Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI Global: How I’m teaching Holocaust literature in light of Canadian recommendations around combatting antisemitism

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Regan Lipes, Extended Sessional Instructor, English and Comparative Literature, MacEwan University

    As university students encounter hate speech, like statements perpetrated by music industry personalities they may have once enjoyed, they have questions about antisemitism — and what it really is.

    I research and teach Jewish literature with a focus on Holocaust narratives. With rising tensions on both sides of the Israel-Hamas War, and 24 hostages still in captivity, Canadian communities feel the continued conflict domestically.

    In December 2024, the House of Commons’s Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights released a comprehensive document: Heightened Anisemitism in Canada and How to Combat It.

    Since Oct. 7, 2023, societal tolerance for blatant acts of antisemitism has risen. This makes this document all the more timely, especially as it reports: “Many witnesses noted that the rise in antisemitism has been particularly acute on university campuses.”

    Among the document’s 19 recommendations is guidance around Holocaust education and remembrance. While there is longstanding scholarly discussion around best practices and ethics pertaining to teaching the Holocaust and remembrance, educators must also be responsive to our current — and evolving — contexts.

    Here, I share ways I have sought to adapt my own approach to teaching Holocaust literature. For educators wondering how to begin approaching the integration of Holocaust topics, a 2020 collection of articles on the subject, Understanding and Teaching the Holocaust, edited by Laura Hilton (professor of history) and Avinoam Patt (professor of Holocaust studies), could be a launching point.

    Modern-day antisemitism, trajectories

    The committee’s sixth recommendation is that the government of Canada work with provinces and territories to “ensure that Holocaust education in public schools and other institutions includes explanations of modern-day antisemitism and integrates a Jewish community-centered lens.”

    For a course teaching film adaptations of the Holocaust, I solicited the assistance of a colleague, historian Carson Phillips, at the Azrieli Foundation, a charity whose eight funding areas include Holocaust education and legacy, to tackle this recommendation.

    Working with Phillips brought an additional voice to the discussion of how Holocaust denial and Holocaust distortion are connected to antisemitism. Holocaust denial is a form of antisemitism with all its malignant intentions.




    Read more:
    How Hitler conspiracies and other Holocaust disinformation undermine democratic institutions


    Phillips suggested I try to additionally focus on survivor memoirs that explore life prior to the Holocaust to illustrate the trajectory of antisemitic agendas. He noted I should concentrate on memoirs with a connection to Canada so this message would be more relevant for my students.

    He provided me with A Cry in Unison by Judy Cohen,
    Flights of Spirit by Elly Gotz and Memories in Focus by Pinchas Gutter. I also applied his advice in the fiction I taught and incorporated the 1970 novel, Crackpot, by Adele Wiseman, to show that between the First and Second World Wars in Canada, there was societal antisemitism and social isolation of Jews.

    To further connect this to a Canadian context, and to consider trajectories of hate, in the future I may include content around how there were plans to export the “final solution” from Europe to North America. This illustrates that tolerance of antisemitism can quickly threaten societal stability.

    Antisemitism far predates Nazism

    I wanted my students to see that although the Holocaust was caused by antisemitism, antisemitism long predated the rise of Nazism and survives today because of a lack of shared awareness.

    The Art Gallery of Alberta recently hosted an exhibit Here to Tell of photograph portraits of Holocaust survivors and their recorded testimonies.




    Read more:
    Holocaust survivor stories are reminders of why we need to educate against antisemitism


    In three of my courses, I gave the extra credit option to visit the exhibition and reflect on ideas, themes and concepts that resonated. Similar engagement is being implemented in high school classes to address Alberta’s curricular requirements.

    This has the aim of better informing learners about what can occur when xenophobia and hate are allowed to proliferate.

    The documentary connected to the exhibit vividly illustrates why antisemitism is dangerous when left to fester and breed, or if misinformation masquerades as fact.

    ‘Here to Tell: Faces of Holocaust Survivors’ project.

    As recent events in a suburb of Edmonton suggest, not combating antisemitism allows the tentacles of white supremacy and xenophobia to affect other communities too. There, masked demonstrators stood with an apparent anti-immigration sign while one gave a Nazi salute.

    Addressing Holocaust remembrance

    The eighth recommendation of Heightened Antisemitism calls for the government of Canada, “in line with its commitment to build strong communities and celebrate multiculturalism,” to “provide funding to develop a five-year program to enhance the literacy of post-secondary students regarding the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism.”

    For me as an educator, this made the marking of International Holocaust Remembrance Day (IHRD) especially meaningful in the context of classroom learning in Alberta.

    After all, Alberta was the province where James Keegstra first began teaching Holocaust denial to high school students in the 1980s. After Prof. Anthony Hall of the University of Lethbridge finally retired in 2018, it seemed like Holocaust denial and baseless vilification of Zionism was on the decline in Alberta. As reported by CBC, in 2016 Hall was suspended without pay for “allegedly promoting conspiracy theories and denying the Holocaust in online articles and videos.”

    This year was the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, and to to mark IHRD, I organized two guest speakers to present their research to students. Speakers helped contextualize the immediate legacy of the Holocaust and how this contributes to contemporary antisemitism.

    With Yom HaShoah (Jewish Holocaust Remembrance Day) soon approaching, these discussions should be at the forefront of Canadian human rights awareness.




    Read more:
    How Jan. 27 came to be International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust


    Wider implications

    Although my students are likely not familiar with the report’s broader recommendations for how to combat antisemitism, a sizeable portion of the report’s advice does focus on university campuses. There are implications far beyond teaching the Holocaust or Jewish subject matters which may potentially impact students.

    Recommendations include:

    • Calls for more robust and effective strategies to combat antisemitism and safeguard Jewish communities across Canada;

    • For action to address antisemitic incidents;

    • That the “full diversity of the Jewish identity be acknowledged within Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) frameworks, including Jewish peoplehood, ethnicity, nationality, multi-denominational religion, cultural diversity, and language, as well as Zionist and Indigenous aspects of Jewish identity.” This point notes that “this includes the recognition of Zionism as the self-determination of Jewish people in their ancestral homeland of Israel.”

    It has yet to be seen how a change in federal Canadian leadership will uphold the values articulated in this important committee report, but the document does provide hope for Holocaust educators and broader Canadian communities isolated by a rise in hate.

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

    ref. How I’m teaching Holocaust literature in light of Canadian recommendations around combatting antisemitism – https://theconversation.com/how-im-teaching-holocaust-literature-in-light-of-canadian-recommendations-around-combatting-antisemitism-247747

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI China: China International Consumer Products Expo unveils tech-driven future

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

    HAIKOU, April 13 — A seamless integration of cutting-edge technologies into daily life is taking center stage at the ongoing fifth China International Consumer Products Expo (CICPE) in south China’s Haikou City, painting a vivid picture of a smarter, more interconnected future.

    Slated from April 13 to 18, this year’s expo features dedicated exhibition zones for groundbreaking innovations in artificial intelligence (AI) and low-altitude economy for the first time.

    Tech giants like Huawei and China Mobile are showcasing futuristic solutions. Huawei’s HarmonyOS ecosystem demonstrates cross-device synergy across “people, vehicles, and homes,” featuring AI-powered eye-tracking technology for hands-free e-book navigation.

    China Mobile’s smart home ecosystem includes quadruped robotic companions for elderly care and AI-driven home security systems.

    “AI is accelerating its integration into everyday scenarios. The expo is undoubtedly a major platform to showcase these advances,” said Zhan Wenyu, vice president of AI company iFLYTEK, which has participated in the expo for five consecutive years.

    The expo’s dedicated AI zone displays humanoid robots capable of complex tasks, such as dancing in traditional local Li ethnic brocade costumes or handling delicate objects.

    Tesla’s latest humanoid robot boasts enhanced mobility and tactile sensitivity, while the Ti5 Robot unveils breakthroughs in electric drive technology with lightweight joint modules and smart dexterous hands.

    Health and wellness technologies also claim a prominent spotlight. Continuous glucose monitors and light therapy glasses under various brands further spotlight the fusion of tech and well-being, while brain-computer interfaces highlight advancements in medical accessibility. Companies like SenseTime and Asus are presenting smart health ecosystems at the event.

    Brands like OSIM and Ogawa have debuted AI massage robots. Air Nutri Solution Inc., a Vancouver-based non-medicinal sleep solutions provider, introduces its “deep sleep cabin,” which uses charged particle waves to create immersive rest environments.

    The OSIM sees the expo as a key platform for engaging in meaningful conversations with global consumers, said Lin Xiaohui, deputy general manager of brand management and marketing of OSIM North Asia.

    Making its debut this year, the low-altitude economy zone showcases electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft, flying cars, and drones.

    Autonomous vehicles served expo attendees, offering driverless shuttles and cleaning services around key venues, providing a glimpse into smart city logistics.

    United Aircraft brought the TD550, which obtained the first type certificate for unmanned helicopters in China, to the exhibition. “China is entering an era of rapid development of the low-altitude economy,” said Zhou Xiaoyue, director of the firm’s public relations.

    “The Hainan Free Trade Port provides unprecedented opportunities for the innovation of the drone industry,” Zhou said, adding that the firm will work with global partners through the expo platform to promote the industrial implementation of the low-altitude economy.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Fresh details emerge on Australia’s new climate migration visa for Tuvalu residents

    ANALYSIS: By Jane McAdam, UNSW Sydney

    The details of a new visa enabling Tuvaluan citizens to permanently migrate to Australia were released this week.

    The visa was created as part of a bilateral treaty Australia and Tuvalu signed in late 2023, which aims to protect the two countries’ shared interests in security, prosperity and stability, especially given the “existential threat posed by climate change”.

    The Australia–Tuvalu Falepili Union, as it is known, is the world’s first bilateral agreement to create a special visa like this in the context of climate change.

    Here’s what we know so far about why this special visa exists and how it will work.

    Why is this migration avenue important?
    The impacts of climate change are already contributing to displacement and migration around the world.

    As a low-lying atoll nation, Tuvalu is particularly exposed to rising sea levels, storm surges and coastal erosion.

    As Pacific leaders declared in a world-first regional framework on climate mobility in 2023, rights-based migration can “help people to move safely and on their own terms in the context of climate change.”

    And enhanced migration opportunities have clearly made a huge difference to development challenges in the Pacific, allowing people to access education and work and send money back home.

    As international development expert Professor Stephen Howes put it,

    Countries with greater migration opportunities in the Pacific generally do better.

    While Australia has a history of labour mobility schemes for Pacific peoples, this will not provide opportunities for everyone.

    Despite perennial calls for migration or relocation opportunities in the face of climate change, this is the first Australian visa to respond.

    How does the new visa work?
    The visa will enable up to 280 people from Tuvalu to move to Australia each year.

    On arrival in Australia, visa holders will receive, among other things, immediate access to:

    • education (at the same subsidisation as Australian citizens)
    • Medicare
    • the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS)
    • family tax benefit
    • childcare subsidy
    • youth allowance.

    They will also have “freedom for unlimited travel” to and from Australia.

    This is rare. Normally, unlimited travel is capped at five years.

    According to some experts, these arrangements now mean Tuvalu has the “second closest migration relationship with Australia after New Zealand”.

    Reading the fine print
    The technical name of the visa is Subclass 192 (Pacific Engagement).

    The details of the visa, released this week, reveal some curiosities.

