Category: Justice

  • MIL-OSI USA News: Remarks by Vice President Harris Before Air Force Two Departure | Detroit,  MI

    Source: The White House

    Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport
    Detroit, Michigan

    12:27 P.M. EDT

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Well, about last night.  So, Donald Trump — I — I found it to be quite bizarre — actually called himself the “father of IVF.”  And if what he meant is taking responsibility, well, then, yeah, he should take responsibility for the fact that one is three women in America lives in a Trump abortion ban state. 

    What he should take responsibility for is that couples who are praying and hoping and working toward growing a family have — have been so disappointed and — and harmed by the fact that IVF treatments have now been put at risk.

    What he should take responsibility for is what we have been seeing across the country since he hand-selected three members of the United States Supreme Court, and they undid the protections of Roe v. Wade — Wade.

    What he should take responsibility for is that he has been trying to take away the protections against preexisting conditions for, for example, women who are survivors of breast cancer. 

    So, let’s not be distracted by his choice of words.  The reality is his actions have been very harmful to women and — and families in America on this issue. 

         Q    Madam Vice President, Donald Trump did a rally —

         Q    Madam Vice President, do you agree with President Obama’s recent suggestion that Black men may be hesitant to vote for you because you’re a woman?

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Let me first say that I am very proud to have the support of former President Barack Obama.  And I think that the important point that I will make over and over again is I don’t assume to have the votes of any demographic locked down.  I have to earn their vote, and I am going to work, as I’ve been, to earn that vote and to win on November 5th.

         Q    That particular dynamic —

         Q    Ma’am, there’s been a lot of recent questions about Donald Trump’s –

    THE PRESIDENT:   Once again.

         Q    There’s been a lot of recent questions based on an event he did recently.  He played music for about 30 minutes straight.  Just questions about his mental fitness for office at this point.  Do you think Donald Trump needs to take a cognitive test?

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Well, I’m going to say what I have said publicly and will say many times based on my observations and, I think, the observations of many.  Donald Trump is increasingly unstable, and as has been said by the people who have worked closely with him, even when he was president, he’s unfit to be president of the United States.

         Q    Do you support the letter the administration sent Israel threatening legal action over military aid?  Are you —

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I —

         Q    Do you su- —

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I’ve issued my statement about that, yeah.

         Q    Are you — are you supporting calling off military aid if the situation in Gaza does not improve?

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I don’t believe that’s what the letter said.

         Q    Or what kind of legal action do you support?

         THE VICE PRESIDENT:  We’ll take it one step at a time if necessary. 

         Q    Are you —

         Q    Madam Vice President, the Chinese military has been doing drills around Taiwan, and Xi Jinping visited the province across from Taiwan.  It’s raising pressure, obviously, on Taiwan. 

    What is your position were there to be an invasion of Taiwan by the Chinese military under — if you were president at the time?

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Well, let me restate the point I’ve made many times.  I believe in the One China policy, and I believe that there — and that Taiwan has an — a right to defend itself.

         Q    Would the American —

         Q    As a Calif- —

         Q    Would the American government provide arms for the Taiwanese —

         Q    As a California voter, how will you vote on the “Get Tough on Crime” Measure 36 — Proposition 36?

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I have not voted yet, and I’ve actually not read it yet.  But I’ll let you know. 

         Thank you.

                            END                12:30 P.M. EDT

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: Readout of Principal Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer’s Trip to  Haiti

    Source: The White House

    Principal Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer traveled to Port-au-Prince, Haiti on October 16 to meet with senior Haitian officials, and leadership of the Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission and the Haitian National Police (HNP) to drive progress on security and governance efforts. Mr. Finer was joined by a senior U.S. delegation from the Department of State, the Department of Defense, the U.S. Agency for International Development, and the National Security Council.  During separate meetings with members of the Transitional Presidential Council (TPC) and Prime Minister Garry Conille, Mr. Finer expressed condolences for the tragic loss of innocent life in the recent gang-led massacre in Pont-Sondé and reiterated the U.S. commitment to support Haitian-led efforts to restore security and pave the way toward free and fair elections.  Mr. Finer also commended the TPC for the transition of the presidency to President Leslie Voltaire on October 7, while noting that all Haitian officials must continue to put country over party and deliver on their promise to work for all Haitians.

    In his meeting with MSS and HNP leadership, Mr. Finer underscored our continued commitment to rally international support and provide the tools necessary to restore security and rule of law in Haiti.  To ensure that the MSS has the resources that it requires, the United States is by far the largest contributor to support the MSS mission to date.  Following the Haitian government’s request to the UN Security Council to authorize a UN peacekeeping mission to take over from the MSS at an appropriate time, Mr. Finer reassured Haitian officials of U.S. support for such a transition.

    The United States remains the largest contributor of humanitarian aid to the Haitian people through our UN and NGO partners, while also supporting the renewal of the HOPE/HELP trade preferences program as soon as possible to spur greater economic prosperity in Haiti.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: A Proclamation on National Forest Products Week,  2024

    Source: The White House

         Our forests are central to our country’s heritage, history, and economy.  Forests support livelihoods across Tribal Nations, rural towns, and big cities — from foresters and loggers to mill workers and carpenters — while also sustaining the health of our environment and our communities.  During National Forest Products Week, we recognize that conserving our bountiful forests is critical to sustaining our economy and ensuring that Americans can enjoy the wonder of our forests for generations to come.

         As a Nation, we rely on our forests for so much — from cleaning the air we breathe and the water we drink to providing the lumber and paper we use every day.  But the existential threat of climate change endangers our forests, putting those jobs, livelihoods, and critical products at risk.  After decades of fire suppression and ignoring climate change, wildfire seasons have become wildfire years, burning down communities, destroying forest ecosystems, and upending people’s lives.

         My first year in office, I launched the “America the Beautiful” initiative to conserve at least 30 percent of all our Nation’s lands and waters by 2030 through local, voluntary efforts across the country while empowering foresters and farmers to advance sustainable practices to keep working lands productive.  These efforts will help strengthen our economy and pass on a healthier planet to our children and grandchildren.

         When I came into office, I was determined to conserve our forests while protecting the people who rely on them for jobs.  My Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is creating jobs managing our forests, restoring ecosystems, and preventing catastrophic fires.  It is investing in the removal of overgrown vegetation near homes and power lines, preparing evacuation routes in areas at risk of wildfires, removing invasive plant species from forests that can cause fire to spread, and planting native tree species that are more resilient to the changing climate.  And my Inflation Reduction Act made the largest climate investment ever, putting people to work planting trees, sustainably managing our forests, and working on fire prevention.  Together, these actions are producing new jobs that help us care for our forests and keep all of us safe from wildfires.

         At the same time, my Administration is working to support the American workers and rural communities producing our forest products.  We have awarded millions of dollars in grants to American businesses that support forest conservation, expand the sustainable use of American wood products, and find innovative ways to use our wood waste materials, including to build strong and sustainable buildings.  I also take pride in having raised the Federal firefighter minimum wage to $15 per hour — an important first step in ensuring the people who run into flames to keep all of us safe are paid what they deserve.

         Conserving our forests is good for our economy, the planet, and the soul of our Nation.  This week, may we recommit to responsibly stewarding our forests and the abundant resources they provide so that we may all enjoy their benefits and beauty for years to come.

         To recognize the importance of the many products generated by our Nation’s forests, the Congress, by Public Law 86–753 (36 U.S.C. 123), as amended, has designated the week beginning on the third Sunday in October of each year as “National Forest Products Week” and has authorized and requested the President to issue a proclamation in observance of this week.

         NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim October 20 through October 26, 2024, as National Forest Products Week.  I call upon the people of the United States to join me in this observance and in recognizing all Americans who are responsible for the stewardship of our Nation’s beautiful forested landscapes.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this eighteenth day of October, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-four, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-ninth.
     
     
                                 JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: A Proclamation on National Character Counts Week,  2024

    Source: The White House

         In the Oval Office, I sit surrounded by portraits of exceptional American Presidents and busts of inspiring American leaders.  They remind me each and every day that we are a Nation of dreamers and doers, of promise and possibilities, and of ordinary Americans doing extraordinary things.  Above all, we are a Nation of good people, who show our kindness and character through small acts every single day.  This National Character Counts Week, we celebrate the core values of decency, honesty, dignity, and equality that have long defined the character of America.

         Our Nation is strong, and our future is bright — in large part because of the upstanding character that resides within all Americans.  I have witnessed it up close in educators like the First Lady, who inspire our Nation’s youth to reach for every possibility; mothers, fathers, and parental figures who raise their children with care, courage, and grit; first responders, who run toward danger to protect others; union workers, who are building America; and brave service members, who stand on the frontlines of freedom to defend our democracy.  Across the country, American workers are writing the greatest comeback story we have ever known — restoring pride in our hometowns, pride in America, and pride in knowing we can get big things done when we work together.

         Since I came into office, my Administration has taken large strides toward building an America that lives up to those values.  The American Rescue Plan helped keep child care programs open, families in their homes, and small businesses on their feet.  We set a record for Federal contract spending on small businesses.  Our historic investments across the clean energy economy are helping to combat climate change and create good-paying jobs.  Through the American Rescue Plan and Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, we have made significant investments in reducing crime, preventing gun violence, and saving lives, and last year, we saw one of the lowest rates of violent crime in more than 50 years.  We are also ensuring that America is a Nation where everyone is respected and where we give hate no safe harbor.  That is why I signed the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, making it easier to report hate crimes, and hosted the United We Stand Summit to counter the corrosive effects of hate-fueled violence.  My Administration continues to work to counter antisemitism, Islamophobia, and hate in all its forms and ensure that everyone is treated with dignity and respect.

         Under my Unity Agenda, we are tackling the opioid epidemic and mental health crisis, holding Big Tech accountable, supporting our veterans and their families, and ending cancer as we know it.  We are investing more than $1 billion to help schools across the country train and hire new mental health counselors through the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, we have granted new disability benefits to over one million veterans and their families under the PACT Act, and we launched the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health to fast-track progress on how we prevent, detect, and treat cancer and other diseases.

         My father taught me that our character is not measured by how many times or how hard we get knocked down but by how quickly we get back up.  Even in the face of challenges ahead and obstacles in our way, Americans always get back up.  It is what drives our great country forward and what makes our Nation strong.  This week and every week, let us recommit to upholding our most essential values and remember that the sacred task of perfecting our Union is not just about any one of us but about “We the People.” 

         NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim October 20 through October 26, 2024, as National Character Counts Week.  Now and throughout the year, I encourage all Americans to engage in efforts that honor and express the best attributes of our character, extend a hand of fellowship to their neighbors, and unite in service to their communities.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this
    eighteenth day of October, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-four, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-ninth.
     
     
                                 JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.
     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: A Proclamation on Minority Enterprise Development Week,  2024

    Source: The White House

    Our Nation’s minority-owned businesses are the glue of our communities and the engines of our economies.  Investing in them is key to growing our economy from the middle out and bottom up, not the top down.  When minority-owned businesses do well, everyone does well.  More people get jobs, first-time business owners build generational wealth, our economy grows, and more Americans feel a sense of pride and hope in all that is possible in our Nation.  This Minority Enterprise Development Week, may we celebrate the talent and ingenuity of the innovators and entrepreneurs who run our Nation’s minority-owned businesses.  And may we recommit to ensuring that minority-owned businesses have access to the resources they need to thrive.

    Minority-owned businesses add incredible value to our economy, generating nearly $2 trillion in revenue each year.  These businesses not only provide the goods and services we need but are also sources of hope — helping people realize their American Dream, building generational wealth, and uplifting their families and communities.  That is why my Administration is ensuring that minority-owned businesses have access to capital and can grow.  The Small Business Administration (SBA) is lending tens of billions of dollars to small businesses that would otherwise struggle to access capital.  For example, since 2020, the rate of SBA-backed loans increased by about 40 percent for Asian American-owned businesses, tripled for Black-owned businesses, and more than doubled for Latino-owned businesses.  Further, my American Rescue Plan helped minority-owned small businesses keep their doors open during the COVID-19 pandemic and represents the largest-ever dedicated Federal investment to connect minority-owned small businesses to support.  That law invested $10 billion to launch and expand programs that provide critical access to capital for small businesses.  The American Rescue Plan also invested $500 million to fund over 100 awards for organizations working to connect entrepreneurs to resources to help their small businesses recover and thrive through initiatives like the SBA’s Community Navigators Program, the Department of the Treasury’s Small Business Opportunity Program, and the Minority Business Development Agency’s Capital Readiness Program. 

