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Category: Justice

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Fraudulent website related to The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Fraudulent website related to The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited 
    The HKMA wishes to remind the public that banks will not send SMS or emails with embedded hyperlinks which direct them to the banks’ websites to carry out transactions. They will not ask customers for sensitive personal information, such as login passwords or one-time password, by phone, email or SMS (including via embedded hyperlinks).
     
    Anyone who has provided his or her personal information, or who has conducted any financial transactions, through or in response to the website concerned, should contact the bank using the contact information provided in the press release, and report the matter to the Police by contacting the Crime Wing Information Centre of the Hong Kong Police Force at 2860 5012.
    Issued at HKT 16:30

    NNNN

    CategoriesMIL-OSI

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Zalo campaign to rebut people smugglers’ lies in Vietnam

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Zalo campaign to rebut people smugglers’ lies in Vietnam

    The government is launching adverts for the first time on Zalo, as it expands its campaign warning people about the dangers of trusting people smuggling gangs.

    Zalo, the Vietnamese instant messaging and social platform, has over 77 million monthly users.

    The ads will run on Zalo and Vietnamese news aggregator Báo Mới in the coming weeks, the first time the UK government has ever advertised on these platforms, helping to secure our borders as part of the Plan for Change. 

    The campaign forms part of the government’s response to a deluge of false claims spread on social media platforms encouraging people to come to the UK illegally. Posts frequently use coded messages to evade content moderation, such as referring to small boat crossings as a ‘game’. People smugglers have also offered discounts to those who film their journey so the footage can be used as promotional material. 

    The campaign launch comes as the UK hosts the landmark Organised Immigration Crime Summit at Lancaster House on 31 March to 1 April.

    The summit will bring together delegates from over 40 countries and marks a step change in the international community’s approach to tackling OIC. It is a critical opportunity to strengthen global co-operation, disrupt criminal networks, and prevent further loss of life.

    Representatives from Meta, X and TikTok are attending the summit to discuss how to jointly tackle the online promotion of irregular migration, such as illegal people smuggling networks. The National Crime Agency announced in January that it had triggered the removal of more than 8,000 accounts linked to people smuggling last year, working closely with social media companies. 

    The government is currently running ads on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube to counter this content in Vietnam, which has already reached over 53 million people since the campaign launched in December.

    Vietnamese nationals remain among the top nationality groups crossing the Channel illegally. They accounted for 17% of small boat arrivals in the first half of 2024, reducing to 6% in the second half. Further campaigns have recently been launched in Albania and Kurdistan Region of Iraq. 

    Minister for Border Security and Asylum, Dame Angela Eagle, said:  

    People smugglers are always looking for new ways to peddle their vile trade and we are exposing their lies at every opportunity.

    This government is securing our borders and delivering on our Plan for Change, dismantling the criminal gangs who abuse our borders and warning migrants about the risks and realities of coming to the UK illegally.

    Founder and CEO of the Vietnamese Family Partnership, Quynh Nguyen, said: 

    As representatives of the Vietnamese community in the UK, we support the expansion of the social media campaign on Zalo to prevent irregular migration. 

    Zalo is widely used in Vietnam and introducing adverts on the channel will help to reach many more vulnerable people to warn them of migrant smugglers’ lies. 

    Our community understands the importance of legal routes, and we are committed to sharing this message with families in Vietnam. We aim to inform and support our community by highlighting the dangers of illegal migration and the importance of seeking legal and safe pathways.

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    Published 31 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: AI-generated child abuse images are a growing threat

    Source: Anglia Ruskin University

    By Simon Bailey and Samantha Lundrigan, Anglia Ruskin University

    The UK aims to be the first country in the world to create new offences related to AI-generated sexual abuse. New laws will make it illegal to possess, create or distribute AI tools designed to generate child sexual abuse material (CSAM), punishable by up to five years in prison. The laws will also make it illegal for anyone to possess so-called “paedophile manuals” which teach people how to use AI to sexually abuse children.

    In the last few decades, the threat against children from online abuse has multiplied at a concerning rate. According to the Internet Watch Foundation, which tracks down and removes abuse from the internet, there has been an 830% rise in online child sexual abuse imagery since 2014. The prevalence of AI image generation tools is fuelling this further.

    Last year, we at the International Policing and Protection Research Institute at Anglia Ruskin University published a report on the growing demand for AI-generated child sexual abuse material online.

    Researchers analysed chats that took place in dark web forums over the previous 12 months. We found evidence of growing interest in this technology, and of online offenders’ desire for others to learn more and create abuse images.

    Horrifyingly, forum members referred to those creating the AI-imagery as “artists”. This technology is creating a new world of opportunity for offenders to create and share the most depraved forms of child abuse content.

    Our analysis showed that members of these forums are using non-AI-generated images and videos already at their disposal to facilitate their learning and train the software they use to create the images. Many expressed their hopes and expectations that the technology would evolve, making it even easier for them to create this material.

    Dark web spaces are hidden and only accessible through specialised software. They provide offenders with anonymity and privacy, making it difficult for law enforcement to identify and prosecute them.

    The Internet Watch Foundation has documented concerning statistics about the rapid increase in the number of AI-generated images they encounter as part of their work. The volume remains relatively low in comparison to the scale of non-AI images that are being found, but the numbers are growing at an alarming rate.

    The charity reported in October 2023 that a total of 20,254 AI generated imaged were uploaded in a month to one dark web forum. Before this report was published, little was known about the threat.

    The harms of AI abuse

    The perception among offenders is that AI-generated child sexual abuse imagery is a victimless crime, because the images are not “real”. But it is far from harmless, firstly because it can be created from real photos of children, including images that are completely innocent.

    While there is a lot we don’t yet know about the impact of AI-generated abuse specifically, there is a wealth of research on the harms of online child sexual abuse, as well as how technology is used to perpetuate or worsen the impact of offline abuse. For example, victims may have continuing trauma due to the permanence of photos or videos, just knowing the images are out there. Offenders may also use images (real or fake) to intimidate or blackmail victims.

    These considerations are also part of ongoing discussions about deepfake pornography, the creation of which the government also plans to criminalise.

    All of these issues can be exacerbated with AI technology. Additionally, there is also likely to be a traumatic impact on moderators and investigators having to view abuse images in the finest details to identify if they are “real” or “generated” images.

    What can the law do?

    UK law currently outlaws the taking, making, distribution and possession of an indecent image or a pseudo-photograph (a digitally-created photorealistic image) of a child.

    But there are currently no laws that make it an offence to possess the technology to create AI child sexual abuse images. The new laws should ensure that police officers will be able to target abusers who are using or considering using AI to generate this content, even if they are not currently in possession of images when investigated.

    We will always be behind offenders when it comes to technology, and law enforcement agencies around the world will soon be overwhelmed. They need laws designed to help them identify and prosecute those seeking to exploit children and young people online.

    It is welcome news that the government is committed to taking action, but it has to be fast. The longer the legislation takes to enact, the more children are at risk of being abused.

    Tackling the global threat will also take more than laws in one country. We need a whole-system response that starts when new technology is being designed. Many AI products and tools have been developed for entirely genuine, honest and non-harmful reasons, but they can easily be adapted and used by offenders looking to create harmful or illegal material.

    The law needs to understand and respond to this, so that technology cannot be used to facilitate abuse, and so that we can differentiate between those using tech to harm, and those using it for good.

    Simon Bailey, Chair, International Policing and Public Protection Research Institute, Anglia Ruskin University and Samantha Lundrigan, Professor of Investigative Psychology and Public Protection, Anglia Ruskin University

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    The opinions expressed in VIEWPOINT articles are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of ARU.

    If you wish to republish this article, please follow these guidelines: https://theconversation.com/uk/republishing-guidelines

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: List of support measures for SVO participants and their children

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    The State University of Management reminds you of the list of support measures for SVO participants and their children that are available to them at our university.

    Federal Law No. 273-FZ of December 29, 2012 “On Education in the Russian Federation” provides special rights (benefits) for admission to bachelor’s and specialist’s degree programs for SVO participants and their children, including the right to admission at the expense of budgetary allocations within a separate quota.

    Benefits for admission of children of SVO participants also apply to adopted children. Classification as a category of persons entitled to admission within a separate quota is confirmed by a corresponding certificate provided in the established manner.

    Also, participants of the SVO and their children are granted the right to be admitted to preparatory departments of educational organizations for training at the expense of budget funds. The list of educational organizations in whose preparatory departments training is carried out at the expense of budgetary allocations of the federal budget for the 2025/26 academic year was approved by order of the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia dated November 15, 2024 No. 765.

    In accordance with the order of the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia dated August 28, 2023 No. 822 “On approval of the procedure and cases of transition of persons studying in educational programs of secondary vocational and higher education from paid education to education at the expense of budgetary allocations of the federal budget, budgets of constituent entities of the Russian Federation and local budgets or at the expense of the organization’s own funds carrying out educational activities, including funds received from income-generating activities, voluntary donations and targeted contributions of individuals and (or) legal entities” children of persons taking or who took part in SVO, studying in an educational organization on the basis of an agreement on the provision of paid educational services, who do not have academic debt, disciplinary sanctions, or arrears in tuition fees at the time of filing the application, are classified as persons having a priority right to transition from paid education to free education.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 03/31/2025

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Police seeking witnesses to fatal crash in CBD

    Source: New South Wales – News

    Police have released images of two cars seen in the CBD just after a pedestrian died in a crash on Wakefield Street.

    Police and emergency services were called to the intersection of Wakefield Street and Frome Street, Adelaide about 9.30pm on Sunday 30 March by reports of a collision.

    It is believed the pedestrian was crossing Wakefield Street when he was struck by a Nissan four-wheel drive, then by a second vehicle, a Mazda station wagon.

    Sadly, the 65-year-old Adelaide man died at the scene.