    First, it has been incorporated into the existing Pacific Engagement Visa category (subclass 192) rather than designed as a standalone visa.

    Presumably, this was a pragmatic decision to expedite its creation and overcome the significant costs of establishing a wholly new visa category.

    But unlike the Pacific Engagement Visa — a different, earlier visa, which is contingent on applicants having a job offer in Australia — this new visa is not employment-dependent.

    Secondly, the new visa does not specifically mention Tuvalu.

    This would make it simpler to extend it to other Pacific countries in the future.

    Who can apply, and how?

    To apply, eligible people must first register their interest for the visa online. Then, they must be selected through a random computer ballot to apply.

    The primary applicant must:

    • be at least 18 years of age
    • hold a Tuvaluan passport, and
    • have been born in Tuvalu — or had a parent or a grandparent born there.

    People with New Zealand citizenship cannot apply. Nor can anyone whose Tuvaluan citizenship was obtained through investment in the country.

    This indicates the underlying humanitarian nature of the visa; people with comparable opportunities in New Zealand or elsewhere are ineligible to apply for it.

    Applicants must also satisfy certain health and character requirements.

    Strikingly, the visa is open to those “with disabilities, special needs and chronic health conditions”. This is often a bar to acquiring an Australian visa.

    And the new visa isn’t contingent on people showing they face risks from the adverse impacts of climate change and disasters, even though climate change formed the backdrop to the scheme’s creation.

    Settlement support is crucial
    With the first visa holders expected to arrive later this year, questions remain about how well supported they will be.

    The Explanatory Memorandum to the treaty says:

    Australia would provide support for applicants to find work and to the growing Tuvaluan diaspora in Australia to maintain connection to culture and improve settlement outcomes.

    That’s promising, but it’s not yet clear how this will be done.

    A heavy burden often falls on diaspora communities to assist newcomers.

    For this scheme to work, there must be government investment over the immediate and longer-term to give people the best prospects of thriving.

    Drawing on experiences from refugee settlement, and from comparative experiences in New Zealand with respect to Pacific communities, will be instructive.

    Extensive and ongoing community consultation is also needed with Tuvalu and with the Tuvalu diaspora in Australia. This includes involving these communities in reviewing the scheme over time.

    Dr Jane McAdam is Scientia professor and ARC laureate fellow, Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UNSW Sydney. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Labor and Coalition support for new home buyers welcome but other Australians also struggling with housing affordability

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Cull, Associate Professor, Western Sydney University

    doublelee/Shutterstock

    There is no denying housing reform is urgently needed in Australia to make housing more affordable and accessible to everyday Australians.

    Both major parties have now announced the incentives they are offering to help first-home buyers. While both Labor and the Coalition are hopeful their newly announced policies will win the most votes, how easy will it be to implement and how will it help first-home buyers?

    What new housing incentives are being offered?

    Refreshingly, both major parties are offering more novel policies than have previously been announced. In addition, both policies offer welcome relief to first-home buyers.

    As part of their $43 billion housing plan that already includes delivering 55,000 social and affordable homes, a Labor government will spend $10 billion to help more Australians purchase their first home.

    The first part of this plan includes increasing housing supply by building 100,000 new homes over eight years – just for first home buyers. The government would work with the states to identify where these homes will be built, beginning next financial year.

    The second part of Labor’s plan involves expanding the 5% deposit Home Guarantee Scheme to remove the annual cap of 50,000 places and removing income thresholds.

    It will also increase property price caps to better reflect local markets so that buyers can look to purchase a property where they currently work and/or live. For example, the current cap in Sydney will increase from $900,000 to $1.5 million.

    The Home Guarantee Scheme, which has already been used by more than 150,000 Australians, allows eligible first-home buyers to purchase a property with a 5% deposit and without paying Lenders Mortgage Insurance. The government guarantees part of the home loan. This will speed up the time that it will take for first-home buyers to save for a deposit, as they will be able to use a smaller deposit to secure a home.

    The 100,000 homes that would be built as part of Labor’s plans would only be available to first time home owners.
    Go My Media

    The Coalition have announced they will permit first-time buyers of newly built properties to deduct interest on up to $650,000 of their mortgage against their income for up to five years. The first home buyers, however, have to remain in their home for this time period.

    This will be available to singles on incomes up to $175,000 and couples with a combined income of up to $250,000. This is similar to the mortgage interest tax deduction currently permitted through negative gearing to property investors with rental properties.

    How easy are these housing policies to implement?

    While Labor’s Home Guarantee policy is already in operation, it should be relatively easy to expand this policy.

    However, in terms of building 100,000 homes, we know Labor is already well behind on its plan to build new housing stock, even though the number of dwellings increased by 53,200 to 11,294,300 for the quarter ended December 2024.

    This is where Labor’s policy of increasing subsidies to apprentices in the construction industry, as well plans to invest in prefabricated and modular homes and introduce a national certification system will help. While welcomed by housing advocates, the detail surrounding exactly where the houses will be built is an important part of this new housing policy.

    The Coalition’s proposal is more radical and will require changes to legislation before it can be implemented.

    It may also need to form part of more holistic taxation reform to have the intended effect. Details are still needed as to how this reform may affect the current capital gains tax exemption and other property tax concessions for one’s principal place of residence.

    Whether the Coalition have other taxation reforms planned is yet to be revealed.

    Could these policies work?

    The latest housing policies announced by both major parties are a step in the right direction.

    However, the details are missing and concerns remain around how these policies will interact with other policy proposals and whether there will be an unintended effect of pushing up housing prices.

    Peter Dutton says the deduction scheme would save the average family about $11,000 a year.
    Andrey Popov/Shutterstock

    While increasing the supply of housing is the answer to the housing crisis, whether these houses can be built quickly is still questionable. The 5% deposit for first home buyers will go a long way in enabling first home buyers to save a deposit. However, this means the remaining 95% still needs to be repaid and first home buyers will still need to prove they can service the loan. It will also increase pressure on first home buyers if interest rates increase early in their home ownership journey.

    First home owners who want to claim a tax deduction on their mortgage interest will still need to construct a new home, which will take some time to build.

    The tax deduction will help first-home buyers in the early years of their mortgage when mortgage interest is highest. However, it does tend to favour higher income earners who receive larger tax deductions due to their higher tax brackets.

    While it does little to put downward pressure on housing prices, the Coalition has combined this with an aggressive immigration policy aimed at increasing supply of established homes.

    Given the tight and expensive market in Australia, the latest housing incentives announced by the major parties may come as welcome news to first home buyers. But any new policy must be viewed as part of the larger package of policies being offered. First home buyers are not the only ones experiencing problems with housing affordability and accessibility.

    If anything, the contest for the federal election has forced both major parties to seriously consider their housing policies and share these with the public. However, the hardest part is yet to come: whether the incoming government’s housing policy is actually effective.

    Michelle Cull is a member of CPA Australia, the Financial Advice Association Australia and President Elect of the Academy of Financial Services in the United States. Michelle is an academic member of UniSuper’s Consultative Committee. Michelle co-founded the Western Sydney University Tax Clinic which has received funding from the Australian Taxation Office as part of the National Tax Clinic Program. Michelle has previously volunteered as Chair of the Macarthur Advisory Council for the Salvation Army Australia.

    ref. Labor and Coalition support for new home buyers welcome but other Australians also struggling with housing affordability – https://theconversation.com/labor-and-coalition-support-for-new-home-buyers-welcome-but-other-australians-also-struggling-with-housing-affordability-254451

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Over 11,000 tonnes of waste collected

    Source: City of Birmingham

    Published: Sunday, 13th April 2025

    Since Friday 4th April 2025, our clean-up crews across the city have collected 11,588 tonnes of waste, including the waste taken to HWRCs – the equivalent to 1,000 killer whales.

    Our crews have been clearing approx. 1,500 tonnes of waste a day since our vehicles have been able to deploy on time, with around 100-120 refuse collection vehicles out every day. We have repurposed between 40 and 60 housing and street cleansing vehicles and deployed multiple ‘grab trucks’ to clear large rubbish piles each day, prioritising 15 of the most affected hotspot wards.

    We are also supported by extra vehicles through mutual aid.

    We predict we have around 4,500 tonnes left to clear up this week.

    Leader of the Council Cllr John Cotton said: “Our work to clear the backlog is gathering pace and we will continue collecting waste over the weekend.

    “I fully appreciate that there is still more to do, and I share the frustration of people across the city, but now that we are getting our crews out on time every day, we are starting to see a difference and I want to thank our amazing crews for their hard work over the last week.

    “I also want to thank every citizen, community group and organisation that is helping with the clear-up. People are helping in neighbourhoods right across the city and their support is helping to clear our streets.”

    Some of our household recycling centres have extended opening hours and slots can be booked online, and our mobile household waste centres are operating on extended hours too. You can check locations here.

    Talks to resolve the dispute will continue next week and Cllr Cotton added: “I will stress again that we have made a fair and reasonable offer that means that no-one has to lose any pay at all, with alternative roles offered within the service, or indeed a promotion to work as a driver. We’re determined to reach an agreement but in the meantime, the clear-up continues.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: ‘HK remains free port in stormy times’

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Financial Secretary Paul Chan

    Allow me to take a moment to highlight why Hong Kong is the ideal strategic destination for innovation and technology businesses.

    In addition to our world-class infrastructure and business-friendly environment mentioned by Margaret (Trade Development Council Executive Director Margaret Fong), Hong Kong’s “one country, two systems” arrangement has set us apart from any other city in Asia. To name just a few of our unique strengths, we have:

    – first, convenient access to the vast Chinese Mainland and Asian markets;

    – second, a trusted common law system and strong intellectual property protection;

    – third, the convergence of Mainland and international data and capital; and

    – fourth, a thriving international talent pool that attracts and nurtures the top minds from around the world.

     

    These strengths have made Hong Kong a premier launch-pad for companies looking to scale up their business in Asia and beyond.

     

    Today, we are home to over 4,700 startups, and 28% of their founders come from outside the city. For a glimpse of this dynamism, I encourage you to visit InnoEX, which showcases the ingenuity of our startups and talent, with groundbreaking innovations ranging from AI and robotics to green tech, smart mobility, and much more.

     

    Hong Kong’s appeal extends beyond these. We offer a comprehensive funding ecosystem, spanning angel investments, venture capital and private equity, to one of the world’s deepest and most liquid stock markets. Besides, together with Greater Bay Area cities like Shenzhen and Guangzhou, we offer you a vibrant ecosystem that caters to the needs of innovative companies from different sectors and different stages of development. In fact, we have been ranked the world’s second most innovative cluster for five consecutive years.

     

    Ladies and gentlemen, we gather at a pivotal moment. We are witnessing a shifting global landscape marked by a daunting trade war and technological fragmentation. Trade patterns, industrial chain, supply chains and partnerships are being reshaped. In this “new normal”, many businesses will have to find new collaborators, explore untapped markets and embrace more agile business models.

     

    In these turbulent times, Hong Kong remains open and welcoming to businesses and talent from all over the world. We are eager to establish new connections and forge new partnerships. These are in our DNA. Rest assured that our free port status and free trade policy remain unshaken. We are firm in our commitment to the free flow of capital, goods, talent and information.

