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Category: KB

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Real Quantum Dot Technology in Samsung QLED TVs: Unleashing “The Artist Within”

    Source: Samsung

    Everyone has creative potential and, colour is able to awaken that capability. These days, technology is not just about features or specifications; it’s also about unlocking experience and evoking powerful emotions.
     
    Samsung’s QLED displays are not just for watching – they are also for inspiration. The incredible QLED Quantum Dot technology now plays a crucial role in enhancing creativity by delivering vibrant, lifelike colours and exceptional picture quality. This kind of modernisation in Samsung QLED technology is not just about flexibility – but also about real innovation at the core.
     
    QLED’s Quantum Dot technology produces a wider range of colours than traditional displays – ensuring that they are displayed accurately and vibrantly. Samsung’s QLED is like a canvas that empowers users to see and express the world in richer, more vivid colour. With this innovative technology, Samsung is now not only providing advancement in display technology, but also offering a more vibrant and realistic viewing experience to creatives around the world.
     
    What makes Quantum Dots so special are the microscopic molecules that emit precise colours when lit – resulting in higher brightness, accurate colour reproduction and a wider colour gamut. Samsung’s QLED uses this Quantum Dot technology to deliver 100% colour volume — maintaining richness at any brightness level. This technology allows the TV to produce a consistent, vivid and accurate colour display, be it in very bright or dark conditions. QLED is able to show deeper reds, brighter greens and purer blues. Colour accuracy then essentially means that – what you see is what the creator intended.
     

     
    With this revolutionary technology – a filmmaker now experiences their work in studio-grade clarity. The picture accuracy and superior contrast of Samsung’s Quantum Dot TVs – make every film feel cinematic, be it the latest blockbuster or an old classic. In essence, Quantum Dot TVs provide filmmakers with a more realistic and visually engaging experience, making them a valuable tool for enjoying their work and professional use. And, a family watching a documentary is also able to feel immersed in the natural world.
     
    In addition, Samsung Art Mode feature[1] is able to transform your screen into a digital gallery — merging art and technology. You can now showcase your artwork from the Art Store as well as upload your own photos or even choose from a selection of curated art pieces. The Samsung Art Store[2] is a subscription-based service that provides access to a wide variety of digital artwork for display on Samsung TVs, primarily the Frame TV series. It allows users to transform their TV into a digital art gallery, showcasing a diverse collection of paintings, photographs and other art forms. 
     
    In addition, Samsung recently launched the Art TV[3] of Art Basel in Basel (ABB) Collection, an exclusive curation of digital art available across Samsung TVs with Samsung Art Store. And furthermore, the Ambient Mode[4] lets you personalise your space with visuals that reflect your taste or mood. This innovative feature allows you to display content on the screen even when the TV is not “on.” Also, you can now transform your TV into a customisable art installation or a source of useful information when not being used for regular viewing.
     
    With the help of QLED’s Quantum Dot technology – it is clear that Samsung is now empowering creativity and unleashing “The Artist Within”. The company’s QLED TVs have now become more than just a display, they are creative partners. For this reason, Samsung remains committed to using ground-breaking technologies such as QLED’s Quantum Dot to leverage artistic expression and technological innovation to create a more immersive and engaging viewing experience for consumers.
     
    Samsung’s QLED with Quantum Dot technology are bridging the gap between technology and creativity. This foundation of the real QLED experience that Samsung has pioneered, invites users to see the world more vividly and to create, imagine and feel more deeply. All of this is an indication that Samsung’s QLED displays are not your average TVs – they are the result of years of refinement and mastery in Quantum Dot display technology.
     
    ________________
     
    Disclaimers:
    [1] Terms & Conditions Apply. Art mode cannot be permanently disabled.
    [2] The Art Store is available on Samsung’s The Frame TVs and is expanding to other Samsung QLED TV models. A subscription is typically required to access the full library of artwork, though some free content may be available. 
    [3] Samsung Art TV includes MICRO LED, The Frame, The Frame Pro, Neo QLED 8K, Neo QLED, and QLED models starting from Q7F and above.
    [4] The Ambient button is only available on select remotes. If you press the Ambient button when the TV is turned off, the TV will turn on in Ambient Mode.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Real Quantum Dot Technology in Samsung QLED TVs: Unleashing “The Artist Within”

    Source: Samsung

    Everyone has creative potential and, colour is able to awaken that capability. These days, technology is not just about features or specifications; it’s also about unlocking experience and evoking powerful emotions.
     
    Samsung’s QLED displays are not just for watching – they are also for inspiration. The incredible QLED Quantum Dot technology now plays a crucial role in enhancing creativity by delivering vibrant, lifelike colours and exceptional picture quality. This kind of modernisation in Samsung QLED technology is not just about flexibility – but also about real innovation at the core.
     
    QLED’s Quantum Dot technology produces a wider range of colours than traditional displays – ensuring that they are displayed accurately and vibrantly. Samsung’s QLED is like a canvas that empowers users to see and express the world in richer, more vivid colour. With this innovative technology, Samsung is now not only providing advancement in display technology, but also offering a more vibrant and realistic viewing experience to creatives around the world.
     
    What makes Quantum Dots so special are the microscopic molecules that emit precise colours when lit – resulting in higher brightness, accurate colour reproduction and a wider colour gamut. Samsung’s QLED uses this Quantum Dot technology to deliver 100% colour volume — maintaining richness at any brightness level. This technology allows the TV to produce a consistent, vivid and accurate colour display, be it in very bright or dark conditions. QLED is able to show deeper reds, brighter greens and purer blues. Colour accuracy then essentially means that – what you see is what the creator intended.
     

     
    With this revolutionary technology – a filmmaker now experiences their work in studio-grade clarity. The picture accuracy and superior contrast of Samsung’s Quantum Dot TVs – make every film feel cinematic, be it the latest blockbuster or an old classic. In essence, Quantum Dot TVs provide filmmakers with a more realistic and visually engaging experience, making them a valuable tool for enjoying their work and professional use. And, a family watching a documentary is also able to feel immersed in the natural world.
     
    In addition, Samsung Art Mode feature[1] is able to transform your screen into a digital gallery — merging art and technology. You can now showcase your artwork from the Art Store as well as upload your own photos or even choose from a selection of curated art pieces. The Samsung Art Store[2] is a subscription-based service that provides access to a wide variety of digital artwork for display on Samsung TVs, primarily the Frame TV series. It allows users to transform their TV into a digital art gallery, showcasing a diverse collection of paintings, photographs and other art forms. 
     
    In addition, Samsung recently launched the Art TV[3] of Art Basel in Basel (ABB) Collection, an exclusive curation of digital art available across Samsung TVs with Samsung Art Store. And furthermore, the Ambient Mode[4] lets you personalise your space with visuals that reflect your taste or mood. This innovative feature allows you to display content on the screen even when the TV is not “on.” Also, you can now transform your TV into a customisable art installation or a source of useful information when not being used for regular viewing.
     
    With the help of QLED’s Quantum Dot technology – it is clear that Samsung is now empowering creativity and unleashing “The Artist Within”. The company’s QLED TVs have now become more than just a display, they are creative partners. For this reason, Samsung remains committed to using ground-breaking technologies such as QLED’s Quantum Dot to leverage artistic expression and technological innovation to create a more immersive and engaging viewing experience for consumers.
     
    Samsung’s QLED with Quantum Dot technology are bridging the gap between technology and creativity. This foundation of the real QLED experience that Samsung has pioneered, invites users to see the world more vividly and to create, imagine and feel more deeply. All of this is an indication that Samsung’s QLED displays are not your average TVs – they are the result of years of refinement and mastery in Quantum Dot display technology.
     