    The driver of the Nissan, a 61-year-old Mitchell Park man, was arrested by Major Crash officers and charged with cause death by careless driving.  He was bailed to appear in the Adelaide Magistrates Court on 18 June.

    The driver of the Mazda, a 20-year-old Hillcrest man, is assisting police with their enquiries.

    Both vehicles were towed from the scene for forensic examination.

    Major Crash Investigation Section has released two images of two separate cars following an investigation.

    Following the initial collision between the Nissan utility and the pedestrian a dark sedan with a spoiler on the rear and a white SUV were seen in CCTV footage to pass through the collision scene in a westerly direction.

    These two vehicles are not believed to be involved in the collision (images below).

    Police are appealing for the driver of both vehicles or any other witnesses to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

    Please reference 25-034M.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Flying Squad officers uncover Post Office armed robbery plot

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    Met detectives used DNA and CCTV to identify a man who staged an armed robbery at a Post Office after he cut himself while making his escape from the scene.

    Rajvinder Khalon was one of five members of the same family who were involved in the plot which resulted in around £136,000 being stolen from the branch in Hounslow.

    As he fled the scene, he cut himself while climbing over a metal fence, and detectives used this evidence, as well as a huge amount of CCTV and phone data to identify those involved and take them to court.

    At around 18:30hrs on 1 April 2024 the Met responded to reports of an armed robbery at the Post Office in Brabazon Road.

    Two women working at the branch, who were later found to be part of the conspiracy, told officers they were threatened by a man with a gun who stole £50,000, as well as the branch’s CCTV system.

    An audit by the Post Office found the actual amount of money missing from the store was around £136,000.

    Detectives from the Met’s Flying Squad took on the investigation and trawled through CCTV from the area around the shop to identify the suspect. They tracked him to a nearby car which was registered to Kahlon. His DNA was also found on the fence.

    Analysis of his phone showed he was in regular contact with a man called Sukhvir Dhillon. Further checks revealed Dhillon was the owner of the branch and the store it was attached to. He is also Kahlon’s cousin.

    Through diligently piecing together contact between the pair ahead of the incident, it became clear the robbery was staged to steal money from the store.

    Three more family members, Ramandeep Dhillon and Sunaver Dhillon , who were the two people working in the shop at the time and provided the first account to police, and Mandeep Gill, were also found to have been aware of the plans.

    Detective Chief Inspector Scott Mather, from the Met’s Flying Squad, said:

    “This was a complex investigation which involved piecing together a large amount of CCTV, phone and financial data, and DNA evidence.

    “The group had taken steps to cover their tracks but we were still able to identify those involved and I’m pleased our work resulted in them being brought to justice.”

    Conviction details

    Rajvinder Khalon, 41 (25.05.82) of Great West Road, Hounslow and Sukhvir Dhillon, 38 (09.07.86), Ramandeep Dhillon, 40 (03.01.85), Sunaver Dhillon, 67 (23.07.56), all of Lyne Road, Virginia Water, were found guilty at Isleworth Crown Court on Wednesday, 27 March of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, conspiracy to money launder, and conspiracy to steal from the Post Office.

    Mandeep Gill, 45 (14.02.1980), also of Lyne Road, Virginia Water, was found guilty of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, conspiracy to money launder.

    They will be sentenced at the same court on Friday, 6 June.

    MIL Security OSI –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE concludes eight regional workshops on combating illicit trafficking in cultural property

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE concludes eight regional workshops on combating illicit trafficking in cultural property

    Participants in a regional workshop on combating illicit trafficking in cultural property in Warsaw, Poland, 26 March 2025. (OSCE) Photo details

    The OSCE Transnational Threats Department, in co-operation with the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of Poland, held the eighth in a series of operation training workshops on combating illicit trafficking of art, antiquities and cultural property in Wroclaw, Poland, from 24 to 28 March 2025.
    The workshops delivered vital operations and investigations training to frontline officers from Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine, equipping them with the tools and expertise to combat the growing threat of cross-border trafficking of cultural property and its linkages to organized crime, terrorism financing and money laundering.
    Representatives from law enforcement, customs and border services organizations, national prosecutors’ offices, financial investigators and museum experts were put through complex simulated art crimes and trafficking cases based on real life examples. These also involved immersive experience training with customs examinations and crime scene investigations at Museums and archaeological sites.
    Trainees were given extensive training on customs search powers and procedures, law enforcement practices, intelligence analysis, financial and cyber investigations, crime scene forensics at the National Museum in Wrocław and the Ceglarski Bastion archaeological site. The course concluded with the presentation of mock investigation results to real state prosecutors.
    “We are building important border management and law enforcement networks across the region to directly confront, disrupt and dismantle the networks profiting from the theft and trafficking of art, antiquities and cultural property,” said Cameron Walter, the OSCE Customs Adviser leading the programme dedicated to combatting illicit trafficking in cultural property. “Multiple international investigative channels were discussed during the training. This work has real impact for communities by making our participating States safer.”
    The training was guided by expert trainers from the OSCE-led Heritage Crime Task Force (HCTF).For more information on the Programme to Combat Trafficking of Cultural Property or the Heritage Crime Task Force, please contact heritage@osce.org.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Regional University Industry Collaboration masterclasses

    Source: Tasmania Police

    Issued: 31 Mar 2025

    Dozens of university researchers and business stakeholders have been honing their partnership building expertise at masterclass events in Rockhampton, to support more regional Queensland research projects to get off the ground.

    Over the past six weeks, 35 researchers from across the state have been taking part in the Regional University Industry Collaboration (RUIC) program masterclass series held at CQUniversity (CQU) and James Cook University (JCU).

    The $7 million Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation (DETSI) initiative delivered by CSIRO, aims to transform project ideas in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields, into impactful real-world solutions.

    Research leaders have been given the skills and tools to effectively identify, approach, engage and collaborate with small to medium enterprises (SMEs) across regional Queensland – assisting them during the research and development stages of a concept – from ideation to commercialisation.

    Queensland Chief Scientist Professor Kerrie Wilison said these masterclasses are expected to equip researchers and business-minded individuals with the knowledge and strategies to effectively transform scientific ideas into viable commercial ventures.

    “This program increases opportunities for business and industry investment in science and recognises and supports entrepreneurship,” she said.

    “The RUIC program promotes economic growth in Queensland’s regional areas, ensuring that local SMEs remain competitive and continue to thrive.

    “We want to boost regional collaboration between businesses and researchers, to grow industry engagement across the state and get more projects launched.”

    CQUniversity Regional Futures Executive Director Paul Hodgson said the RUIC program is an excellent platform to develop relationships between regional universities and SMEs.

    “As a regional university, CQUniversity is proudly focused on delivering ‘research with impact’, which is only possible through strong partnerships with industry, particularly SMEs,” he said.

    “The RUIC masterclass series was a timely and critical process in upskilling the engagement capability and confidence of our researchers to deliver sustained impact into the future”.

    View further details on the Regional University Industry Collaboration program.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: How should police officers use force? The Kristian White case is an insight into what the community thinks

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Emma Ryan, Lecturer in Criminology, Deakin University

    When a jury in the New South Wales Supreme Court found Kristian White guilty of manslaughter, it was the first verdict of its kind in recent Australian history.

    The verdict is significant because it offered a rare opportunity for the community to have a prominent say in what should and shouldn’t be regarded as reasonable use of force by police.

    The sentence of a two-year community-based order means White won’t spend any time behind bars – a judgement that surprised some legal scholars.

    Clare Nowland, aged 95, died after she was tasered by White, a police officer, in a nursing home in 2023. Nowland had approached White in distress while holding a steak knife. She fell after being tasered and died a week later in hospital.

    In finding White guilty, the jury drew an important line in the sand around the appropriate use of tasers, and use of force more generally, by police in Australia.

    It follows an emerging international trend, suggesting community expectations around police use of force are shifting. Recent convictions of Derek Chauvin in the United States and Benjamin Monk in the United Kingdom demonstrate this.

    We don’t know much about what the public thinks about this issue. While this case is highly specific, it’s the first major window into what everyday people think police should and shouldn’t be able to do in the line of duty.

    Excessive force: what are the rules?

    Excessive use of force by police is notoriously difficult to define.

    “Situational use of force” models, such as that used in the NSW Police, offer little insight, for officers or juries, about what level of force is appropriate for what level of resistance.

    Officers in NSW are reminded that “the decision to apply force, including use of a Taser, is an individual one for which every officer will be held accountable”.

    In this model, any officer who carries an array of weapons (as White did on that fateful evening) must be an expert in how to use those weapons proportionately to the threat they face.

    But what tangible guidance do they have about what constitutes excessive force? Given persistent concerns among police scholars about deficiencies in training and other policy documents, it can be hard to discern what is reasonable or excessive force legally.

    Every critical incident carries specific and different dynamics, and officers cannot realistically be trained for every possible scenario. Much depends on their individual decision-making.

    So can we reach a definition?

    How then can we find a universal way to recognise “excessive force”?

    One of the better definitions of such force comes from North American police ethics scholar Carl Klockars, who suggested in 1996 excessive force was “any force that a police officer of the highest skill might find a way to avoid”.

    This definition encourages us to think (and talk) more about what a police officer of the highest skill looks like. This is important in an era when ideas about what police can and should do are strongly shaped by Hollywood fantasies.

    In the tragic set of circumstances that unfolded in the Cooma aged care home, we can ask ourselves: what might an officer of the highest skill have done?

    Notably, a recently retired senior officer answered this question in the media the day after the events unfolded. He said “they could have thrown a blanket over her”.

    Evidently, the jury agreed there were other options available that didn’t involve the use of a taser.

    Modern policing must reckon with what a highly skilled officer looks like, especially as the profession adopts so-called “less lethal” force technologies such as tasers. What characteristics do we really want in a police officer’s “skills armoury”? Do we want a good aim, a strong physical presence, high levels of empathy or perhaps ethical decision-making? What should be prioritised?