     

    Let me conclude by extending my gratitude to my government colleagues, the HKTDC, and all the exhibitors and partners who have brought the BIT Week to life. To our visitors: beyond networking and conducting business, please take some time to explore this vibrant city, not just our scenic hills, stunning coastlines and beautiful outlying islands, but also the 200+ Michelin-recommended restaurants. We impose no duty on wine. Coldplay was performing in our world-class Kai Tak Stadium. The Palace Museum and M+ museum are just across the harbour.

     

    I am sure you will enjoy the city, and wish you all the best of business and health for the time ahead.

     

    Financial Secretary Paul Chan made these remarks at the BIT Week 2025’s opening ceremony on April 13.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Voters have a clear choice. Labor’s long term and equitable tax reform or the Coalition’s big but one-off tax cuts

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Isaac Gross, Lecturer in Economics, Monash University

    Tang Yan Song

    The election campaign has erupted into a economic battleground as Labor and the Coalition unveiled major new tax policies at their campaign launches.

    Each policy package is aimed at addressing the mounting cost-of-living pressures facing millions of Australians.

    Labor’s flagship announcement is a new standard tax deduction of $1000 per year for work-related expenses. It represents a permanent reform designed to simplify the tax system and provide consistent, predictable relief.

    Economically, it reduces compliance costs and inefficiencies by eliminating paperwork and receipt-keeping for millions of Australians.

    According to a Blueprint Institute report, simplifying tax deductions through a standard deduction can significantly reduce compliance costs and increase economic efficiency. It potentially saves taxpayers and the government millions annually by streamlining the tax filing process.

    This change reduces errors, improves efficiency and saves both individuals and the government significant time and resources.

    A standard deduction can lead to increased compliance and fewer disputes. The Australian Taxation Office will not need to audit taxpayers who take the standard deduction. This will lower administrative costs and reduce the need for costly tax advice from accountants.

    Additionally, a simpler tax system can enhance labour market participation. It does this by removing complexity that disproportionately affects lower-income workers and those without professional tax advice.

    It also preserves the option for Australians with an unusually high number of deductions to keep deducting item by item as they currently do.

    In contrast, the Coalition’s big-ticket announcement is a one-off Cost of Living Tax Offset. It offers a refund of up to $1200 to workers earning up to $144,000 annually.

    Similar in structure to the previous Morrison government’s Low and Middle Income Tax Offset (LMITO), this measure provides short-term relief rather than systemic reform.

    Economically, the Coalition’s approach injects rapid fiscal stimulus into the economy, targeting households under significant financial strain from rising living costs.

    By providing direct rebates after the lodgment of the 2025-26 tax return, the Coalition aims to boost disposable incomes and encourage consumer spending without permanently altering tax scales.

    The temporary nature of the Coalition’s offset, priced at $10 billion, allows fiscal flexibility. It mitigates potential inflationary pressures by avoiding permanent spending increases, thereby providing immediate relief without structurally embedding costs into the budget.

    Coupled with the Coalition’s pledge to cut the fuel excise by 25¢ per litre immediately after the election, the tax offset represents a significant short-term fiscal injection. It offers immediate political advantage but limited longer-term economic reform.

    The economic debate between Labor and the Coalition has now crystallised around differing perspectives on fiscal management and economic intervention.

    Labor prioritises systemic reforms aimed at simplification and equity. The Coalition emphasises immediate, substantial cash injections to households through temporary relief measures. Both policies entail substantial fiscal commitments, yet differ markedly in their timing, permanence and structural impact on the Australian economy.

    Voters face a clear economic choice: Labor’s systemic tax simplification versus the Coalition’s aggressive short-term tax relief.

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

    ref. Voters have a clear choice. Labor’s long term and equitable tax reform or the Coalition’s big but one-off tax cuts – https://theconversation.com/voters-have-a-clear-choice-labors-long-term-and-equitable-tax-reform-or-the-coalitions-big-but-one-off-tax-cuts-254452

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Election Diary: Liberal and Labor launches focus on housing, but who thinks either side can fix that crisis any time soon?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

    If anyone had any doubts before, Sunday’s Liberal and Labor launches highlighted that this election is an auction for votes, in particular those of the under 40s and people in the outer suburbs.

    Amid the usual launch hoopla – the Liberals choosing western Sydney and Labor returning to Perth – both parties announced major fresh housing initiatives. They were making a deep bow to what’s a central issue for younger Australians who still aspire to the so-called “Australian dream” but can’t see themselves affording it.

    Significantly, Peter Dutton also produced a tax handout – a tax offset of up to $1200 targeted to lower and middle income earners. This was despite his signalling earlier in the campaign he wouldn’t be able to afford to do so. On tax, Anthony Albanese promised people would be able to claim a $1000 automatic tax deduction for work expenses (at a cost of $2.4 billion over the forward estimates).

    The Liberal campaign has been flagging. Labor has appeared headed for victory, at least in a comfortable minority. The Liberals might say they’ve been working on the policies produced on Sunday for some time, but they do have a “break glass” feel about them, as the opposition seeks to reinvigorate its campaign.

    The Liberals’ proposal for the interest on a mortgage to be tax deductible has strict limits. It only applies to first home buyers, to new homes and (for the house buyer) for five years, and provided the buyer remains living in the home. There is a means test, and the interest deductibility only applies on the first $650,000 of the loan. This is why the plan is costed at a modest $1.25 billion over the forward estimates.

    The plan will come under some tough criticism in the final three weeks of the campaign. Independent economist Saul Eslake said on Sunday the policy would put upward pressure on house prices. “We have 60 years of evidence going back to the Menzies government’s initial first home owners’ grant scheme that anything allowing people to spend more on housing than they otherwise would results in more expensive housing and a smaller proportion of the population owning it.”

    Eslake argues that when this policy is combined with the Liberals’ policy to give people access to their superannuation for a deposit, “they make a candidate for the worst policy decision of the 21st century so far.”

    In its new housing offer, Labor is promising to invest $10 billion for the construction of up to 100,000 new homes to be sold only to first home owners. Also, the present scheme under which the government guarantees a 5% home deposit would have the means test removed (the Liberals would also tweak some detail of this measure).

    Labor in its first term committed to spending $33 billion and set a target of 1.2 million new homes over five years. Progress to the target is off course. The latest initiatives could be seen by some voters as more of the same.

    The Liberals hope the interest deductibility policy might be a show stopper. But there is a salutary lesson from the 2022 campaign. The Liberals also came out at that campaign launch with a big housing initiative – to allow people access to their super for the purchase of their first home.

    It wasn’t the “game changer” Scott Morrison labelled it. It was too late, for one thing. For another, policy auction or not, many voters make decisions on wider criteria, including what they think of the leaders and the context in which the contest is taking place.

    The latter is especially important this election, when the vagaries of the Trump administration are driving some voters towards staying with “the devil you know”.

    While the Liberals’ tax offset announcement came as a surprise, perhaps it was inevitable the Coalition would have to offer something on taxation. It seemed at the time crazy brave for the opposition to reject the government’s $17 billion budget package of tax cuts.

    The opposition rationalises the money involved in its election carrots. The earlier-announced cuts in petrol and diesel fuel excise (costing $6 billion) would last a year (although open to extension). Then the $10 billion tax offset would cut in. The Liberals argue this sequencing balances immediate cost-of-living relief with economic responsibility.

    Nevertheless, the opposition’s giveaways don’t sit easily with its mantra about the need to cut spending. We have yet to see the circle squared, and that will only come (if it does) at the end of the campaign when the accounting numbers are all submitted.

    Meanwhile, Labor is making the most of the threat of Dutton’s unknown spending cuts. Albanese said in his speech: “If Peter Dutton won’t tell you what cuts he will make before you vote, if he refuses to say where the $600 billion for his nuclear reactors will come from, then every other promise is worthless.”

    The figure of Donald Trump continues to hang over the campaign, with Albanese declaring “the Liberals want to copy from overseas”.

    In an own goal on Saturday Jacinta Price, who is shadow minister for government efficiency, referred to the opposition’s commitment to “make Australia great again” at an appearance with Dutton.

    Dutton’s launch speech ran for the best part of an hour, with three former prime ministers, John Howard, Tony Abbott and Scott Morrison, in the audience. Predictably, there was no sign of Malcolm Turnbull.

    Julia Gillard was there for Albanese’s launch. Paul Keating didn’t make the trek to Perth; Kevin Rudd, as ambassador in Washington, has other responsibilities these days.

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

    ref. Election Diary: Liberal and Labor launches focus on housing, but who thinks either side can fix that crisis any time soon? – https://theconversation.com/election-diary-liberal-and-labor-launches-focus-on-housing-but-who-thinks-either-side-can-fix-that-crisis-any-time-soon-254206

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  • MIL-OSI Economics: CBB Welcomes Delegation from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ “Dhiyafa” Program

    Source: Central Bank of Bahrain

    CBB Welcomes Delegation from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ “Dhiyafa” Program

    Published on 13 April 2025

    Manama, Bahrain – 13 April 2025: The Central Bank of Bahrain (CBB) hosted a delegation of participants from the fifth International Diplomats Program “Dhiyafa” on Thursday, 10th April 2025 at its headquarters. The initiative is organised by the Mohamed bin Mubarak Al Khalifa Academy (MBMA) for Diplomatic Studies under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    Mr. Yousef Rashid Al Fadhel, Executive Director of Corporate Services at CBB, received the delegation which consisted of 23 diplomats. In his opening address, he highlighted the importance of these initiatives in enhancing communication and the exchange of expertise between Bahrain and other nations.

    During the visit, Mr. Mohammed Al Sadiq, Head of Financial Stability at CBB, presented an overview of the institution’s mandate and its commitment to maintaining regulatory oversight in the sector. He also outlined the key objectives of the Financial Services Sector Development Strategy 2022 – 2026. Following his session, Ms. Sarah Ehsan Faraj, Director of the Currency Issue Directorate, delivered a presentation on the issuance of the commemorative silver coin minted on the occasion of the Silver Jubilee of His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, marking 25 years of His Majesty’s reign. The visit concluded with a tour of the Currency Museum housed within the CBB’s premises.

    On the occasion, Mr. Yousef Rashid Al Fadhel, commented: “In line with our commitment to contributing towards meaningful national initiatives, we were pleased to offer the delegates an in-depth perspective into the CBB’s pioneering role in supporting the Kingdom’s financial sector. We also commend this vital endeavour, which serves to stimulate the interflow of ideas and build stronger connections with diplomats from different backgrounds as they explore Bahrain’s rich history and cultural legacy.”

    Launched in 2019, “Dhiyafa” was the recipient of the inaugural Government Innovation Competition (Fikra) award in 2018. Since then, it has welcomed 91 officials from 47 nations. Designed as a comprehensive experience that combines academic learning with practical engagement, the program seeks to enhance bilateral relations between Bahrain and the participating countries by showcasing the Kingdom’s progress across diverse fields.

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  • MIL-OSI China: White House says 1st round of US-Iran talks ‘positive’

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    U.S. special presidential envoy Steve Witkoff met with Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi on Saturday and had “very positive and constructive” discussions, said the White House.

    “Special Envoy Witkoff underscored to Dr. Araghchi that he had instructions from President (Donald) Trump to resolve our two nations’ differences through dialogue and diplomacy, if that is possible,” it said in a statement.

    “These issues are very complicated, and Special Envoy Witkoff’s direct communication today was a step forward in achieving a mutually beneficial outcome,” it said, adding that the two sides plan to meet again next Saturday.

    Earlier Saturday, Iranian media also described the talks as “constructive” and revealed plans for more discussions next week.