    ________________
     
    Disclaimers:
    [1] Terms & Conditions Apply. Art mode cannot be permanently disabled.
    [2] The Art Store is available on Samsung’s The Frame TVs and is expanding to other Samsung QLED TV models. A subscription is typically required to access the full library of artwork, though some free content may be available. 
    [3] Samsung Art TV includes MICRO LED, The Frame, The Frame Pro, Neo QLED 8K, Neo QLED, and QLED models starting from Q7F and above.
    [4] The Ambient button is only available on select remotes. If you press the Ambient button when the TV is turned off, the TV will turn on in Ambient Mode.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Statement on the Situation in the Middle East

    Source: ASEAN

    We express concern over the escalation of tensions in the Middle East since 13 June 2025, and welcome the ceasefire between Israel and Iran on 24 June 2025. We urge all parties to respect the ceasefire and avoid further escalation of this conflict.
    We reaffirm the obligation of all States to resolve their differences through peaceful means and to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all nations, in line with international law, including the United Nations (UN) Charter. We further reiterate the obligations to protect civilians and civilian infrastructures in armed conflicts consistent with international law and relevant UN Security Council resolutions.
    We support ongoing efforts, including those led by the UN, aimed at de-escalating tensions and facilitating the resumption of constructive engagement among parties involved.
    We also re-emphasise the shared commitment to provide emergency assistance to ASEAN nationals, in accordance with the ASEAN Declaration on the Guidelines on Consular Assistance by ASEAN Member States’ Missions in Third Countries to Nationals of Other ASEAN Member State and the Guidelines for the Provision of Emergency Assistance by ASEAN Missions in Third Countries to Nationals of ASEAN Member Countries in Crisis Situations.

     
    Download the full statement here.

    The post ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Statement on the Situation in the Middle East appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Volleyball culture thrives in Guangdong’s Taishan

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

    In the history of Chinese volleyball, the city of Taishan in southern China’s Guangdong province holds a place of honor. Known today as the “Hometown of Volleyball,” Taishan has spent over a century weaving the sport into its cultural fabric.

    The story began in 1914 when overseas Chinese brought volleyball to Taishan. The sport quickly took root and spread across the region, evolving from a foreign novelty into a beloved local tradition. Over time, volleyball transitioned from village courtyards to professional arenas, becoming a symbol of community identity. In 1956, People’s Daily dubbed Taishan the “Hometown of Volleyball” after the local men’s team won a major tournament in Beijing, cementing the city’s reputation in the national spotlight.

    Volleyball is a beloved sport in Taishan, southern China’s Guangdong province. [Photo provided to China.org.cn]

    In Taishan, volleyball is more than just a game—it’s a cultural emblem. Courts can be found in nearly every village, and during holidays, volleyball tournaments are held throughout the city and countryside. 

    This passion is matched by a dedication to excellence. Taishan coaches and players have developed unique strategies—such as the famed “short players versus tall opponents” approach—centered on speed, agility, and versatility. Its various techniques have not only delivered impressive victories, but also influenced the evolution of China’s volleyball tactics.

    One of Taishan’s most distinctive contributions to the sport is the development of nine-player volleyball. This variation, known for its moderate intensity and flexible playstyle, enjoys widespread popularity among locals. It has also become a cultural bridge, connecting overseas Chinese communities where it was introduced by Taishan’s diaspora. 

    In 2022, Taishan’s nine-player volleyball was listed as a representative item of Guangdong’s intangible cultural heritage. The city responded by launching a series of books titled “The Story of Taishan Volleyball” and began testing national rules for nine-player competitions to promote standardized development across China.

    Today, Taishan continues to nurture the sport’s legacy. The city’s men’s nine-player league has been named a model event in China’s national public sports programs. Schools across Taishan offer volleyball courses, and tournaments of all sizes take place year-round.

    MIL OSI China News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Analysis: UK’s F-35A fighter jet deal problem: the RAF has no aircraft to refuel them in mid-air

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Arun Dawson, PhD Candidate, Department of War Studies, King’s College London

    A1C Jake Welty

    The UK has decided to acquire at least 12 F-35A stealth fighters. These fighter jets should be able to carry out nuclear and conventional strikes from the air, a capability the Royal Air Force (RAF) has lacked since the 1990s. The deal also marks a significant move for the UK’s participation in Nato operations amid rising nuclear rhetoric from adversaries.

    The F-35A brings notable advantages over the F-35B variant already in RAF service. It’s less expensive to buy and operate, has greater range – 679 miles (1093km) vs 517 miles (833km) – and supports a broader variety of weapons, including the nuclear-capable B61 bomb (with US agreement). Because it can spend longer in the air, it may also allow prospective RAF pilots to get through their pilot training quicker.

    Yet while the F-35A offers greater range than many comparable fighter jets, it still requires in-flight refuelling to operate effectively over extended distances and to return home from such missions. This exposes a critical vulnerability that has been largely overlooked in public commentary: the RAF has no tanker aircraft capable of supporting the F-35A in this way. As a result, these fighter jets – carrying nuclear ordnance or otherwise – are limited in the types of operations they can carry out.

    Unlike the F-35B which is compatible with the UK’s current fleet of tankers, the A-model depends exclusively on “flying boom” refuelling. Flying boom is one of two aerial refuelling methods. Favoured by the United States Air Force, it uses a rigid, extendable tube to deliver fuel at a high transfer rate and is generally easier for receiving pilots to operate.

    The alternative is probe-and-drogue which relies on a flexible hose and basket, connected to a probe on the receiving aircraft. While slower and more demanding to operate, it allows multiple fighters to refuel simultaneously, offers redundancy (backup options) and is simpler to integrate.

    The RAF’s refuelling predicament stems from an exclusive leasing deal negotiated under the last Labour government, which supplied only probe-and-drogue Voyager tankers. Although the aircraft were designed to support both systems, the UK opted not to include booms due to cost constraints and limited demand at the time.

    Since then, however, the UK has steadily acquired more American-made aircraft that can only use the flying boom method to refuel: the C-17 Globemaster (air transport), RC-135W Rivet Joint (intelligence), E-7 Wedgetail (airborne command and control) and P-8A Poseidon (maritime patrol).

    The F-35A announcement continues this trend but with greater implications. While the aircraft can carry external fuel tanks to extend its range, this degrades its stealth capability. Stealth means it is less easy for enemy sensors – like radar – to detect. The F-35A needs this stealth capability for nuclear missions that require penetration of contested airspace to deliver unguided B61 bombs.

    The outcome is that Britain’s F-35As, along with alternative and otherwise highly capable aircraft, will not be ablew to operate independently during critical military operations. London to Eastern Europe, for instance, is roughly 1,150 miles (1,852km): nearly double the distance the F-35A can fly without refuelling. Without flying boom tankers or bases in foreign countries for refuelling, tactical flexibility is compromised.

    This shortfall imposes a growing reliance on allied tanker support. In crisis conditions, UK aircraft could be confined to American-led operations where such tankers exist.

    This risk was manageable in previous decades; the possibility of operating without the Americans considered remote. But as the 2025 Strategic Defence Review concedes, the United States is clear that the “security of Europe is no longer its primary international focus”.

    And while some Nato allies in Europe as well as Australia are increasing their flying boom capacity through a multinational fleet, the UK is not as yet part of those arrangements. Retrofitting the existing Voyager fleet remains an option, but it would require an extensive – and expensive – structural overhaul, prompting the question of whether acquiring new, compatible tankers might now be a more viable path.

    Either way, until Britain invests in flying boom capability or secures assured access from allies, it will have to accept constraints to its military power. Buying frontline jets is only part of the equation. Without the means to sustain them in the air, the UK risks fielding a force that can’t reach its target, leaving it a spectator when it matters most.

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

    – ref. UK’s F-35A fighter jet deal problem: the RAF has no aircraft to refuel them in mid-air – https://theconversation.com/uks-f-35a-fighter-jet-deal-problem-the-raf-has-no-aircraft-to-refuel-them-in-mid-air-259821

    MIL OSI Analysis –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Analysis: UK’s F-35A fighter jet deal problem: the RAF has no aircraft to refuel them in mid-air

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Arun Dawson, PhD Candidate, Department of War Studies, King’s College London

    A1C Jake Welty

    The UK has decided to acquire at least 12 F-35A stealth fighters. These fighter jets should be able to carry out nuclear and conventional strikes from the air, a capability the Royal Air Force (RAF) has lacked since the 1990s. The deal also marks a significant move for the UK’s participation in Nato operations amid rising nuclear rhetoric from adversaries.

    The F-35A brings notable advantages over the F-35B variant already in RAF service. It’s less expensive to buy and operate, has greater range – 679 miles (1093km) vs 517 miles (833km) – and supports a broader variety of weapons, including the nuclear-capable B61 bomb (with US agreement). Because it can spend longer in the air, it may also allow prospective RAF pilots to get through their pilot training quicker.

    Yet while the F-35A offers greater range than many comparable fighter jets, it still requires in-flight refuelling to operate effectively over extended distances and to return home from such missions. This exposes a critical vulnerability that has been largely overlooked in public commentary: the RAF has no tanker aircraft capable of supporting the F-35A in this way. As a result, these fighter jets – carrying nuclear ordnance or otherwise – are limited in the types of operations they can carry out.