    My Administration has also been working to ensure that minority-owned businesses get a fair shot at success.  That is why I signed an Executive Order that would increase the share of total Federal contracts going to disadvantaged businesses from 10 percent to 15 percent by 2025 — and in the last 3 years, we have spent over $208 billion on small disadvantaged businesses.  My Bipartisan Infrastructure Law expanded and made permanent the Minority Business Development Agency, ensuring that minority-owned businesses have access to the resources and support they need to thrive.  And with my Inflation Reduction Act and CHIPS and Science Act, we are working to make sure that minority-owned businesses are benefiting from the billions of dollars we are investing in America’s infrastructure, manufacturing, and clean energy industries here at home.  In addition, Vice President Harris launched the Economic Opportunity Coalition in 2022 to provide tens of billions of dollars in investments to underserved communities. 

    Since Vice President Harris and I entered office, our Administration has created 16 million jobs, and American entrepreneurs have filed nearly 20 million new business applications.  Wages are growing faster than prices.  Unemployment remains low.  Black- and Latino-owned businesses are being created faster today than they have been in years and Federal contracts with Native American-owned companies increased by over $8 billion from 2020 to 2023. I also take pride in my Administration’s investments in Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic-Serving Institutions, Tribal Colleges and Universities, and Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institutions — all of which are helping launch the next generation of innovators, entrepreneurs, and business owners.  These investments will ensure that their graduates will have every opportunity to lead the industries of the future and build generational wealth.

    Across America — from small towns to big cities — we are seeing thousands of stories of revival, renewal, optimism, and pride.  And each new business that is created is an act of hope, not just for the business owner but for the entire community.  During Minority Enterprise Development Week, may we celebrate all the minority-owned businesses making our economy stronger, our Nation more competitive, and our communities more hopeful.  And may we recommit to supporting their success and longevity.

    NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim October 20 through October 26, 2024, as Minority Enterprise Development Week.  I call upon the people of the United States to acknowledge and celebrate the achievements and contributions of minority business owners and enterprises and commit to promoting systemic economic equality.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this eighteenth day of October, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-four, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-ninth.

                                  JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Pair charged with drug trafficking extradited to face court in Tasmania

    Source: Tasmania Police

    Pair charged with drug trafficking extradited to face court in Tasmania

    Tuesday, 22 October 2024 – 2:36 pm.

    Tasmania Police is today extraditing a man and a woman from New South Wales to Hobart, after they failed to appear in the Supreme Court last Monday, 14 October.
    The 48-year-old woman and 49-year-old man are on trial for trafficking in a controlled substance, where it is alleged they were involved in the importing of approximately $700,000 worth of illicit drugs into Tasmania in 2019.
    At the time, the man was reportedly the national vice president of the Bandidos Outlaw Motorcycle Gang (OMCG).
    The investigation into the drug trafficking formed part of Operation Advance which was a joint operation between Tasmania Police and the Australian Federal Police (AFP).
    Tasmania Police and AFP would like to recognise the assistance provided by NSW Police in the extradition, after officers arrested the pair on Sunday.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Five men arrested relating to Operation Eclipse

    Source: South Australia Police

    Five men have been arrested this morning after a series of searches in the Metropolitan area as part of Operation Eclipse.

    Just after 8am, Tuesday 22 October, Detectives from Serious and Organised Crime Branch attended and searched six residential and business premises located at Blair Athol, Walkley Heights, Dudley Park, Sheidow Park and Morphett Vale.

    Detectives were supported by 45 police from specialist areas including STAR Operations, Metropolitan Districts, Digital Evidence Section and Confiscations Section officers.

    As a result of these searches, Detectives have seized numerous items of interest including tobacco products, approximately $114,500 in cash and two vehicles including a black Range Rover (pictured).

    The five men were arrested for offences that police will allege relate to the ongoing conflict, associated with the illicit tobacco sales in SA and the standover and intimidation tactics that are being used by these syndicates.

    • A 34-year-old man from Blair Athol was charged with aggravated affray and aggravated assault
    • A 31-year-old man from Blair Athol was charged with aggravated affray, attempt cause serious harm and money laundering
    • A 23-year-old man from Blair Athol was charged with aggravated affray, aggravated attempt cause serious harm and money laundering
    • A 33-year-old man from Walkley Heights was charged with aggravated affray and aggravated attempt cause harm
    • A 23-year-old man from Dudley Park was charged with aggravated affray and aggravated assault.

    All five men were refused police bail and are expected to appear in the Adelaide Magistrates Court later today.

    Members of the public who are purchasing illicit tobacco products are directly supporting the organised crime syndicates who are driving the current Operation Eclipse related crime series.

    South Australia Police will continue to investigate offences of violence and extortion and aim to disrupt this type of offending to ensure public safety.

    Anyone who has any information in relation to any suspicious activity around business premises, specifically in the hours of darkness, is asked to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 33 000 or online at http://www.crimestopperssa.com.au – you can remain anonymous.

    CO2400042543

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Significant Police operation targets organised crime around North Island

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Today Police executed over 30 search warrants across the North Island as part of Operation Highwater, a concentrated operation targeting members and associates of the Mongrel Mob Barbarian MC East Bay chapter based in Opotiki.

    NZ Police National Organised Crime Group commenced Operation Highwater in December 2023 following an increase in occurrences of violent crime and other offending in Opotiki, in Eastern Bay of Plenty.

    Today’s search warrants spanned Eastern Bay of Plenty, Waikato, Auckland, Rotorua, Taupo, Wellington, and Hawke’s Bay, targeting identified people believed to be involved in a North Island-wide drug distribution network, including methamphetamine and cannabis.

    Police arrested a total of 28 people, seized illegal drugs and firearms and restrained assets. Provisional results are as follows.

    Arrests by Police District:

    • Bay Of Plenty – 18
    • Auckland – 3
    • Waikato – 3
    • Wellington – 2
    • Eastern – 2

    Restrained assets:

    • One residential property
    • Four cars
    • One jetski
    • Two trailbikes
    • One Harley Davidson motorcycle
    • Approx. $86,000 in a bank account
    • Approx. $20,000 value of jewellery
    • Approx. $65,500 cash

    Approx. total value of assets restrained of $800,000.

    Seizures include:

    • Six firearms including five rifles and a 3D-printed pistol
    • Quantities of illegal drugs including 12 lbs of cannabis and smaller quantities of methamphetamine and cocaine
    • 13 Mongrel Mob Barbarian Patches.

    The investigation team is now in the process of filing charges and confirming court dates.

    Today’s actions follow the execution of warrants in the Coromandel area over several days in August this year, after the Operation Highwater investigation team identified a flow of methamphetamine into the area. Police completed 12 search warrants in Whitianga and Coromandel resulting in six arrests and the seizure of methamphetamine, cannabis and a firearm.

    This is an example of the “all-of-Police” approach, which has seen several workgroups across Police working together toward a shared goal. The operation has been led by the National Organised Crime Group, supported by specialist groups and District Staff. Staff from the Police Partnership and Harm team will support the community wrap-around process during and after today’s termination.

    Today’s search warrants are the culmination of a 10-month investigation, during which instances of serious violence were detected and prevented by Police.

    One such incident saw Police deploy to Opotiki, after receiving information about a planned drive-by shooting at a local marae.

    Quick action meant Police located and seized three firearms, including a high-powered rifle, shotguns and ammunition, preventing what could have been a serious incident.

    Bay of Plenty District Commander Superintendent Tim Anderson says that today is a good day for Opotiki.

    “The termination of this operation is a clear message to gang members selling illegal drugs across the Bay of Plenty that we will find you and you will be held accountable for your destructive behaviour.

    “We will continue to relentlessly pursue criminals who prey on our communities and cause a huge amount of harm and misery in their own communities with their drug dealing and violent behaviour.

    “From my travels around the Bay of Plenty, the feedback from different iwi leaders and the wider community is that they’ve had enough of this type of criminal offending.

    “I’d like to thank the community members who have reported this type of offending and I encourage them to keep reporting these drug dealers to us via 105 and Crimestoppers reporting lines.

    “I’d also like to acknowledge and thank our organised crime detectives for their tireless work and dedication, as well as all our policing teams across the Bay of Plenty who are making arrests every day to make us all much safer.

    “Yesterday we stood up our district Gang Disruption Unit and this new team is also in the Eastern Bay of Plenty targeting gang members as we speak. They, and all our staff across the Bay, will continue to work hard every day to make our communities safer.

    “I’m proud of the work our officers carry out every day, and results such as we’ve seen today are testament to their hard work.”

    Gang members commit a disproportionate amount of crime and harm in New Zealand, and particularly in the areas of serious assault, robberies, drug and firearms offences, and homicides.

    We continue to have a strong focus on disrupting unlawful activity by gang members and their associates, and holding offenders to account for crimes committed.

    Police is committed to doing everything we can to ensure everybody is safe and feels safe too. We urge anyone who has concerns about criminal offending by gangs in their community to contact Police so it can be investigated.

    Call 111 if there is an incident happening now or make a report via 105 online if it is not an emergency situation.

    Information can also be provided anonymously through Crimestoppers at 0800 555 111.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre
     

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Benefits of good effluent management

    Source: Environment Canterbury Regional Council

    Environment Canterbury © 2024
    Retrieved: 4:05pm, Tue 22 Oct 2024
    ecan.govt.nz/get-involved/news-and-events/2024/benefits-of-good-effluent-management/

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Time to shut down failed Youth Justice Residences

    Source: Green Party

    The Green Party is calling for Youth Justice Residences to close, following a protest in which a group of young people spent the night on the roof of an Oranga Tamariki justice facility.

    “Rangatahi deserve more than child prisons and military bootcamps. They deserve opportunities,” says the Green Party Spokesperson for Youth, Tamatha Paul.

    “Instead of punching down on our most vulnerable, we should be providing our rangatahi with meaningful life opportunities, healthcare that addresses their needs, but most importantly, the love and care that they have never, ever had in their short lives. 

    “The Greens are calling for an end to Youth Justice Residences and military-style bootcamps. Our young people deserve a system which sets them up to rebuild their lives, not to be confined to prisons which perpetuate trauma, isolation and violence

    “There are young people out there who cannot imagine a life for themselves outside of prison walls, and that is a failure of successive governments, and a moral failure of our society.

    “I have visited these youth justice residences and can confirm that they are child prisons. They are filled with the most vulnerable rangatahi in our country who have come from extreme levels of poverty and family abuse.

    “What’s happened at Korowai Manaaki is not a unique situation. Years of research and experience shows that youth justice residences are re-traumatising and ineffective. 

    “When the Office of the Children’s Commissioner reported on Korowai Manaaki recently, they revealed inappropriate and deeply troubling practices within the residences. Unfortunately, this culture can be seen across the youth justice space in Aotearoa and is a product of politicians who put winning votes above the real needs of children.

    “The young people leaving these residences do not feel empowered or able to turn their lives around which leads to a lifetime of incarceration and a complete loss of human potential. It’s time to close them down.” says Tamatha Paul.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Third man charged with murder of Darshak Narran

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Waikato Police have today charged a third person with the murder of Darshak Narran.

    A 23-year-old Papakura man will appear in the Manukau District Court tomorrow (23 October).

    Darshak, aged 43, was located with critical injuries on the roadside in the vicinity of the Hampton Downs Racetrack shortly after midnight on Monday 14 October.

    He subsequently died in Auckland Hospital.

    Police are not ruling out further arrests in relation to the assault on Darshak.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Search for missing man in Onerahi to resume tomorrow at first light

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    The search for an 83-year-old man missing in Onerahi, Northland has concluded for the day.

    Today’s search included Police, LandSAR Northland, squads from Waipu Cove Surf Life Saving Club, Whangārei Heads Volunteer Surf Life Saving Patrol, and volunteers from Northland Coastguard Air Patrol and Coastguard Whangārei.

    The search for the missing man will resume again tomorrow at first light, and LandSAR Far North will be joining the search effort then as well.

    The missing man typically goes for a daily swim in the Whangārei Harbour and wears a wet suit and pink swim cap.

    He has not been seen since Saturday evening and was reported missing on Monday evening.

    If you have any information which could help in the search for the missing man, please update us online now or call 105.

    Please use the reference number 241021/1742.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: One southbound lane reopens on Auckland’s Southern Motorway

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    One southbound lane has reopened on Auckland’s Southern Motorway, following an incident near the Penrose Road overbridge.

    There is significant traffic build-up due to the earlier closure of all southbound lanes.

    Motorists are asked to delay travel or take alternative routes where possible.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: All southbound lanes on Auckland’s Southern Motorway reopen

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    All southbound lanes on Auckland’s Southern Motorway have reopened following an incident near the Penrose Road overbridge this afternoon.

    While the lanes have reopened, there is still significant traffic build-up following the earlier closure.