    The meeting marked the first time the United States and Iran engaged directly since Trump returned to the White House.

    Trump has repeatedly said Iran needs to rapidly reach a deal that makes sure it can’t obtain a nuclear weapon or will face the prospect of military strikes. 

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  • MIL-OSI China: Macao comedy festival launches platform for emerging talent

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    A new comedy competition forum that connects emerging talent with investors debuted Friday at the Macao International Comedy Festival.

    A photo captures a scene from the stage play “I’m Your Father” at a comedy pitch event during the second Macao International Comedy Festival in Hengqin, Guangdong province, April 11, 2025. [Photo courtesy of Mahua Fun Age]

    The New Talents: Comedy Venture Capital Forum is China’s first platform where comedy screenwriters can pitch their work to potential investors through stage performances. 

    Held in Hengqin, a district of Zhuhai city in Guangdong province adjacent to Macao, the event featured directors Feng Xiaogang and Xu Zheng and comedy stars Shen Teng and Ma Li as judges. The forum aims to help emerging comedians secure funding, gain access to industry resources and find creative collaborators, helping transform their script ideas into marketable productions.

    The competition drew more than 300 original stage play submissions across genres from urban comedy to absurdist theater and dark humor. After selection and development, six finalists presented their scripts through immersive performances.

    The program also included an artificial intelligence component, with organizers saying AI helped screenwriters find inspiration and explore new approaches to comedy.

    A photo captures a scene from the stage play “Home, Friends and Whiskey” at a comedy pitch event during the second Macao International Comedy Festival in Hengqin, Guangdong province, April 11, 2025. [Photo courtesy of Mahua Fun Age]

    Playwright Ji Yun’s “I’m Your Father” won the top story and best incubation awards following performances and deliberations by the judges. Liang Yubao’s “The Laughing Grandpa” received the jury’s special award, while Sang Kezhou’s “Home, Friends and Whiskey” earned the most potential prize. Guan Xin and Qu Mufei’s “Seize the Flight” took home the best creativity award.

    “Comedy should mirror everyday experiences,” Ji said during his acceptance. “By articulating what audiences feel but can’t express, we find boundless creativity. Our art must both originate from and return to the people.”

    Director Xu Zheng, one of the four judges, shared his vision at the awards ceremony: “I want to see greater diversity in comedy. May more comedic works flourish across all cultures and contexts.”

    Filmmakers Feng Xiaogang, Xu Zheng and comedy stars Shen Teng and Ma Li serve as judges at a comedy pitch event during the second Macao International Comedy Festival in Hengqin, Guangdong province, April 11, 2025. [Photo courtesy of Mahua Fun Age]

    The second Macao International Comedy Festival runs through Sunday across Hengqin and Macao, featuring comedians, film screenings, performances, forums and an evening gala.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Introducing the 2025 ACT Australian of the Year winners

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    From left: Daniel Bartholomaeus, Hannah Costello, Vanessa Brettell, Megan Gilmour, Marilyn Ralston, Peter Ralston OAM.

    In brief:

    • The winners of the 2025 ACT Australian of the Year Awards have been announced.
    • The four categories recognise people who go above and beyond for their communities.
    • They are now finalists in the national awards, to be announced on 25 January 2025.

    The winners of the 2025 ACT Australian of the Year Awards have been announced.

    They will join the other state and territory recipients as finalists for the national awards announcement on 25 January 2025.

    Read on to find out more about the winners.

    2025 ACT Australian of the Year recipient – Megan Gilmour

    Social innovator Megan Gilmour wants to create a world where all children are seen and heard.

    In Australia, 1.2 million children are at risk of missing school due to complex medical and mental health challenges.

    Megan advocates for change in education systems for these vulnerable children.

    She drew on her lived experience to co-found MissingSchool. The organisation develops school solutions that help students continue learning alongside their peers.

    MissingSchool launched the world’s first national telepresence service, allowing children in hospital or at home to join lessons in real time.

    It has restored school connections for some 6,900 students since 2018.

    2025 ACT Senior Australian of The Year recipients – Marilyn and Peter Ralston OAM

    Peter and Marilyn Ralston support people with vision impairment or other disabilities to run, walk and be active.

    They began Achilles Running Club Canberra in 2013. Peter is President of the club.

    Through Achilles Canberra, volunteer guides team up with people with disability. Together, they join fun runs, club training and the weekly Parkrun.

    In the past three years, Peter has guided blind athletes 120 times at Parkrun. Achilles Canberra has enabled several blind members to each achieve hundreds of Parkruns.

    Peter and Marilyn also serve the community through other charity work.

    2025 ACT Young Australian of the Year recipient – Daniel Bartholomaeus

    Daniel Bartholomaeus is an artist and neurodiversity advocate.

    Daniel, who has autism and ADHD, inspires and motivates others. This is especially the case within the neurodiverse community.

    He not only uses his art to express himself, but also to forge common pathways for people with mental ill-health and those of different abilities.

    His art and lived experience help bridge the gap between neurotypical and neurodiverse people.

    Daniel is a mentor with The With Friends Initiative, a social group for neurodivergent young people.

    2025 ACT Local Hero recipients – Vanessa Brettell and Hannah Costello

    Vanessa Brettell and Hannah Costello use hospitality to empower vulnerable women.

    Their business, Cafe Stepping Stone, operates as a social enterprise. It employs women who experience significant barriers to employment. These women are mostly from migrant and refugee backgrounds.

    The café’s two locations offer culturally and linguistically diverse women employment pathways, on-the-job training and qualifications. These help them enter or return to the workforce.

    Hannah and Vanessa’s inclusive employment practices assist female workers who:

    • are the sole income earners in their household
    • are new arrivals to Australia
    • have limited English or minimal employment history
    • are experiencing homelessness.

    Find out more about the awards and other ACT nominees on the Australian of the Year website.

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  • MIL-OSI Australia: Canberra’s most common recycling mistakes

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    From coffee cups to clothing, there are some items that do not belong in your recycling bin.

    Canberrans are great recyclers, but sometimes people mistake items as recyclable when they’re not.

    Things you can put in your recycling (yellow) bin include:

    • aluminium and steel cans
    • glass bottles and jars
    • paper and cardboard
    • plastic bottles and containers.

    However, plenty of other items turn up in yellow bins across the ACT every day. These include everything from coffee cups to clothing and computers to cat poo.

    While some of these things can be recycled, your yellow bin is not the place for them. Visit the A to Z guide of waste and recycling to find out what to do with them.

    Here are some items Canberrans commonly try to recycle through their yellow bin.

    Bagged recycling

    Plastic bags cannot go in your recycling bin. If you put items in your yellow bin inside a plastic bag, the whole bag will go to landfill. Waste sorting facilities will not open the bag as there may be other contamination inside.

    Don’t let the bag cancel out what’s inside. Simply place recyclable items – loose and empty – into your recycling bin and reuse your bags another way.

    Soft plastics

    Soft plastics include things like chip and lolly packets and bread bags. Like plastic bags, these can’t go in your recycling bin.

    The general rule is that if you can scrunch it up, it can’t go in your recycling bin. Put it in your landfill (red) bin instead.

    Even though items like milk bottles and berry punnets may feel a bit soft, these are still considered hard plastics and can go in your household recycling.

    Takeaway coffee cups

    There is a lot of confusion around these. While many takeaway coffee cups are made from cardboard, they cannot go in recycling bins. This is due to the type of materials they’re made from, including the plastic coating often found on the inside.

    You should also put the disposable lids in your landfill bin as they cannot be recycled either.

    Timber

    Timber can be reused but not via your household recycling bin.

    You can dispose of reusable timber by dropping it off for free at second-hand locations like Goodies Junction. If the timber is valuable, you could try a local ‘buy nothing’ group or consider contacting places like Thor’s Hammer or ACT Recycling.

    Textiles

    These include clothing, blankets, sheets, towels and fabrics.

    These items can also be recycled but your recycling bin is not the place for them.

    You can try giving them another home by:

    • passing them on to a friend
    • selling or giving them away online
    • donating them to a charity
    • dropping them off for free at Goodies Junction at either Mitchell or Mugga Lane.

    Batteries and eWaste

    It’s imperative batteries and eWaste are disposed of correctly. These items can cause fires and should not go in any of your household bins.

    You can drop off batteries for free at over 50 locations across Canberra. These include most supermarkets and hardware stores.

    Both eWaste and batteries can be disposed of for free at a resource management centre – either at Mitchell or Mugga Lane.

    Animal waste

    While this one may seem obvious, animal waste is not recyclable and must not go in household recycling bins. Animal waste should only be placed in landfill bins.

    If you’re ever unsure about what can and cannot be recycled, check out the A to Z guide to waste and recycling.


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  • MIL-OSI Australia: 35 (more) new places to eat in 2024

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Carlotta is the first restaurant by Chris Lucas in Canberra. Image: VisitCanberra


    In brief:

    • Many new restaurants, cafés and bars have opened in Canberra in the second half of 2024.
    • This story includes a list of new eateries to try.

    We hope you’re hungry, because there are plenty of new places to check out:

    Ballyhoo has seriously good food, with a fun, laid-back atmosphere. The food is a blend of Mediterranean and South American cuisine.

    Expect Australian-influenced Mediterranean food designed for shared feasting. Savour antipasto, handmade pasta, and meat and seafood cooked in a wood oven from Naples.

    The iconic building at the top of Red Hill has reopened with two Italian restaurants: Lunetta and Lunetta Trattoria. The latter is on the ground floor with a more relaxed vibe. Upstairs, Lunetta offers elevated dining with beautiful views.

    Wildflour are famous for their seasonal pastries, and Macquarie residents can soon get their fix. Their new shopfront is set to open in mid-November.

    This Korean barbecue spot joined Capital Food Market in September. Wagyu beef is a star on the menu, but there are also salads, seafood, soups and more.

    Hao Chi is another new addition to Belconnen’s Capital Food Market. The menu includes a range of dumplings and buns, as well as noodles, fried rice, and snacks.

    Southsiders can now easily get their hands on NYC-style donuts. Brooklyn Donut and Coffee have a large menu with traditional and filled donuts. Enjoy flavours like red velvet, New York cheesecake, and dark choc peanut butter.

    Looking for a cozy coffee spot in Tuggeranong? Look no further. Mocha Mystic also have a varied breakfast and lunch menu. Fritters, momo (Nepalese dumpling), salads, toasties and more are on offer.

    Bombay Duck, Greenway

    Authentic Indian is now available at South.Point in Tuggeranong.  Curries, chat, rice, biryani, and naan all feature on the menu.

    Espresso Room has opened near Coles in the Canberra Centre. The coffee is a focus but you’ll also find pastries, donuts and takeaway lunch items.

    This isn’t a new opening, but it is a long-awaited reopening. This award-winning Turkish restaurant is known as an ideal spot for a special occasion meal.

    The former chef of the now-closed XO in Narrabundah is bringing southeast Asian street eats to New Acton. Grab takeaway lunch from Monday to Friday in the form of fragrant curries.

    Flui is a casual fine dining restaurant. The cuisine is modern Australian with influences from the Mediterranean, Middle East and Asia.

    This bar and restaurant offers authentic Mexican. The menu includes tacos, burritos, chimichangas, paella and much more.

    This deli-style café is on the edge of Yerrabi Pond. They make their sandwiches with golden schiacciata bread. The fillings showcase Italian deli meats and fresh cheeses.