    Unlike the F-35B which is compatible with the UK’s current fleet of tankers, the A-model depends exclusively on “flying boom” refuelling. Flying boom is one of two aerial refuelling methods. Favoured by the United States Air Force, it uses a rigid, extendable tube to deliver fuel at a high transfer rate and is generally easier for receiving pilots to operate.

    The alternative is probe-and-drogue which relies on a flexible hose and basket, connected to a probe on the receiving aircraft. While slower and more demanding to operate, it allows multiple fighters to refuel simultaneously, offers redundancy (backup options) and is simpler to integrate.

    The RAF’s refuelling predicament stems from an exclusive leasing deal negotiated under the last Labour government, which supplied only probe-and-drogue Voyager tankers. Although the aircraft were designed to support both systems, the UK opted not to include booms due to cost constraints and limited demand at the time.

    Since then, however, the UK has steadily acquired more American-made aircraft that can only use the flying boom method to refuel: the C-17 Globemaster (air transport), RC-135W Rivet Joint (intelligence), E-7 Wedgetail (airborne command and control) and P-8A Poseidon (maritime patrol).

    The F-35A announcement continues this trend but with greater implications. While the aircraft can carry external fuel tanks to extend its range, this degrades its stealth capability. Stealth means it is less easy for enemy sensors – like radar – to detect. The F-35A needs this stealth capability for nuclear missions that require penetration of contested airspace to deliver unguided B61 bombs.

    The outcome is that Britain’s F-35As, along with alternative and otherwise highly capable aircraft, will not be ablew to operate independently during critical military operations. London to Eastern Europe, for instance, is roughly 1,150 miles (1,852km): nearly double the distance the F-35A can fly without refuelling. Without flying boom tankers or bases in foreign countries for refuelling, tactical flexibility is compromised.

    This shortfall imposes a growing reliance on allied tanker support. In crisis conditions, UK aircraft could be confined to American-led operations where such tankers exist.

    This risk was manageable in previous decades; the possibility of operating without the Americans considered remote. But as the 2025 Strategic Defence Review concedes, the United States is clear that the “security of Europe is no longer its primary international focus”.

    And while some Nato allies in Europe as well as Australia are increasing their flying boom capacity through a multinational fleet, the UK is not as yet part of those arrangements. Retrofitting the existing Voyager fleet remains an option, but it would require an extensive – and expensive – structural overhaul, prompting the question of whether acquiring new, compatible tankers might now be a more viable path.

    Either way, until Britain invests in flying boom capability or secures assured access from allies, it will have to accept constraints to its military power. Buying frontline jets is only part of the equation. Without the means to sustain them in the air, the UK risks fielding a force that can’t reach its target, leaving it a spectator when it matters most.

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

    – ref. UK’s F-35A fighter jet deal problem: the RAF has no aircraft to refuel them in mid-air – https://theconversation.com/uks-f-35a-fighter-jet-deal-problem-the-raf-has-no-aircraft-to-refuel-them-in-mid-air-259821

    MIL OSI Analysis –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Amid alarm over a US ‘autism registry’, people are using these tactics to avoid disability surveillance – podcast

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Gemma Ware, Host, The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. caused controversy in April by promising to find the cause for autism by September. Claims by the new US secretary for health and human services that autism is a “preventable disease” with an environmental cause,  contradict a body of research that suggests autism is caused by a combination of genetic and external factors.

    The US government announced that to support the research effort into autism, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), would partner with Medicare and Medicaid to build a “data platform” involving data on claims, medical records and consumer wearables.

    When first announced this plan was dubbed an autism registry, though the government later denied that’s what it was creating, instead calling it a “ real-world platform” to allow researchers to study comprehensive data on people with autism.

    While the NIH defended the decision as “fully compliant with privacy and security laws”, autistic people and disability advocates are alarmed at the potential violations such a data platform could enable.

     In this episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, we speak to Amy Gaeta, a  research associate at the University of Cambridge in the UK who studies disability surveillance.

    Gaeta, who is American, explains that for over a century, disabled people have often been denied the right to privacy and been subjected to a sinister history of forced medical testing, forced sterilisation and various laws that criminalise mental illness. She says:

     I think this is why a lot of these everyday actions that disabled people do to resist surveillance don’t even come across as anti-surveillance. To them it just comes across as this is how I exist in the world.

    Gaeta talks us through some of the strategies people are using to avoid potential surveillance, from self-diagnosis, to withholding information or being careful with the language they use to describe themselves. Listen to our conversation with Gaeta on The Conversation Weekly podcast.

    This episode of The Conversation Weekly was written and produced by Katie Flood with assistance from Mend Mariwany. Gemma Ware is the executive producer. Mixing and sound design by Eloise Stevens and theme music by Neeta Sarl.

    Newsclips in this episode from ABC News.

    Listen to The Conversation Weekly via any of the apps listed above, download it directly via our RSS feed or find out how else to listen here. A transcript of this episode is available on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

    Amy Gaeta receives research funding from UKRI, a grant that is hosted at the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence.

    – ref. Amid alarm over a US ‘autism registry’, people are using these tactics to avoid disability surveillance – podcast – https://theconversation.com/amid-alarm-over-a-us-autism-registry-people-are-using-these-tactics-to-avoid-disability-surveillance-podcast-259818

    MIL OSI Analysis –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: Children and Armed Conflict – UNICEF briefing to the Security Council | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (video statements)

    Briefing by Sheema Sen Gupta, Director of Child Protection and Migration, the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), on children and armed conflict.

    UNICEF’s Director of Child Protection, Sheema Sen Gupta, said, “we are witnessing a breakdown in the basic protections each of these children is owed — not just as a legal matter, but as a matter of human decency.”

    Gupta said, “children are not collateral damage. They are not soldiers. They are not bargaining chips. They are children. They deserve to be safe. They deserve justice. They deserve a future. This Council has a unique role to play in making that future possible. We cannot allow these grave violations against children to continue unchecked.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oGpFG1HVaho

    MIL OSI Video –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Audience of the Holy Father with Redemptorist and Scalabrinian Bishops

    Source: The Holy See

    Audience of the Holy Father with Redemptorist and Scalabrinian Bishops, 26.06.2025
    This morning, in the Consistory Hall of the Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father Leo XIV received in audience the Redemptorist and Scalabrinian bishops, to whom he delivered the following address:

    Address of the Holy Father
    In the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
    Peace be with you!
    Your Eminences, Your Excellencies,
    Reverend Superiors,
    I am happy about this meeting, and find the occasion that generates it beautiful: the choice of two Religious Congregations to meet and dialogue with those brethren whose episcopal ministry they have given to the Church. This is an exchange that certainly enriches the Bishops present, your Communities and the entire People of God, as the Second Vatican Council teaches (cf. Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 7; Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes – Congregation for Bishops, Directives for the Mutual Relations Between Bishops and Religious in the Church, 2).
    The Church is grateful to your Institutes, of whom it has asked, with the appointment of bishops among its members, a not inconsiderable sacrifice in times of a shortage of religious brothers, when depriving you of confrères engaged in the service of various works entails not a few problems. Perhaps the General will say something to me, but… [laughter]. At the same time, though, it has given a great gift to your Congregations, because service to the universal Church is the most beautiful grace and joy for any religious family, as your Founders would certainly confirm.
    You in particular, Scalabrinian and Redemptorist religious, chosen and consecrated for service to the Episcopate and also to the Cardinals, bring into your ministry the legacy of two important charisms, especially in our days: service to migrants and the evangelization of the poor and the distant.
    Saint Alphonsus Maria de’ Liguori, entering into contact with the poverty of the most neglected neighbourhoods of Naples in the eighteenth century, renounced a wealthy life and a lucrative career, embracing the mission of bringing the Gospel to the last.
    Saint John Baptist Scalabrini, a century later, was able to feel and understand the hopes and sufferings of the many people who left, leaving everything behind, in search of a better future for themselves and their families in faraway lands.
    Both of them were Founders, became bishops, and knew how to respond to the challenges of social and economic systems which on the one hand opened new frontiers at various levels, but on the other left behind a great deal of unheeded misery and many problems, creating pockets of degradation that no one seemed to want to deal with.
    At a historic moment that also presents great opportunities and at the same time no shortage of difficulties and contradictions, by celebrating the Jubilee of hope we want to recall that, today as yesterday, the voice to listen to in order to understand what to do is that of “the love of God … poured out into our hearts through the holy Spirit that has been given to us” (Rm 5:5).
    Even in our world, the Lord’s work always goes before us: we are required to conform our minds and hearts to it through wise discernment, and I am convinced that the discussion you have promoted will be very useful to this end. I encourage you, therefore, to maintain and to nurture, also for the future, these relations of fraternal help, with generosity and selflessness, for the good of all Christ’s flock. I thank you for the great work you do, and I bless you heartily, together with all your communities. Thank you!
    [Prayer: Pater Noster]
    [Blessing]

