then appointed the government, that is now at work trying to implement reforms that are long due in Lebanon. And we want to do the same thing, same food for cooperation in Syria, where this, after overturning the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad, there is an opportunity to build a strong sovereign country that will be a source of stability rather than instability for the region. I cannot let aside Gaza and the Israel-Palestinian conflict, where again, we converge on the necessity to bring back stability and peace to the region. We have praised the Arab accord logic, and we’re working in the same direction, bringing peace to the region. Muslim and Arabic countries in the region and Israel towards security architecture that would ensure the security of all peace and stability. We also discussed Africa, where the U.S. made a breakthrough in handling or in sort of moving towards a cessation of hostilities in the Great Lakes regions in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the second worst humanitarian crisis is happening right now. This is good. And after they were received or they were hosted by the Department of State, a few days ago, the DRC and Rwanda gathered in Qatar with France and with the United States. So as you can see, some of the major, major issues, major crises. France and the U.S. are working together in order to find the right solution. Sometimes it isn’t we. Sometimes we don’t start from the same point, but look at Lebanon. It’s because of our complementarity, because of different history in the region, because of the different nature of our partnership, relationship, friendship with the stakeholders of that crisis that we were able.

    Frederick Kempe : Thank you for that answer. Let’s start with Ukraine. News yesterday about critical minerals deal with Ukraine almost more interested in the political side of this than the economic side of this. Talking to Ukrainian officials over the last few months, they’ve been concerned that the U.S. gone more from being an actual partner of Ukraine in trying to counter Russian threat and the Russian attack, and more of an arbitrator, more of a moderator. This critical mineral deal, if you read the language of it, suggests a little bit of a change of direction. And I just wonder, and that is an area where France and the U.S. have not always been entirely singing from the same song sheet. What did you hear during your trip there? How do you assess this new agreement and its political meaning?

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Well, I think it’s a very good agreement. I think it’s a very good agreement for Ukraine and also for the U.S. But I also think that it tells us something very important about what’s happening right now. Let’s go back to the Oval Office when President Zelensky was there. What was the expectation by President Trump with respect to Ukraine? Well, actually, there were two expectations. Ceasefire and sign of a new deal. Since then, on March 9, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine accepted a comprehensive ceasefire. And yesterday night, they agreed to a mineral deal with the United States of America. They’ve done their part of the job. They’ve walked their part of the talk. But in the meantime, we haven’t seen Vladimir Putin send any signal, any sign of his willingness to comply with the requests of President Trump, to the very contrary. So let’s face it, right now, the main obstacle to peace is Vladimir Putin. So what I found very interesting in my meetings here in Washington is the efforts, the commendable efforts by Senator Lindsey Graham, who put together a massive package of sanctions that he collected bipartisan support for, with almost 70 senators now signing the bill which is aimed at threatening Russia into accepting a ceasefire, or else those sanctions will apply. And here again, we agree that we will try to coordinate because we, Europeans, are in the process of putting together the 17th sanction package that we are going to try, on substance and timing, to coordinate with Senator Graham’s own package. That was, perhaps, a bit of a long answer. But in summary, it’s good news that this deal was struck. It’s good news that the US, and I heard Secretary Besant express what he had in mind, the US was considering deep economic cooperation with Ukraine. It goes in the right direction. It’s the right course that they should, that should be taken.

    Frederick Kempe : And Secretary Bessent also said this is meant to be a signal to Putin. You see this as well.

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Yeah, put together this deal. The package by Lindsey Graham, who last time I checked is not a political adversary of President Trump, as well as the pressure that Europe is building up on Russia. And you get, the sense of the variant, it’s now basically Putin’s fault if we don’t yet have a ceasefire in the world.

    Frederick Kempe : So in recent discussions with US envoy Steve Witkoff, what divergences existed between France and the United States? And how do you hope to close those divergences? I guess part of this has to do with European troops, American backstop, but it also gets to the conditions behind a peace deal.