    Motorists should expect continued delays while the traffic build-up clears.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: October 21st, 2024 Heinrich Highlights $2.5 Million for Mobile Training Unit to Connect Rural New Mexicans to In-Demand Careers in the Skilled Trades, Participates in Training Demo with U.A. Local 412

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Mexico Martin Heinrich
    PHOTOS & VIDEO
    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Chairman of the U.S. Joint Economic Committee and a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, highlighted more than $2.5 million he has secured through the Appropriations process for the United Association of Plumbers & Pipefitters Local 412 (U.A. Local 412) to operate a mobile training unit that provides pre-apprenticeship training to New Mexicans living in rural and Tribal communities. 
    The mobile training unit is creating more pathways to in-demand careers in the skilled trades and has already trained dozens of New Mexicans in Española, Taos, Las Vegas, Mora, Raton, and Santa Fe. Heinrich also participated in a training demonstration with U.A. Local 412 leadership and apprentices who are learning skills in the plumbing, pipefitting, and HVAC trades.

    U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) participates in a training demonstration with the United Association of Plumbers & Pipefitters Local 412 (U.A. Local 412), October 21, 2024.
    “Thanks to our Inflation Reduction Act and CHIPS and Science Act, New Mexico is experiencing a manufacturing and clean energy renaissance that is creating new high-quality careers New Mexicans can build their families around,” said Heinrich. “I’m focused on expanding pathways to skills training and apprenticeships that connect New Mexicans to careers in their own communities. This is how we can address workforce shortages, grow the middle class, and strengthen our economy.”
    Heinrich-Secured Federal Investments for the Mobile Training Unit:
    The U.A. Local 412 Mobile Training Unit was initially paid for by an Economic Development Administration (EDA) Good Jobs Challenge Grant, as part of a $6.4 million award to the Northern N.M. Workforce Integration Network. The Good Jobs Challenge funds were authorized by the American Rescue Plan, the critical economic recovery legislation that Heinrich was proud to pass in 2021. 
    Through his work on the Senate Appropriations Committee, Heinrich has further supported the U.A. Local 412’s workforce development efforts by securing more than $2.5 million in Congressionally Directed Spending (CDS) in the Fiscal Year 2023 and Fiscal Year 2024 Appropriations Bills. These awards helped the union secure the equipment and staffing they need to train New Mexicans for jobs in the skilled trades, including specialized training needed to fill the many new, well-paying jobs being created by the CHIPS and Science Act and the Inflation Reduction Act. 
    Heinrich is currently fighting to pass the Fiscal Year 2025 Appropriations Bills, which include an additional $870,000 CDS award that he secured within the Senate Appropriations Committee-passed Labor, Health and Human Services, Education Appropriations Bill to sustain the U.A. Local 412’s mobile training unit’s operations past the original EDA funding, and to expand its reach to new communities including Grants, Gallup, Silver City, and Zuni Pueblo. 
    Heinrich’s Longtime Support for Workforce Training and Apprenticeships:
    Heinrich has long championed proven workforce training programs like U.A. Local 412’s apprenticeship and pre-apprenticeship programs that are growing the middle class, creating and connecting New Mexicans to high-quality careers they can access in their communities, and continuing New Mexico’s leading role in the clean energy transition that is being built by union workers in the skilled trades. 
    Last week, Heinrich hosted a “Pro-Worker, Pro-Business Opportunities” roundtable to talk directly with New Mexicans about how federal legislation he helped pass into law, like the Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Law, is creating careers in high-demand sectors and strengthening New Mexico’s health care, early childhood education, and skilled trades workforce.  
    Last year, Heinrich introduced the bipartisan Apprenticeship Pathways Act, legislation to create pathways to careers for high school students by expanding access to apprenticeship programs for occupations with high need, including the building trades, healthcare, manufacturing, technology, telecommunications, and early childhood education. Earlier this year, Heinrich introduced the Pre-Apprenticeships To Hardhats (PATH) Act, legislation to strengthen the pipeline for careers in New Mexico, address rising workforce shortages, and grow the state’s economy through quality pre-apprenticeship programs. 
    Last year, Courtenay Eichhorst, Business Manager of U.A. Local 412 and President of New Mexico Building Trades, testified about the importance of apprenticeships and pre-apprenticeships during a hearing that Heinrich convened as the Chairman of the Joint Economic Committee on “Job Training for the Clean Energy Transition.” 
    Eichhorst said during that JEC hearing, “In addition to our ‘gold standard’ apprenticeship programs, the UA and other Building Trades’ unions are also increasingly investing in pre-apprenticeship programs that can be designed to help prepare high school students or individuals from underrepresented communities for a career in the trades. These programs help fill the role that used to be filled by the ‘shop classes’ that were found in high schools but have become increasingly rare. Pre-apprenticeship programs also focus on the ‘soft skills’ that are necessary for success in any industry, such as showing up on time and other work etiquette.”
    Earlier this year, also in the Fiscal Year 2024 Appropriations Bills, Heinrich secured $1,200,000 in Congressionally Directed Spending for the SMART Local Union No. 49 Joint Apprenticeship and Training Committee to enhance and expand specialized HVAC apprenticeship training. 
    In March, Heinrich introduced the Providing Resources and Opportunities for Health Education and Learning (PRO-HEAL) Act, legislation that will tackle the health care provider shortage in New Mexico and nationwide by expanding pathways to high-quality, in-demand health care careers that medical professionals can access in their communities. Specifically, the PRO-HEAL Act addresses medical provider shortages by incentivizing states and institutions of higher education to expand or create health care provider pipeline programs, particularly in underserved and rural communities. The legislation is inspired by the success of the Combined BA/MD Degree Program at the University of New Mexico, where over 65% of students who have graduated from their program practice medicine in New Mexico.    
    Last year, Heinrich introduced the Pathways to Health Careers Act, legislation that reauthorizes and modernizes the Health Profession Opportunity Grant (HPOG) program to help address health care shortages in New Mexico and across the country and create pathways to high-quality, in-demand health care careers. The HPOG program has a proven track record of successfully educating workers for jobs in the health care industry, while also providing career coaching, job placement, and a mix of other support services. The Pathways to Health Careers Act would restart and expand the HPOG Program, providing $425 million to make HPOG available nationwide from FY2024 through FY2028 and includes set asides for Tribes and U.S. Territories.  
    In 2021, Heinrich introduced the Championing Apprenticeships for New Careers and Employees in Technology (CHANCE in Tech) Act, legislation to create earlier pathways to high-paying careers in the information technology (IT) industry. Heinrich previously introduced similar bipartisan legislation in 2019 with former Senator Cory Gardner (R-Colo.).

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Murray, Cantwell, Kilmer Announce $51M Federal Grant to Repair Hood Canal Bridge

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington State Patty Murray
    Hood Canal Bridge is a vital link between Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas & helps more than 30,000 daily commuters avoid a 100-mile detour around Puget Sound
    As the longest floating saltwater bridge in the world, the structure is deteriorating in the harsh marine environment
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Patty Murray (D-WA) , Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and U.S. Representative Derek Kilmer (D, WA-06) announced that the Washington State Department of Transportation will receive $51,125,917 in federal funds to repair the Hood Canal Bridge.
    The funding comes from the Infrastructure for Rebuilding America (INFRA) Grant Program, which provides grants to nationally and regionally significant transportation projects to improve the country’s freight network.
    “The Hood Canal Bridge is an absolutely critical connection for people and businesses on the Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas,” said Sen. Murray. “This is a piece of infrastructure that must remain safe and reliable so people can get to where they need to go—whether that’s work, a doctor’s appointment, or anything else. With thousands of travelers relying on this bridge just about every day, I’m proud to have worked together with Senator Cantwell and Representative Kilmer to ensure we bring these federal dollars home to replace outdated portions of this bridge.”
    “Thanks to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the Hood Canal Bridge will receive the repairs it needs to continue providing a vital connection between Kitsap, Jefferson, and Clallam Counties, with more than 30,000 crossings per day. Without this bridge, drivers would need to take a 100-mile detour around Puget Sound. And if the bridge’s retractable span were to fail, submarines and other vessels would be cut off from Naval Base Kitsap – Bangor,” Sen. Cantwell said. “This bridge is critical to the quality of life for residents and our national security.”
    “The Hood Canal Bridge is often a lifeline for folks on the Olympic Peninsula, enabling them to get where they need to go,” said Rep. Kilmer. “This federal funding is a major step toward improving the safety and reliability of the bridge, helping ensure that it will remain open, accessible and resilient for years to come. And with federal support it means this project can move forward without the costs falling solely on the backs of taxpayers in our state. That’s a win-win.”
    This project will replace over 3,400 linear feet of the western half of the bridge including the replacement of 55 reinforced concrete crossbeams and 216 prestressed concrete girder lines and the placement of nearly 4,800 cubic yards of concrete. Preliminary design work is scheduled to begin in November 2025, with project completion scheduled for June 2027. The project’s total budget is $85.2 million.
    The Hood Canal Bridge links the Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas, allowing over 30,000 motorists to get to and from work each day. As the longest floating bridge in the world over saltwater, this unique structure sits in a harsh marine environment that’s deteriorated its condition over the past 40 years. Currently, vehicles that can cross the bridge are weight-restricted at 17,000 lbs per axle or less, and overweight vehicles are forced to drive nearly 100 miles around Puget Sound.  If the bridge’s condition goes unaddressed, further deterioration and restrictions would have severe impacts on commerce and the livelihood of those who depend on the bridge every day.
    The Hood Canal Bridge also crosses a channel used by U.S. Navy submarines to reach the Pacific Ocean from Naval Base Kitsap -Bangor. Should the bridge’s retractable span become unusable, those vessels would be cut off from the base.
    Sen. Murray, as a senior appropriator and then Assistant Majority Leader, helped secure $3.2 billion for the INFRA grant program in advance appropriations in addition to the $4.8 billion funded through the Highway Trust Fund when she helped pass the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, for a total of $8 billion over five years. 
    Sen. Cantwell authored the INFRA Grant Program in the FAST Act of 2015, to provide grants to nationally and regionally significant freight and highway projects. This grant program was the first discretionary grant program to focus on improving the multimodal freight network and addressing freight bottlenecks. In 2022, as chair of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Sen. Cantwell helped secure $8 billion over five years for the INFRA Grant Program as part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, a 78 percent increase in funding. Additionally, in August 2024, Sen. Cantwell wrote a letter to Department of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg in support of the Hood Canal Bridge project’s INFRA grant application. The State of Washington has received 11 INFRA Grants, for a total of $532,300,108 since the start of the program.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Five Defendants Sentenced for Long-Running Bid-Rigging Conspiracy in Georgia Concrete Industry

    Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

    Four executives and a corporation were sentenced for participating in a long-running conspiracy to fix prices, rig bids and allocate jobs for ready-mix concrete in the greater Savannah, Georgia area.

    James Clayton Pedrick, Gregory Hall Melton, John David Melton, Timothy “Bo” Strickland and Evans Concrete LLC were charged in September 2020 with conspiring to fix prices, rig bids and allocate jobs for the sale of ready-mix concrete used in residential, commercial and public projects. Pedrick, Strickland and Evans Concrete later pleaded guilty for their participation in this conspiracy. Gregory Hall Melton and John David Melton were convicted by a jury in the U.S. District Court in Savannah earlier this year. Argos USA LLC separately admitted to its role in the conspiracy and entered into a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) with the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division in January 2021.

    Gregory Hall Melton was sentenced today to 41 months in prison, and three years of supervised release and to pay a $50,000 fine. John David Melton was sentenced today to 26 months in prison, three years of supervised release and to pay a $10,000 fine. The court previously sentenced Strickland to five months in prison and to pay $150,000 fine, Pedrick to one year of probation and Evans Concrete to pay a $2.7 million fine. Argos USA LLC paid a $20 million criminal penalty as part of its DPA.

    According to court documents, the defendants effectuated their conspiracy by coordinating the issuance of price-increase letters to customers, allocating specific ready-mix concrete jobs in the coastal Georgia area, and submitting bids to customers at collusive and noncompetitive prices. The charged conspiracy began as early as 2010 and continued until about July 2016.

    “These sentences reflect the egregious nature of rigging bids for materials like ready-mix concrete which are essential to the American economy,” said Deputy Assistant Attorney General Manish Kumar of the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division. “The Antitrust Division and its law enforcement partners will hold accountable those who seek to exploit the critical need for these materials to harm consumers.”

    “Concrete is an essential material in construction projects, with prices set in the free market by the forces of supply and demand,” said U.S. Attorney Jill E. Steinberg for the Southern District of Georgia. “However, the defendants in this case for several years illegally rigged the system to benefit themselves at the expense of customers and are being held accountable for their conduct.”