    The Nowland case has asked these questions. The jury’s verdict set the stage for a sentence that established a higher standard for policing vulnerable people, which made it surprising that a non-custodial sentence was ultimately imposed.

    What does the public think?

    The sentencing outcome will spur more debate and has disappointed Nowland’s family.

    Justice Ian Harrison found there were mitigating factors, such as White’s claim he felt “justified” in his actions. As a police officer, this likely carried significant weight to reduce moral culpability and the need for “punishment”.

    Justice Harrison also found White’s actions fell at the lower end of objective seriousness for manslaughter.

    But what about ensuring the sentence reflects community ideals about policing standards, as reflected in the guilty verdict?

    Many may now wonder whether there is any kind of police misuse of a taser that could be deemed worthy of the ultimate penalty of imprisonment.

    But the case nevertheless remains a watershed moment. It provides an insight into what the public expects of police, and how strongly courts choose to reinforce those expectations.

    Emma Ryan 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 should police officers use force? The Kristian White case is an insight into what the community thinks – https://theconversation.com/how-should-police-officers-use-force-the-kristian-white-case-is-an-insight-into-what-the-community-thinks-245151

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Relentless Pursuit: U.S. Marshals Arrest Suspected Norteños Murderers in Multi-State Manhunt

    Source: US Marshals Service

    Spokane, WA – The U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), in coordination with federal, state, and local law enforcement partners, continues to demonstrate the effectiveness of its rapidly advancing manhunt program in the pursuit and apprehension of violent fugitives.

    Following the tragic March 21, 2025, drive-by shooting in Moses Lake, Washington, which claimed the life of a 14-year-old boy and critically injured four others, the USMS Pacific Northwest Violent Offender Task Force (PNVOTF) launched an intensive multi-agency effort to locate and arrest those responsible.

    Case Progression:

    • March 24, 2025: A juvenile suspect was arrested in Richland, Washington, at the request of the U.S. Marshals Service to prevent his escape while he received treatment for a self-inflicted gunshot wound at Kadlec Regional Medical Center. The arrest was conducted in coordination with the Richland Police Department. The suspect was charged with first-degree murder and multiple felony counts.
    • March 25, 2025: Arrest warrants were issued for Jose Beltran-Rodriguez and Matthew Valdez, charging them with first-degree murder, five counts of first-degree assault, drive-by shooting, and felon in possession of a firearm.
    • March 27, 2025: The U.S. Marshals Task Force and Spokane County Sheriff’s Office SWAT Team executed a search warrant at a Spokane residence in pursuit of Beltran-Rodriguez.
    • March 28, 2025: Fugitive Matthew Valdez was apprehended in Beaverton, Oregon, with assistance from the Washington County Sheriff’s Office Community Violence Reduction Team and Tactical Negotiations Team.
    • March 29, 2025: The U.S. Marshals Service announced a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to the arrest of Beltran-Rodriguez, the last remaining suspect.
    • March 30, 2025: Jose Beltran-Rodriguez was arrested in Redding, California, and booked into jail pending extradition hearings.

    Participating Agencies:

    The USMS Investigation Operations Division (IOD) played a pivotal role in supporting the rapidly advancing manhunt, bringing together a vast network of resources from across the country, including:

    •    Moses Lake Police Department
    •    USMS Aviation
    •    USMS Domestic Investigations Branch
    •    USMS District of Oregon
    •    USMS Eastern District of California
    •    USMS Incident Management Team
    •    USMS Northern District of California
    •    USMS Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF)/Organized Crime and Gangs (OCAG) Unit
    •    USMS PSWRTF
    •    USMS Special Operations Group
    •    USMS TOG
    •    USMS TOG Rocky Mountain
    •    Members from USMS Regional Fugitive Task Forces across the country
    •    Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF)
    •    Benton County Sheriff’s Office – Washington
    •    Stockton Police Department – California
    •    Spokane County Sheriff’s Office – Washington
    •    U.S. Border Patrol
    •    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
    •    The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Washington
    •    Washington County Sheriff’s Office – Oregon
    •    Washington State Department of Corrections
    •    Washington State Patrol
    •    Yakima PD
    •    Yakima County Sheriff’s Office
    •    And many other agencies

    Additionally, the Moses Lake Police Department worked tirelessly around the clock, contributing significantly to the investigation and ensuring coordination among all involved agencies. Their relentless efforts were instrumental in the swift conclusion of this manhunt.

    Ongoing Investigations and New Charges:

    As a result of the investigation, associates of Beltran-Rodriguez, Valdez, and the juvenile in both Moses Lake and Spokane, Washington, are now facing criminal investigations and new charges. The ATF and the Moses Lake Police Department are actively pursuing federal charges against all individuals involved in this violent crime.

    Beltran-Rodriguez, Valdez, and the juvenile suspect are all suspected members of the Norteños, a transnational criminal organization with ties to violent crime, drug trafficking, and firearms offenses across the United States and beyond.

    Rapidly Advancing Manhunt (RAM):

    The rapidly advancing manhunt program combines real-time intelligence sharing, cutting-edge technology, and interagency collaboration to track and capture violent fugitives. This case highlights the use of the RAM model.

    “The swift identification and arrest of multiple fugitives in this case demonstrates the strength of the U.S. Marshals Service’s proactive manhunt strategy,” said Craig Thayer, U.S. Marshal for the Eastern District of Washington. “By leveraging cutting-edge investigative tools, intelligence analysis, and close partnerships with our law enforcement partners, we ensure that violent criminals are swiftly brought to justice.”

    This remains an active and ongoing investigation. Further details will be released as they become available.

    The Pacific Northwest Violent Offender Task Force is a U.S. Marshals-led partnership comprising federal, state, and local law enforcement officers from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska. The task force’s primary mission is to locate, arrest and return to the justice system the most violent and egregious federal and state fugitives. Oregon-Idaho HIDTA program is an Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) sponsored counterdrug grant program that coordinates with and provides funding resources to multi-agency drug enforcement initiatives, including the Pacific Northwest Violent Offender Task Force.

    Anyone with information is urged to contact the nearest U.S. Marshals office, the U.S. Marshals Service Communications Center at 1-800-336-0102, or USMS Tips.

    MIL Security OSI –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Text of the Vice–President’s address at valedictory session of National Conference on Environment- 2025 at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi (Excerpts)

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 30 MAR 2025 6:34PM by PIB Delhi

    Good evening, all of you. Frankly, I’m not used to such kind of order.

    I’m more used to disorder in the house. And secondly, when I sit in the chair, as Chairman Rajya Sabha, on my right is the Government, on the left is the Opposition. Today there’s a strange combination, excellence, sublimity, of bar and bench on my right side.

    One regret that I have, of parting with the jealous mistress, the legal profession, by becoming Governor-State of West Bengal and now the Vice-President, I did not have the occasion to appear before one of the finest judges of this country, Justice P. S. Narsimha. And similarly, I had no occasion to cross swords with another legal luminary, Shri Tushar Mehta. A source of inspiration and motivation for me.

    Because rarely there is a combination where dedication, excellence, commitment, and nationalism converge. Very soothing experience. Justice P. S. Narsimha, Judge Supreme Court of India, Justice Prakash Shrivastava, Chairperson of the National Green Tribunal, I know him while he was Chief Justice, Calcutta High Court, while I was in Kolkata, because the High Court continues to be known as Calcutta High Court, exemplified highest judicial decorum and standards, and was not eyesore to anyone, fructifying, game-changing decisions.

    A chairman of the National Green Tribunal, you know what he is. But I must share one thing, that is common between us. We both fear our wives. Pradeepti is here, so is Dr. Sudesh. They are our strength. Shri Tushar Mehta Ji has equal challenge in the family as we have. No issue on that. Shri Thirumal Kumar, an IAS officer, I have admired him for a long time, he knows it. So he was a little astounded that I still recollect that.

    Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, nothing has happened to me by virtue of these constitutional offices. I am what I am. The only loss that I have is, a legal profession is known as a jealous mistress. I quoted the jealous mistress. When I joined the bar, the year I was married. So along with my wife, there was a jealous mistress.

    But it was very thoughtful of the President of India, Ramnath Kovind Ji. He chose 20th of July 2019, that I forsake the jealous mistress, because that happened to be the birthday of my wife. We have in the audience distinguished Chief Justices, acting Chief Justices, judges, lawyers, environmentalists, boys and girls, but I must recognise the presence of some.

    Justice Vishwanath, some other, I have one thing in common with him. We both belong to the Daughters Club. He has a daughter, and so do we have. And had the satisfaction of knowing him for long. Justice Ashutosh Kumar, Acting Chief Justice, Patna High Court, I’m sure I’ll be making some mistakes. So I leave it at that. My greetings to all of you.

    When I reflected on 20th of July, my wife’s birthday, it doesn’t end there. 20th of July, Neil Armstrong in 1969, landed on the moon for the first time. But my wife was born 12 years before. But what Neil Armstrong said is extremely relevant today for what we are discussing and deliberating. Neil Armstrong reflected, I quote him, “there’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

    That is what we need to deal with the issue. Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, it’s a privilege to address the valedictory session of this National Conference on Environment. Grateful to Chairman Prakash Shrivastava for securing convergence of over 1,200 environmental experts, judicial and administrative minds, as also most vital stakeholders, young boys and girls.

    They are supremely interested, both in democracy and environment. They will go a long way. I am confident the deliberations over the last two days must have been very fruitful and must have generated a lot of hope and possibility.

    Our planet faces, in the shape of climate change, not an ordinary challenge. It’s an existential challenge. And the nature of the existential challenge is unknown to history ever before.

    The situation is critical and cliffhanging and far too long, engaging the attention of everyone, governments and people all over the globe. The solution to this burning issue is complexed by the belief that someone else will fix it. This is not to be true. We’ll have to do it on our own. There is now live realisation of this menace. It has to be moderated to begin with and solved by all of us in tenement togetherness.