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Gender-responsive policing in focus at cadet training organized by OSCE and Albanian Security Academy

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

    Headline: Gender-responsive policing in focus at cadet training organized by OSCE and Albanian Security Academy

    Police cadets in Albania strengthening their skills in gender-responsive policing during an introductory training course organized by the OSCE and the Albanian Security Academy in Tirana, 24 June. (OSCE) Photo details

    More than 400 police cadets in Albania strengthened their skills in gender-responsive policing during a series of one-day introductory training courses organized by the OSCE’s Transnational Threats Department, the OSCE Presence in Albania, and the Albanian Security Academy from 23 to 26 June 2025 in Tirana.
    The aim of the course was to help future police officers effectively respond to cases of gender-based violence and know how to maintain a victim-centred approach. It also underscored the key role police officers play in detecting and preventing gender-based violence, as well as how to ensure effective implementation of protective measures and risk assessments.
    Each cadet attended a one-day training session led by a group of national police officers, prosecutors, and local experts. They learned about key terms and concepts related to gender stereotypes and gender-based violence as well as the importance of a victim-centred approach.
    “Victim-centred criminal justice responses to gender-based violence are crucial for the safety of all women and girls, their families and wider society. Meaningful actions of law enforcement authorities to address gender-based violence, in full respect of the victim, is a core element of increasing trust in the criminal justice system and increasing reporting of this particularly damaging type of crime,” said Umberto Severini, Head of the OSCE’s Strategic Police Matters Unit.
    A professional psychologist also worked with the cadets to understand the neurobiology of trauma and the psychology of victims and perpetrators. Through a specially-developed role play theatre session, they deepened their insights into the consequences of gender-based violence on victims.
    Finally, the cadets heard from a victim of domestic violence who had received support from a local civil society organization working with victims of gender-based violence and had offered to share her experience at the training courses. She spoke about some of the challenges and stigma she faced when seeking help and dealing with the law enforcement system.
    “During the training, I particularly liked the methodology and the moderating approach. The trainers created an open and safe environment to express opinions, encouraging active participation and respect for different opinions. What I believe will have a direct impact on my future profession is the ability to communicate effectively, to listen with empathy and to intervene without judgment in delicate situations, especially when it comes to sensitive issues such as gender-based violence,” said one of the cadets in the training.
    The training courses were delivered as part of the OSCE’s extrabudgetary project, “Enhancing Criminal Justice Capacities for Combating Gender-based Violence in South-Eastern Europe”, funded by Austria, Finland, France, Germany, Italy and Norway. The project contributes to the implementation of the Council of Europe Istanbul Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    June 26, 2025
  • Haryana govt gears up to roll out Lado Lakshmi Scheme; Rs 2,100 monthly aid for poor women

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Haryana government has completed preparations to roll out the Lado Lakshmi Scheme, which promises monthly financial support of Rs 2,100 to women from economically weaker sections.

    According to the Department of Information, Public Relations, Language and Culture (DIPR) on X, the scheme is set to be implemented this year. “Under this scheme, an amount of Rs 2,100 will be deposited into the accounts of women this year itself,” the post quoted CM Saini as saying.

    A budgetary provision of Rs 5,000 crore has been allocated for the scheme. The post also mentioned that the government has fulfilled 28 out of the 217 resolutions made, and work is underway on 90 others, within just five months of assuming office.

    In another key announcement, the chief minister said results for 7,500 government job positions will be declared soon. “A plan is also being prepared to recruit youth for vacant posts across departments,” the post read.

    Earlier this week, on June 23, CM Saini had urged Vice Chancellors of state universities to prioritise skill development programmes aimed at improving employability among the youth.

    According to an official release, the CM stressed the need for stronger industry-academia collaboration. “Each university should run at least 10 per cent of its programs in partnership with industrial entities,” he said, adding that the move is aimed at aligning education with evolving market needs and generating employment opportunities in the state.

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Advice accepted on autumn 2025 COVID-19 vaccination programme

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Government response

    Advice accepted on autumn 2025 COVID-19 vaccination programme

    The government has accepted advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) for the autumn 2025 COVID-19 vaccination programme

    A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said:

    This decision is based on expert advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), which continuously monitor and evaluate emerging scientific evidence on COVID-19 vaccines.  

    The autumn 2025 vaccination programme will target people who are at the highest risk of serious illness to protect the most vulnerable.

    We encourage anyone who is eligible for COVID-19 vaccination to come forward for vaccination this autumn.”   

    Background information

    On the 13th November 2024, the JCVI published advice on the COVID-19 vaccination programme for spring 2025, autumn 2025 and spring 2026. On 26th June 2025, the Government decided, in line with JCVI advice, that a COVID-19 vaccine should be offered to those in the population most vulnerable to serious outcomes from COVID-19 and who are therefore most likely to benefit from vaccination.

    Vaccination will be offered in England in autumn 2025 to:

    • Adults aged 75 years and over
    • Residents in a care home for older adults
    • Individuals aged 6 months and over who are immunosuppressed, as defined in tables 3 and 4 of the COVID-19 chapter of the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) Green Book on immunisation against infectious disease.

    In line with JCVI advice, frontline health and social care workers (HSCWs) and staff working in care homes for older adults will not be eligible for COVID-19 vaccination under the national programme for autumn 2025.

    This is following an extensive review by JCVI of the scientific evidence surrounding the impact of vaccination on transmission of the virus from HSCWs to patients, protection of HSCWs against symptoms of the disease, and staff sickness absences.

    In the current era of high population immunity to COVID-19, additional COVID-19 doses provide very limited, if any, protection against infection and any subsequent onward transmission of infection.

    For HSCWs, this means that COVID-19 vaccination likely now has only a very limited impact on reducing staff sickness absence. Therefore, the focus of the programme is now on those at greatest risk of serious disease and who are therefore most likely to benefit from vaccination.

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    Published 26 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Bus tours of the Summer in Moscow sites are offered by the Russpass service

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Admire the beauty of the city, listening to the guide’s stories, and at the same time create your own routes for further exploration of the places you like – this is a new format of bus excursions that started operating in the capital several days ago. It is called Russbus. A double-decker excursion bus runs between city attractions and the venues of the Summer in Moscow festival. During the trip, participants registered in the service Ruspass, can use it to mark places they like, learn about events that take place there, and register for them. Tours are free. To get on the Russbus, you must register in advance onwebsite.

    Russbus will run between the Summer in Moscow festival sites on weekends before the autumn cold sets in. Three excursions are held per day, each lasting two hours. They start at 12:00, 14:00 and 16:00. A guide will be on board, telling you about the city, its history, museums and theatres. He will also give advice on how to plan your cultural leisure. In addition, an audio guide is available to excursionists, which will help them learn additional interesting facts about the capital.

    In addition to daytime excursion trips, Russbus also organizes evening trips around summer Moscow. They take place on weekends at 18:00. The bus route is the same as during the day, but during the trip, instead of a guide, participants are accompanied by a professional DJ who will help raise their spirits. Evening trips are intended for participants over 16 years old. You can register for the trip at link.

    The bus departs from the stop at the Muzeon Arts Park. The excursion route includes the Summer in Moscow sites in Gorky Park, the 19th-century estate with the P.I. Tchaikovsky Museum, Patriarch’s Ponds, Catherine Park, Tsvetnoy Boulevard and Chistye Prudy, as well as Bauman Garden. Then the bus returns to the departure point via Bolotnaya Square.

    The Russbus route passes through places with popular tourist attractions. The guide will tell about each of them, and also explain to the tourists how they can register for the events of the Summer in Moscow project: master classes, noble games, historical picnics and others. In addition, on the way they will be able to buy tickets to events that take place at the city’s cultural venues. For example, to the Moscow Zoo or the Moscow Planetarium.

    The digital travel service Russpass began operating in 2020. During this time, it has grown into a full-fledged ecosystem. The service makes it easy to plan a trip, book tickets and a hotel, and select excursions. And the online publication “Russpass-magazine” will help you find out everything about traveling around Russia. In addition, since June 2023, the portal “Russpass. Business” has been operating for representatives of the tourism industry.