    “Activities related to bid-rigging and collusion do not promote an environment conducive to open competition which harms the consumer,” said Executive Special Agent in Charge Kenneth Cleevely of U.S. Postal Service’s Office of Inspector General (USPS OIG). “The sentencing in this case represents a win for all law enforcement agencies who investigate those who engage in this type of harmful conduct to ensure that justice is served.”

    “The sentences imposed today send a clear message to anyone who chooses corporate greed over open and fair competition,” said Special Agent in Charge Joseph Harris of the Department of Transportation’s Office of Inspector General (DOT OIG), Southern Region. “Our commitment to working with our law enforcement partners and DOJ’s Antitrust Division is unwavering as we continue to pursue and uncover corrupt conduct and hold companies that intentionally engage in wrongdoing accountable.”

    The FBI Washington Field Office, DOT OIG and USPS OIG investigated the case.

    Trial Attorney Patrick S. Brown and former Trial Attorney Julia M. Maloney of the Antitrust Division’s Washington Criminal Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney E. Greg Gilluly Jr. for the Southern District of Georgia prosecuted the case.

    Anyone with information on bid rigging, price fixing, market allocation or other anticompetitive conduct in the ready-mix concrete industry should contact the Antitrust Division’s Complaint Center at 888-647-3258 or visit http://www.justice.gov/atr/report-violations.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Experts of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women Praise Japan for Criminalising Non-Consensual Sexual Intercourse, Ask about Women’s Representation in Public and Private Bodies and the Single Surname System for Married Couples

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women today considered the ninth periodic report of Japan, with Committee Experts praising the State’s revision of legislation on rape to criminalise non-consensual sexual intercourse, and raising questions about women’s representation in public and private bodies and the single surname system for married couples.

    Bandana Rana, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Japan, commended the State party for redefining rape as “non-consensual sexual intercourse” and for raising the age of consent to 16.

    Ms. Rana noted, however, that Japan had been ranked one hundred and twenty-fifth globally in terms of gender equality, due to, among other factors, the low level of women’s representation in government and deeply rooted gender stereotypes that hampered women’s standing.  The State party needed to address these issues, she said.

    Several Committee Experts raised concerns regarding women’s representation in public and private bodies.  One Expert noted that the number of women representatives in government had decreased recently, and that only around 0.8 per cent of company chief executive officers and 7.1 per cent of senior diplomats were women.  How would the State party improve female representation?

    A Committee Expert noted that 94.7 per cent of women adopted their husband’s surname under the current single surname system.  This had negative impacts on their identity and employment.  What were the prospects of reforming the law to allow for a dual surname system?

    Introducing the report, Keiko Okada, Director-General, Gender Equality Bureau, Cabinet Office of Japan and head of the delegation, said revisions to the Penal Code in 2023 clarified that non-consensual sexual acts constituted crimes regardless of marital status and raised the age of sexual consent from 13 to 16.  Multiple other laws addressing sexual violence, including against children, had also been enacted.

    Ms. Okada said the Government aimed to increase the percentage of women among candidates for the House of Representatives and the House of Councillors to 35 per cent by 2025.  The Act on Promotion of Women’s Participation and Advancement in the Workplace made it obligatory for national and local governments to set targets for women’s representation and make information about women’s participation publicly available. 

    The delegation added that companies with 301 employees or more were obliged to develop action plans on promoting women’s participation and publish statistics on women’s representation in workforces, and there were plans to extend this obligation to companies with 101 employees or more. There had been a gradual increase in women’s representation in managerial positions in private companies in recent years.

    Ms. Okada also said public opinion in Japan varied greatly regarding separate surnames for married couples.  The Government would proceed with deliberations on the introduction of such a system while closely monitoring public opinion. It was raising awareness that former surnames could be recorded alongside formal surnames on many official documents.

    In closing remarks, Ms. Okada said the delegation had engaged sincerely in the dialogue.  It hoped that the responses it had provided would be useful for the Committee.

    Ana Peláez Narváez, Committee Chair, in her concluding remarks, said that the dialogue had provided further insight into the situation of women in Japan. The Committee encouraged the State party to undertake further efforts to implement the Convention more comprehensively for the benefit of all women and girls in the State.

    The delegation of Japan consisted of representatives from the Cabinet Office; Cabinet Secretariat; National Police Agency; Children and Families Agency; Ministry of Justice; Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology; Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare; and the Permanent Mission of Japan to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Committee will issue concluding observations on the report of Japan at the end of its eighty-ninth session on 25 October.  All documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, can be found on the session’s webpage.  Meeting summary releases can be found here.  The webcast of the Committee’s public meetings can be accessed via the UN Web TV webpage.

    The Committee will next meet in public at 10 a.m. on Friday, 18 October to consider the ninth periodic report of Cuba (CEDAW/C/CUB/9).

    Report

    The Committee has before it the ninth periodic report of Japan (CEDAW/C/JPN/9).

    Presentation of Report

    KEIKO OKADA, Director-General, Gender Equality Bureau, Cabinet Office of Japan and head of the delegation, said that for nearly 40 years since ratifying the Convention in 1985, Japan had committed itself to implementing gender equality measures with the aim of eliminating discrimination against women both in its legislation and in practice.

    Following Committee recommendations, a bill to revise the Civil Code to make the minimum legal age of marriage the same for men and women was enacted in 2018 and took effect in 2022.  Another revision to the Civil Code enacted in 2022 abolished the waiting period for women to remarry after divorce.  This took effect in 2024.

    Public opinion in Japan varied greatly regarding separate surnames for married couples. The Fifth Basic Plan for Gender Equality stated that the Government would proceed with deliberations on the introduction of such a system while closely monitoring public opinion and developments in the National Diet’s discussion on the matter.  The Government was committed to expanding the use of former surnames; it was raising awareness that former surnames could be recorded alongside formal surnames on many official documents.

    The Hate Speech Elimination Act, the Act on the Promotion of the Elimination of Buraku Discrimination, and the Act on Promoting Measures for the Ainu People all incorporated the principle that discrimination was unacceptable, while the Basic Plan on Human Rights Education and Human Rights Awareness-Raising promoted human rights education and awareness-raising, identifying issues concerning women, the Buraku community, the Ainu people, and foreign nationals.  The content of the Plan was now being reviewed to address emerging issues.

    Revisions to the Penal Code in 2023 introduced crimes of “penetrative sexual assault” and “indecent assault”; clarified that non-consensual sexual acts constituted crimes regardless of marital status; raised the age of sexual consent from 13 to 16; criminalised requesting or engaging in a meeting with a child aged 15 or under for the purpose of an indecent act; and extended the statute of limitations for prosecuting sexual crimes.  Multiple other laws had also been enacted, including acts establishing the crime of non-consensual recording of a sexual image, preventing harm as a result of performing in sexually explicit videos, and stipulating measures to prevent sexual violence against children in schools and childcare providers. As of 2023, courts were able to issue orders banning spouses, including same-sex spouses, from approaching victims not only in cases of physical violence, but also in cases of non-physical acts causing psychological harm.  A 2022 law also stipulated comprehensive provision of a wide range of assistance for women victims of violence.

    Following 2019 legislation, a lump-sum payment of 3.2 million yen was provided to people with disabilities who underwent forced surgeries or other sterilization procedures. As of 2024, 1,129 claimants, including 817 women, had been approved for receipt of such payments.  In July 2024, the Supreme Court ruled that the provisions of the now-defunct Eugenic Protection Act relating to sterilization surgeries were unconstitutional.  The Prime Minister subsequently apologised on behalf of the Government for its role in enforcing the Act.  In September 2024, a “Basic Agreement” was signed with stakeholders aiming for a comprehensive solution to the issues of the now-defunct Eugenic Protection Act. The Diet also passed and enacted a bill on payment of compensation to persons who underwent eugenic surgery in October 2024.

    Following another Committee recommendation, Japan enacted and enforced domestic legislation to give effect to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and its supplementary protocol on trafficking in persons in 2017.

    In June 2021, measures to combat sexual harassment and harassment related to pregnancy and childbirth were made mandatory.  The Government aimed to increase the percentage of women among candidates for the House of Representatives and the House of Councillors to 35 per cent by 2025. The Act on Promotion of Women’s Participation and Advancement in the Workplace made it obligatory for national and local governments to set targets for women’s representation, formulate action plans comprising measures to achieve their targets, and make information about women’s participation publicly available.

    The Government aimed to ensure that by 2031, 40 per cent of single-parent households received child support, and that 70 per cent of single-parent households that had a child support agreement received it.  Revisions to the Civil Code in May 2024 introduced a statutory child support system that enabled a parent who lived with a child to claim child support from the parent who lived separately.  The revisions updated provisions relating to child support, parental responsibility and custody, making it possible for both parents to be designated as having parental responsibility following divorce.  Sole parental responsibility was always mandated in potential cases of child abuse, domestic violence, or other potential harm.

    Following the Committee’s recommendations, the Government had revised legislation to make it obligatory for employers with 301 or more regularly employed workers to make information about the gender wage gap publicly available.  The Government also offered a consultation service to help companies analyse the factors and reduce gender wage gaps and was promoting the use of digital tools to help companies calculate those gaps.  Local and national governments were also required to make information on gender wage gaps for all their agencies publicly available.

    The Act on Childcare and Family Care Leave was revised in June 2021, creating a parental leave system that allowed fathers to take leave twice, up to a maximum total of four weeks, within the first eight weeks after the birth of their child. Employers with more than 300 employees were required to make uptake rates of parental leave publicly available. Employers were also required to provide flexible ways of working for workers with preschool age children. Legislation was revised to allow employees who took childcare leave for 14 days or more to receive 80 per cent of their pre-leave pay for 28 days.

    ATSUYUKI OIKE, Permanent Representative of Japan to the United Nations Office at Geneva, said Japan had successfully formulated three national action plans on women, peace and security and was eagerly ensuring cross-cutting intergovernmental coordination.  Bodies promoting women, peace and security were established within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Defence.  Japan was currently implementing 57 projects across the globe, contributing to promoting the women, peace and security agenda in Asia, Africa and Latin America.  In 2025, Japan would assume the role of Co-Chair of the Women, Peace and Security Focal Points Network; it would make every effort to advance the agenda internationally.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    BANDANA RANA, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Japan, commended Japan for its efforts since its last report.  Ms. Rana said that Hiroko Akizuki, the Committee’s Vice-Chair, made valuable contributions to the Committee.  Japan was also congratulated for being nominated as the Co-Chair of the Women, Peace and Security Focal Points Network for 2025.

    Challenges remained for fully achieving gender equality.  Japan had been ranked one hundred and twenty fifth globally in terms of gender equality, due to, among other factors, the low level of women’s representation in government and deeply rooted gender stereotypes that hampered women’s standing.  The State party needed to address these issues.

    Ms. Rana commended the State party for redefining rape as “non-consensual sexual intercourse” and for raising the age of consent to 16.  There was a lack of enforcement of gender equality legislation, leading gender gaps and discriminatory practices to persist.  What legal complaint mechanisms were in place for women who faced discrimination and how was the State party raising awareness of these mechanisms?

    Ms. Rana commended the State party on adopting several laws that addressed discrimination.  There was no definition of intersectional discrimination in legislation.  Would the State party adopt such a definition?  What was the status of efforts to ratify the Convention’s Optional Protocol?

    Japan’s Basic Plan for Gender Equality lacked concrete commitments to address structural barriers for women. How would the State party address the shortcomings in the Plan?

    International treaties had the same effect as domestic legislation in Japan, but courts reportedly rarely applied the Convention.  There were commendable training programmes for judges on the Convention.  How would the State party further promote implementation and awareness of the Convention?

    A Committee Expert commended Japan on its stand on lethal autonomous weapons systems, which was in line with the Committee’s general recommendation 30.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said that under the Constitution and domestic laws, gender-based discrimination was prohibited. The Fifth Basic Plan on Gender Equality called on the Government to raise awareness about remedy mechanisms available to the public.  The plan would run until the end of 2025.  Consideration of the next plan would begin at a later stage.

    Japan was taking into consideration various issues, including organisational frameworks, in its deliberations on ratifying the Optional Protocol, and would seriously consider ratifying it soon.

    All international human rights treaties ratified by Japan had the same effect as domestic law, and were referred to when necessary in courts.  The Convention attached rights and obligations to the State party, not individuals.  The Legal Training and Research Institute trained judges each year on human rights issues.  Prosecutors also received training on international conventions. 