    Resolute addressing of the problem is paramount. And neither we have the time nor we have another planet to cohabit. This problem of huge dimensions has to be fixed by all individuals acting individually, organisations and the governments with immediate, urgent, concerted and sustained effort.

    Let me share with the distinguished audience. Everyone is positioned to make his or her contribution. And the contribution when converges in totality will be result-orientated. We need to realise we are trustees of everything offered by Mother Earth and there is divine ordainment that we must pass on to the future generations all this in good shape writing on the wall. Have we done it? The answer comes from within. Certainly not.

    The present scenario is alarming, daunting and far distanced from what it should have been. In such a scenario an institution like the National Green Tribunal in the largest democracy habitat for one-sixth of humanity is playing vital and significant role catalysing scenarios for containment and searching for solutions. I join Justice P.S. Narsimha in complimenting Justice Shrivastava for taking this initiative and it is not a day too soon.

    India happens to be the third country as was reflected not by this number as such by Shri Tushar Mehta that we have taken a number of initiatives, innovative steps, affirmative government policies in the country but we were amongst the first three in the world to have an institution and regulator like the National Green Tribunal. Distinguished audience not many countries in the world can claim to have civilisational depth which we as Bharat have thousands of years of civilisational ethos. Long before sustainability became a global buzzword much long before centuries before it became a global buzzword India lived it for centuries where every banyan tree was a temple, every river a goddess and waste an unknown concept in a civilisation that worshipped circularity.

    Our Vedic literature is gold mine for nurturing of mother earth and propagating harmony between men and nature. From Ayurveda’s living harmony to Gandhi’s world has enough for need not for greed. The wise sage who transformed democratic landscape of the world bringing about change through non-violence he said the world has everything, earth has everything for need but not for greed.

    India’s DNA carries the only vaccine against ecological collapse, conspicuous consumption. We only have to read what is there in our gold mine. Environmental depredation if we see the cause of it is brought about on the planet only by one species amongst living beings.

    We do it, no one else does it. Distinguished audience we have to be aware the planet is not exclusive to us we are not its owners. Flora and fauna must flourish and blossom alongside and so must all other living beings.

    In such a scenario men will have to learn to live in harmony with nature and other living beings. Are we doing it? No. Every technological development increasing human prowess is used to captivate and make others’ lives vulnerable to other living beings.

    There will have to be individual focus on optimal utilisation of resources of nature. This has to be our habit. Our fiscal power and our fiscal capacity cannot determine the use of natural resources.

    The consumption has to be optimal. We are paying heavy price already for reckless exploitation of these resources and thoughtless consumption conspicuous and lacking empathy. Distinguished audience protecting earth for future generations, an urgent need calls for sustainable practices that recognise nature’s inherent worth while reconciling conservation with development needs. It’s a delicate balance and NGT is required to navigate the fine print of it.

    Human activities particularly climate change and water management now influence seismic events. Studies have revealed earthquakes we all know are normally because of tectonic processes but then the way we conserve waters, build dams and get them emptied is a cause of profound impact on geological situations and therefore there is a global need to evolve and believe in environmental ethics. This underscores human’s moral obligations to protect and preserve the environment.

    This is the interconnection of all living beings. I can assure you once we lose it we know the worth of it. Let us realise the worth before we lose it forever.

    Both ecological extension and conservation ethics advocate harmonious human-nature relationships and are so easy to bring about. It doesn’t call for anything but a positive mindset towards life, we have to focus on environmental preservation and prudent resource stewardship for generational sustainability. Friends, global environmental challenges necessitate cross-border cooperation and innovative strategies that simultaneously advance ecological sustainability and economic development.

    No individual, no group, no nation can by itself resolve this issue. It has to be done by one and all on the planet. There will have to be convergence.

    I am so glad that a step has been taken by the chairman NGT Mr. Shrivastava by having this conference. More of it and it’s kind of needed. Environmental security must inform nuclear policy also.

    We all know weapon systems have huge ecological impact from manufacturing through potential deployment and pose existential risk that undermines their perpetrated security benefits. Something that is for security will result in our defacement from the planet. There has to be a thought process.

    Developed nations must transcend the political boundaries, environmental thinking adopting models where planetary health becomes foundational to human prosperity and well-being. They cannot isolate themselves. Okay, we are doing fine. We have means, technological means to generate a healthy ecosystem. It can last for some years but not forever. They will have to be enveloped into the menace if they do not join the rest of the global community.

    Friends, just look around. Proliferation of air purifiers, masks, water filters, generators usually witnessed in the last few decades. They represent the grievous symptoms of environmental degradation rather than solutions.

    Authentic progress requires eliminating pollution sources. We have to eliminate them because they are created by us. They are man-made.

    Transforming our relationship with nature and exploitation to stewardship. The Bhopal gas tragedy relations are still unlearned. The Union carbide leakage of 1984. I think if I’m not wrong it was in 2015 that Justice Shrivastava, the judge of the Madhya Pradesh High Court dealt with as a commissioner what compensation could be given. It was mega environmental negligence. Even after four decades families suffered generation after generation genetic disorders and groundwater contamination.

    30 years after it as I reflected Justice Shrivastava dealt with an issue for welfare of the victims. Just imagine how pathetic was the lack of awareness. We did not have an institution like NGT.

    We did not have a regulatory regime that could address the issue. Things would have been very different if there had been a regulatory regime of the current level then. Distinguished audience there is a growing concern that environmental justice often follows a troubling pattern of 4Ds delay, deny, dispose, dissolve.

    This cycle must be broken. I am happy to note NGT is catalysing sensitisation on all fronts on this aspect. And I am sure intervention to the NGT exercise will be scarce.

    It is an expert body. I am not for a moment questioning anybody’s authority or power, sir. But then when expert bodies function and have the facility of getting expertise from people who are really knowledgeable, stalling their action delays environmental protection.

    It is soothing to note that the National Green Tribunal shifts from delay to decisiveness from denial to accountability from mere disposal to true restoration and from dissolution to sustainable resolution is increasingly getting respect of the people, institutions corporate world and workers. Our environmental jurisprudence in the country has to grow by looking into our reservoir I said, gold mine reflected in our Vedic literature. Fortunately, trends are emerging that now transcend remediation to embracing ecological preservation as a fundamental mandate.

    Why should we get into remediation, repair? Let us keep an eagle’s eye. Let us keep it in deep focus. Why should there be no preservation? I admire and compliment the Chairman NGT. He has made no efforts to secure scientific expertise to assist and this is turning out to be a cutting edge to NGT’s adjudicatory functions helping it play a visionary role in environmental governance. The tribunal’s environmental jurisprudence is progressively integrating emerging scientific understanding with established legal doctrines and I can share it with you. Having had modest global exposure, the tribunal’s judgments are looked at with great deference globally.

    Invoking the power to interpret the Constitution, the Supreme Court has, and I would say earliest in the world, given dimensions to Article 21, that healthy environment and right to clean air are integrated inalienable facets of Article 21. Friends, despite the synergy between our constitutional values and cultural ethos, there is now an urgent need to deal with citizenry neglect that is widely evident. I reflect on occasions when no Indian who is abroad throws a banana skin out of a running vehicle. No one does it. Why do we have negligence on our holy land? Citizens must be sensitised and made aware. Such kinds of conferences as indicated by Justice Narasimha play a pivotal role because they get media attention and traction. Steps have been taken by the government, and I can share many steps that are game-changing. Toilet in the house, gas connection in the house. Just imagine making that kind of bulbs, making solar power available. Just imagine. Just a decade ago, our solar power capacity was in single-digit gigawatts. It is now beyond 100 gigawatts. We have an international solar alliance here. During G20, India took the initiative for biofuels.

    So world is changing, but India is changing fastest in the last 10 years, both in economy and infrastructure. But we need to do more because we have to lead on the front foot for the entire world and humanity. Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam.

    At an individual level, we have to be constantly mindful of the environment as guided by one of the पंच प्राण, पर्यावरण संरक्षण यह हमारा धर्म है, यह हमारा कर्म होना चाहिए, यह हमारा दैनिक कर्म होना चाहिए, इसको करने से हम खुद को लाभ देते हैं, देश को देते हैं, दुनिया को देते हैं।

    We should proactively try to reduce our carbon footprint. And mind you, India is the only country where the Prime Minister could declare that not only we abide by the Paris Declaration, but we will meet the target aead other nations and the world has applauded us. The way I look, Chairman Shrivastava, to NGT and for nurturing G for green and T for tomorrow. NGT for me is nurturing green for tomorrow.

    Friends, this is not just wordplay. It is the vision of an institution that connects law, science, and ethics to transform our relationship with nature. Let us draw from our Vedic roots, wield cutting edge tools, and uphold climate justice with unwavering resolve.

    Shanti path from Yajurveda I’ll conclude with that. Let peace prevail in the sky and space. Let peace reign and radiate in earth, in water, and in all plants. Let peace prevail everywhere.

    द्यौः शान्तिः अन्तरिक्षं शान्तिः पृथ्वी शान्तिः वनस्पतयः शान्तिः। ॐ शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः॥

    The earth is not for us to conquer. It is for us to cherish and pass on to posterity to future generations. The NGT which it’s blend of judicial mind and moral clarity is uniquely positioned to lead the charge under the guidance of Justice Prakash Shrivastava. I am grateful for this opportunity. Thank you everyone for your patience.

    ****

    JK/RC/SM

     

    (Release ID: 2116858) Visitor Counter : 125

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Appeal for information on missing man in Yau Ma Tei (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Police today (March 29) appealed to the public for information on a man who went missing in Yau Ma Tei.

    Law Ah-cheung, aged 70, went missing after he was last seen at an elderly home on Man Ying Street yesterday (March 28) afternoon. Staff of the caring home then made a report to Police.
       