    This sushi train restaurant has recently opened on the Kingston Foreshore. Enjoy fresh sushi, sashimi, udon, rice bowls and hot dishes while overlooking Lake Burley Griffin.

    Fans of K-Pop will love this new Korean eatery. Extra hungry? Go all out and dig into a platter. They include black pink fried chicken, house-made pickle radish, coleslaw and dinner rolls.

    Mawson shops have established themselves as a suburban foodie haven. The newest addition is Mawson Kebab and Grill, where you’ll find an extensive menu with Turkish classics.

    This soon-to-be-opened Italian restaurant in Gungahlin has a build your own model. Select from five different pasta types, choose a sauce and then add your extras.

    Anketell Street’s newest café has something for everyone. Classic breakfast dishes, healthy bowls, pastas, burgers and more are all available.

    This Parisian-style pastry shop is proving popular among locals. Expect to queue for croissants, eclairs, escargot, tarts, savoury pastries and more.

    Salted butter rolls, cookies, buns, sticky rice balls and sweet cakes. These are some of the goods available at this Korean bakery. Arrive hungry, as the pastry cases are bursting with creative, decadent creations.

    Seoul Sistaz blends Korean cuisine with soul food. The result is delicious dishes like bulgogi toasties, iced black sesame lattes, and triangle spicy bulgogi. kimbap,

    The newest location on Mort Street offers the same healthy food Eighty/Twenty customers have come to know and love. Acai bowls, salads and smoothies are fan favourites.

    This Indian restaurant in the historic Melbourne Building offers authentic Indian cuisine. A host of curries feature on the menu alongside dosa, Jalfrezi, samosa and more. There are plenty of vegetarian dishes on the menu.

    This bar on Dairy Road in Fyshwick specialises in heavenly cocktails. The food menu includes bar snacks, pita pizza, cheese and charcuterie plates and sliders.

    Verity Lane’s newest addition includes new and traditional flavours of Vietnam. Phở, bánh mì and rice paper rolls are some of the fresh, tasty options available.

    This Italian micro bakery is one of the newest stallholders at the Old Bus Depot Markets. Apple crumble brioche, Biscoff and roasted hazelnut snails, and crème brûlée bombolini are some of their featured menu items.

    This family-owned business has a large menu full of Vietnamese favourites. Their banh mi menu includes vegan, vegetarian and pescatarian options.

    Crispy, golden focaccia baked fresh by a local home baker. Bink By B’s focaccias are available in three flavours: garlic butter, rosemary and sea salt, and olive, tomato and rosemary.

    The much-loved mobile pizza fan has taken up residence at The Jetty. Chef Hem has been named one of the world’s best pizza chefs. One bite and you’ll understand why.

    XinFuTang Canberra, Canberra City

    Taste Taiwanese bubble tea at the Canberra Centre. Flavours include brown sugar boba milk with Biscoff sauce, matcha boba milk tea, and lychee green tea.

    Banana Blossom opened its first Canberra store in June and has fast become a favourite among city workers. Fresh salads, rice bowls and noodles feature on the menu.

    If you were a bit fan of Lim Peh’s when they were at Verity Lane Market, you can breathe a sigh of relief: they’re coming back. This time, their Singaporean-inspired hawker bowls will be available at Westfield Woden. You can expect them to open very soon.

    Who knew that specialty coffee and Korean-inspired sandos paired so well? The sandos are made with cloud-like shokupan bread with locally sourced ingredients.

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  • MIL-OSI Australia: How to find a Justice of the Peace

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    A Justice of the Peace may witness signatures and perform other duties.


    In brief:

    • A Justice of the Peace (JP) certifies documents for members of the public.
    • Damiano Costa has been a JP for more than 50 years.
    • This article shares some of Damiano’s experience as JP and provides more information about finding a JP.

    Most Canberrans will seek the services of a JP, or Justice of the Peace, when they need a document certified. But what is actually involved in being a JP?

    A JP is authorised to:

    • administer oaths and affirmations
    • witness statutory declarations and affidavits
    • witness signatures
    • attest and certify documents.

    They’re the people who can certify your passport documents or witness your signature. They might do this in their home, on a weekend or after hours, but they’re not paid for this.

    An office of the JP is an honorary role. This means they can’t charge fees or accept payment for their services . Before providing JP services to the ACT community, an individual must:

    • complete the required training
    • make a successful application to the Attorney-General
    • attend a swearing-in ceremony.

    Damiano’s story

    Damiano Costa has been a JP since 1967. At the time, he was working for the Department of Immigration, who were then responsible for issuing passports.

    “Five hundred people were employed in the public service in Immigration at the time and I was the only person speaking Italian,” Damiano said.

    For the Italians who migrated to Australia after the war, the services of someone like Damiano were critical.

    “Also, when we created the Italian Club in Forrest, people needed documents certified for various reasons, and they also needed interpreting and translation,” he said.

    “I decided to become a JP to make it easier for myself, because we were limited to where JPs were available and there were not very many at that time.”

    Becoming a Justice of the Peace meant Damiano was able to help other members of the Italian community in Canberra. He recalls people from Cooma and Goulburn coming to Canberra to have documents translated and certified.

    Over the years, he has helped many Italians with passport applications, bank loans, and speeding fines. He’s also helped them transfer their Italian pensions to Australia, an important responsibility that has since been transferred to the Italian Embassy.

    How JPs work

    Part of the responsibility is being available to perform the role at all reasonable times, including after hours and on weekends.

    Some JPs perform their duties from their homes, but others meet people in mutually convenient locations. JP services are also available at public locations such as:

    * shopping centres

    * public libraries

    * police stations.

    Damiano has made visits to nursing homes to perform duties for older people who are unable to travel to him.

    Looking for a JP?

    JPs are available at a range of public locations. Often no appointments are necessary, however you may have to wait. You can also search the online JP Register to find a JP near you.

    Find a Justice of the Peace.

    Learn more about what a Justice of the Peace does.

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  • MIL-OSI Australia: Supporting local social enterprises to scale up

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Base Soaps co-founder Mick Cronin wanted the company to have a social purpose.

    In brief:

    • A local social enterprise has turned a gift-giving experiment into a flourishing business.
    • The owners received support from the Mill House Ventures.
    • A new program is now open to help social enterprise businesses scale up.

    Many of us may have tried some DIY soap-making in the past. But chances are, few of us are like Mick Cronin and Lianne Brink. These two founded Base Soaps from their home just outside of Canberra.

    Base Soaps started as a gift-giving experiment in 2017. With a little help along the way, it is now a fully-fledged business. It sells tens of thousands of bars and liquid soaps across the country.

    Co-founder Mick has a PhD in Chemistry. He wanted Base Soaps to have a social purpose – to help to address preventable diseases in Australia’s rural and remote communities.

    He wants people to know that their for-profit, for-purpose business is a social enterprise. This means giving back is embedded into the company’s constitution.

    “You can, simultaneously, have environmentally thoughtful, high-quality hygiene products, and contribute positive impact to rural and remote Australian communities,” he said.

    “Some Australian communities suffer incredibly high rates of preventable diseases.

    “We assist by contributing to existing programs that address preventable diseases in Australia’s rural and remote communities.”

    One is Otitis Media – better known as middle ear infection. Both co-founders were concerned with the high rates of this in children in Indigenous communities.

    They set up the constitution of Base Soaps to require them to donate at least 50 per cent of profits to causes that address these kinds of issues.

    Asking for support along the way

    A number of mentors have helped Mick and Lianne along the way. Many of these were found via Base Soaps’ connection to Canberra’s social enterprise intermediary, The Mill House Ventures.

    The Mill House Ventures provides a comprehensive suite of through-life support for local social enterprises and their founders. These range from short workshops to mentoring programs.

    Their latest program, Scale for Impact, is now open for applications. It aims to help established social enterprises, like Base Soaps, to identify future growth opportunities.

    Scale for Impact is an initiative developed by The Mill House Ventures through funding from the ACT Government.

    “The Scale for Impact program offers established social enterprises in Canberra tailored business support to help identify potential growth opportunities and pathways to philanthropic, sponsorship and/or investment funding,” CEO of The Mill House Ventures, Craig Fairweather, said.

    Mick from Base Soaps encourages other entrepreneurs keen to make a difference to connect with The Mill House Ventures.

    “It doesn’t matter if you’re already established, or simply have an idea. Go in with an open mind and you’ll quickly find out if this is the best way to make change, and enjoy yourself in the process,” said Mick.

    To find out more about the Scale for Impact program go to: millhouseventures.com.au/scale


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  • MIL-OSI Australia: New EVs join government fleet

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Electric vehicles take advantage of the ACT’s 100 per cent renewable electricity supply to help reduce emissions from transport.

    In brief:

    • The ACT Government has added 10 more electric vehicles to its fleet.
    • Electric vehicles are better for the environment and cheaper to run.
    • Making your next car electric could save you money.

    Canberra continues to lead the nation in supporting the uptake of electric vehicles (EVs).

    About 10 new electric vehicles are coming onto ACT roads every day. In fact, you might spot a few new ACT Government EVs out and about this spring, including:

    • a ute
    • two tipper trucks
    • a litter picking truck
    • a delivery van.

    These vehicles will join the City Services fleet as a trial to see how the ACT Government can continue to provide essential services in a more environmentally friendly way. An additional four electric passenger vehicles have also joined the fleet in the past month. These vehicles join more than 400 electric, plug-in hybrid or hydrogen fuel cell vehicles already in the ACT Government fleet.

    The trial will showcase the variety and availability of EVs for commercial use and promote their benefits to local industry and community. The new vehicles have been funded through the ACT Government’s Social Cost of Carbon Fund and Zero Emission Government Fund. These funds aim to reduce emissions produced by government activity.

    Making the switch

    Zero emission vehicles, like EVs, are better for the environment and quieter than petrol and diesel vehicles. They’re also much more affordable to run.

    Making your next car electric could save you around $18,000 in running costs over 10 years. It could also reduce your greenhouse gas emissions by around 3 tonnes per year.

    The ACT Government offers multiple incentives for people and businesses when they purchase an EV. And with new public chargers being installed all over the city, charging your EV is quick and easy.

    Canberran’s are embracing EVs at a rapid pace, with over 9,100 EVs currently registered. If you’re thinking about making your next car electric, but not sure where to start, check out this handy guide on EVs for beginners.

    Transport contributes over 60 per cent of the ACT’s emissions. This means electric vehicles have the potential to make a big difference as the ACT continues towards our goals of net zero emissions by 2045.

    For more information about zero emissions vehicles in the ACT, visit the Everyday Climate Choices website.


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  • MIL-OSI Australia: Canberra’s best pastries, as voted by you

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Almond, chocolate or plain? Canberrans have plenty of options when it comes to croissants and other pastries. Image: VisitCanberra


    In Brief:

    • We asked Canberrans on the @weareCBR Instagram account to name their favourite local pastry spot.
    • This list includes cafés, pâtisseries and bakeries around Canberra.

    Whether it’s a croissant for breakfast, a box of Danishes for the office morning tea or a mid-afternoon sweet treat, Canberran’s can’t get enough pastries.

    Here are the results:

    The scent of baked bread will lure you into this bakery tucked away at Fyshwick Markets. Inside, you’ll find a pastry counter heaving with fruit Danishes, croissants, Italian cream-filled donuts, Portuguese tarts and more.