    Non-governmental organizations had contributed to the State party’s policies on gender; women, peace and security; and to drafting the State party’s report.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    A Committee Expert said Japan had created shelters and strong policies to address human trafficking.  There were problems in the State party’s measures to address trafficking, which had not changed in the last five years and did not cover the whole country.  What was the role of women in the peacebuilding process in Japan?  Had the Diet implemented gender budgeting?  Would the State party develop an independent national human rights institute for the benefit of women?  Japan needed to provide increased support for non-governmental organizations.

    Another Committee Expert acknowledged legislative measures to promote women’s participation in public life.  The Basic Plan for Gender Equality set targets to increase women’s representation in political bodies, disaster management bodies, and leadership positions to 30 per cent.  Other countries of similar economic capacity were seeking to achieve parity, so it was disappointing that these modest targets had not been reached.  What progress had been made in achieving the targets in the Plan?  Would the State party adopt temporary special measures to reduce the fee of three million yen required for running for political office?  Were there temporary special measures targeting Buraku women and women with disabilities?  The Expert congratulated Nihon Hidankyo on receiving the 2024 Nobel Peace Prize and asked how the Government was supporting women hibakusha and women and girls affected by the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Japan had 10 women ambassadors and six general counsels who were women.  Forty per cent of Foreign Ministry employees were women, and this percentage was expected to increase.

    The Government had announced preventative measures to address sexual abuse by United States forces in Okinawa.  A new forum had been established between the military and residents of Okinawa.  Japan had primary jurisdiction over offences committed by military personnel.

    National and regional legal affairs bureaus had staff members that received complaints of human rights violations from women. There had been a significant increase in the budget promoting gender equality in recent years.  The Government’s 2024 budget included investments of 10.6 trillion yen in gender policies.

    The Government was working to promote the participation of women with disabilities in decision-making processes.  The Government had a policy committee for persons with disabilities; 40 per cent of its members were women with disabilities. The central government mandated local governments to formulate plans supporting persons with disabilities.

    The Convention did not apply to the period of the Second World War.  However, Japan had legally concluded all claims and property issues related to comfort women.  It had also established a fund that provided atonement for former comfort women, who were also sent letters of apology by the Prime Minister.  Meetings had been conducted with former comfort women.  The Government had also significantly invested in a healing foundation for comfort women and provided direct support to 65 surviving comfort women.

    Some women who had evacuated Fukushima after the nuclear incident had returned.  Experts monitored the health impact of radioactive material and were providing accurate information on risks to residents.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the State party was promoting awareness of unconscious gender bias, but patriarchal attitudes continued to be present in various aspects of life.  How did the Government measure the effectiveness of awareness activities? Would the State party consider policies to counter gender stereotyping at all levels, which appeared to be normalised in society?  How would the State party prohibit discriminatory remarks by politicians?

    How could rape be prosecuted without accusation from victims? There were reports that perpetrators of offences by United States military personnel in Okinawa against women were not brought to justice.  How was the State party addressing this?  Could the State party provide data on arrests, prosecutions and convictions?

    Resource allocations to enforce prevention of spousal violence were reportedly insufficient.  Would the State party consider revising legislation to address coercion and psychological violence?  How was it building the capacity of the judiciary related to their understanding of gender-based violence?  How were shelters for victims of domestic violence being funded?  Was there a level of awareness amongst women regarding new legislation on non-consensual sex and their right to refuse sex?

    BANDANA RANA, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Japan, commended the 2014 national action plan to combat trafficking in persons and the establishment of the council to combat trafficking in persons.  What measures were in place to improve identification mechanisms for victims of trafficking?  Current legal provisions did not fully encompass non-coercive forms of trafficking. How would this be addressed? Labour trafficking remained significantly underreported.  How would the State party secure convictions in trafficking cases and enhance cross-border cooperation to ensure the safe return of trafficking victims? Victimisation of girls persisted in the online sphere through child prostitution and pornography.  How was this being addressed?  Did programmes to prevent trafficking reach rural areas? What measures were in place to prevent the trafficking of young women and girls forced into prostitution by economic hardship?

    The Committee acknowledged efforts made by Japan to address the comfort women issue.  These steps needed to be sustained and enhanced to ensure the rights of victims to truth, justice and reparation.

    ANA PELÁEZ NARVÁEZ, Committee Chair, asked how legislation addressed sexual acts against persons who could not give consent, such as children and persons with disabilities.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said that the Cabinet Office had conducted surveys in 2021 and 2022 that revealed unconscious bias related to gender.  It had since implemented various measures to promote awareness of unconscious bias in government and society.  The Act on Promotion of Gender Equality in the Political Field required political bodies to implement training to prevent sexual harassment against persons holding public office.  Individual cases of harassment were handled according to the law.

    In 2023, the Penal Code was revised to specify that non-consensual sexual relations were prohibited in all situations. Information had been posted on Government websites, and leaflets and posters had been created, informing women and girls about the new legislation.  Lectures on the new law had also been provided for staff at one-stop support centres.  Persons who had sex with persons who could not give consent due to a disability or other factors were punished under the law.

    A victim-centred approach was taken to addressing the issue of sexual abuse by military personnel against women in Okinawa. Suspects were held by the military until the Japanese Government indicted them.  The Government was committed to holding all perpetrators accountable.  There were three arrests of United States forces for non-consensual sex with women and one arrest for indecent assault.

    The Act against Sexual Violence was amended in 2023 to address threats of violence and extend restraining orders for perpetrators of domestic violence.  The Legal Training and Research Institute had conducted training on domestic violence for family court clecks and investigators.  Courts could order prohibition of repeated phone calls to victims. Forty-seven publicly run shelters were provided for victims of sexual and gender-based violence, and the Government also supported privately run shelters.  Livelihood support was provided for victims, as was education support for their children.  In 2023, 1,100 protection orders were issued by courts.

    In 2022, the Government introduced an action plan on trafficking in persons, which promoted the identification and support of victims. After 2022, Japan had been attending the meetings of the Bali Process and contributing funds to the International Organization for Migration to promote awareness of trafficking and voluntary returns of victims.  Japan had supported the return of over 600 victims.  The Japan Coast Guard conducted inspections of vessels and took protective measures if there were suspicions of trafficking.  The Immigration Services Agency investigated whether asylum seekers were victims of trafficking.  Residence visas could be issued to persons found to be victims.  The Agency provided consultations and information on trafficking in persons in multiple languages, and victim protection services through regional contact points.  The police had also been trained in identifying victims of trafficking.

    Legislation had been enacted to address online child pornography and child prostitution.  Persons who distributed child pornography were prosecuted under this legislation.

    Japan aimed to lead global efforts to prevent gender-based violence.  It was providing financial contributions to organizations supporting women affected by conflict and was conducting awareness raising campaigns to prevent such incidents.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert commended efforts to remove barriers to female political representation in Japan.  It was concerning that the number of women representatives in government had decreased recently.  Only around 0.8 per cent of company chief executive officers were women, there were only two female justices in the Supreme Court, and only 7.1 per cent of senior diplomats were women.  How would the State party improve female representation in these areas? Would it implement penalties or incentives to improve female representation?

    Another Committee Expert said that mixed nationality couples and single foreign parents had issues with passing nationality onto their children.  Did children of mixed couples obtain Japanese nationality upon birth, regardless of the marital status of their parents? Could more detail be provided about changes in the nationality law in 2024?  Children of foreign nationals born in Japan were not granted Japanese nationality and foreign residents were not allowed the right to vote.  Could they be appointed to government positions?  Was there a complaints mechanism for denied nationality applications?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Basic Act for Gender Equality called on the Government to pursue affirmative actions to promote gender equality.  It set numerical targets for women’s representation and measures were developed to achieve those targets.  Numerical targets had been set for the representation of women in private sector companies.  More than half of new employees of the Foreign Ministry were women.  Currently, the Supreme Court had three women judges, meaning 20 per cent of its judges were women.  The Government was exerting efforts to increase the representation of women in the judiciary.  Companies with more than 301 employees were obliged to develop action plans on promoting women’s participation and publish statistics on women’s representation in their workforces, and there were plans to extend this obligation to companies with more than 101 employees.  There had been a gradual increase in women’s representation in managerial positions in private companies in recent years.

    The 2024 revision to the law on nationality was enacted to ensure that nationality was not granted when false claims were made by applicants.  There was no specific complaint mechanism related to obtaining nationality. Nationality could be obtained through naturalisation and other means.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    BANDANA RANA, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Japan, said that Japan was one of the world’s largest donors to international efforts promoting gender equality.  How would the State party promote women’s participation in peace negotiations?

    Another Committee Expert said horizontal segregation persisted in Japan.  The share of female students in physical science education was 15 per cent, and around 10 per cent in engineering education. Women professors made up around 17 per cent of professors in universities.  Would the State party introduce temporary special measures to address these issues?  Why were many female lecturers hired in temporary positions?  How was the State party encouraging women to become doctors?

    How did the State party ensure standardisation and the accuracy of information in history textbooks?  How many male teachers were there in primary schools?  What measures were in place to improve the working environment for women teachers?  Did teacher training address verbal and psychological violence?  Would the State party adopt Convention standards related to sexual education?  What measures were in place to address bullying against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex children and children from non-conventional families?

    A Committee Expert said the Penal Code had recently been revised to address online insults; how many cases of online insults had since been prosecuted?  Marginalised women experienced disproportionate levels of workplace harassment.  The gender wage gap was wide, at 23 per cent, and there was a large proportion of unemployed work-age women.  What measures were in place to address these issues?  Most women worked in irregular employment positions; would the State party consider requiring companies to report on the percentage of women in such positions?  What protections were available for workplace harassment of whistle-blowers?  The Convention needed to be upheld in Supreme Court deliberations regarding selective surnames for women.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said that in 2023, Japan positioned gender mainstreaming as an important part of official development assistance.  It was promoting women’s empowerment through foreign policies. Wide-ranging discussions were held on the empowerment of women at the G-7 as a part of gender mainstreaming efforts. Women were encouraged to participate in humanitarian aid activities.

    Under the fifth Basic Plan for Gender Equality, there was a target for increasing women and girls’ participation in science, technology, engineering and maths education.  Women’s participation in this education had gone up this year.  The Government was also promoting diversity among university students and supporting women studying science, technology, engineering and maths subjects through scholarships.  It also awarded universities that took positive measures to enrol women students and was distributing increased funding for universities that employed high percentages of women professors and women in leadership positions.  The Government was supporting women to return to work in research after childbirth.  It found that there had been discrimination against women in three medical schools’ entrance examinations.  Measures had been taken to ban such discrimination and prevent its recurrence.

    The Government had national curriculum standards that textbook publishers needed to adhere to.  School textbooks promoted harmony between students and provided education on gender equality.  In the authorisation process, academic and other experts assessed draft textbooks created by private sector companies to ensure that they explicitly promoted gender equality.

    Overtime payment was not provided to teachers, but teachers’ salaries were adjusted based on the amount of work they conducted.  The Government was trying to reduce working hours for teachers by hiring additional teachers and implementing other measures. Teacher training covered respect for human rights and support for students of diverse backgrounds.

    Bullying, including of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex children, was not tolerated in schools.  Psychological health surveys and individual support teams were employed to respond quickly to school bullying, and guidelines were being revised to strengthen responses to bullying.  A policy to address deep-fake pornography was included in the Basic Plan for Gender Equality.

    Employers were not allowed to select employees based on weight, height or physical strength, or based on their ethnic background or belief. Each public and private entity had a quota for employment of persons with disabilities.  This had led to increased employment of such persons.  A workplace diversity promotion project was launched in 2019.  Companies that actively employed women were certified and provided with tax incentives. The Government, over the next three years, would introduce measures to support women’s employment in the digital field.  There were 73 prosecutions involving insults in 2023.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the Equal Employment Act did not recognise discrimination based on pregnancy, rural background or age. Would the State party amend this legislation?  More than 50 per cent of female workers were in temporary positions.  This needed to be addressed.  The 2025 World Expo was an opportunity to showcase that the future of work was female.

    Another Committee Expert asked about the slow pace of dismantling single-sex schools, which validated differences between the sexes.  What timeline did the Government have to achieve this?  What reparation had been provided to women who had been denied admission to medical schools due to discrimination?  How would the State party address negative comments by authorities related to reproductive education?

    A Committee Expert said a 2023 Government pilot had made emergency contraception pills available in pharmacies.  Would this pilot project be made permanent, and would contraception be provided to persons under 18?  Women in Japan had to get consent from spouses to seek abortions.  There were even cases where single women had had to seek permission from partners to obtain abortions.  Would the Government remove this requirement?  Only around three per cent of clinics offered abortion pills that were as expensive as other abortion procedures and needed to be taken in front of medical staff.  What measures were in place to increase access to abortion pills and to allow women to take these pills at home?