    The Russpass service was developed on the initiative of the Moscow Government. The project is supervised by the capital Tourism Committee together withDepartment of Information Technology.

    Project “Summer in Moscow”— the main event of the season. It unites the most exciting events of the capital. Every day in all districts of the city there are charity, cultural and sports events, many of which are free. The project “Summer in Moscow” is held in the capital for the second time. In the new season, various sports, cultural and scientific and educational events have been added to the festivals beloved by city residents and tourists.

    Quickly find out the main news of the capital inofficial telegram channel the city of Moscow.

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

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/155792073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Pelosi Statement on Support of War Powers Resolution

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi Representing the 12th District of California

    Washington, D.C. – Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi released the following statement announcing her cosponsorship of H.Con.Res.40 to remove the United States Armed Forces from hostilities with Iran:
     
    “We must all exercise our best judgement in how we prevent Iran from having a nuclear weapon and honor our relationship with Israel in the interest of our national security. But over the weekend, the Trump Administration unilaterally conducted military airstrikes in Iran without consulting the Congress of the United States. This action endangered our servicemembers, diplomats and others by risking a serious escalation of tensions with Iran. 

    “Yesterday, the Administration decided to withhold intelligence and delay the scheduled bipartisan classified Member briefing — which was already long overdue — in a slap in the face to the Congress. The Administration must work with their co-equal branch of government to fulfill the Constitutional requirement that the President comes to Congress before going to war. That is why I am supporting War Powers Resolutions which reassert the Article One powers of the Congress and ensure the Administration does not keep the American people and their Representatives in the dark.”

    MIL OSI USA News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Pelosi Statement on Cancelation of Bipartisan Classified Member Briefing

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi Representing the 12th District of California

    Washington, D.C. – Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi released the following statement on the Trump Administration’s cancelation of a bipartisan classified Member briefing on Israel-Iran:
     
    “The decision of this Administration to withhold intelligence and cancel today’s scheduled bipartisan classified Member briefing — which was already long overdue — is a slap in the face to the Congress of the United States.

    “We must all exercise our best judgement in how we prevent Iran from having a nuclear weapon and honor our relationship with Israel in the interest of our national security. The unjustified cancellation of this briefing by the Trump Administration is an intolerable insult to their co-equal branch of government and the Constitutional requirement that the President comes to Congress before going to war.

    “The President owes the American people an explanation on why his Administration is keeping them and their Representatives in the dark.”

    MIL OSI USA News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Pelosi at Aspen Ideas Festival to Celebrate 15 Years of the Affordable Care Act: “This was the challenge of our generation.”

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi Representing the 12th District of California

    Aspen, CO – Yesterday, Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi joined former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretaries Kathleen Sebelius and Sylvia Burwell at the Aspen Ideas Festival for a behind-the-scenes look at the passage of the Affordable Care Act, moderated by former Congressman Charlie Dent.

    The conversation, hosted by the Aspen Institute, offered an inside look into one of the most consequential legislative efforts in American history, focusing on the intense political landscape in 2010, the stakes for working families and the coalition it took to get the ACA across the finish line.

    “For a hundred years they’d been trying to pass a [health care] bill,” Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi said. “This was the challenge of our generation—to do something very special for the American people that made a difference in their lives.”

    The panel recounted both the triumphs and trials of the legislative fight, including the instrumental leadership of Secretaries Sebelius and Burwell in its passage and implementation, efforts to prevent Republicans from repealing the ACA, and the ongoing fight to protect Medicaid from Republican attacks.

    Watch the full event HERE.

    Read coverage of the event below:

    The Aspen Daily News: Pelosi talks Affordable Care Act in Aspen

    [Rick Carroll, 6/23/25]

    Rep. Nancy Pelosi stuck to the script at Paepcke Auditorium on Sunday night. In Aspen for a panel discussion, Pelosi joined the stage with three others to discuss their roles in the passage of the Affordable Care Act, which became law in 2010.

    The conversation was titled “Behind the Vote: How the ACA Became Law.” Likely due to its irrelevancy to the discussion, there was no mention of the United States’ strikes on three nuclear sites in Iran a day earlier.

    Pelosi was critical of President Donald Trump’s decision to bomb the facilities on Saturday night. On X, she posted: “Tonight, the President ignored the Constitution by unilaterally engaging our military without Congressional authorization. I join my colleagues in demanding answers from the Administration on this operation which endangers American lives and risks further escalation and dangerous destabilization of the region.”

    On Sunday, however, the discussion of the landmark legislation — also known as Obamacare and considered the largest piece of health-care legislation in the U.S. since the introduction of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965 — took center stage. 

    Noting that it took a century of wrangling, Pelosi said it was President Bill Clinton’s administration that gave a serious push to start health care reform in his first term starting in 1993. Facing strong opposition from conservatives and the insurance lobby, Clinton couldn’t pass it through. 

    “For over 100 years, presidents had been trying to pass, to provide … some kind of health care for all Americans,” Pelosi said. “The Clintons had attempted and it may have not succeeded in terms of passing the bill, but it certainly succeeded in raising the awareness and making it possible for us to pass a bill later. So I just give them credit for that.”

    Pelosi, a House member since 1987, was speaker from 2007 to 2011 and from 2019 to 2023.

    As speaker of the House, she played a key role in shepherding the ACA bill through a divided Congress and a Republican party fiercely opposed to the legislation. She also had to negotiate with those in her party, from the progressives to the moderates, over concessions in the bill. Even without a single vote from a Republican in either chamber of Congress, the ACA became law in March 2010. 

    The legislation made health coverage more accessible to people with low to moderate incomes or pre-existing conditions by giving them income-based subsidies. Its supporters also say the ACA stabilized the health-care market by making it more equitable and accessible.

    The ACA’s backlash, however, has included insurers leaving marketplaces in rural areas, fewer choices for doctors because of insurers tightening their provider networks, increased premiums for middle-class consumers, as well as public confusion over navigating a system rife with complexities. 

    Pelosi was joined on the panel by Kathleen Sebelius and Sylvia Burwell, the respective 21st and 22nd U.S. Secretaries of Health and Human Services, and former Republican Rep. Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania. 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Additional Disaster Recovery Centers Opening in the City of St. Louis

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency 2

    wo additional Disaster Recovery Centers with FEMA Individual Assistance staff are opening in the City of St. Louis to help people affected by the May 16 tornado and storms.
    At all locations, FEMA and the U.S. Small Business Administration will help impacted residents with their disaster assistance applications, answer questions, and upload required documents.
    Opening Thursday, June 26

    LOCATION
    HOURS OF OPERATION

    Sumner High School — Parking Lot    4248 Cottage Ave.St. Louis, MO 63113 
    Monday-Saturday: 8 a.m.-7 p.m.Sunday: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

    Opening Monday, June 30

    LOCATION
    HOURS OF OPERATION

    Urban League Entrepreneurship and Women’s Business Center 4401 Natural Bridge Ave.St. Louis, MO 63115
    Monday-Saturday: 8 a.m.-8 p.m.Sunday: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

    Currently Opened Location

    LOCATION
    HOURS OF OPERATION

    Union Tabernacle M.B. Church           626 N. Newstead Ave.St. Louis, MO 63108
    Monday-Saturday: 8 a.m.-8 p.m.Sunday: Closed

    To save time, please apply for FEMA assistance before coming to a Disaster Recovery Center. Apply online at DisasterAssistance.gov or by calling 800-621-3362. 
    If you are unable to apply online or by phone, someone at the Disaster Recovery Center can assist you. 
    You may visit any location, no matter where you are staying now.
    If your home or personal property sustained damage not covered by insurance, FEMA may be able to provide money to help you pay for home repairs, a temporary place to live, and replace essential personal property that was destroyed.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: PHOTO RELEASE: Secretary Noem Visits Costa Rica

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: PHOTO RELEASE: Secretary Noem Visits Costa Rica

    AN JOSÉ, COSTA RICA – Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem traveled to Costa Rica to reinforce the importance of international cooperation in preventing violent criminal illegal aliens from entering the United States

    During her visit, she met with the U

    S

    Customs and Border Protection’s (CBP) Joint Security Program Team, toured the Los Lagos Detention Center, and held discussions with Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves

      
     

     
    On Tuesday, Secretary Noem met with members of CBP’s Joint Security Program Team, which operates in Costa Rica and makes significant contributions to bolstering border security efforts