    Wildflour sell a range of different pastries, but they’re most well-known for their croissants. Ube, matcha, pistachio, salted caramel, Biscoff, black tea and mango are just some of the flavours that they’ve featured on their ever-changing menu.

    Knead has the feel of a traditional bakery, offering all of the classic pastries. There are croissants, seasonal frangipanes, Portuguese tarts and fruit Danishes. But you’ll also find surprises, like brookies (a brownie cookie hybrid) and a cracking crème brulee tart.

    This small but mighty bakery at Curtin shops has the feel of a traditional suburban bakery. Their hearty, flavourful savoury pies are a favourite among Woden residents.

    This is not your traditional bakery – unless you’ve recently arrived from the Mediterranean. You’ll find traditional, chocolate and almond croissants alongside Turkish sweet pastries and Borek.

    French-influenced pastries are the star at this bakery. You’ll find croissants, cinnamon buns, Danishes, escargot and more.

    Le Bon Mélange make just about every baked good under the sun – and pastries are no exception. You’ll find a huge variety of both sweet and savoury options.

    Locals queue at this suburb gem to stock up on pastries. There’s cardamon buns, greens and cheese escargots, kouign-amanns, croissants, seasonal pastries and more.

    Danishes, scrolls, cruffins, croissants – this family-run bakery offers an impressive lineup of pastries. With a Lyneham location opening soon, more Inner North residents will be able to get their Bakehouse fix.

    Located on Beltana Road, this bakery offers a range of fresh pastries to fuel your Pialligo adventures. Choose from croissants, pain au chocolat, escargot, cinnamon buns, Danishes, cruffins and more.

    It’s hard to walk by the pastry counter at Tinker Tailor without treating yourself to a golden, flaky pastry. Danishes, croissants and scrolls are some of the delights regularly on offer.

    Three Mills not only have five locations across the city, but you can purchase their goods at shops and cafés around town. One taste of their delicious pastries and it’s easy to see why. There’s a big selection of fresh pastries and even bake at home packs.

    L’epi Artisan Bakery, Chisholm and Kambah

    This French-inspired artisan bakery has a large selection of classic and unique freshly baked pastries. Try a Moorish custard Danish or indulge in a crookie (that’s a croissant with cookie dough, for the uninitiated).

    From their cultured butter croissant to their flaky morning buns, locals love pastries from Sonoma. You’ll often have to queue to secure a sweet treat, but rest assured that every moment is worth it.

    Sometimes, only a classic will do. Dobinsons has been serving Canberra since 1994 and have earned a reputation for delicious sweet and savoury pastries. Crispy spinach and feta triangles, fruit tarts heaving with shiny fruit and the decadent Nutella Danish are some of the crowd favourites.

    It’s little surprise that this bakery, run by French bakers, make an excellent croissant. They also infuse their baked goods with seasonal flair, offering specials like peanut butter, fresh apple and coconut pastries or mandarin and chocolate croissants.

    Located inside Manuka Court, this little pâtisserie offers a taste of Europe to the inner south. Chef Wim is Dutch, but trained in France, so you’ll find Dutch boterkoek (butter cake with fruit and nuts) alongside croissants and Belgian chocolate custard twists.

    Over the years, Silo has earnt a cult following in the Canberra community. As a result, you may need to jostle your way to the front of the cue for a pastry, but it’s all part of the charm. You’ll find the counter stocked with a stunning lineup of sweet and savoury pastries that will keep you coming back for more.

    This bakery is worth the trip to Fyshwick for fresh pastries. If you’d rather not make the journey, the Cedar Husk truck makes its way around Canberra delivering to baked goods to people’s homes. Follow them on Facebook to see when they’re coming to your area.

    Prefer your morning pastry with a side of spectacular views? The Café at the Arboretum is in the Village Centre. Take a seat and soak up the views or order takeaway and enjoy a picnic among the trees.

    Good Neighbour is one of the newest additions to Kingston’s café scene. Alongside their basque cheesecake and New York style chunky cookies, you’ll find a selection of fresh pastries available at the front counter.

    Lilette, Dickson

    This artisanal French pâtisserie made the move from Melbourne to Dickson earlier in the year. Chef Lilette bakes all your French favourites, from eclairs to croissants and tarts.

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    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Companion Animal Care recipients announced

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Companion animals help people with their physical, mental and emotional wellbeing.


    In brief:

    • The ACT Government has awarded $200,000 in funding through the Companion Animal Care Grants Program.
    • The funding will support community groups in Canberra who improve animal welfare.
    • This story lists the groups who have recieved grants, and what the funding will be used for.

    The ACT Government has awarded $200,000 in funding through the Companion Animal Care Grants Program. This funding will support community groups to improve animal welfare across Canberra.

    Most of the groups receiving funding through the program rely on volunteers and community support. They rescue, rehome, advocate and care for companion animals such as cats and dogs.

    Groups to receive funding include:

    • ACT Pet Crisis Support
    • ACT Rescue and Foster
    • Canberra Pet Rescue
    • Canberra Street Cat Alliance
    • Completely Rescued
    • Labrador Rescue
    • Pets and Positive Ageing
    • Pets in the Park
    • The Rabbit Sanctuary.

    These groups will use the grants for a wide variety of activities including to support:

    • volunteer-run vet clinics to help pet owners with a Healthcare Card to care for their pets
    • services for older pet owners to help them keep their pets as their health declines
    • homeless people with companion animals by providing access to medications to treat the chronic health conditions of their pets
    • purchasing food and litter for foster carers to assist with rehoming cats in need
    • training for rescue dogs to increase the chances of rehoming them
    • desexing of rescue dogs to reduce the number of unplanned and unwanted litters
    • upgrading animal care facilities including a cattery and small animal enclosure
    • the rescue and rehoming of domestic rabbits.

    Companion animals help many people in Canberra with their physical, mental and emotional wellbeing.

    With the cost of living crisis, there has been an increase in abandoned and surrendered animals. This has led to more demand for the important work of these support groups.

    This funding will provide support for and recognise the efforts of volunteer groups that care for Canberra’s companion animals.

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    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI China: Global shipping strikes landmark emissions deal

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Following years of intense negotiations, nations reached a landmark agreement on Friday to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from global shipping by setting mandatory fuel standards and introducing an industry-wide carbon pricing mechanism.

    The framework, approved by the United Nations (UN) International Maritime Organization (IMO) Marine Environment Protection Committee, is the first to combine mandatory emissions limits and greenhouse gas pricing across an entire industry sector.

    Scheduled for formal adoption in October 2025 and implementation by 2027, the measures will apply to large ocean-going vessels exceeding 5,000 gross tonnage, which are responsible for approximately 85 percent of carbon dioxide emissions from the global shipping fleet.

    The framework adopts a dual approach: a global fuel standard that will progressively lower the annual greenhouse gas intensity of marine fuels, and a carbon pricing mechanism requiring high-emitting ships to pay for their excess pollution.

    A key feature of the new framework is the IMO Net-Zero Fund, which will collect revenue from the carbon pricing mechanism to support innovation, research, infrastructure, and transition initiatives in developing countries.

    IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez praised member states for their cooperation and commitment during the negotiations. “The approval of draft amendments to MARPOL Annex VI mandating the IMO net-zero framework represents another significant step in our collective efforts to combat climate change, to modernize shipping, and demonstrates that IMO delivers on its commitments,” he said.

    MARPOL Annex VI refers to provisions in the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, specifically addressing air pollution. It already includes mandatory energy efficiency requirements for ships and has 108 Parties, covering approximately 97 percent of the world’s merchant shipping fleet by tonnage.

    Established in 1948 and headquartered in London, the IMO is a UN specialized agency responsible for the safety and security of global shipping and the prevention of marine and atmospheric pollution from ships. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for April 13, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on April 13, 2025.

    ‘Trump fatigue’ is putting Kiwis off the news, with trust in media still low – new report
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Merja Myllylahti, Senior Lecturer, Co-Director Research Centre for Journalism, Media & Democracy, Auckland University of Technology Getty Images The news media is doing its best to keep everyone up to speed with the pace of Donald Trump’s radical changes to the world order. But in Aotearoa New

    Health workers call for NZ government to join global demands for ambulance massacre inquiry
    Asia Pacific Report Health workers spoke out at a rally condemning Israel’s genocide in Gaza and the latest atrocity against Palestinian aid workers today, calling on the New Zealand government to join global demands for an independent investigation. They were protesting over last month’s massacre of 15 Palestinian rescue workers and the destruction of their

    Albanese pitches to aspiring home buyers with $10 billion plan and removal of means test on deposit guarantee
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Anthony Albanese will promise a $10 billion scheme to facilitate the building of up to 100,000 homes that would be earmarked for sale to first home buyers. To be unveiled at Labor’s formal campaign launch in Perth on Sunday, the

    Dutton to offer targeted income tax offset of up to $1,200
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Peter Dutton at his party launch on Sunday will offer a “cost of living tax offset” of up to $1,200 to more than 10 million taxpayers. The one-off offset would go to taxpayers earning up to $144,000 when they lodged

    Caitlin Johnstone: Israel’s innocent oopsie-poopsie medical massacre mistake
    Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone The Israeli military changed its story many times about why its forces killed 15 medical workers and then buried them and their vehicles to hide the evidence. After their initial claim that the medical vehicles were approaching “suspiciously” without their emergency lights

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Security: Kelly Lake — Missing person: Help the RCMP find Kayla (Kayda) Westcott

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Halifax Regional Detachment RCMP is asking for the public’s assistance in locating 14-year-old Kayla (Kadey) Westcott, from Truro, who was reported missing on April 11, 2025. She is believed to have been last seen on Highway 102, near exit 5A (Kelly Lake scale house).

    Westcott is described as 5-foot-7, approximately 140 pounds. She has red hair and hazel eyes.

    It is believed that Westcott is travelling towards Dartmouth (Shubie Trail).

    When someone goes missing, it has deep and far-reaching impacts for the person and those who know them. We ask that people spread the word through social media respectfully.

    Anyone with information on the whereabouts of Kayla (Kayda) Westcott is asked to contact the Halifax Regional Detachment RCMP at 902-490-5020. To remain anonymous, call Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers, toll-free, at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips app.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Enduring Pacific partnerships

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Kia ora, aloha, good morning. 
     
    Interim President of the East-West Center, Jim Scott, distinguished guests.
     
    It is an absolute pleasure to be here in Hawaii, leading a cross-party delegation through the Pacific. New Zealand’s commitment to the Pacific is foundational to who we are as a people. It transcends governments, political parties, and the disruptive events and controversies of the moment. 
     
    A core and enduring part of New Zealand’s approach is our determination to work with our Pacific brothers, sisters and cousins to forge together a more secure, more prosperous and more resilient future, which grows opportunities and possibilities for our peoples.
     
    Our delegation is looking forward to an open, free-flowing discussion with you, representatives of the East-West Centre. This institution has, for generations, sought to promote dialogue about the developments in our region and the United States’ place in it. As the name of this Centre implies, the world works best when different cultures – from East to West – come together. 
     
    Before we start our discussion, I wanted to offer some reflections – as New Zealand’s Minister of Foreign Affairs – about the relationships binding New Zealand, the United States, the Pacific and the broader Indo-Pacific. 
     