    Jean-Noël Barrot : If Ukraine was to capitulate, this would have long-lasting, wide-ranging consequences for the entire world. because it would basically replace rule-based international order by the law of the strongest. It would create massive incentives for countries around the world that that have border issues with their neighbors to consider that they can invade, that they can use military threats or force to obtain territorial concessions. This would be major, and this would be very costly for all of us, at least for responsible powers like the US and France that tend to get involved when there are issues around the world. When we would see issues exploding all around, it would be a major threat. In addition to that, should Ukraine capitulate after Ukraine has agreed to let go of its nuclear weapons in exchange for security guarantees. This will send the signal that the only ultimate security guarantee is the possession of nuclear weapons. And there we have a nuclear proliferation crisis, which again raises global instability at levels that we haven’t seen for the past 80 years, and will increase the cost massively of security in the US, security in Europe. And I think this view is shared between the U.S. and France. But of course, there is one difference between the perspective of the U.S. and the European perspective of this crisis, which is that our own security is at stake because we are neighbors of Russia or because we don’t want to be neighbors of this Russia that is now spending 40% of its budget on its military spending, 10% of its GDP, that just conscribed 160,000 additional soldiers, the largest conscription in 14 years. I’ve heard many, many times Russia say that they don’t want NATO at their borders. Well, we don’t want this Russia at our borders either. And that’s why we are so serious about what’s happening and about how the war will end. And that’s why we’ve been insisting so much about the security guarantees. And I think our message went through. And I think the US are counting on us to build the security arrangements such that when the peace deal is struck, that we can provide those security arrangements in order for the peace to be lasting and durable. But I think it’s well understood, and I’ve heard President Trump, but also officials from the US, clearly saying that of course they want this peace to be lasting, and of course this means that there is security guarantee.

    Frederick Kempe : And can it work without an American backstop where you’re getting closer to a conversation about that? Or, alternatively, is this critical minerals deal a security guarantee in a different form?

    Jean-Noël Barrot : So you should put things in two perspectives. We have been supporters of the Euro-Atlantic integration of Ukraine. Namely, we said that we were open to extend an invitation, a NATO invitation to Ukraine. We understand that NATO members, not all NATO members, agree with our view, so we have to find an alternative path. The sense of this coalition of the able of the willing that France and the UK has been putting together in order to design those security arrangements. This is ongoing work. This starts with making the Ukrainian army strong enough to be able to deter any further aggression by Russia, but it also very likely means some form of military capacity as a second layer of sanction or guarantee. When those detailed discussions will have been wrapped up, they’re currently ongoing, it will appear whether or not and how much any contribution or backstop by the US is needed. It’s possible that it is needed. Why? Well, because as far as Europeans are concerned, we’ve been working. We’ve been working and planning for our defense. It’s a little bit different for France, the UK, and Poland. But for the rest of European armies, we’ve been working within NATO. So if you’re going to work on a security arrangement outside of NATO framework, then at some point, you might need some kind of NATO-like enablers or make items that are going to make sure that the security arrangements are robust. But that being said, in the same way, do we understand that the US have decided that they will likely reduce their commitment to. We also understand that they are counting on us to bear the burden of providing the security arrangements. But we also need to be honest with them once we’ve done our homework. If there are pieces of these security arrangements that cannot be found outside of US contribution, we’ll just be honest.

    Frederick Kempe : Thank you so much. The one thing you didn’t mention in your opening comments is you didn’t talk about tariffs. You knew I was going to say that. And I wondered if it came up at all in your discussions. And also, I wonder if you could talk a little bit about what this 90-day pause gives a potential for an agreement. What sort of agreement can you imagine, or what is the direction of agreement with the European Union and the United States? How concerned are you about the tariffs driving a more lasting wedge across the Atlantic?