    The team, composed of CBP personnel and Costa Rican counterparts, works to enhance security measures at key border points and combat illicit activities such as smuggling and trafficking

    At the meeting, Secretary Noem received a briefing on the team’s operations, including their use of advanced technology, intelligence-sharing protocols, and joint initiatives

     
     

     
    On Wednesday, Secretary Noem also toured the Los Lagos Detention Center and was briefed on Costa Rican authorities’ detainment of known or suspected terrorists

    The tour provided insights into Costa Rica’s efforts to address illegal migration

    Accompanied by Costa Rican officials, Noem observed the facility’s operations, including its infrastructure, security protocols, and detainee management practices

     
     

    On Wednesday, Secretary Noem also met with President Rodrigo Chaves Robles in San José to reaffirm the strong partnership between the United States and Costa Rica

    The discussion focused on deepening bilateral ties through enhanced collaboration on security issues, including countering transnational crime, drug trafficking, and illegal migration

    Both leaders emphasized their commitment to joint initiatives promoting regional stability and prosperity

    They explored opportunities to align policies and share resources to address shared challenges, such as strengthening border security while supporting lawful trade and travel

    MIL OSI USA News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: CPSC Urges Fireworks Safety Ahead of July 4th Holiday

    Source: US Consumer Product Safety Commission

    CPSC Estimate: 14,700 injuries, 11 Deaths in 2024
    WASHINGTON, D.C. –  As July 4th celebrations near, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is urging the public to prioritize fireworks safety. Mishandling fireworks can turn celebration into tragedy. 
    In 2024, there were 11 reported fireworks-related deaths, most involving misuse and device misfire/malfunctions. An estimated 14,700 people were injured by fireworks last year – a sharp increase of about 38% in deaths and about 52% in injuries respectively compared to 2023. There were an estimated 1,700 emergency room treated injuries in 2024 involving sparklers.
    Adults ages 25 to 44 accounted for the largest share of reported injuries (32%), followed by people ages 15 to 24 (24%). The most frequently injured body parts were hands and fingers (36%) and head, face, and ears (22%). Burns were the most common injury, making up 37% of all emergency room visits. 
    “Behind these numbers are real people, real families — and often, preventable incidents,” said CPSC Acting Chairman Peter Feldman. “Fireworks injuries don’t just happen on the Fourth of July. We urge everyone to celebrate responsibly — because safety must always come first.”
    Stay Safe This Holiday: CPSC’s Fireworks Safety Tips:

    Never allow young children to play with or ignite fireworks, including sparklers. Sparklers burn at temperatures of about 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit—hot enough to melt some metals.
    Keep a bucket of water or a garden hose handy, in case of fire or other mishap.
    Make sure fireworks are legal in your area, and only purchase and set off fireworks that are labeled for consumer (not professional) use.
    Never use fireworks while impaired by alcohol or drugs.
    Light fireworks one at a time, then move back quickly.
    Never try to re-light or pick up fireworks that have not ignited fully.
    Follow all instructions and warnings on fireworks and never hold them in hand unless instructions specify to do so.

    For more fireworks safety tips, visit Fireworks | CPSC.gov.  
    View B-roll from CPSC’s past fireworks demonstrations. 
    ###
    Note: Individual Commissioners may have statements related to this topic. Please visit www.cpsc.gov/commissioners to search for statements related to this or other topics.

    About the U.S. CPSCThe U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is charged with protecting the public from unreasonable risk of injury associated with the use of thousands of types of consumer products. Deaths, injuries, and property damage from consumer product-related incidents cost the nation more than $1 trillion annually. Since the CPSC was established more than 50 years ago, it has worked to ensure the safety of consumer products, which has contributed to a decline in injuries associated with these products. 
    Federal law prohibits any person from selling products subject to a Commission ordered recall or a voluntary recall undertaken in consultation with the CPSC.
    For lifesaving information:

    MIL OSI USA News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA’s Chandra Shares a New View of Our Galactic Neighbor

    Source: NASA

    The Andromeda galaxy, also known as Messier 31 (M31), is the closest spiral galaxy to the Milky Way at a distance of about 2.5 million light-years. Astronomers use Andromeda to understand the structure and evolution of our own spiral, which is much harder to do since Earth is embedded inside the Milky Way.
    The galaxy M31 has played an important role in many aspects of astrophysics, but particularly in the discovery of dark matter. In the 1960s, astronomer Vera Rubin and her colleagues studied M31 and determined that there was some unseen matter in the galaxy that was affecting how the galaxy and its spiral arms rotated. This unknown material was named “dark matter.” Its nature remains one of the biggest open questions in astrophysics today, one which NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is designed to help answer.

    This new composite image contains data of M31 taken by some of the world’s most powerful telescopes in different kinds of light. This image includes X-rays from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA’s (European Space Agency’s) XMM-Newton (represented in red, green, and blue); ultraviolet data from NASA’s retired GALEX (blue); optical data from astrophotographers using ground based telescopes (Jakob Sahner and Tarun Kottary); infrared data from NASA’s retired Spitzer Space Telescope, the Infrared Astronomy Satellite, COBE, Planck, and Herschel (red, orange, and purple); and radio data from the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (red-orange).

    Each type of light reveals new information about this close galactic relative to the Milky Way. For example, Chandra’s X-rays reveal the high-energy radiation around the supermassive black hole at the center of M31 as well as many other smaller compact and dense objects strewn across the galaxy. A recent paper about Chandra observations of M31 discusses the amount of X-rays produced by the supermassive black hole in the center of the galaxy over the last 15 years. One flare was observed in 2013, which appears to represent an amplification of the typical X-rays seen from the black hole.
    These multi-wavelength datasets are also being released as a sonification, which includes the same wavelengths of data in the new composite. In the sonification, the layer from each telescope has been separated out and rotated so that they stack on top of each other horizontally, beginning with X-rays at the top and then moving through ultraviolet, optical, infrared, and radio at the bottom. As the scan moves from left to right in the sonification, each type of light is mapped to a different range of notes, from lower-energy radio waves up through the high energy of X-rays. Meanwhile, the brightness of each source controls volume, and the vertical location dictates the pitch.

    This new image of M31 is released in tribute to the groundbreaking legacy of Dr. Vera Rubin, whose observations transformed our understanding of the universe. Rubin’s meticulous measurements of Andromeda’s rotation curve provided some of the earliest and most convincing evidence that galaxies are embedded in massive halos of invisible material — what we now call dark matter. Her work challenged long-held assumptions and catalyzed a new era of research into the composition and dynamics of the cosmos. In recognition of her profound scientific contributions, the United States Mint has recently released a quarter in 2025 featuring Rubin as part of its American Women Quarters Program — making her the first astronomer honored in the series.
    NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.

    Learn more about the Chandra X-ray Observatory and its mission here:

    chandra

    https://chandra.si.edu

    This release features several images and a sonification video examining the Andromeda galaxy, our closest spiral galaxy neighbor. This collection helps astronomers understand the evolution of the Milky Way, our own spiral galaxy, and provides a fascinating insight into astronomical data gathering and presentation.
    Like all spiral galaxies viewed at this distance and angle, Andromeda appears relatively flat. Its spiraling arms circle around a bright core, creating a disk shape, like a large dinner plate. In most of the images in this collection, Andromeda’s flat surface is tilted to face our upper left.
    This collection features data from some of the world’s most powerful telescopes, each capturing light in a different spectrum. In each single-spectrum image, Andromeda has a similar shape and orientation, but the colors and details are dramatically different.
    In radio waves, the spiraling arms appear red and orange, like a burning, loosely coiled rope. The center appears black, with no core discernible. In infrared light, the outer arms are similarly fiery. Here, a white spiraling ring encircles a blue center with a small golden core. The optical image is hazy and grey, with spiraling arms like faded smoke rings. Here, the blackness of space is dotted with specks of light, and a small bright dot glows at the core of the galaxy. In ultraviolet light the spiraling arms are icy blue and white, with a hazy white ball at the core. No spiral arms are present in the X-ray image, making the bright golden core and nearby stars clear and easy to study.
    In this release, the single-spectrum images are presented side by side for easy comparison. They are also combined into a composite image. In the composite, Andromeda’s spiraling arms are the color of red wine near the outer edges, and lavender near the center. The core is large and bright, surrounded by a cluster of bright blue and green specks. Other small flecks in a variety of colors dot the galaxy, and the blackness of space surrounding it.
    This release also features a thirty second video, which sonifies the collected data. In the video, the single-spectrum images are stacked vertically, one atop the other. As the video plays, an activation line sweeps across the stacked images from left to right. Musical notes ring out when the line encounters light. The lower the wavelength energy, the lower the pitches of the notes. The brighter the source, the louder the volume.