    New Zealand and the United States are Pacific partners, as Hawaiians know well. Indeed, Auckland and Honolulu are two of the great Pacific cities: the northern and southern points of the so-called Polynesian triangle. Many, many Polynesians scattered across our vast, oceanic region have, over many, many generations, migrated to Auckland and Honolulu. These two wonderful cities stand as diverse, vibrant testaments to Polynesian histories and cultures. 
     
    We gather in Honolulu at an important, uncertain, anxious time in world affairs. Every day, we wake up to headlines about confronting events that are happening on the world stage.
     
    It is a common human tendency to think that the events or ravages of the moment are unprecedented. That the challenges we face are uniquely urgent or complex. Indeed, the most overused word in politics is ‘crisis’. This, coupled with the hyperactive social media age we live in, can generate an urge to react too quickly and too stridently. To set out absolute principles to defend. To draw battle lines. To pick sides. To form teams. To fight. 
     
    But, being in Honolulu, it’s hard not to take a longer view of what the world is currently experiencing and of the choices facing New Zealand and our Pacific partners. 
     
    This morning, we were hosted on the USS Missouri, where the Pacific part of World War II formally came to an end. This was a reminder of the history of shared sacrifice that forever binds New Zealanders, Americans and people from throughout the Pacific. 
     
    Our peoples have fought, and died, together in defence of a free, open and democratic region .  A region in which our people are free to elect their own political leaders and to worship the god of their choice. And a region, the Pacific, that lives up to the promise of that name.
     
    But this dark, painful chapter in our history also provides the backdrop to the efforts we have collectively made, in the eight decades since, to painstakingly build an international order based on dialogue, compromise, diplomacy and trust. This determination not to go back to an era of global wars – to prefer jaw, jaw to war, war – must always be at the forefront of our minds. 
     
    In recent weeks, the tendency to hype up a debate about how international trade works into a black-and-white, polarising issue has been unfortunate and misguided. The use of military language – of a “trade war”, of the need to “fight”, of the imperative to form alliances in order to oppose the actions of one country – has at times come across as hysterical and short-sighted.
     
    For a small country like New Zealand, when events are moving fast and changing day-by-day, the best course is almost always to be cautious, to be modest, to be pragmatic, and to be practical. To wait for the dust to settle before making choices we may later regret. 
     
    Working closely with our one formal ally, Australia, we are guided by a cool-headed assessment of New Zealand’s interests. Those assessments are formed by equally sober analysis of our relative strengths and vulnerabilities, rather than any desire to draw sharp lines in the sand, especially during times when the sand is shifting so fast its final shape is unknown. 
     
    There are historical parallels here. Notwithstanding our strong, indispensable and long-standing partnership during and since the two World Wars of the 20th Century, the governments and peoples of New Zealand and the United States have not always seen eye-to-eye. We have often fought side-by-side, but we have sometimes differed on certain military conflicts. New Zealand pursued a position on the nuclear issue with which the US disagreed. And US Presidents have not always been popular back home.
     
    Some of us have been around long enough to witness the ironies in the cycles of history. In two World Wars, New Zealanders were there from the beginning – and our country lost more people per capita than almost any other. We have also contributed military forces towards trying to solve countless other conflicts, alongside other Western countries. So we know about sacrifice and burden-sharing. 
     
    But we also recall certain protestors, in New Zealand and across the Indo-Pacific, chanting “Yankees Go Home!” during the rancorous days of the late 1960s. Some of those protestors chanted those words perhaps unaware that, just a few decades earlier, their parents and grandparents had been praying that the Americans would arrive to save them. 
     
    We also recall the order-shattering change throughout American history. Presidents as different as Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan all, in historically significant ways, upended their inherited orthodoxies. Yet the enduring experiment in democratic government that was created by America’s Founders still stands, unbowed. 
     
    Appreciating this history also serves to quiet the breathless language of panic because what we are seeing now is what many of our predecessors have seen before. So, one lesson is that cool heads and quiet diplomacy will succeed where talk of “fighting” will not.
     
    My view of the strategic partnership between New Zealand and the United States is this: we each have the right, indeed the imperative, to pursue our own foreign policies, driven by our own sense of national interest. 
     
    But close friends do not need to be, and should not be, confrontational and rude with one another, as New Zealand sometimes was towards the United States in the mid-to-late 1980s. And we should never forget what binds and unites us, bonds stronger and more long-lasting than the controversies and headlines of the moment. 
     
    We should give each other the benefit of the doubt and a fair hearing, seek to understand each other’s perspectives, and find common cause and common purpose. 
     
    New Zealand looks forward to working with the new US Administration to support a peaceful, prosperous and resilient Pacific and wider Indo-Pacific region. We look forward to continue partnering across the interdependent areas of security, economics and development.
     
    We were in Washington DC recently, to meet representatives of the new US Administration, including the Secretary of State and the National Security Adviser. One message they had for us was that the United States expected New Zealand to carry our share of the burden in keeping our part of the world safe and prosperous. 
     
    This New Zealand government, through decisions on defence capability and development spending, is seeking to meet that challenge under difficult fiscal conditions. To carry, like we did in the war that ended on the USS Missouri, our part of the burden of keeping our region and our world safe, free and open.  We do this because it’s the right thing to do. Because it’s in New Zealand’s interests. 
     
    One message we carried to Washington DC was that New Zealand wants, indeed needs, for the United States to remain an active, engaged and constructive partner in the Indo-Pacific. 
     
    Our discussions here in Honolulu over the next few days are designed to reinforce that message, and to carry forward the generations-old commitment of New Zealanders and Americans to work together for a more peaceful, more prosperous, and more resilient Pacific. 
     
    On this score, we valued our discussions in Washington DC last month and we look forward to more constructive dialogue in the days ahead. We acknowledge there is uncertainty and indeed anxiety over aspects of current US policy towards the Pacific. Part of that is a natural and regular consequence of a change of Administration in Washington. Part of it relates directly to recent US decision-making on such issues as development spending and tariffs – positions that, in our view, are still evolving. 
     
    But our message to both our American friends, and to our Pacific family, is a timeless one. As we work through the issues facing us today, let us treat one another with open minds, hear each other out, opt for quiet rather than megaphone diplomacy, and remember our collective purpose of pursuing and protecting a free, democratic, open, prosperous and resilient Pacific. Let us proceed carefully, cautiously, and always as friends.
     
    In the coming days, we will be reflecting about the past as we contemplate the future. We will be having dialogue about the Pacific with representatives of the US Government, the governments of Northern Pacific countries Palau, Marshall Islands, and the Federated States of Micronesia, as well as the Hawaiian state Government.
     
    We will be visiting the Bishop Museum, one of the world’s largest repositories of Pacific artefacts, and Pearl Harbor – where the Second World War was dramatically changed on one, fateful day. And we will be laying a wreath in honour of American and New Zealand servicemen who died in defence of our region. 
     
    As we go through this interesting and important programme here in Honolulu, we will seek to remember those enduring values and interests that unite New Zealand, the United States and the Pacific. And we will continue to promote careful, pragmatic, quiet dialogue – aimed at deescalation and practical problem solving, rather than premature posturing.
     
    That is the Pacific Way. 
     
    Thank you. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Government acts to save British steel production

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Government acts to save British steel production

    Urgent action by the Government sees vote on emergency powers to save British steel production.

    • Parliament recalled to introduce emergency powers that will allow the Government to protect the Scunthorpe site
    • Unique action to gives the best chance of safeguarding steelmaking, protecting jobs, national security and supply chains.
    • This strategic decision aims to secure domestic steel production for nationally important projects like airports, rail and housing and deliver growth at part of the Plan for Change.

    Steelmaking is set to continue in Scunthorpe following urgent action by the UK Government on Friday 11 April.   

    The Prime Minister requested the recall of Parliament to vote on emergency legislation to prevent the blast furnaces being shut down.

    The move will maximise the chances of securing domestic steel production – a crucial national capability which was at risk of collapse under the site’s current ownership. This is a very specific intervention taken in exceptional circumstances.

    British Steel’s owners Jingye confirmed their intention to close the blast furnaces at Scunthorpe immediately, despite months of negotiations in good faith and a generous offer of co-investment from the UK government of £500 million. 

    If the blast furnaces were to be immediately switched off, this would put at severe risk the future of steelmaking at this unique site. 

    The legislation will give the Government the power to direct the company’s board and workforce, ensure they get paid, and order the raw materials to keep the blast furnace running.

    In the meantime, the Government has instructed the company’s UK management to continue the running of the plant to ensure the furnaces keep burning. This legislation means that anyone employed at the plant who takes steps to keep it running, against the orders of the Chinese ownership, can be reinstated if sacked for doing so.

    Steel is vital for both the UK’s national security and manufacturing, and crucial for the Government’s mission to build 1.5 million new homes in the UK as part of its Plan for Change, with construction projects requiring millions of tonnes of steel. 

    Given global economic instability, it is crucial that manufacturing is protected at home. That’s why the Government took action earlier this week to support the car industry by easing the path to the EV mandate and deliver a £30 million package to support the reopening of Doncaster Sheffield Airport, which is expected to support 5,000 jobs and boost the economy by £5 billion.  

    Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said: 

    “We will always do what is necessary to keep Britain secure at home and strong abroad. We are doing what previous governments have failed to, acting in the national interest to help secure UK steelmaking for the future.

    “We negotiated with British Steel’s owners in good faith ever since coming to office. We made a generous offer of support to the company and I am deeply disappointed that we have been forced to take these measures, but Jingye have not been forthright throughout this process, and left us no choice but to act. 

    “We’re in a new and changing world where it’s never been more important to support our security and build our resilience, so that we can have strength abroad and renewal at home, and that’s what this government has done.” 

    A Bill was voted on by MPs on Saturday 12 April to ensure continuity of production at the Scunthorpe site – avoiding the danger and cost of allowing it to stop.  

    Funding for the site will come from the Government’s £2.5bn steel fund, to help rebuild the industry over the next five years.  

    NOTES TO EDITORS 

    • All funding required for the site will come out of existing budgets, within the departmental spending envelope set out by the government at Spring Statement 2025.No further government borrowing is envisaged to support any intervention
    • As the Chancellor and PM have made clear, the UK’s fiscal rules remain non-negotiable.

    Updates to this page

    Published 12 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM statement on British Steel: 12 April 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    PM statement on British Steel: 12 April 2025

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s statement on British Steel this afternoon.

    Today, my government has stepped in to save British Steel. We are acting to protect the jobs of thousands of workers, and all options are on the table to secure the future of the industry. Delivering security and renewal for working people is at the heart of my Plan for Change.

    This government is turning the page on a decade of decline, where our manufacturing heartlands were hollowed out by the previous government.

    In recent weeks alone, we have announced the expansion of Heathrow airport and the building of the biggest theme park in Europe in Bedford. We are reforming our planning rules to build 1.5 million homes, and the infrastructure the nation desperately needs. New roads, railways, schools, hospitals, grids and reservoirs. British steel will be the backbone as we get Britain building once more.

    This is a government of industry. That’s why we’ve secured a better deal for the workers of Port Talbot. It’s why we fought to secure the future of Harland & Wolff. It’s why we’ve pledged £200 million to Grangemouth. Our industry is the pride of our history – and I want it to be our future too.

    A secure future. A Britain rebuilt with British steel, in the national interest.