    He is about 1.6 metres tall, 52 kilograms in weight and of medium build. He has a long face with yellow complexion and short white hair. He was last seen wearing a blue checked shirt, black trousers, black slippers and carrying a beige recycle bag and a long umbrella.

    Anyone who knows the whereabouts of the missing man or may have seen him is urged to contact the Regional Missing Persons Unit of Kowloon West on 3661 8036 or 9020 6542 or email to rmpu-kw@police.gov.hk, or contact any police station.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Long before ‘Sustainability’ became a global buzzword India lived it for centuries-VP

    Source: Government of India

    Long before ‘Sustainability’ became a global buzzword India lived it for centuries-VP

    Developed nations must transcend political boundaries in environmental thinking-VP

    The Union Carbide Leakage of 1984 was mega environmental negligence-VP

    Global need to evolve and believe in environmental ethics-VP

    NGT connects law, science and ethics to transform our relationship with nature-VP

    Vice-President addresses the valedictory session of National Conference on Environment- 2025

    Posted On: 30 MAR 2025 6:01PM by PIB Delhi

    Vice-President, Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar today stated that, “ Long before sustainability became a global buzzword, much long before….India lived it for centuries where every Banyan tree was a temple, every river a goddess and best an unknown concept in a civilisation that worshipped secularity. Our Vedic literature is goldmine for nurturing Mother Earth and propagating harmony between man and nature.”

    Developed nations must transcend political boundaries in environmental thinking.

    They must adopt models where planetary health becomes foundational to human prosperity and well-being.

    They cannot isolate themselves believing that they have technological means to generate a… pic.twitter.com/Y3gDXJkCAe

    — Vice-President of India (@VPIndia) March 30, 2025

    “India’s DNA carries the only vaccine against ecological collapse conspicuous consumption. We only have to read what is there in our goldmine”, he added.

    Addressing the valedictory session of National Conference on Environment- 2025 at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi today, Shri Dhankhar stated, “Developed nations must transcend the political boundaries in environmental thinking. Adopting models where planetary health becomes foundational to human prosperity and well-being.”

    There is a global need to evolve and believe in environmental ethics.

    This underscores humans’ moral obligations to protect and preserve the environment.

    We must note that human activities, particularly #climatechange and water management, now influence even seismic events.… pic.twitter.com/D1aSnyhmSu

    — Vice-President of India (@VPIndia) March 30, 2025

    /center>

    Recalling the Bhopal gas tragedy of 1984, Shri Dhankar said, “ The Bhopal gas tragedy lesson is still unlearned. The Union Carbide Leakage of 1984.  It was mega environmental negligence. Even after four decades, families suffered generation after generation, genetic disorders and groundwater contamination…..Just imagine how pathetic was the lack of awareness. We did not have an institution like NGT. We did not have a regulatory regime that could address the issue. Things would have been very different if there had been a regulatory regime of the current level then.”

    As I look at it, in NGT:
    N stands for nurturing,
    G for green, and
    T for tomorrow.
    NGT for me is nurturing green for tomorrow.

    This is not just word play. It is the vision of an institution that connects law, science and ethics to transform our relationship with nature.

    Let… pic.twitter.com/fNtOCj5SCG

    — Vice-President of India (@VPIndia) March 30, 2025

    Emphasising on the need to evolve environmental ethics, he stated, “….There is a global need to evolve and believe in environmental ethics, this underscores human’s moral obligations to protect and preserve the environment…….we have to be aware the planet is not exclusive to us. We are not its owners. Flora and fauna must flourish and blossom alongside and so must all other living beings. In such a scenario, man will have to learn to live in harmony with nature and other living beings. Are we doing it? No…..There will have to be individual focus on optimal utilisation of resources of the nature. This has to be our habit. Our fiscal power, our fiscal capacity cannot determine the use of natural resources. The consumption has to be optimal.”

    There is a growing concern that environmental justice often follows a troubling pattern of 4Ds: Delay, Deny, Dispose, Dissolve. This cycle must be broken.

    I am happy to note NGT is catalysing sensitisation on all fronts. I am sure intervention to the NGT exercise will be… pic.twitter.com/JNEZ8j4vJp

    — Vice-President of India (@VPIndia) March 30, 2025

    “Both Ecological Extension and Conservation Ethics advocate harmonious human-nature relationship, and so easy to bring about. It doesn’t call for anything but a positive mindset towards life. We have to focus on environmental preservation and prudent resource stewardship for generational sustainability”, he added.

    Highlighting the interconnectedness of NGT with law, science and ethics, Shri Dhankhar stated, “ The way I look to NGT, N for nurturing, G for green and T for tomorrow. NGT for me is nurturing green for tomorrow. This is not just word play. It is vision of an institution that connects law, science and ethics to transform our relationship with nature. Let us grow from our very roots, wield cutting edge, tools and uphold climate justice with unwavering resolve.”

    “Let peace prevail in the sky and space. Let peace reign  and radiate in earth, in water and in all plants.  Let peace prevail everywhere”,he added.

    Dr. (Smt.) Sudesh Dhankhar, Spouse of the Hon’ble Vice-President of India, Justice P.S Narsimha, Judge, Supreme Court of India, Justice Prakash Shrivastava, Chairperson, National Green Tribunal, Shri Tushar Mehta, Solicitor General of India, Shri Tanmay Kumar, Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change and other dignitaries were present at the occasion.

    ****

    JK/RC/SM

     

    (Release ID: 2116844) Visitor Counter : 177

    Read this release in: Urdu

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Speech by SJ at opening ceremony of 22nd Willem C Vis East International Commercial Arbitration Moot (English only) (with photo)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Following is the speech by the Secretary for Justice, Mr Paul Lam, SC, at the opening ceremony of 22nd Willem C Vis East International Commercial Arbitration Moot today (March 30):

    Ms Barrington (Director of the Vis East Moot Foundation, Ms Louise Barrington), Ms Tung (Deputy Director of the Vis East Moot Foundation, Ms Sherlin Tung), distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Union Minister Dr Mansukh Mandaviya, Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan lead Fit India Sundays on Cycle Event Across Nation

    Source: Government of India

    Union Minister Dr Mansukh Mandaviya, Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan lead Fit India Sundays on Cycle Event Across Nation

    Cricketer Deepti Sharma as well as Boxers Sonia Lather and Prachi Dhankhar join event in New Delhi

    Posted On: 30 MAR 2025 3:52PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Minister for Youth Affairs and Sports Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya once again led the Fit India Sundays on Cycle in Junagadh, Gujarat, today. Simultaneously, the cycling rally was flagged off by the Hon’ble Chief Minister of Kerala Pinarayi Vijayan from Cliff House, Trivandrum.

    In Junagadh, over 500 cyclists embarked on a route from the iconic Girnar Gate to the revered Bhavnath Mahadev temple, hosted by Sports Authority of India (SAI) Regional Centre in Gandhinagar. In Trivandrum, the rally followed an iconic 7 km route, from the Cliff House through the Central Stadium; this was hosted by the SAI Lakshmibai National College of Physical Education (SAI LNCPE).

    This week’s Sundays on Cycle placed a special emphasis on the involvement of school students across the country, who cycled alongside their parents and teachers. “You can make a lifelong friendship with cycling, so make this exercise your best friend,” Dr. Mandaviya encouraged participants at the event in Junagadh. “The Fit India campaign is developing as a nationwide festival, and today, the large participation of school children in Sundays on Cycle vividly depicts this. Paying attention to health is crucial for the progress of the country.”

    Active cycling drives were also conducted across Khelo India Centres (KICs), in districts such as Shivtarai in Bilaspur and Janjgir Champa in Chhattisgarh, Darbhanga in Bihar, and Orai in Uttar Pradesh.

    फिटनेस की गारंटी – #SundaysOnCycle

    आज स्कूल के बच्चों के साथ जूनागढ़ में साइकिलिंग की। फिट इंडिया का संदेश देते हुए, ‘Sundays On Cycle’ एक जन-आंदोलन का रूप ले चुका है। pic.twitter.com/D5pFjJUT9X

    — Dr Mansukh Mandaviya (@mansukhmandviya) March 30, 2025

    In Trivandrum, over 500 fitness enthusiasts, cycling groups, and organizations from across Kerala, including Indian Army CRPF, BSF, NCC, Kerala Police (SAP), Kerala Police (Traffic), Crime Branch, Collectorate, FCI, RBI, Department of Sports, Directorate of Sports & Youth Affairs, KRCC, KSSC, NSS, Trivandrum Golf Club, Kerala Olympic Association, Kerala Cycling Association, participated.

    In the national capital, the Fit India Sundays on Cycle event saw presence of prominent sports personalities. Arjuna Awardee boxer Sonia Lather and Asian U-22 Championships 2024 gold medalist and Khelo India scheme athlete Prachi Dhankhar joined the gathering. ‘Push-up man of India’ Rohtash Chaudhary returned for the event, while Indian cricketer Deepti Sharma contributed to the event virtually, extending the reach of the fitness message.

    “As a cricketer, I understand the profound significance of physical activity,” remarked Deepti Sharma, a key member of the Indian women’s cricket team that secured gold at the Asian Games 2022. “Cycling is not only a fantastic way to stay fit but also an enjoyable activity that strengthens connections within our communities and promotes environmental consciousness. It is truly amazing that over 2 lakh riders from all age groups have participated in the Sundays on Cycle initiative since its start in December 2024, spanning over 4500 locations across the country.”

    21-year-old boxer Prachi Dhankhar expressed her appreciation for the broader impact of the Fit India Movement. “The Fit India Movement is a fantastic initiative, launched under the visionary leadership of our Hon’ble Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi, in 2019, with the aim of creating a healthier and more active nation. So many diverse events have been conducted through this movement – walking, jogging, and now cycling. It is truly heartening to see,” she shared.