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Well, the good thing when you’re a foreign minister or an FF minister from France is that you’re not in France working tariffs. That being said, you’re allowed to have your own view on things. And indeed, as an economist, I have to say, otherwise I would be a traitor to my profession, that tariffs are not a good idea. President Trump wants to bring jobs back to America, and this is a perfectly legitimate ambition. In fact, we have the same in Europe. We want to bring jobs back to Europe. But tariffs are probably not the best way to achieve this objective. Tariffs are a tax on our economy. It’s a tax on the middle class. And it will make us Europeans, as well as Americans, poor. We do have research on what happened during the last trade war, the 2018 trade war. What happened? Well, the effect on the economy on this side of the Atlantic was limited. It’s basically a $7 billion loss, $7 billion loss on the economy. That’s not big. But it led to a massive transfer from the US consumer, middle class, of $50 billion. So the loss for the US consumer of $50 billion transferred to producers, $9 billion, to the government, $35 billion. And the rest is what’s lost for the US economy. So it’s a mild loss. But it’s a massive transfer from the US consumers to the US government. That’s what happened last time around. And those numbers are small because the trade war at the time was very big. Multiply this by 10. And you’ll get the kind of effects that you’re going to see on European economies, U.S. economies, and so on. So our hope is to reach the same type of outcome that we got the last time around. The U.S. retaliated, we retaliated, and then at some point we suspended those who lifted those tariffs. It was not the same administration that did it, but still, those tariffs were lifted. And I really hope that we get to this objective because, again, we’re very closely intertwined economies, so we have a lot to lose, but we have major rivals, adversaries, competitors that are going to benefit massively from this framework if we sort of choose confrontation over cooperation.

    Frederick Kempe : So let me ask one more follow-up there, and then I’ll go to the audience. On the tariffs, didn’t you raise this issue when you were here, when you are the foreign minister, but it is a political as well as an economic issue. And did you get any indications of what direction ?

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Well, the good thing about being Marco Rubio is that you’re not in charge of terrorists either. But when we met in NATO, I told him that if there was only one positive aspect of those tariffs, is that by lowering GDPs, it would allow us to reach our NATO targets.

    First question from an author and journalist : We see re-entering a phase, a new intensive phase of big power rivalry with the United States retreating from security commitments in Europe, Russian military militarizing its society and having designs on other neighbors besides Ukraine and China seeking economic domination of the world. President Macron has spoken often about the need for Europe to achieve greater strategic autonomy. Do you think Europe should seek to constitute a fourth bloc, even at the risk of putting greater space with its principal ally, the United States? And a quick follow-up, you spoke about the need to share power in a multilateral context. In terms of UN Security Council reform, is France prepared to fold its seat into the European Union presence, or would you also agree to the idea of expanding the Security Council to have 10 to 12 nations? Thank you.

    Jean-Noël Barrot : So you mentioned Russia. You mentioned the four months. That was your first question. I wouldn’t go Russia a block. Russia has a GDP that is 20 times smaller than the EU. I wouldn’t call that a block. Russia is a big country geographically. It is one of the winning nations of the Second World War. So, there are a number of consequences coming with that, including the permanent seat of the Security Council. But I wouldn’t call Russia a block. And we don’t see ourselves, when we speak about strategic autonomy, we don’t see ourselves as entering into a logic of blocks or spheres of influence and stuff like that. We remain committed to multilateralism, rule-based international world order, balance. The only thing is that in a more brutal world, if you want to be heard and be respected, when you’re upholding the values that Europe and the EU upholding, freedom, democracy, free speech and so on, you’re going to need to be much stronger, much less dependent on other regions. And so we see our strategic autonomy as a way to defend the model, which is an open model, which is a balanced model, which is a multilateral model of governance for the world. And we see a lot of appetite for this approach, because since those trade wars started, we cannot count the number of countries that are knocking at EU’s door to strike a trade deal or even to become a candidate. And it’s not only Iceland and Norway that seem to be interested. I heard that on this side of the Atlantic, there are people considering. And you know that there is one geographical criteria. But I just want to mention that even though it’s a very, very, very, very tiny island in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, no one lives there. I think it’s like 20 meters long. But this island is split between Canada and Denmark, which gives Canada an actual border with the European Union. And the second question is about… I went quickly because I was told that we should not be long in the introduction of those conversations, but I really think that if we want to adjust those institutions, Security Council and so on, To the new era, we need to accept that others have grown over the past 18 years and they need to be represented, but they also need to take their responsibility. Some of them are no longer developing countries. They are actual major economies, major powers. So they should have a seat at the table, but they should also behave as major powers. So what’s our position? Our position is a permanent seat of the Security Council for India, Germany, Japan, Brazil, and two African countries with all associated priorities. This is what we want for the reform of the Security Council. But we also want the same kind of thing to happen with international financial institutions. And this is the spirit of what President Macron has called the Paris Act, or the Act for the People and the Planet, where the ideal is reform. No country in the south should have to choose between fighting against poverty and fighting against climate change. So it should be more balanced, more equal, equitable funding for southern countries. But those emerging countries from the South that are now developed economies should also bear their responsibilities with respect to the least developed countries, the poorest countries. Because right now, some of them are sort of bunching with the least advanced countries sort of take their responsibility with respect to the poor countries. So that’s the spirit in which we’re pushing. And in fact, I had a meeting dedicated to security council reform on Monday in New York with some of the African countries that were working on it.