    The Committee commended the Government for apologising for the sterilisation of persons with disabilities conducted under the former eugenic protection law and for committing to provide compensation to victims. What reproductive rights did women with disabilities currently have?  What progress had been made in reducing per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in water supplies, which were harmful for pregnant women?

    Another Committee Expert commended the revised Pension Act and support provided for start-ups created by women.  Around 15 per cent of women in Japan lived below the poverty line. Women in part-time work lacked adequate safety nets to keep them from poverty.  What measures were in place to further extend women’s access to employment opportunities and low-interest credit?  How would the State party address the gender digital skills gap? Were there financial literacy programmes for women in rural areas?  What percentage of the social security budget was devoted to older women, women with disabilities, foreign students and rural women workers?  Had the State party considered reforms that would establish guaranteed pensions for all individuals and family benefits for women with children classified as “illegitimate”?  How was the State party promoting women’s participation in sports and cultural programmes?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Government would continue to consider expanding the scope of legislation on indirect discrimination in recruitment, considering societal attitudes.  Japan’s efforts to promote women’s empowerment would be showcased at World Expo 2025. 

    Japan had no plans to dismantle single-sex schools.  Schools and boards of education made decisions related to single-sex education in individual schools.  Sexual and reproductive education called on students to respect the opposite gender and to make informed decisions regarding sexual activities.

    A trial was being conducted on the sale of emergency contraception pills at pharmacies and a research project on the provision of the abortion pill at medical clinics had been concluded this year.  The Government would analyse their results.  Male spouses needed to permit pregnant women to seek abortions, except in cases of domestic abuse or for unmarried mothers. The Government would deepen social discussions on this issue.

    The Government had developed a plan for promoting female digital talent; it was expanding opportunities for female high school and university students to receive education on programming.  The Government provided loans to female entrepreneurs who had difficulties obtaining funds and was collecting statistics on the number of start-ups created by women.  Seminars had been conducted to promote capacity building for women entrepreneurs.

    In 2022, the Government published cross-sectoral guidelines on business and human rights.  It would continue to study the possibility of future laws on human rights due diligence.

    The average monthly pension as of 2022 was 58,000 yen for men and 54,000 yen for women.  There was no gender gap in the system itself; the difference was due to gaps in work style between men and women.  Japan had a universal pension system.  The Government would expand the scope of employees qualified to receive pensions and would provide additional support to elderly women recipients of pensions.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert asked about the timeline for the trial of emergency contraception, and asked whether the Government would change legislation to remove the requirement for people who wished to change genders to be sterilised.  It was extraordinary that women in Japan needed to get permission from spouses to obtain abortions, except in cases of divorce, domestic violence or death of spouses. Would the State party revise this?

    Another Committee Expert asked about the number of female beneficiaries of financial loans.  How would the State party provide pension coverage for all vulnerable groups, including women not in employment, education or training?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said it was currently difficult to indicate a timeline for the trial of emergency contraception, but the Government would continue to consider this.

    The poverty rate was higher for females than for males. To address this, a supplementary pension benefit was provided for low-income households.

    The Government provided various sporting opportunities for women and was promoting women’s participation in governance of sporting organizations.  A plan had been adopted that promoted women’s participation in cultural activities.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    BANDANA RANA, Committee Expert and Rapporteur for Japan, commended plans to support land ownership for rural women.  Rural women lacked access to adequate social benefits such as maternity and sickness leave. How would the State party address this? 

    Ms. Rana welcomed inspections that had led to the detection of abuse of migrant technical intern trainees.  However, migrant women workers continued to face discrimination, threats of repatriation abroad, and poor working conditions.  How was the State party addressing these issues?  What measures were in place to address barriers to accessing health care for women with disabilities?

    Women’s representation in climate change decision making was low.  How would the Government address this, and ensure that extraterritorial investments protected women’s rights?  How would the State party take responsibility for monitoring nuclear standards with regards to the dumping of nuclear treatment water into the ocean?

    Another Committee Expert said that 94.7 per cent of women adopted their husband’s surname under the current single surname system.  This had negative impacts on their identity and employment. What were the prospects of reforming the law to allow for a dual surname system?

    What measures were in place to address the impact of discriminatory practices against children born out of wedlock?  There were barriers to women accessing assets in divorce settlements.  How was the Government working to train the judiciary on these issues so that justice could be imparted with a gender perspective?  How would it protect victims of family violence after the introduction of joint custody decisions?  Were there plans to increase court resources for this purpose?  Would the State party allow for adoption by same-sex couples?  The Committee suggested that the State party consider establishing equality between men and women regarding the appointment of female emperors.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said foreigners could be appointed to certain public servant positions, but not all positions.  In 2022, several thousands of inspections were carried out under the technical intern trainee law, which had identified human rights violations.  Employers that violated migrant workers’ rights were sanctioned.

    The Ministry of Environment was actively employing women. Discharged water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant was not contaminated with nuclear material.  The International Atomic Energy Agency had determined that the radiation impact of this water was negligible and that the disposal of this water into the ocean was safe.

    Opinions were mixed regarding selective separate surnames. The Government was offering information to deepen debate on the topic in the public and in the Diet.

    The best interests of the child needed to be considered regarding visitation rights for parents.  The revision of legislation on visitation did not harm the rights of children. In 2024, the Civil Code was revised to promote the separation of property after divorces.  The period in which claims could be made to family courts were extended from two to five years.  The revised law promoted the fair division of property.

    It was not appropriate for the Committee to raise the issue of revising the system of succession to the Imperial Throne of Japan.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    ANA PELÁEZ NARVÁEZ, Committee Chair, said that the Committee had capacity to raise relevant questions regarding equality between men and women, including regarding succession to the throne.  This was a topic that was directly relevant to the Convention.

    A Committee Expert welcomed that the Government had removed a policy offering grants to women to move away from Tokyo to get married. What was the level of engagement of women in policy making such as this?

    Another Committee Expert asked about efforts to ensure that family law included a gender perspective.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Japanese Government had set targets regarding the percentage of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in drinking water.  There had been no reports of health issues related to levels of these substances, but monitoring of water resources would continue to ensure the safety of the public.

    The Government would continue to support the capacity building efforts of family courts.  It was providing information about women’s ability to use maiden names to apply for certain State services.

    Concluding Remarks

    KEIKO OKADA, Director-General, Gender Equality Bureau, Cabinet Office of Japan and head of the delegation, said the delegation had engaged sincerely in the dialogue.  It hoped that the responses it had provided would be useful for the Committee.

    ANA PELÁEZ NARVÁEZ, Committee Chair, said that the dialogue had provided further insight into the situation of women in Japan.  The Committee encouraged the State party to undertake further efforts to implement the Convention more comprehensively for the benefit of all women and girls in the State.

     

    Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the media; 
    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

     

    CEDAW24.030E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: Remarks by Vice President Harris at a Campaign Event | Scottsdale,  AZ

    Source: The White House

    Grayhawk Golf Club
    Scottsdale, Arizona

    12:12 P.M. MST

    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Hi, everyone.  Good afternoon.  Please have a seat.  Good afternoon.  (Applause.)  Thank you. 

    Thank you.  Thank you very much.  Thank you.  I appreciate you.  Thank you very much.  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you.  (Applause.) 

    Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you.  I’m touched.  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you.  That means a lot.  Thank you, (inaudible).  (Applause.) 

    Thank you.  Please, please, please have a seat.  I’m — I’m very touched and very honored.  And thank you, all leaders who are here. 

    Mayor Giles, I thank you.  You’ve been an extraordinary friend.  And I really — I so appreciate the courage that you have shown to be so open and forward about the importance of us all working together, and your support has meant the world to me.  So, in front of all of the friends, I thank you very much for all you’ve done.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you.

    And former State Rep Shaw, I thank you as well.  Is sh- — I — there you are.  (Laughter.)  Thank you for all the support that you have given as well.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you.

    So, we are all here together because we love our country.  We love our country.  And I was talking with some folks recently about the importance of understanding the — the duality, frankly, that exists in terms of our democracy. 

    You know, as your vice president, I have now met over 150 world leaders — presidents, prime ministers, chancellors, and kings — and when we, representing the United States, walk in those rooms, traditionally, we’ve been able to walk in those rooms chin up, shoulders back, with the earned and self-appointed authority to talk about the importance of democracies, rule of law.  But I say, to a room of role models, here’s the thing about being a role model: When you’re a role model, folks watch what you do to see if it matches up to what you say. 

    And I tell you because I have traveled the country recently — including the many, many trips that I have taken over the last almost four years — but recently, in particular, where world leaders, allies have come up to me — we’re now on a first-name basis; I’ve met with so many of them so many times — and they have said to me, “Kamala, I hope you guys are going to be okay.”

    One of the things that I think about and weighs on me sometimes is I hope we, as Americans, really understand how important we are to the world.  We are so important to the world.  Those people who fight for democracy, who fight for freedom, who fight for a life in which they can have opportunity, they hold us up and they hold us out as a model. 

    And that, as much as anything, is at stake right now in this election.  And I know I’m speaking to a group of people who know that and know that well. 

    You know, I was raised to believe that hard work is important, it is important to look out for each other, it is important to understand that the vast majority of u- — of us have so much more in common than what separates us. 

    I was raised in a community of folks who understood that when we stand together, when we look for commonality, that’s when we thrive. 

    And part of what we know has been happening in the last several years in our country is there’s some powerful forces that are trying to divide us as Americans, would have us and cheer us on if we point fingers at one another. 

    There’s this kind of backward thinking coming from some folks that suggests that the measure of the strength of a leader is based on who you beat down, instead of what we know, which is the real measure of the strength of a leader is based on who you lift up.  That’s strength.  (Applause.)

    But — but truly, like i- — but — but I mean that intentionally.  It’s not only good and right.  That’s strength. 

    Because that’s part of what is the perversion of what some people are suggesting, as though it is a sign of weakness to have empathy, to have some level of concern and care about the suffering of other people and then take it upon oneself to do something about that that is about lifting the condition of your fellow human being. 

    So, when we think about what’s at stake in this election — whoa, it’s packed with some stuff.  (Laughter.)  It’s packed with some fundamental stuff — (applause) — I say rather articulately.  (Laughs.)  There’s so much at stake. 

    Mayor, you mentioned John McCain.  Okay.  So, I’ll tell you, I was in the United States Senate for about four years, and — and I worked with John McCain.  And so, I’ll tell you, so there was this — we were on a committee together.  And, you know, these committee rooms in the United States Senate, they’re very grand and — and very impressive.  And John McCain was on one side of the dais; I was on the other — horseshoe. 

    And he’s going after me.  He’s going after me.  We’re having some conversation.  I think it was about one of the nominees.  This — this was during President Trump’s years.  He’s going after me, and I’m going back after him.  (Laughter.)  I’m going back after him.  And that was it.  And this is what the public saw. 

    And then I step onto the floor of the well of the Senate later that day — we had votes — and I passed by John McCain, and he looks at me and he says, “Kid, come over here.”  (Laughter.)  “You’re going to make a great senator.”  (Laughter and applause.)  True story.  True story.  True story.

    That was John McCain.  That was John McCain. 

    I was talking about him last night at a rally, right?  John McCain, who — you know, we didn’t agree on everything, but, man, I mean, what about an incredible American hero?  (Applause.) 

    Again, strength — strength — right? — we know what the former president said about John McCain; I’m not going to repeat it here — but strength.

    John McCain stood on principle.  He stood on a belief in the — in the importance of — of patriotism, of sacrifice, of what we stand for as a country. 

    And part of what I talked about at a rally last night is — I — I shared with the folks in the room: I was there on the Senate floor, way into the middle of the night, when it was yet another attempt of the former president to get rid of the Affordable Care Act, which, as we know, has been literally a lifesaver for people, right?  (Applause.)  What it has done to no longer allow preexisting conditions to be the reason that an insurance company can’t give you assistance.  Right?

    And you all may have seen it.  I was there on the floor that night, and we were all standing around because whether or not the Affordable Care Act would continue to be relied on one vote.  And we were all standing on the floor.  And, of course, I had voted to keep it going.  And — and I say this, and it sounds like it’s out of a movie, but this is how I experienced it.

    On the flo- — floor with my colleagues in the Senate well — it was late into the night, and they — in the Senate, they had the — you walk onto the Senate floor, and there are these big, wooden ornate doors.  And those ornate doors opened — (laughter) — and John McCain came out. 

    And he went to the floor, and he said, “No, you don’t.”  (Applause.)  He said, “No, you don’t.”  “No, you don’t take away health care for millions of people.” 