    Sonia Lather, silver medalist at the 2016 World Boxing Championship, conveyed her enthusiasm for the event’s inclusive nature. “Fitness should be the foremost priority for everyone, regardless of age,” Lather emphasized. “It was a truly enriching experience to ride alongside children as young as 6 or 7 years old, as well as individuals well over and under 70 years old.”

    The nationwide events on March 30 also witnessed strong participation from students representing a diverse range of educational institutions — Tagore International School EOK, Delhi Public School Gurugram Sec 45, Modern School Barakhamba Road, Modern Public School Shalimar Bagh, St Marks School Meera Bagh, Bal Bharati Public School Noida, DAV Public School CMC, Army Public School Sankar Vihar, Bal Bhavan Public School Mayur Vihar, DLF School Sahibabad and KV Sangathan.

    The Sundays on Cycle initiative sees simultaneous events held nationwide at Sports Authority of India (SAI) Regional Centres, National Centres of Excellence (NCOEs), and Khelo India Centres (KICs). These events are collaborated with key stakeholders, including the Cycling Federation of India (CFI), the Physical Education Foundation of India (PEFI), doctors from the Indian Medical Association (IMA), and various cycling groups.

    *****

    Himanshu Pathak

    (Release ID: 2116807) Visitor Counter : 65

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Vice President Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar Chairs Valedictory Session of National Green Tribunal’s National Conference on Environment 2025

    Source: Government of India

    Vice President Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar Chairs Valedictory Session of National Green Tribunal’s National Conference on Environment 2025

    Two-Day Conference on Environment 2025 Concludes with Focus on Forest Conservation and Policy Advancements

    The Event Highlights Crucial Role of Judicial Bodies, Government Agencies, and Experts in Shaping India’s Environmental Future

    Posted On: 30 MAR 2025 6:51PM by PIB Delhi

    The Hon’ble Vice President of India, Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar, chaired the valedictory session of the National Green Tribunal’s two-day conference on Environment 2025 today at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi. The session was graced by distinguished dignitaries, including Hon’ble Justice P. S. Narsimha, Judge of the Supreme Court of India, Hon’ble Justice Prakash Shrivastava, Chairperson of NGT, Shri Tushar Mehta, Solicitor General of India, and Sh. Tanmay Kumar, Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change.

    Addressing the valedictory session, Hon’ble Vice President Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar pointed out that neither the planet is exclusive to us nor are we the owners of it. He emphasized that Developed nations must transcend political boundaries in environmental thinking and urged for a collective commitment to live in harmony with nature and protect the environment. (Detailed Press Release:

    https://pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetail.aspx?PRID=2116844®=3&lang=1)

    The second day’s proceedings began with Technical Session III, focusing on “Forest and Biodiversity Conservation”, chaired by Hon’ble Justice Anand Pathak, Judge, Madhya Pradesh High Court. Experts and policymakers deliberated on the impact of human intervention on forests and biodiversity, highlighting legal and policy frameworks necessary for conservation. Justice Anand Pathak of the Madhya Pradesh High Court stated that every citizen has a duty to promote the environment by planting right trees in the right places. He proposed a range of ideas such as transforming minor penalties into plantation initiatives, corporate climate responsibility, creating National Carbon Credit Bank and establishing Sovereign Funds for conserving biodiversity. It is a need of an hour to shift from human rights to planetary rights and nurturing the thought of environmental responsibility, he added.

    The Technical Session IV, titled “Reflections and Key Takeaways”, provided a comprehensive review of the discussions held in technical sessions over the two days. Chaired by Hon’ble Justice P. S. Narsimha, Judge, Supreme Court of India, and co-chaired by Hon’ble Justice Arun Kumar Tyagi, Judicial Member, NGT, the session summarized key environmental concerns and proposed a roadmap for legal and policy advancements. Hon’ble Justice P.S. Narsimha emphasized upon the effective execution and implementation of policies. Focusing upon the institutional integrity, he proposed to strengthen and empower the regulatory bodies to function effectively at the grassroots level.

    The event was also marked by the felicitation of universities and students for their outstanding contributions towards environmental conservation and sustainable practices. This initiative was aimed at motivating young minds to continue their efforts in ensuring a cleaner and greener future.

    A key moment of the session was the release of the NGT Souvenir book titled ‘Voice of Nature’, which highlights the history, activities, and achievements of NGT.

    The NGT e-Journal, comprising notable NGT cases, was also launched by the Hon’ble Vice President.

    Over the course of two days, the National Conference on Environment – 2025 served as a significant step towards fostering collaboration between judicial bodies, government agencies, and environmental experts. The resolutions and discussions will play a crucial role in shaping India’s environmental governance framework and will contribute to future national and international environmental initiatives.

    ****

    VM/GS

    (Release ID: 2116868) Visitor Counter : 101

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Commissioner of Police encourages graduates to fulfill duties with “Law, Reason and Empathy” (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    The Commissioner of Police, Mr Siu Chak-yee, inspected the passing-out parade for 29 probationary inspectors and 158 recruit police constables at the Hong Kong Police College today (March 29) and witnessed the graduates becoming members of the Force, ready to shoulder the noble mission of safeguarding national security and protecting the lives and property of citizens.

    Speaking at the ceremony, Mr Siu encouraged the graduates to embrace their responsibilities as law enforcers who adhere to the principles of “Law, Reason, and Empathy”. He explained that “Law” represents the legal framework, emphasising the importance of impartiality and fairness in law enforcement while also requiring officers to set an example of lawfulness themselves. “Reason” highlights the significance of understanding through communication to reduce unnecessary misunderstandings and conflicts, thereby enhancing professionalism in handling incidents. “Empathy” encourages officers to put themselves in the shoes of others, considering the underlying reasons behind citizens’ requests for assistance.

    He shared several stories about how citizens praised Force members for their professionalism and efficiency in assisting them in distress, exemplifying understanding and care for individuals in need. He encouraged the graduates to demonstrate professionalism in their duties, and to strive for continuous improvement by leveraging the public trust they have earned while prioritising the well-being of citizens. He stressed that professional police officers should not only focus on “completing the tasks”, but more importantly, aim “to excel in their duties”.

    Reflecting on his 36-year career in the Force, Mr Siu said that his aspiration was to uphold justice and maintain law and order. He stated that it was not just a job for him, but a passion that brought him immense satisfaction. He felt fortunate to be part of the Force and considered working alongside with colleagues – sharing both hardship and joy – is a source of great fulfillment and a life without regrets.

    He firmly believed that with the dedication and professionalism of his police colleagues, along with the support of stakeholders and the general public, Hong Kong’s law and order will continue to improve, allowing citizens to live and work in a better community.

    In conclusion, he inspired the graduates with the words, “Work is exciting because of the challenges, life is fulfilling because of the efforts”, urging them to uphold their aspirations of joining the Force and to continue the over 180-year tradition of excellence of the Police Force. He also encouraged them to embody the core values of “Honour, Duty and Loyalty”, that is to be loyal to the mission of the Force; sincere in protecting citizens; brave and courageous in protecting citizens in any conditions, thereby ensuring Hong Kong remains one of the safest and most stable cities in the world.

                  

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Norton Introduces Resolution to Designate March 27, 2025 as “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day”

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) introduced her resolution to designate March 27, 2025 as “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day.”

    “As an elite corps of African American pilots and crew, as well as others, who fought in World War II, the Tuskegee Airmen deserve this recognition,” Norton said. “It will be deeply meaningful to the veterans, their family members, and the succeeding generations of Black service members who surely deserve our thanks.”

    The Tuskegee Airmen were pilots, ground crews and support personnel serving in segregated units of the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II. Their service and valor paved the way for the desegregation of the U.S. military.

    Norton’s resolution follows.

    RESOLUTION

    Expressing support for the designation of March 27, 2025, as “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day”, and calling on each State, the District of Columbia, and each territory to recognize the Tuskegee Airmen for their heroism, valor, and exemplary service to the Nation.

    Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen were Black pilots, aircrew, ground crew, and support personnel who served in the Army Air Corps from 1941 to 1949;

    Whereas 992 Tuskegee Airmen graduated flight training at the Tuskegee Army Air Field in Tuskegee, Alabama, and 450 pilots deployed into combat overseas;

    Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen faced enormous adversity, from overcrowded classrooms to bigoted officers and segregated facilities;

    Whereas, during World War II, the Tuskegee Airmen flew over 15,000 combat sorties and saw extensive action in the European and North African theaters;

    Whereas 84 Tuskegee Airmen were killed in action, 12 died during training and noncombat missions, and 32 were taken prisoners of war after their planes were shot down;

    Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen earned 744 Air Medals, 14 Bronze Stars, and 8 Purple Hearts;

    Whereas, in 1945, Tuskegee Airmen in the 477th Bombardment Group staged a nonviolent demonstration to desegregate the officers’ club at Freeman Field, Indiana, and their nonviolent direct action would inspire later civil rights protesters;

    Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen’s battle against fascism abroad and racism at home has been called a “Double Victory” and led President Truman to issue Executive Order 9981, integrating the Armed Forces;

    Whereas four Tuskegee Airmen, Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., Daniel “Chappie” James, Lucius Theus, and Charles McGee, later became generals in the Air Force;

    Whereas, in 2006, a bill to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Tuskegee Airmen “in recognition of their unique military record, which inspired revolutionary reform in the Armed Forces” was signed into law (Public Law 109–213);

    Whereas, in 2008, the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site opened at Moton Field in Tuskegee, Alabama, to commemorate and interpret the heroic actions of the Tuskegee Airmen; and

    Whereas very few Tuskegee Airmen are still alive today to share their story of courage and bravery with younger Americans: Now, therefore, be it

    Resolved, That the House of Representatives supports the designation of “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day”.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: SH11, Haruru reopens

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    A stretch of Puketona Road / State Highway 11, closed due to an earlier fatal crash, has now reopened.