    Frederick Kempe : Thank you for that good answer. While we’re open, we’ve got a lot of questions now. I saw this gentleman first. and then we’ll go, I’ll figure it out, we’ll figure it out. Anyone here that wants to, there we go, that’s what I’m gonna do next. There we go, please.

    Second question : In context with President Macron’s call to Prime Minister Modi of India in solidarity after the terror attack in Palgakush, India, do you see a justifiable response by India against this attack as another roadblock to ensuring the India-Middle East Corridor gets off the ground. Of course, it was set back after the Israel-Hamas war. And did that conversation come up in your discussion with Secretary Rubio today? And if not, then what do we need to do collectively as the international community to make sure this gets off the ground?

    Jean-Noël Barrot : Thank you, so President Macron has been in touch with Prime Minister Modi, I have been in touch two times with my fellow foreign minister from India. We expressed solidarity. We hope tensions not to escalate and I heard Secretary Rubio call Pakistan to formally recognize the terrorist nature of this attack and to condemn it in the strongest possible way. And I would happily join this call to Pakistan to recognize the terrorist nature of what happened. And we’ll keep in touch with Marco Rubio, but also with my fellow minister David Lamb from Great Britain, UK, and my Indian colleague, in order to ensure or to try and avoid procrastination in the region.

    Third question : Good afternoon, journalist from the French newspaper Le Monde. I have two questions, the first one regarding security guarantees for Ukraine. For months, France supported the idea of the deployment of some international monitoring force in Ukraine, but with a very strong American security guarantees. The Trump administration doesn’t seem to see eye to eye on this. They’re not inclined to offer any sort of serious security guarantees, so what’s the plan B? Have you given up on this two-fold idea or not? And the second question regarding Iran, there are currently very important discussions between the Trump administration directly and indirect with the Iranian representatives. For a very long time, France was in favor of putting on the table as well with Iran the ballistic issue. It doesn’t seem the case at all right now. The Trump administration is basically considering a sort of GCPOA revisited or maybe an interim agreement. So what’s your view exactly on the current discussions? Thank you.