    And that is but one example of an individual that we all respect who put country before party in terms of what they thought was right.  I am honored to have the endorsement of Jeff Flake, someone I also worked with — (applause) — again, putting country before party.

    And so, I say all of that to say that those are examples that are situated right here in this beautiful state of Arizona, a tradition that everyone, and all of us, I will say, stand on. 

    And then, of course, most recently, what Maricopa did in terms of the clerk refusing to participate in the intention to undo the will of the people in a free and fair election.  The people of this state have always shown extraordinary courage to stand up for the principles upon which we as a country were founded.  And I thank you for that.  I thank you for that.

    I know we are going to win this election, and it is not going to be easy.  There are forces at play that are making us, as-  — as Americans, I think, call into question certain fundamentals that we have always taken for granted, that is part of our pride: freedom — freedom — freedom from the government making decisions about a person’s body, a woman’s body; freedom to just be; freedom over matters of heart and home, I like to say; fundamental principles around the importance of rule of law, whether we should actually be concerned and have a question — a legitimate question in an election for president of the United States, the commander in chief, of whether they will abide by the oath.  (Applause.) 

    But imagine — imagine.  That’s a legitimate question we are asking.  It’s not rhetorical.  It’s a legitimate question we are asking.

    He who said that he would, quote, “terminate” the Constitution of the United States.  He who said he would be a dictator on day one.  He who intends to weaponize the Department of Justice against his political enemies — take away the independence of the Department of Justice and put in place loyalists.

    Fundamental notions about who and what we are as a democracy are at play in this election.  And you all, each of you, have had the courage to say, hey, we may not agree on every single thing — that’s also what a democracy looks like — but foundational, first principles cannot be in question, not for the sake of our children, not for the sake of our future and well-being, not for the sake of our standing in the world.

    And so, I tell you all this to just reaffirm that we — we share not only a concern but a commitment to our country and what’s most important about, in a moment of crisis — dare I say, I think this is one — do we stand together as Americans being our first identity and come together around these issues?

    And I — I’m going to actually announce — we have press in the room — that I have decided also — not only will I have a Republican in my Cabinet, but I’m also going to — I — I was talking to my team about it.  I want to create some structure around the following, which is: I love good ideas.  Wherever they come from, I love good ideas.  (Applause.)  Right?

    And so, part of what I intend to do, Mayor, and put some structure around is creating a bipartisan council of advisers who can then give feedback on policy as we go forward.  Because here’s the thing I also understand and feel strongly about: In order for us as America to maintain our status as the strongest democracy in the world, we need a healthy two-party system.  We have to have a healthy two-party system.  (Applause.)  We have to.  It’s in the best interest of all of us.  It’s in the best interest of all of us. 

    You know, the way that I like to lead — I bring folks in my office all the time, and they know I don’t want any “yes” people.  I want people to come in and, first of all, be prepared.  (Laughter.)  Yeah, no time to waste.  But come in and then let’s — let’s, as I often say, kick the tires on ideas.  Because the best ideas will survive those kinds of challenges, and the best ideas will then be most relevant to the American people, most in- — effective to the American people. 

    And so, I’m going to create a bipartisan council so we can put some structure around exactly this point and do the work that is important. 

    And then I’m — I’m just going to close with this.  You know, again, I think on the fundamentals, we have more in common than what separates us, including across faiths. 

    So, I know there are mem- — a lot of members of the LDS community here, and you may or may not know my pastor actually spoke at the 100th birthday of President Nelson.  (Applause.)  Yeah.  Yeah. 

    And I just — and that wasn’t a plan as part of this.  It just is.  And — and I just think if we think in our lives and in what we know, there are so many examples of that point.  We have so much more in common than what separates us, especially on the fundamentals. 

    And so, with that, I say that I am committed to all of you to be a president for all Americans and to work as we must — together — again, knowing we have so much more in common than what separates us.  And on the biggest and most important issues, I think we know that this is a fight that is not against something as much as it is a fight that is for something.  (Applause.)

    Thank you. 

    God bless you.  God bless you.  And God bless the United States of America.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

                              END                 12:28 P.M. MST

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Exosens announces agreement to acquire NVLS (Night Vision Laser Spain), specialist in night vision equipment

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    EXOSENS ANNOUNCES AGREEMENT TO ACQUIRE NVLS (NIGHT VISION LASER SPAIN), SPECIALIST IN NIGHT VISION EQUIPMENT

    PRESS RELEASE
    MÉRIGNAC, FRANCE– MADRID, SPAIN, OCTOBER, 22nd 2024

    • Exosens announces having reached a definitive agreement to acquire Spanish-based NVLS, a specialist in night vision equipment, widening its optical and mechanical deep know-how
    • This acquisition will enable NVLS to develop its business in Spain, Latin America and Asia and will contribute to providing enhanced night vision solutions to Armed Forces.

    Exosens, a high-tech company focused on providing mission and performance-critical amplification, detection and imaging technology, today announces the signing of the acquisition of Spain-based company NVLS, a specialist developer and manufacturer of man-portable night vision and thermal devices.

    “With the acquisition of NVLS, we will enhance our long-term innovation capabilities for multi-sensor platforms using detectors and cameras made by Exosens.

    Serving and delivering large volumes of high-performance image intensifiers to all our customers and end-users remain our priority in the years to come. We are committed to our customers to maintain the same high level of service and support that we have thrived to constantly deliver as the reference ITAR-free image intensifier tube provider».” commented Jérôme Cerisier, CEO of Exosens.

    NVLS, based in Spain with 63 employees, has developed a strong expertise in the field of man-portable night vision equipment, offering ultra-compact large field of view devices that provide enhanced visibility for land and aviation missions. These devices have been introduced as the new standards within the Spanish Armed Forces, Customs Police and Guardia Civil.

    “We are very pleased to join Exosens group with which we have built a strong supplier relationship since many years. All our products lines have always been using Photonis image intensifier tubes which ensure a high level of image quality and reliability. We will continue to benefit from their extended sensors technology platform to develop a new generation of devices, bringing unrivaled performances to armed forces.” stated Jorge de la Torre, CEO of NVLS.

    The transaction is expected to be finalized in the coming months. Terms of the transaction are not being disclosed and are pending customary clearances and approvals.

    ABOUT EXOSENS:

    Exosens is a high‐tech company, with more than 85 years of experience in the innovation, development, manufacturing and sale of high‐end electro‐optical technologies in the field of amplification, detection and imaging. Today, it offers its customers detection components and solutions such as travelling wave tubes, advanced cameras, neutron & gamma detectors, instrument detectors and light intensifier tubes. This allows Exosens to respond to complex issues in extremely demanding environments by offering tailor‐made solutions to its customers. Thanks to its sustained investments, Exosens is internationally recognized as a major innovator in optoelectronics, with production and R&D carried out on 11 sites, in Europe and North America and with over 1,700 employees.

    Exosens is listed on compartment A of the regulated market of Euronext Paris ﴾Ticker: EXENS – ISIN: FR001400Q9V2﴿ and is a member of Euronext Tech Leaders segment.

    For more information: exosens.com

    Forward-looking statements

    Certain information included in this press release are not historical facts but are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are based on current beliefs, expectations and assumptions, including, without limitation, assumptions regarding present and future business strategies and the environment in which Exosens operates, and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, which may cause actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from the forward-looking statements included in this press release.

    Media contacts for Exosens:
    Brunswick group – exosens@brunswickgroup.com
    Laetitia Quignon, + 33 6 83 17 89 13
    Nicolas Buffenoir, + 33 6 31 89 36 78

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Arrest – Attempted sexual assault – Woodroffe

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Northern Territory Police have arrested a youth after an alleged attempted sexual assault in Woodroffe yesterday.

    Around 7:30pm, police received a report that a woman was allegedly sexually assaulted in the vicinity of Vernier Circuit, Woodroffe.  

    A short time later, a 16-year-old male was arrested. He currently remains in police custody and is expected to be charged with Attempt sexual Intercourse without consent and Aggravated assault.

    Detectives from the Sex Crimes Unit continue to investigate the incident and are urging anyone with information to contact Police on 131 444 or CrimeStoppers on 1800 333 000. Please quote reference number P24291277. 

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI: Volta Finance Limited Annual Financial Report and Notice of Annual General Meeting

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Volta Finance Limited (VTA/VTAS)
    Legal Entity Identification Code: 2138004N6QDNAZ2V3W80

    Publication of the Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements
    (the “Accounts”) for the financial year ended 31 July 2024 and
    Notice of the Annual General Meeting

    NOT FOR RELEASE, DISTRIBUTION OR PUBLICATION, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, IN OR INTO
    THE UNITED STATES

    *****

    Guernsey, 22 October 2024

    Volta Finance Limited has published its results for the financial year ended 31 July 2024. The 2024 Accounts are attached to this release and will be available on the Volta Finance Limited website (http://www.voltafinance.com).

    Notice of the Annual General Meeting of Volta Finance Limited on Thursday 5 December 2024 may be found at pages 86 and 87 of the Accounts.

    For further information, please contact:

    Company Secretary and Portfolio Administrator
    BNP Paribas S.A., Guernsey Branch
    guernsey.bp2s.volta.cosec@bnpparibas.com
    +44 (0) 1481 750 853

    Corporate Broker
    Cavendish Financial plc
    Andrew Worne
    Daniel Balabanoff
    +44 (0) 20 7397 8900

    For the Investment Manager
    AXA Investment Managers Paris
    François Touati

    francois.touati@axa-im.com
    +33 (0) 1 44 45 80 22

    *****
    ABOUT VOLTA FINANCE LIMITED

    Volta Finance Limited is incorporated in Guernsey under the Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008 (as amended) and listed on Euronext Amsterdam and the London Stock Exchange’s Main Market for listed securities. Volta’s home member state for the purposes of the EU Transparency Directive is the Netherlands. As such, Volta is subject to regulation and supervision by the AFM, being the regulator for financial markets in the Netherlands.

    Volta’s Investment objectives are to preserve its capital across the credit cycle and to provide a stable stream of income to its Shareholders through dividends that it expects to distribute on a quarterly basis. The Company currently seeks to achieve its investment objectives by pursuing exposure predominantly to CLO’s and similar asset classes. A more diversified investment strategy across structured finance assets may be pursued opportunistically. The Company has appointed AXA Investment Managers Paris an investment management company with a division specialised in structured credit, for the investment management of all its assets.

    *****

    ABOUT AXA INVESTMENT MANAGERS
    AXA Investment Managers (AXA IM) is a multi-expert asset management company within the AXA Group, a global leader in financial protection and wealth management. AXA IM is one of the largest European-based asset managers with 2,850 professionals and €844 billion in assets under management as of the end of December 2023.

    *****

    This press release is published by AXA Investment Managers Paris (“AXA IM”), in its capacity as alternative investment fund manager (within the meaning of Directive 2011/61/EU, the “AIFM Directive”) of Volta Finance Limited (the “Volta Finance”) whose portfolio is managed by AXA IM.

    This press release is for information only and does not constitute an invitation or inducement to acquire shares in Volta Finance. Its circulation may be prohibited in certain jurisdictions and no recipient may circulate copies of this document in breach of such limitations or restrictions. This document is not an offer for sale of the securities referred to herein in the United States or to persons who are “U.S. persons” for purposes of Regulation S under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), or otherwise in circumstances where such offer would be restricted by applicable law. Such securities may not be sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration from the Securities Act. Volta Finance does not intend to register any portion of the offer of such securities in the United States or to conduct a public offering of such securities in the United States.

    *****

    This communication is only being distributed to and is only directed at (i) persons who are outside the United Kingdom or (ii) investment professionals falling within Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (the “Order”) or (iii) high net worth companies, and other persons to whom it may lawfully be communicated, falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) of the Order (all such persons together being referred to as “relevant persons”). The securities referred to herein are only available to, and any invitation, offer or agreement to subscribe, purchase or otherwise acquire such securities will be engaged in only with, relevant persons. Any person who is not a relevant person should not act or rely on this document or any of its contents. Past performance cannot be relied on as a guide to future performance.

    *****
    This press release contains statements that are, or may deemed to be, “forward-looking statements”. These forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology, including the terms “believes”, “anticipated”, “expects”, “intends”, “is/are expected”, “may”, “will” or “should”. They include the statements regarding the level of the dividend, the current market context and its impact on the long-term return of Volta Finance’s investments. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties and readers are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. Volta Finance’s actual results, portfolio composition and performance may differ materially from the impression created by the forward-looking statements. AXA IM does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking statements.

    Any target information is based on certain assumptions as to future events which may not prove to be realised. Due to the uncertainty surrounding these future events, the targets are not intended to be and should not be regarded as profits or earnings or any other type of forecasts. There can be no assurance that any of these targets will be achieved. In addition, no assurance can be given that the investment objective will be achieved.