    Police acknowledge the public’s understanding and cooperation while our enquiries were carried out at the scene.

    An investigation is underway into the circumstances of the fatal crash.

    ENDS

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Update: Vehicle sought in relation to investigation, Miramar

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attributable to Detective Inspector Nick Pritchard:

    Police investigating a homicide and aggravated burglary in Miramar are appealing for information from the public regarding a vehicle seen in the area, and items of clothing located near the property that was burgled.

    At around 2am on Monday 17 March, Police were called to a Darlington Road address after the occupants located an intruder inside their home. A 28-year-old man has been arrested and charged with aggravated burglary in relation to this incident.

    Then at around 2.20am on Monday 17 March 63-year-old Abdul Nabizadah was located with serious head injuries at the intersection of Camperdown Road and Totara Road. Sadly, Mr Nabizadah subsequently died in hospital and a homicide investigation was launched.

    A large Police team is working to establish whether the incidents are connected and we are continuing to appeal for any information.

    We wish to speak to the driver of a Grey or Silver Mazda Atenza / Mazda 6, 2006 model that was seen driving through Darlington Rd / Camperdown Rd intersection several times between 11.50pm Sunday 16 March and 2.17am Monday 17 March. The CCTV image shows the vehicle and the reference image shows the make and model of the vehicle sought.

    We hope that the driver of this car will be able to assist Police with enquiries. If this was you or if you recognise this vehicle and know who the driver is, please contact Police.

    We are also interested in information about two items of clothing left at the Darlington Road burglary scene. We believe that both items were left by the burglar and, while a person has already been charged in relation to the burglary, we continue to seek any information about the clothing items.

    The first item is a white baseball hat with red swastika on the front.

    The second item is a pair of H & H size 8 woman’s gumboots. It is possible that these had been stolen from a nearby residence, maybe a back door, insecure shed or porch by the alleged burglar. Police ask that anyone who believes that these may be their gumboots to please contact us.

    We wish to thank the community for their help so far, and we note that community assistance helped identify the man running in Darlington Rd who was the subject of a previous appeal.

    We continue to appeal for information about a man seen walking down Camperdown Road from Totara Street and who turned right in to Darlington Road from Camperdown Road at 12.28am. The man was wearing a light-coloured top and dark pants. We urge this person, or anyone who may know them, to come forward as soon as possible.

    We understand these incidents are upsetting and concerning for the community and the investigation team are working tirelessly to determine the circumstances around Mr Nabizadah’s death and to bring closure for his family.

    If you have any information that could help the investigation teams, please update us at 105 online now or call 105.

    Please use the reference number 250317/6324, or reference Operation Celtic.

    Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: These 3 arguments are part of the long game in Trump’s trade wars

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Markus Wagner, Professor of Law and Director of the UOW Transnational Law and Policy Centre, University of Wollongong

    Since returning to office in January, US President Donald Trump has doubled down on using trade measures – mostly tariffs – to reshape global trade. He plans to impose reciprocal tariffs on what he has labelled “Liberation Day”, April 2.

    The Trump administration claims US producers face higher tariffs and more restrictions abroad than foreign producers when they export to the US.

    The administration also examined tax systems such as Europe’s Value Added Tax and Australia’s GST, import regulations and other factors. It believes – mostly wrongly – these unfairly disadvantage American businesses and contribute to the US trade deficit.

    As with many Trump initiatives, actual tariffs often change significantly between announcement and implementation, if they are implemented at all.

    His reciprocal tariffs have been narrowed to imports from the US’ largest trading partners instead of imports from all countries. There may also be tariffs on specific sectors. Last week, Trump announced 25% tariffs on cars from overseas. At the weekend said he “couldn’t care less” if this made cars more expensive for US consumers.

    Coercive control, revenue and re-shoring

    President Trump has raised a myriad of puzzling arguments in favour of tariffs. They largely fall into three categories:

    The first is the use of tariffs as a coercion tool against other countries. In the first Trump presidency, trading partners were pressured to renegotiate trade agreements such as the renamed but largely identical US-Mexico-Canada agreement.

    Similarly, the Trump administration used the threat of tariffs to gain market access, elicit better trade terms or as a form of weaponised trade to achieve unrelated foreign policy goals.

    Last week, Trump suggested he would consider a reduction in tariffs on China in exchange for a sale of TikTok by its Chinese owner.

    The second category is the use of tariffs as a source of revenue. The Trump administration envisions tariffs to be collected by a yet-to-be-created External Revenue Service. This would form the flip side of the powerful and much-maligned Internal Revenue Service.

    Trump claims tariffs will be paid by the exporting country. This would be in theory to finance future tax cuts. In practice, tariffs are almost always paid by the importer of goods and usually get passed on to consumers.

    There is a potential contradiction between these two rationales. It appears the Trump administration wants to make at least some tariffs permanent. But doing so would almost nullify the use of tariffs as a bargaining chip and coercion tool.

    The final category is to encourage companies to “re-shore” production to the US to avoid tariffs and to support US jobs.

    This would signal a reversal of what 1994 presidential candidate Ross Perot, speaking of the North American Free Trade Agreement, called the “giant sucking sound going south”. Some manufacturing may return to the US. But the high costs of building new factories, re-routing supply chains and uncompetitive US labour costs will hinder large-scale re-shoring efforts.

    A long-term plan?

    The Trump administration’s trade moves can be seen as part of a larger strategy to reshape the US domestic and the global economic system.

    In a recent speech, US Vice-President JD Vance argued for a structural reshaping of the US economy, to increase domestic innovation capacity.

    Vance warned “deindustrialisation poses risks both to our national security and our workforce”. Vance himself sums up this approach by characterising tariffs as a “necessary tool to protect our jobs and our industries”.

    This line of argument overlooks a number of critical factors. Tariffs lead to higher prices for consumers. Unless currencies adjust, the inflationary impact could disadvantage the very people that can least afford it.

    The same is true if other countries respond to US trade measures by responding in kind, as Canada and the European Union already have.

    American farmers and other export-oriented industries will be hard hit. From a strategic perspective, the US position as global leader has suffered a severe blow. Some countries are openly pivoting to its geopolitical and economic rival, China.

    If this scenario comes to pass, the US pullback – an outright withdrawal is unlikely – from the highly integrated international trading system might end up a more chaotic version of the UK’s pursuit of Brexit.

    A step back in time

    The world of liberalised trade that followed the end of the Cold War in 1990 is ending. Countries will turn inwards, prioritising their economic security and resilience. The costs of this turn away from multilateralism and international institutions, however, are not just economic.

    The close economic integration we have witnessed post-1990 has led to reduced uncertainty in international economic relations, increased international security and greater prosperity.

    A return of the “beggar thy neighbour” policies of the 1930s would be a dangerous path, with the world inching closer to the abyss. “Liberation Day” might push the world over the edge.




    Read more:
    What are non-tariff barriers – and why is agriculture so exposed?


    Markus Wagner 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. These 3 arguments are part of the long game in Trump’s trade wars – https://theconversation.com/these-3-arguments-are-part-of-the-long-game-in-trumps-trade-wars-252516

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Name release: Fatal crash, Naenae

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Police can now release the name of the woman who died following a crash in Naenae on Thursday 27 March.

    She was 60-year-old Vanessa Rithia Houpapa, of Naenae.

    Police extend our condolences to her family and friends during this difficult time.

    A 25-year-old woman is due to reappear in the Hutt Valley District Court on 29 April, charged with excess breath alcohol causing injury and excess breath alcohol causing death.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: SH11 closed due to fatal crash

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    31 March 2025 3:32 pm | NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) advises State Highway 11 is closed near Haruru due to a fatal crash.

    The closure is between the State Highway 10/SH11 intersection at Puketona and Haruru and is expected to remain in place for a least a couple of hours while the NZ Police Serious Crash Unit investigates.

    Traffic will be detoured via State Highway 11 from Kawakawa.

    People are advised to check the NZTA Journey Planner website (journeys.nzta.govt.nz(external link)) for up-to-date information on the closure before they travel.

    Tags

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Fatal crash: SH11, Haruru

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    A section of State Highway 11 near Haruru has been closed due to a fatal crash.

    Police are in attendance at the crash involving a truck and vehicle on Puketona Road / State Highway 11.

    The crash was reported at 2.27pm.

    Sadly, the driver of the vehicle has died at the scene.

    Two occupants of the truck have sustained moderate injuries.

    The Serious Crash Unit is deploying to the site and will examine the scene, with an investigation to commence.

    A section of State Highway 11 has been closed and these are expected to be in place for at least a couple of hours.

    Diversions are in place at the Puketona roundabout (intersection with State Highway 10) and at Haruru Falls Road.

    Light vehicles travelling from Paihia will be able to U-turn at Haruru Falls Road intersection.

    Heavy vehicles will need to travel via Haruru Falls Road, through Waitangi, to return to Paihia.

    Please expect delays on your travels this afternoon.

    ENDS.

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Australia – Fairness and the rule of law must underpin election commitments – Law Council

    Source: Law Council of Australia

    As parties and individuals seeking election finalise the policies they will take to the people in the lead up to the Federal polls, the Law Council of Australia is calling on them to prioritise protection of the rule of law, promote the administration of justice, support the exercise of rights under the law and commit to the principles of good law making.

    “Today we release our 2025 Federal Election Call to Parties. We wholeheartedly believe the recommendations made in this document can make Australia a fairer and more just society,” Law Council of Australia President, Juliana Warner said.
     
    “The Law Council is seeking a commitment from candidates to improve access to justice for all Australians by providing vital, and long overdue, funding for legal assistance services. These services are relied upon by Australians to help to resolve family law disputes, remove themselves from harm, enforce their employment rights, defend themselves against charges, or make sure they have a roof over their head.
     