    Updates to this page

    Published 12 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Mfume, Maryland Delegation Members Slam OMB’s Proposed NASA Goddard Cuts, Vow to Fight Back Against NASA Budget

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Kweisi Mfume (MD-07)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Congressman Kweisi Mfume, Senators Chris Van Hollen and Angela Alsobrooks and Representatives Steny Hoyer, Jamie Raskin, Glenn Ivey, Sarah Elfreth, April McClain Delaney, and Johnny Olszewski released the following statement regarding the Office of Management and Budget’s proposed cuts to NASA Goddard missions:

    “Maryland is the proud home to NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and to many of the men and women who conduct the vital work being done there and at its partner launch site, NASA Wallops Flight Facility. This work is critical to our exploration of space, our understanding of the universe and the planet we live on, our development of new, innovative technologies, and our national security. Cutting NASA Goddard’s missions would not only be harmful to our state – the negative impacts would be felt across the country. That’s why we’re committed to protecting the missions at NASA Goddard, and together we will push back against this NASA budget proposal.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Video: #ASMR Icebreaking with the USCGC Neah Bay

    Source: US Coast Guard (video statements)

    Enjoy the sound of the USCGC Neah Bay as it breaks through ice on the Great Lakes!

    #dyk that the Coast Guard’s icebreaking mission doesn’t just happen in the polar regions of our world? It also happens outside our major cities on the rivers and lakes of our nation’s intercoastal waterways.

    The USCGC Neah Bay is a 140-foot Bay Class Icebreaking Tug homeported in Cleaveland, Ohio.

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

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: Issa Criticizes LA28 Decision Not to Keep Galway Downs an Olympic Venue

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Darrell Issa (CA-50)

    Calls for continued support of Temecula facility as 2028 Olympics Equestrian venue

    Congressman Darrell Issa issued the following statement in response to the decision by LA28 to not keep Galway Downs as an Olympic venue for the 2028 summer games.

    “I’m deeply disappointed to learn that Galway Downs in Temecula is reportedly no longer LA28’s proposed host site for equestrian events at the upcoming 2028 Olympic Games. This abrupt move appears arbitrary, unwarranted, and our community deserves a clear explanation of the process that led to this change. At this time, a satisfactory reason has yet to be offered.

    It must be said that for several years, the state-of-the-art facility at Galway Downs, the city of Temecula, and the Riverside County community have prepared to host these important events and showcase the very best that all three have to offer. Significant investments in time, material, and preparation have already been dedicated to serving as the host site, and Galway Downs is the only equestrian venue in the greater Los Angeles region with the existing infrastructure to accommodate all Equestrian Events, including a full-length cross-country course.

    I look forward to productive and informative conversations and a more comprehensive transparent process that provides fundamental fairness to Galway Downs and unifies our Southern California community as we welcome the world to our home in 2028.”

    This week, Rep. Issa also joined Congressman Ken Calvert (CA-41) and a range of Riverside County regional leaders to encourage the Los Angeles City Council, the Los Angeles Organizing Committee for the 2028 Olympic Games, and the International Olympic Committee to extend continued support for Temecula’s Galway Downs Equestrian Center as the idea venue to host the Equestrian events during the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

    Read the letter here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Lamont Thanks Sponsors of the 2025 UConn Women’s Basketball Victory Parade and Rally

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    (HARTFORD, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont today is thanking the businesses and organizations who have reached out over the last several days offering to serve as sponsors of the 2025 UConn women’s basketball victory parade and rally, which is being held in downtown Hartford on Sunday, April 13, 2025, at 1:00 p.m.

    Funding from the sponsors is being used to cover all the costs of the event, including police, fire, and ambulance services; public works and sanitation; staging and production; permits and insurance; and labor hours for event set-up, management, and take-down. No state or city funding is used. The event is organized through a partnership between the State of Connecticut, the City of Hartford, and the Hartford Business Improvement District.

    “We are very appreciative of the many businesses and organizations whose sponsorship is covering the costs of this victory parade and rally,” Governor Lamont said. “Their donations are making this event possible, and I thank all of them for helping to honor the 2025 UConn women’s basketball national championship team.”

    The following businesses and organizations are contributing funds:

    • Coca-Cola
    • Jordan’s Furniture
    • Hartford HealthCare
    • LAZ Parking
    • Mohegan Sun
    • Nassau Financial Group
    • PeoplesBank
    • Travelers
    • Bear’s Smokehouse Barbecue
    • CONNSTEP
    • CT Realtors
    • UConn Health
    • Connecticut Army National Guard
    • Delta Dental of CT
    • Sam’s Food Stores
    • Two Roads Brewing
    • Verogy
    • WFSB

    The following businesses are providing substantial in-kind services:

    • C2 Vehicles
    • DATTCO
    • Manafort Brothers
    • Mitchell Auto Group
    • Peter Pan Bus Lines
    • Powerstation Events
    • XL Center

    For more event information, including a map of the parade route, visit www.hartford.com/uconn.

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: 200+ HOUSE DEMOCRATS FILE AMICUS BRIEF AGAINST UNCONSTITUTIONAL TRUMP BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP EXECUTIVE ORDER 

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Hakeem Jeffries (8th District of New York)

    Washington, D.C. — Today, House Democrats continued their efforts to push back against President Donald Trump’s unlawful executive directives by filing an amicus brief in defense of the essential constitutional principle of birthright citizenship in the matter of State of Washington, et al. v. Trump, et al. The brief was signed by 208 members of the Democratic Caucus, including leads and Litigation Task Force Co-Chairs Assistant Leader Joe Neguse and Ranking Member Jamie Raskin, along with House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Representatives Bennie Thompson, Ranking Member of the Homeland Security Committee, and Pramila Jayapal, Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement.

    Also at the forefront of the endeavor are Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Chair Yvette Clarke, Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC) Chair Adriano Espaillat, Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) Chair Grace Meng, and Congressional Jewish Caucus (CJC) Co-Chairs Jerry Nadler and Brad Schneider.

    In their argument, the amici curiae (or friends of the court) presented overwhelming evidence that Trump’s day-one order to nullify birthright citizenship violates not just the Constitution and over a century of Supreme Court rulings, but also laws passed by Congress that have repeatedly guaranteed citizenship to children born in America.

    “An Executive Order is a Memo from the President to his staff. It does not trump federal law, much less the Constitution. Trump cannot end the Constitutional right to birthright citizenship with the stroke of his pen. That’s laughable. The order would strip children born in America of their rights under the Fourteenth Amendment, which violates the plain language of the Constitution, as repeatedly reaffirmed by the Supreme Court, as well as decades-old federal laws that codify this constitutional right,” said Ranking Member Raskin. “Trump not only believes he is above the law, he believes he has the power to strip the people of the United States of their fundamental constitutional rights and freedoms. The president does not get to decide who gets to be an American. That’s why I am proudly joining the fight to defend the Constitution, 150 years of legislative and judicial precedent, and the birthright of all children born in America.”

    “Donald Trump and Elon Musk will stop at nothing to enact their far-right agenda, including attacking the United States Constitution with an unprecedented assault on birthright citizenship and the Fourteenth Amendment. Their blatant and unlawful disregard for the rule of law in the form of this illegal executive order shocks the conscience and House Democrats will continue to push back against it. I am grateful to Rep. Raskin, Rep. Jayapal, Rep. Thompson, Rep. Clarke, Rep. Espaillat, Rep. Meng, Rep. Nadler, Rep. Schneider and Assistant Leader Neguse of the Litigation Working Group and Rapid Response Task Force for leading House Democrats as we stand up against this unconstitutional attack on the American way of life,” said Leader Jeffries

    “President Trump cannot overturn the 14th Amendment by way of executive fiat,” said Assistant Leader Neguse. “And as both the son of immigrants and a defender of the democratic values that form the foundation of our nation, I will push back against this blatantly unconstitutional effort.”

    “Under the Constitution, people born here are United States citizens, no matter who they are, what they look like, or where their families came from. It’s just that simple. We will not allow this administration to redefine what it is to be an American just to fit their outrageous anti-immigrant beliefs. Americans reject what Trump is trying to do and the courts should too,” said Ranking Member Thompson

    “Birthright citizenship is a core piece of our Constitution. Ending it through executive order is simply unconstitutional and a dangerous overreach of executive power,” said Ranking Member Jayapal. “All persons born on U.S. soil are U.S. citizens, that is what our Constitution dictates and is something President Trump cannot undo by waving a pen. As the first immigrant to serve as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Immigration, Integrity, Security, and Enforcement, I am proud to be co-leading on this amicus brief to stand up for the immigration laws of this country.”

    “President Trump’s unlawful executive order to revoke birthright citizenship is a flagrant violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and the President’s oath to protect and defend the Constitution. This is nothing more than a desperate attempt to sow division and stoke xenophobic sentiment for political gain. We are a nation of laws, not one ruled by a king, and the courts must step in to uphold the Constitution from those who seek to undermine it. I am proud to join my colleagues to fight against this unlawful action and protect the principles that have made our country into what it is today,” said Chair Meng

    “For more than a century, a cornerstone of our law is that those born on U.S. soil are American citizens. President Trump’s executive order to nullify birthright citizenship is in clear violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and is further evidence that extremist Republicans more concerned with dividing our country, not lower the cost of living, or improving economic conditions for hardworking Americans. President Trump has absolutely no authority to unilaterally write American citizens out of the Constitution, and any challenge to that notion is utterly fanciful. As Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, I am proud to join my colleagues in making clear that we will not stand down against President Trump and extremist Republicans’ lawless and xenophobic attacks,” said Chair Clarke

    “Nearly 200 members of Congress banded together behind this critical amicus brief to defend birthright citizenship—one of the most fundamental promises enshrined in the 14th Amendment. For over 150 years, it has guaranteed that every person born on U.S. soil is equal under the law, no matter their background. Any attempt to dismantle this right by executive order is not only unconstitutional—it’s an attack on the very foundation of our democracy. For the Latino community, this fight is deeply personal. Our families are workers, business owners, taxpayers, and proud Americans who contribute to the strength and prosperity of this country every single day. Stripping their children of citizenship would create a dangerous underclass and tear at the fabric of our workforce and economy. We will not allow this nation to return to a dark chapter in its history—we will fight to protect the 14th  Amendment and the future it promises all our communities,“ said Chair Espaillat.

    “Since the founding of our country 249 years ago, we’ve recognized that every person born in the United States is a citizen. Turning against this founding principle goes against everything we believe in and hold sacred as a country. We should learn from history where this kind of dismantling of civil liberties leads. President Trump is tearing down our institutions and undermining the values that make America the greatest country in the world,” said Congressman Schneider

    “Donald Trump’s divisive and xenophobic policies seek to divide and distract us,” said Congressman Nadler.  “We are dealing with a President who believes he is not just above the law, but above the U.S. Constitution.  The 14th Amendment is clear that persons born in the United States are U.S. citizens. And yet, President Trump feels compelled to single-handedly change what has been universally understood about the law since the Amendment was adopted in 1868.  All Americans should be disturbed by Trump’s assertion that he can unilaterally change the Constitution at will to suit his purposes.  This represents an assault on our democracy, and we cannot stand idly by and allow the President to disregard fundamental pillars of the Constitution. That is why I am proud as the Congressional Jewish Caucus Co-chair to join my colleagues in leading this effort.”

    The full amicus brief is available HERE. 

    House Democrats add this to the growing list of court cases filed against the Trump Administration in which they have become involved, including successfully urging a federal judge to block efforts to dismantle the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). 

    litigationandresponse.house.gov

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    MIL OSI USA News