    Jean-Noël Barrot : So on the first question, let me just clarify, because I think it’s important that everyone gets this right. There are two things. First, there is a ceasefire, and a ceasefire needs to be monitored. And the coalition of the able and willing put together by France and the UK have been working on proposals so that at the minute the ceasefire is broken, that the US have in their hands, because there will be that sort of origins of the ceasefire, solutions for this ceasefire to be monitored. And this might involve some European capacity just to check what’s happening in the line of contact and to be able to attribute violations. So that’s one thing. But the ceasefire is only one step towards what’s our end goal, which is a full-fledged peace treaty or peace agreement. This peace agreement that the Ukrainians and Russians will be discussing, but that was President Trump’s intuition, this discussion cannot happen while the war is happening in Ukraine. That’s why he did a ceasefire for the discussion. It will end up with discussions on territories and a discussion on security. And with the same question of the coalition of willing, we’re working on this second piece, which is security guarantee. But security guarantee has nothing to do with monitoring the ceasefire. Security guarantee is deterrence against any further aggression. How do you do that? As I was saying earlier, the first layer is to porcupine the Ukrainian army for it to be deterrent enough for anyone to try and invade. But then you probably have other layers, so military capacity deployed in Ukraine or around Ukraine, and that’s what we’re working on, and when the moment is right, we get to the Americans and ask them or tell them what is it we need for this security guarantee. And we’re working on this, and we’re confident, and again, as I was saying, I’ve heard President Trump in several occasions speak in a way that shows that he understands the importance of the security terms. And then on Iran, a very important topic that I should have mentioned in response to your first question, Mr. President, because this is a topic in which we’ve been coordinating with Marco Rubio from day one. We are supporting, encouraging the discussion that the U.S. opened with Iran. Why? Because Iran is posing a major threat to our security interests. Because we France, Marseille are within reach. And because our partners, close partners, in the region are also within reach. So we are very serious about this question. But we believe that there is no other route, no other path, and a diplomatic path to solve this issue. That there is no military solution to this issue and that any form of military attempt to solve this issue will have very large costs that we would not like to bear. So, in order for this discussion to be as successful as possible, we’ve been coordinating with the US on a substance and timing. substance because our teams have been working for the last few months ahead from the expiration of the GCP area, the nuclear agreement that was struck 10 years ago and that is expiring in the fall. So we were getting ready for this expiration a clear idea of indeed what might be a robust and protected field for us, and this would include indeed some of the ballistic components, but also the regional activities components. And the substance is sort of at the disposal of U.S. negotiators because it’s for free and there is no copyright. But we’re also coordinated on timing because we will not hesitate to reapply all the sanctions that we lifted in 10 years ago when GCPOA was struck. In the case where the IAEA confirms that Iran has violated its obligations under GCPOA, and if it happens that by the summer we will have a protected frontier that is sufficiently protected of our security interests.

    Frederick Kempe : So this has got to be the last question. I really apologize to others, but I saw that gentleman’s hand approach right through the middle. So, no, no. Yes, thank you. Yes. Thank you.

    Last question from a student from Sciences Po : I’d like to know what’s your opinion what’s your take on how france will balance its relationship with the U.S. and at the same time with China in light of the fact that France needs new partners and also in light of the fact that President Trump openly asked European leaders to direct ties with the PRC. Thank you.

    Frederick Kempe : And since this is the last question, let me add to it on the terror front because You know, in your conversations here, and you’ve spoken before about the relationship between the European Union and China on the trade front, does this terror policy drive Europe more into the hands of trade and economic relationships with China? And if you believe that, have you said that to your interlocutors here watching during your visit?

    Jean-Noël Barrot : I mean, it’s obvious, no? Whether you want it or not, look at one and read economic research. The numbers I quoted earlier are from a paper in the Portal Reform of Economics called the Returns to Protection. It’s the last paper on the 2018 trade war, last economic paper, research paper. But anyway, I will tell you that what happened last time is that during the 2018 trade war, it’s not like suddenly factories moved from one country to another. It was a reshuffling of international trade. So you’re going to see a lot of reshuffling. You mentioned, or you recall what I said, on China and filling the void. Listen to Chinese officials’ speeches now. And again, we take all of this with lots of grains of salt, but my colleague, Wang Li, now in all his speeches, he’s saying how much he cares about multilateralism. And I’m sure… No, seriously. And he will, I mean, I’m pretty sure that they will consider filling the void at the World Health Organization. I’m pretty sure that they will, anytime they will see some pullback, they will try to step in. Because they have two, there are two possible strategies. Either the U.S. are there, filling the void, then they will try to build sort of formats outside of the established formats that we’ve seen them do or they will see U.S. pull back and they will try fill the void. Now, what’s our relationship with China? As far as Europe is concerned. Again, we’re lucid. We’re not blind. And so we think there can be a trade agenda with China. So that’s some of the issues that we’ve are sold, which is not quite the case now. We’ve also had our trade war with China these past few years, with us sanctioning Chinese EVs and then sanctioning European cognac and armagnac. So this is dear to our hearts. And of course, it’s going to be difficult to engage into a natural trade agenda until those sort of contentious issues are solved. Then we can. But of course, our discussion cannot only touch upon trade. And when China is supporting Russia’s war on Russia, when China is on the side of DPRK, on the side of Iran, proliferating countries that are threatening this non-proliferation treaty and sort of the global stability, it’s difficult to build trust. If China was to establish a sort of trusted relationship with European countries, it will have to show also that it takes our security interests into account. Otherwise, it might be challenging.