    “The Law Council is particularly calling on those seeking election to establish a financially sustainable model of grants of legal aid to private practitioners, including Independent Children’s Lawyers, to ensure they can continue to deliver high-quality legal assistance services across Australia.
     
    “Around 72 per cent of legal aid approved matters – more than 100,000 cases – are provided by private practitioners, the majority of whom are working in very small businesses. But these lawyers and small businesses are at breaking point, and many are considering walking away from legal aid work unless rates are raised to more sustainable levels.  
     
    “The level of unmet legal need continues to rise as a result of funding failures. Sadly, those most harmed by these failures are the most vulnerable members of our community, including children, First Nations people, people with disability and older Australians.
     
    “In particular, people living in rural, regional and remote parts of Australia can find it difficult to access a lawyer when they need one. To assist with this growing crisis, the Law Council is proposing a HELP debt relief incentive that we believe can help bring more lawyers to where they are needed.”
     
    The Law Council’s Call to Parties offers considered proposals on a range of other challenges facing Australia today.
     
    “Our next Government must adopt an approach to criminal justice reform that is evidence-based and consistent with the rule of law and Australia’s international human rights obligations,” Ms Warner said.
     
    “This should include national leadership on child justice in line with the recommendations of the National Children’s Commissioner; raising the minimum age of criminal responsibility at the federal level to 14 years; repealing all Commonwealth provisions imposing mandatory minimum periods of imprisonment; and in line with the recent Budget commitment, the establishment of a Commonwealth Parole Board.
     
    “The Law Council is also seeking a commitment to ensuring that our laws are operating as intended – supported by appropriately resourced services – when it comes to protecting and supporting those experiencing family violence.
     
    “The responses we are seeking also include the establishment of a Federal Judicial Commission, further privacy reforms, careful improvements to the regulation of artificial intelligence technology, and the introduction of a federal Human Rights Act.
     
    “Each of the reform measures we are calling for must be underpinned by a commitment to proper consultation with relevant stakeholders.
       
    “Good lawmaking depends on robust and transparent consultation processes. The Law Council is concerned that legislative reform processes are increasingly rushed and lack transparency or public scrutiny. This impacts the efficacy, accuracy and appropriateness of potential reforms. It also undermines the participation of civil society and may erode democratic culture and decision making.
     
    “The Law Council will be asking parties and independent candidates for formal responses to each of the recommendations contained in its Call to Parties, which we will share with the profession and public.”

    MIL OSI – Submitted News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Community consultation now open for Girrawheen Hub Precinct redevelopment

    Source: South Australia Police

    The Girrawheen Hub Precinct redevelopment continues to take shape, with community feedback now being sought on the concept design.

    Identified as a priority project by Council last year, the Girrawheen Hub Precinct forms part of the City’s ‘Putting Community First’ advocacy campaign, which aims to secure support from all levels of government to deliver vital community infrastructure.

    The single-storey concept design incorporates the existing hub, senior citizens centre, library, community centre and community garden functions, and provides greater accessibility across the facility and improved flow between indoor and outdoor spaces.

    The redevelopment will also provide increased floor space for external service providers based at the hub, more car parking, expanded parklands and a new outdoor event space.

    Mayor Linda Aitken said the innovative concept design would deliver a more accessible and inviting community facility for residents of Girrawheen and surrounds.

    “Redeveloping the Girrawheen Hub Precinct will give our community a more welcoming and convenient place to connect with one another, and to access important services closer to their homes,” she said.

    “This consultation will help ensure the hub will meet the needs and aspirations of the community.”

    Community consultation is open from 31 March to 12 May 2025, and findings from the consultation will be presented in a report to Council.

    Construction of the redeveloped hub is scheduled to begin in January 2026 and expected to take approximately 15 months to complete.

    The City will work closely with affected hub hirers and tenants to minimise disruption while we work to build a better Girrawheen Hub precinct for everyone.

    For more information on the Girrawheen Hub Precinct redevelopment project, visit yoursay.wanneroo.wa.gov.au.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Police appealing for information following serious assaults, Hastings

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Hawke’s Bay Police are appealing for information from the public in relation to a number of serious assaults in Hastings.

    Detective Sergeant Ryan Kemsley says Police were called to a disorder involving a large number of people fighting on King Street at around 3.30am on Sunday 30 March.

    “Police arrived and located five people with injuries, some are believed to have been from a weapon.

    “They were all transported to hospital to receive treatment.”

    Police are speaking with several people believed to be involved and are working to establish what has occurred.

    “We would like to speak with anyone who may have witnessed the assaults as we believe they have information that could assist in our investigation,” says Detective Sergeant Ryan Kemsley.

    Police would also like to hear from anyone who has CCTV or dashcam footage in the King Street area between 3am and 4am on Sunday.

    If you have any information that could assist Police, please contact us online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update Report” or call 105.

    Please use the reference number 250330/6709.

    You can also provide information anonymously through Crime Stoppers online or via 0800 555 111.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Parent Portal coming to ACT public schools

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    It is planned that all ACT public schools will have access to Parent Portal in a gradual rollout by term 2, 2024.

    A new parent portal will be rolled out across all ACT public schools this year, making it easier for parents and carers to engage with their school.

    Parent Portal is a secure online platform for sharing student information between schools and parents and carers.

    Key information – spanning preschool to year 12 – will be housed on the one system.

    The portal has capacity for parents and carers to:

    • notify their school if their child is sick
    • book parent-teacher interviews
    • receive their child’s academic reports (including past reports)
    • receive their school newsletter
    • receive messages from their child’s teachers
    • see their child’s student timetable
    • get daily notices of school activities
    • update contact details
    • make payments.

    The introduction of the portal will be phased. At first it will complement existing school communication channels. Eventually it will be the key online communication tool used by all ACT public schools.

    In term 4 2023, the portal was successfully rolled out at nine northside schools in a pilot program.

    More than 2000 parents at these schools are already using Parent Portal.

    Parents and carers with children across multiple schools will not need to sign up to the system twice.

    They can easily add a student to their account once those schools have access to Parent Portal.

    It is planned that all ACT public schools will have access to Parent Portal in a gradual rollout by term 2, 2024.

    “Council’s P&C delegates were really impressed to see a recent demonstration of the Parent Portal, and its capabilities. Parents are looking forward to the roll-out of the portal to their local schools, it will make it easier for them to keep track of what’s happening, from explaining absences, excursions and making payments. Parents will be cheering to not have to dig through school bags for lost notes,” said Executive Officer ACT Council of Parents & Citizens Associations Veronica Elliott.

    As Parent Portal becomes available at each school, information will be provided to explain the benefits and how families can access the platform.

    School front office staff can assist parents and carers who can’t access the online tool, or who may need assistance.

    For more information on beginning the sign-up process, visit the ACT Education Directorate website: https://www.education.act.gov.au/public-school-life/parent-portal.


    Get ACT news and events delivered straight to your inbox, sign up to our email newsletter:


    MIL OSI News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Next phase of Canberra Hospital Master Plan underway

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Upcoming building demolition will make way for new a facility for pathology and other clinical services. 

    The Canberra Hospital Master Plan will reach a new phase with demolition work beginning on Building 23.

    The demolition of Building 23 and the adjacent Building 6 will make way for a new state-of-the art facility for pathology and other clinical services.

    The next step in delivering a modern, accessible Canberra Hospital campus, it is also an early priority of the Canberra Hospital Master Plan.

    It is also just one of many significant changes taking place at the hospital.

    The hospital’s new Critical Services Building will open later this year, featuring a new emergency department and additional operating rooms, treatment spaces and intensive care beds.

    The hospital is also home to the recently completed expansion of the Centenary Hospital for Women and Children, and a new Cancer Research Centre to be completed in late 2024.

    Multiplex will undertake the demolition work for Building 23 and will then progress to the demolition of Building 6.

    Demolition work is expected to take several months and is projected to be completed in quarter three of 2024.

    The Canberra Hospital Master Plan will continue to transform the campus over the next 20 years.

    Planning work for Canberra’s new northside hospital and more community-based health centres also continue.


    Get ACT news and events delivered straight to your inbox, sign up to our email newsletter:


    MIL OSI News –

    March 31, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Monaro Highway upgrades are now underway

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    The new Lanyon Drive Interchange is the first of three upgrades planned for the Monaro Highway.

    Construction has begun on the first of three interchanges planned for the Monaro Highway, south of Canberra.

    Work on the new Lanyon Drive Interchange has begun which will improve safety and reduce congestion.

    This consists of a southbound flyover for the highway over Lanyon Drive and three intersection upgrades including:

    • the removal of traffic lights at the Alexander Maconochie Centre (intersection of the Monaro Highway and David Warren Road)
    • a new roundabout at the intersection of the new Monaro Highway southbound off-ramp and David Warren Road extension
    • upgrading the signalised intersection at Lanyon Drive and Sheppard Street to include a direct connection to David Warren Road and the Monaro Highway southbound off-ramp.

    The design aims to have a minimal impact on existing native plants.

    The landscaping plans will focus on local and native species. They will prioritise tree planting, water sensitive urban design and biodiversity conservation.

    Some of the construction work has already been completed or is underway. This includes:

    • major water mains and telecommunication networks were relocated for protection in 2022
    • two gas mains have been relocated
    • early preparatory works, including site clearing and earthworks, started last month. This involves large machinery, including excavators and trucks.

    Preliminary design is also underway on future interchanges at the Hume industrial precinct and Isabella Drive.

    There will be impacts to travel times during construction. This includes during peak periods, with reduced speed limits and temporary lane closures expected.

    The ACT Government is encouraging motorists to rethink their travel plans where possible and consider taking public transport or travelling outside peak times where possible.

    The government expects construction to take about three years to complete. The design and construction phases are estimated to create 700 jobs.


    Get ACT news and events delivered straight to your inbox, sign up to our email newsletter:


    MIL OSI News –

    March 31, 2025
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