    Megan WatzkeChandra X-ray CenterCambridge, Mass.617-496-7998mwatzke@cfa.harvard.edu
    Lane FigueroaMarshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama256-544-0034lane.e.figueroa@nasa.gov

    MIL OSI USA News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Commissioner for Belt and Road leads delegation to Indonesia and Malaysia to promote Hong Kong’s professional services

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Commissioner for Belt and Road, Mr Nicholas Ho, led a delegation to Indonesia and Malaysia to promote Hong Kong’s professional services related to infrastructure and construction and to explore opportunities for co-operation. The visit concluded today (June 26).
     
         The delegation visited Jakarta, Indonesia, on June 23 and 24, and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on June 25 and 26 to meet with government officials, business leaders and representatives of professional organisations and enterprises of the two places.
     
         The delegates visited the Daya Anagata Nusantara Investment Management Agency and the Investment Coordinating Board in Indonesia, as well as the Public Private Partnership Unit of the Prime Minister’s Department and the Malaysian Investment Development Authority in Malaysia, to learn about the latest economic and infrastructure developments in the two places. While in Malaysia, they also met with the Minister of Transport of Malaysia, Mr Loke Siew Fook, to exchange views and understand the planning and development of Malaysia’s transportation system, with a view to exploring opportunities for Hong Kong’s professional services to participate and contribute.
      
         In addition, the delegation attended presentations of signature projects in the two places, directly connecting with representatives of local enterprises to explore commercially viable investment and co-operation. They also attended business luncheons hosted in the two places by the Belt and Road Office with the support of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in Jakarta to promote Hong Kong’s business advantages to around 200 local business leaders. Apart from the delegates, around 20 representatives from Hong Kong enterprises and organisations also took part in some of the exchange sessions. During the visit period, Hong Kong representatives signed 21 Memoranda of Understanding with their partners in Indonesia and Malaysia, covering such areas as business collaboration and exchanges in professional services.
     
         During the stay in Jakarta, Mr Ho also visited a data centre, an investment development project of a Hong Kong company, to learn about how the data centre contributes to the development of the Digital Silk Road in promoting connectivity.
     
         Mr Ho said, “The Association of Southeast Asian Nations is Hong Kong’s second-largest trading partner and a key link in the Belt and Road Initiative. Indonesia and Malaysia are both undergoing rapid infrastructure development, and there is huge demand for professional services in large-scale projects such as the new capital city of Nusantara in Indonesia and the mass rapid transit system in Malaysia. Hong Kong, as a ‘super connector’ and a ‘super value-adder’, is connected to international standards in fields such as financing, law, construction engineering, project management, logistics and transportation, and innovative technology. We also have a deep pool of professionals with experience especially in taking forward public-private partnerships in infrastructure projects, presenting extensive room for collaboration with Indonesia and Malaysia to seize the opportunities brought by the Belt and Road Initiative.”
     
         He added that as an international financial and trade centre, Hong Kong possesses the advantages of convergence of capital and talent, and is committed to giving full play to its role as a functional platform for the Belt and Road, striving for solid progress in pursuing high-quality Belt and Road co-operation. As announced in “The Chief Executive’s 2024 Policy Address”, the Government will continue to pay visits and lead business and professional services delegations to priority markets such as Belt and Road countries.
     
         The delegation comprises around 20 representatives from professional services and commercial sectors, including small and medium-sized enterprises. The visit is supported by the Professionals Participation Subsidy Programme under the Government’s Professional Services Advancement Support Scheme. Hong Kong professionals from eligible professional sectors can apply for the subsidy to join the visit to promote Hong Kong’s competitive edges and professional services.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Form 8.3 – [ALPHA GROUP INTERNATIONAL PLC – 25 06 2025] – (CGAML)

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    FORM 8.3

    PUBLIC OPENING POSITION DISCLOSURE/DEALING DISCLOSURE BY
    A PERSON WITH INTERESTS IN RELEVANT SECURITIES REPRESENTING 1% OR MORE
    Rule 8.3 of the Takeover Code (the “Code”)

    1.        KEY INFORMATION

    (a)   Full name of discloser: CANACCORD GENUITY ASSET MANAGEMENT LIMITED (for Discretionary clients)
    (b)   Owner or controller of interests and short positions disclosed, if different from 1(a):
            The naming of nominee or vehicle companies is insufficient. For a trust, the trustee(s), settlor and beneficiaries must be named.
    N/A
    (c)   Name of offeror/offeree in relation to whose relevant securities this form relates:
            Use a separate form for each offeror/offeree
    ALPHA GROUP INTERNATIONAL PLC
    (d)   If an exempt fund manager connected with an offeror/offeree, state this and specify identity of offeror/offeree: N/A
    (e)   Date position held/dealing undertaken:
            For an opening position disclosure, state the latest practicable date prior to the disclosure
    25 JUNE 2025
    (f)   In addition to the company in 1(c) above, is the discloser making disclosures in respect of any other party to the offer?
            If it is a cash offer or possible cash offer, state “N/A”
    N/A

    2.        POSITIONS OF THE PERSON MAKING THE DISCLOSURE

    If there are positions or rights to subscribe to disclose in more than one class of relevant securities of the offeror or offeree named in 1(c), copy table 2(a) or (b) (as appropriate) for each additional class of relevant security.

    (a)      Interests and short positions in the relevant securities of the offeror or offeree to which the disclosure relates following the dealing (if any)

    Class of relevant security: 0.2p ORDINARY
      Interests Short positions
    Number % Number %
    (1)   Relevant securities owned and/or controlled: 1,338,000 3.1628    
    (2)   Cash-settled derivatives:        
    (3)   Stock-settled derivatives (including options) and agreements to purchase/sell:        
    TOTAL: 1,338,000 3.1628    

    All interests and all short positions should be disclosed.

    Details of any open stock-settled derivative positions (including traded options), or agreements to purchase or sell relevant securities, should be given on a Supplemental Form 8 (Open Positions).

    (b)      Rights to subscribe for new securities (including directors’ and other employee options)

    Class of relevant security in relation to which subscription right exists:  
    Details, including nature of the rights concerned and relevant percentages:  

    3.        DEALINGS (IF ANY) BY THE PERSON MAKING THE DISCLOSURE

    Where there have been dealings in more than one class of relevant securities of the offeror or offeree named in 1(c), copy table 3(a), (b), (c) or (d) (as appropriate) for each additional class of relevant security dealt in.

    The currency of all prices and other monetary amounts should be stated.

    (a)        Purchases and sales

    Class of relevant security Purchase/sale Number of securities Price per unit
    0.2p ORDINARY SALE 10,000 3145p

    (b)        Cash-settled derivative transactions

    Class of relevant security Product description
    e.g. CFD
    Nature of dealing
    e.g. opening/closing a long/short position, increasing/reducing a long/short position
    Number of reference securities Price per unit
    NONE        

    (c)        Stock-settled derivative transactions (including options)

    (i)        Writing, selling, purchasing or varying

    Class of relevant security Product description e.g. call option Writing, purchasing, selling, varying etc. Number of securities to which option relates Exercise price per unit Type
    e.g. American, European etc.
    Expiry date Option money paid/ received per unit
    NONE              

    (ii)        Exercise

    Class of relevant security Product description
    e.g. call option
    Exercising/ exercised against Number of securities Exercise price per unit

    (d)        Other dealings (including subscribing for new securities)

    Class of relevant security Nature of dealing
    e.g. subscription, conversion
    Details Price per unit (if applicable)
    NONE      

    4.        OTHER INFORMATION

    (a)        Indemnity and other dealing arrangements

    Details of any indemnity or option arrangement, or any agreement or understanding, formal or informal, relating to relevant securities which may be an inducement to deal or refrain from dealing entered into by the person making the disclosure and any party to the offer or any person acting in concert with a party to the offer:
    Irrevocable commitments and letters of intent should not be included. If there are no such agreements, arrangements or understandings, state “none”

    NONE

    (b)        Agreements, arrangements or understandings relating to options or derivatives

    Details of any agreement, arrangement or understanding, formal or informal, between the person making the disclosure and any other person relating to:
    (i)   the voting rights of any relevant securities under any option; or
    (ii)   the voting rights or future acquisition or disposal of any relevant securities to which any derivative is referenced:
    If there are no such agreements, arrangements or understandings, state “none”

    NONE

    (c)        Attachments

    Is a Supplemental Form 8 (Open Positions) attached? NO
    Date of disclosure: 26 JUNE 2025
    Contact name: MARK ELLIOTT
    Telephone number: 01253 376539

    Public disclosures under Rule 8 of the Code must be made to a Regulatory Information Service.