    The figures provided that relate to past months or years and past performance cannot be relied on as a guide to future performance or construed as a reliable indicator as to future performance. Throughout this review, the citation of specific trades or strategies is intended to illustrate some of the investment methodologies and philosophies of Volta Finance, as implemented by AXA IM. The historical success or AXA IM’s belief in the future success, of any of these trades or strategies is not indicative of, and has no bearing on, future results.

    The valuation of financial assets can vary significantly from the prices that the AXA IM could obtain if it sought to liquidate the positions on behalf of the Volta Finance due to market conditions and general economic environment. Such valuations do not constitute a fairness or similar opinion and should not be regarded as such.

    Editor: AXA INVESTMENT MANAGERS PARIS, a company incorporated under the laws of France, having its registered office located at Tour Majunga, 6, Place de la Pyramide – 92800 Puteaux. AXA IMP is authorized by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers under registration number GP92008 as an alternative investment fund manager within the meaning of the AIFM Directive.

    *****

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Ezell Presents Congressional Award Gold Medal to Petal Native

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Mike Ezell (Mississippi 4th District)

    Today, Congressman Mike Ezell (MS-04) presented Colt Bergman with a Congressional Award Gold Medal, the highest Congressional honor for America’s youth. Bergman completed 400 hours of voluntary public service, 200 hours of personal development, 200 hours of physical fitness, and a 5-day, 4-night trip over the span of 24 months to complete the Congressional Award program.

    “The Congressional Award program is the highest honor Congress gives to young Americans, recognizing their commitment to personal development, physical fitness, and community service,” Ezell said. “Through hard work and perseverance, Colt has earned this award, proudly representing Mississippi. The Congressional Award encourages participants to set and achieve challenging goals, building valuable skills and a spirit of volunteerism. I am proud to support the program and congratulate Colt on his outstanding achievement. Together, let’s continue to support our future leaders who make a positive impact in their communities and beyond!”

    Additional background on the Congressional Award:

    The United States Congress established the Congressional Award in 1979 (Public Law 96-114) to recognize initiative, service, and achievement in young people. It began as a bipartisan effort in both the United States Senate and the House of Representatives. The original bill was sponsored by Senator Malcolm Wallop of Wyoming and Congressman James Howard of New Jersey.

    The Congressional Award provides a structure for young Americans to learn the value of service, personal development, fitness, and citizenship through character-forming experiences that shape tomorrow’s leaders and our country’s future.

    The Congressional Award program is promoted throughout America by Members of Congress who share this unique opportunity with their constituents, providing today’s youth with the tools they need to thrive as adults.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: CCC review of police powers to search places for high-risk missing persons

    Source: Crime and Corruption Commission – Queensland

    Date published: 22 October 2024 | Last modified: 22 October 2024 | Last reviewed: 22 October 2024

    The Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC) has published its review of the powers available to police to search places for high-risk missing persons.

    The missing person search powers are set out in Chapter 7, Part 3A of the Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000 (Qld).

    The powers came into effect in 2018 to enable the Queensland Police Service to conduct searches where a person is missing and at high risk of harm if not found as quickly as possible, and the occupier of the location will or cannot give consent to the search. The introduction of these provisions addressed a small but significant gap in police powers.

    The CCC’s review identified that the missing person search powers were used rarely, but when used, they proved to be a useful and valuable tool to progress investigations.

    The CCC made two recommendations related to approval requirements and to recordkeeping.

    The CCC was required to conduct this review by section 879 of the Act. As set out in that section, the CCC consulted with the Minister for Police and Community Safety in the course of preparing the report.

    You can read the report “Searching places for high-risk missing persons” here.

    The CCC is an independent agency combating major crime and reducing corruption for the benefit of the Queensland community.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI China: MOFA affirms stance taken by US, Japan, Australia, India, and ROK at ASEAN summits underlining importance of peace and stability in South China Sea

    Source: Republic of Taiwan – Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    MOFA affirms stance taken by US, Japan, Australia, India, and ROK at ASEAN summits underlining importance of peace and stability in South China Sea

    • Date:2024-10-12
    • Data Source:Department of East Asian and Pacific Affairs

    October 12, 2024
    No. 351

    The 44th and 45th summits of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) took place in Vientiane, the capital of Laos, from October 6 to 11. During the meetings, the United States, Japan, Australia, India, the Republic of Korea, and other like-minded countries expressed concern about the situation in the South China Sea and underlined the importance of peace and stability in the region. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) welcomes and affirms these statements.

    A chorus of parties at the summits highlighted recent tensions in the South China Sea. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba voiced concern about escalating militarization and unlawful coercion in the region. They also pledged to work on maintaining freedom of navigation and overflight in the South China Sea. The joint statement from the ROK-ASEAN summit called on all parties to respect international law and settle disputes in accordance with the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). In his remarks, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi emphasized that peace, security, and stability were in line with the general interests of the Indo-Pacific region. MOFA affirms the positions of the above parties, which correspond with the policy that Taiwan has consistently promoted with regard to the South China Sea.

    Based on integrated diplomacy, Taiwan will continue to work with like-minded partners to uphold democracy, freedom, human rights, and other shared values. Taiwan urges all parties to abide by international law, UNCLOS, and related instruments to jointly defend the rules-based international order and advance peace, stability, and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region. (E)

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Justice Department Sues Rocket Mortgage, Appraisal Management Company and Appraiser for Race Discrimination in Mortgage Refinance Application

    Source: US State of California

    The Justice Department announced today that it has filed a lawsuit alleging that Rocket Mortgage LLC; Solidifi US Inc.; Maverick Appraisal Group Inc.; and Maksym Mykhailyna discriminated against a Black homeowner by undervaluing her home based on her race in an appraisal required as part of a home mortgage refinance application. The United States also alleges that Rocket Mortgage retaliated against the homeowner and interfered with her rights by cancelling her mortgage refinance application when she reported this discrimination.

    “This lawsuit is part of our ongoing efforts to bring an end to appraisal bias which prevent Black communities and other consumers of color from accessing credit and benefitting from homeownership,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “Appraisal bias exacerbates the racial wealth gap, and runs contrary to the principles of fairness, transparency and equity that we need in our housing market today. The Justice Department will continue to hold appraisers, lenders and others who discriminate against loan applicants accountable for their actions. No one should have to suffer the indignity and financial harm associated with appraisal bias.”

    “The complaint alleges racially discriminatory practices by a lender and an appraiser that harmed a homeowner. These discriminatory practices have gone on for too long in Denver,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Matt Kirsch for the District of Colorado. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office is committed to addressing persistent inequities in housing through vigorous enforcement of federal laws prohibiting discrimination in housing and lending.”

    The Justice Department’s complaint alleges that a homeowner applied for a mortgage refinance loan from Rocket Mortgage in January 2021, and Rocket Mortgage contracted with an appraisal management company, Solidifi US Inc., to complete the required home appraisal. Solidifi retained Mykhailyna and his company, Maverick Appraisal Group, to appraise the home, which is located in a neighborhood in Denver that is predominantly white. The complaint alleges that Mykhailyna used sales from properties in further-away neighborhoods with larger Black populations instead of closer neighborhoods that were predominantly white. In fact, the complaint alleges Mykhailyna failed to consider data from sales of homes less than a mile from the complainant’s property in an adjoining neighborhood, even though a few months earlier he had used sales of homes in that same neighborhood to support an appraisal of a home with a white owner in the complainant’s neighborhood. The complaint alleges that these and other errors demonstrate Mykhailyna undervalued the property because of race and color.

    Mykhailyna appraised the property to be over $200,000 lower than an appraisal on the same property that had been completed less than a year before, a more than 25% decrease at a time of rising home values in the Denver.

    As alleged in the complaint, Mykhailyna sent his appraisal to Solidifi, which reviewed it and then forwarded it to Rocket Mortgage and the homeowner. When the homeowner received the appraisal, she contacted Rocket Mortgage and explained why she believed it was discriminatory. In response, Rocket Mortgage cancelled her refinance application. She filed a complaint with the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which later conducted an investigation, determined that there was reasonable cause to conclude the defendants had violated the Fair Housing Act, and referred the matter to the Justice Department.

    “HUD applauds today’s action and remains committed to working with DOJ to ensure appraisal companies and mortgage providers are held accountable when they violate our nation’s fair housing laws.” said Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Diane M. Shelley of HUD’s Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity. “It has been over 56 years since the passage of the Fair Housing Act, and it is unconscionable that Black and Brown families still face discrimination during housing transactions.”

    More information about the Civil Rights Division and the laws it enforces is available at www.justice.gov/crt. Along with several federal agencies, the Justice Department issued a letter to The Appraisal Foundation underscoring the importance of incorporating federal nondiscrimination standards into appraisal standards. More information about the Interagency Task Force on Property Appraisal and Valuation Equity is available at pave.hud.gov.

    Individuals may report housing discrimination to the Justice Department by calling 1-833-591-0291, emailing fairhousing@usdoj.gov or submitting a report online. Individuals also may report housing discrimination to HUD by calling 1-800-669-9777 or filing a complaint online.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Unexplained death in Adelaide parklands

    Source: South Australia Police

    Police are investigating the unexplained death of a 53-year-old Aboriginal woman who died in the southwestern parklands in the early hours of Monday 20 January.

    The woman’s name and full image have not been released at the request of her family.

    It is known the woman had been sleeping in parklands and frequenting the western part of the Adelaide Central Business District in the days leading up to her death.

    A map below shows the areas the woman is believed to have been frequenting.

    Police are seeking assistance from the public in an effort to identify the woman’s movements in the days and hours before her death.

    If anyone recognises the woman, knows of her, has recently spoken to her or has any other information that would assist police please contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000, or online at http://www.crimestopperssa.com.au

    Callers to Crime Stoppers can choose to remain anonymous.

    Police also encourage anyone who may have dashcam or CCTV footage captured in the western part of the CBD in the days before the woman’s death to review it and advise police if they believe they may have images of her.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Road blocked, SH51, Waipatu

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    SH51/Ruahapia Road near Waipatu is blocked following a crash this evening.

    Police were alerted to the single vehicle crash at around 6.45pm.

    There have been no reported injuries.

    The road is blocked between Napier Road and St Georges Road and diversions are in place.

    Motorists are advised to avoid the area and expect delays.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Serious crash at Wirraminna

    Source: South Australia Police

    Emergency services are responding to a serious crash on the Stuart Highway in the State’s Far North.

    The single vehicle collision was reported on the Stuart Highway, Wirraminna about 5.30pm on Friday 24 January.

    Motorists are advised to avoid the area if possible.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Murray Statement on Meeting with DOT Secretary Nominee Sean Duffy

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington State Patty Murray
    Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, released the following statement after meeting with Sean Duffy, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee to be Secretary of the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT):
    “I’m glad I could meet with Mr. Duffy today and discuss my priorities when it comes to our nation’s transportation system and transit infrastructure. Washington state has benefitted in a major way from our Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, Inflation Reduction Act, and the vast array of federal infrastructure programs I help fund each year through the regular appropriations process.  I will be keeping a close eye to make sure Mr. Duffy faithfully executes the law and delivers the resources communities across Washington state are counting on for everything from building bridges to expanding our public transit.  
    “There are massive infrastructure investments in my state with huge economic benefits that depend on DOT meeting its legal obligations, including the I-5 Bridge Replacement Project that is a huge deal for folks in Southwest Washington and the entire Pacific Northwest economy.
    “It is critical that we have a Secretary of Transportation who will follow the law and work productively with senators on both sides of the aisle on the transportation needs and challenges our states are facing.
    “We also spoke about aviation safety and working together to make sure FAA has the resources and staffing it needs to conduct proper oversight—including overseeing the continued implementation of Boeing’s comprehensive action plan to ensure that horrifying safety lapses, like the door plug incident we saw last January, never happen again.”
    Senator Murray played a key role in passing the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law as Assistant Majority Leader, and as a longtime member—and now Vice Chair—of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee and former chair of the Transportation appropriations subcommittee, Senator Murray has fought successfully over the years to boost investment in a wide range of transportation and infrastructure grant programs that benefit Washington state. Last Congress, as Chair of the Appropriations Committee, Senator Murray wrote and passed the transportation appropriations bill for fiscal year 2024, which was signed into law last March. The annual legislation funds the Department of Transportation and critical grant programs that benefit Washington state enormously, including RAISE—which Senator Murray established in 2009. Senator Murray is now working to negotiate government funding bills, including the transportation funding bill, for fiscal year 2025.

    MIL OSI USA News