    Frederick Kempe : Thank you. Do you have your answer? Yes, Fred, thank you. So, look, this, Minister Barrot, on behalf of the audience, on behalf of the Atlantic Council, thank you for three things. First of all, for your visit to the United States, a very timely visit, a very crucial moment. Second of all, for taking so much time with us at the Atlantic Council and talking so frankly and clearly in your opening statement and in this fascinating engagement, and then most of all for our enduring alliance. Thank you so much.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Rhode Island Man Sentenced to 20 Years in Prison in One of Rhode Island’s Largest Fentanyl Seizures

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime Alerts (b)

    PROVIDENCE – Jorge Pimentel, a/k/a “Big Head,” 36, of Cranston, has been sentenced to twenty years in federal prison, announced Acting United States Attorney Sara Miron Bloom.

    Pimentel previously admitted to a federal judge that he ran a highly productive drug lab and a stash house in Pawtucket from which 19,315 fentanyl-laced pills made to resemble pharmaceutical grade Percocet pills and nearly 9 kilograms of powder fentanyl were seized by law enforcement.  The seizure of a combined total of over sixteen kilograms of fentanyl-laced pills and fentanyl powder, an industrial grade high-speed pill press, and twenty-eight thousand grams of cutting agents used in the manufacturer of the fake pill seized in September 2023, is among the largest seizures of fentanyl in Rhode Island. 

    The fentanyl powder and already cut mixture seized in this case represented the potential production of more than 633,000 fentanyl-laced pills.

    Court documents detail that Pimentel was already a “well-established, large scale fentanyl trafficker” when, on multiple occasions between May 31, 2023, and September 29, 2023, he brokered sales of a total of approximately 34,000 fentanyl-laced pills for which he was paid $37,000.

    Pimentel was sentenced on Tuesday by U.S. District Court Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., to 240 months of incarceration to be followed by five years of federal supervised release. He pleaded guilty in December 2024 as charged by indictment with conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute fentanyl, and possession with intent to distribute fentanyl. No plea agreement was filed in this case.

    The matter was investigated by the FBI’s Rhode Island Safe Streets Task Force. The Safe Streets Task Force consists of agents and law enforcement officers from the FBI, Rhode Island State Police, the Cranston, Woonsocket, Pawtucket, West Warwick, and Central Falls Police Departments, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the Rhode Island Department of Corrections.

    The United States Attorney’s Office thanks the Providence Police Department and the DEA for their partnership.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. 

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    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Raleigh Man Convicted of Possessing More Than 300 Images of Child Sexual Abuse Material on his Work Laptop

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. – A federal jury convicted a Raleigh man Tuesday for possession of child sexual abuse material.  Joseph Matthew Dobbs, 45, now faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison when sentenced in July.

    According to court records and evidence presented at trial, Dobbs was working from home as an IT support engineer for a multinational technology company when, in early November 2022, a supervisor remotely observed Dobbs watching content on his work-issued laptop that appeared to be child sexual abuse material. The company terminated Dobbs’s employment and forwarded screenshots taken by the supervisor to law enforcement for investigation.  The Raleigh Police Department executed a search at Dobbs’s apartment and seized the company laptop.  A review of the laptop and the company’s back-up servers revealed that Dobbs’s laptop contained over 300 image files of child sexual abuse material, including the sexual abuse of infants and toddlers and depictions of bondage.  On a special verdict form, the jury found Dobbs guilty as charged and found that the images included visual depictions of prepubescent minors.

    In 2006, Dobbs was also convicted of having carnal knowledge of a child, using a computer to solicit a minor (three counts), possession of child sexual abuse material (ten counts), and manufacturing sexually explicit material in Virginia.  He spent seven years in prison and was still on probation for those offenses at the time of this incident.

    Daniel P. Bubar, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina made the announcement after U.S. District Judge Terrence W. Boyle accepted the verdict. The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Raleigh Police Department investigated the case, and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Lori Warlick and Logan Liles prosecuted the case.

    Related court documents and information can be found on the website of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina or on PACER by searching for Case No.5:24-CR-182.

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    MIL Security OSI