    The Panel’s Market Surveillance Unit is available for consultation in relation to the Code’s disclosure requirements on +44 (0)20 7638 0129.

    The Code can be viewed on the Panel’s website at www.thetakeoverpanel.org.uk.

    The MIL Network –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Lease Sale 262 Moves Forward – A Strong Step for American Offshore Energy

    Source: National Ocean Industries Association – NOIA

    Headline: Lease Sale 262 Moves Forward – A Strong Step for American Offshore Energy

    For Immediate Release: Wednesday, June 25, 2025NOIA .org
    Lease Sale 262 Moves Forward – A Strong Step for American Offshore Energy
    Washington, D.C. – National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) President Erik Milito issued the following statement after the Department of the Interior issued the Proposed Notice of Sale for Gulf of America Lease Sale 262:
    “This is welcome news and a timely step that reaffirms America’s commitment to offshore energy leadership. It underscores the vital role the Gulf of America plays in providing affordable, reliable energy, supporting hundreds of thousands of good-paying jobs, and reinforcing our national security.
    “We commend Secretary Burgum and the administration for advancing this process and restoring much-needed predictability to the offshore leasing program. This action sets the stage for continued investment, innovation, and responsible development in one of the world’s most strategic energy regions. We look forward to working with policymakers to ensure the Gulf’s continued contributions to U.S. energy strength for generations to come.”
    ##
    About NOIA The National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) represents and advances a dynamic and growing offshore energy industry, providing solutions that support communities and protect our workers, the public and our environment.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Syria: Severe lack of support continues the nightmare for torture survivors from Saydnaya and other detention centres – new testimonies

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Torture and abuse have left survivors with tuberculosis, nerve and joint damage and broken teeth from torture and symptoms of PTSD

    Massive drop in foreign aid severely impacting availability of support programmes

    Survivors interviewed by Amnesty emphasised that accountability is crucial for their healing

    Reparations extend beyond financial compensation: ‘I don’t want it to be transactional. It should be about restoring human dignity’ – Younes, survivor

    ‘It is beyond the pale that the people who made it out alive from these horrific torture dungeons are now struggling to access urgent medical and mental health treatment’ – Bissan Fakih

    Six months after the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government in Syria, survivors of its brutal detention system – including the notorious Saydnaya military prison – are struggling with severe physical and psychological trauma, while facing a critical shortage of support, Amnesty International said.

    On the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, Amnesty joins survivor associations in calling for concrete action to uphold torture survivors’ rights to justice and reparations – including access to rehabilitation.

    The Syrian government has an obligation to ensure survivors’ rights to truth, justice, and reparations for torture and other grave human rights violations. Amnesty is also urging donor governments to urgently fund survivor-led initiatives, family associations, and programmes that provide critical care and assistance to survivors.

    Bissan Fakih, Campaigner at Amnesty International, said:

    “For years the stories of torture, enforced disappearances and mass hangings in secret in Syria’s detention centres made the blood run cold.

    “It is beyond the pale that the people who made it out alive from these horrific torture dungeons are now struggling to access urgent medical and mental health treatment

    “The Syrian government is struggling with a myriad of economic and political challenges, but it must still, without any delay, ensure that all those suspected of criminal responsibility for torture and other international crimes are brought to justice in fair trials before ordinary civilian courts.

    “Survivors of Syria’s notorious detention system are in need of medical, psychosocial and legal support right now. During this pivotal period, donor states should be restoring or increasing funding to survivors’ groups, civil society organisations and programmes offering survivors support, rather than cutting off or cutting down foreign assistance.”

    The Syrian government, in place since 29 March, prohibited torture in a recent Constitutional Declaration, noting it would not be subject to a statute of limitations, established a Transitional Justice Commission, which is meant to lead the work on accountability, and has carried out some consultations with survivors. In a May meeting, the Minister of Interior told Amnesty that the most notorious prisons, including Saydnaya Military Prison and the Palestine Branch, would never be used as prisons again.

    Last month Amnesty met with survivors, survivors’ associations and civil society organisations in Syria, attended events organised by survivors and family members of the disappeared, and listened to their demands. These included ensuring meaningful and effective participation of survivors and victims’ families, comprehensive reparations to meet the needs of survivors, which include immediate physical and mental health support, and ensuring accountability for the crimes to which they were subjected. 

    Years of torture and inhumane conditions have left former detainees with tuberculosis, and conditions affecting their eyes, joints and nerves. Broken teeth from torture are also common among survivors, as well as symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Survivors supporting each other amid funding cuts 

    Survivor-led organisations have sounded the alarm over severe gaps in support, particularly after the mass release of detainees following the ousting of former President al-Assad.

    “Right at the time that people were being released from detention centres, the funding stopped,”

    said Muhannad Younes from Ta’afi, a survivor-led group offering rehabilitation support to fellow survivors. The organisation lost 60% of their funding due to the suspension of US foreign aid, severely limiting its ability to support survivors who emerged from detention both before and after the recent releases.

    Diab Serrih from the Association of Detainees and Missing Persons of Sednaya, set up by former survivors from Sednaya military prison said:

    “The general reduction in US and European funding will inevitably increase the suffering of victims. Mental health services in a post-conflict country are not a luxury… They are fundamental for the long-term recovery and reintegration of survivors.”

    Survivor associations and detainees recently released from Saydnaya Military Prison interviewed by Amnesty in Damascus said that survivors have been unable or desperately struggling to access urgently needed medical care, in a country in which much of the healthcare system has crumbled.  

    An activist in Damascus told Amnesty he received a call from a Saydnaya survivor about a fellow survivor struggling to get medical care:

    “He required an MRI which he wasn’t able to get at government hospitals. He told me the other survivors were pooling their money together, 600,000 SYP [the equivalent of 70 USD], to get him the medical test he needed.”

    Abdulmoneim al-Kayed, a Saydnaya survivor released on 8 December, confirmed that survivors had been trying to pool their money together to support him and others in need of medical care. He said that while there had been a quick response to tuberculosis, other medical needs were neglected. At least 12 former detainees he is in contact with still require urgent surgery, particularly neurological and ophthalmological operations, and the vast majority need dental treatment for teeth broken during torture.

    Samira Shawarba, from The Female Survivor Union, emphasised the need for comprehensive medical tests, including bloodwork, to assess the long-term health impact of years in overcrowded, unsanitary conditions without sunlight.

    The need for mental health support is equally urgent and largely unmet. Al-Kayed said:

    “We tried every possible way to get psychological support, but unfortunately, we couldn’t find any.”

    Ahmed Helmi from Ta’afi said very few organisations are able to provide mental health support:

    “Support exists, but it’s limited, especially because those organisations have had cuts in funding. The organisations we used to work with on mental health support for example can’t always take referrals anymore because they can’t afford it.”

    Survivors and survivor networks emphasised that those emerging from Syria’s detention facilities needed particular and trauma-informed support to achieve dignified lives. “Survivor-centred approaches are essential,” Younes said, explaining that many grassroots survivor networks have adopted such approaches in their work, taking into account that survivors suffer from memory loss, and that extensive questionnaires to offer aid could come across as interrogations to survivors of detention. 

    Shawarba stressed the rights of survivors to rehabilitation, not just short-term but also long-term support that enables survivors to regain their independence and self-esteem.

    Truth, justice, and reparations

    Survivors interviewed by Amnesty consistently emphasised that accountability is crucial for their healing. Al-Kayed, said many detainees families were extorted. His own family had 25,000 euros extorted from them on promises he would be released:

    “I call for accountability for the heads of security branches, so they don’t escape justice, and for every person who traded in our lives and extorted our families.”

    Ahmed Helmi from Ta’afi said guarantees of non-recurrence were key to him as a survivor of detention:

    “There was a part of our lives where we were removed from the face of the earth, placed somewhere behind the sun and subjected to horrors. That place and that period will always be a black stain, and it will only continue to grow until we can make meaning of it. And it can only gain meaning if it becomes a foundation for making sure our children never go through it. The value and meaning of what we experienced only comes from ensuring it never happens again. If we can’t guarantee that, then what happened has no meaning.”

    Younes explained that reparations extend beyond financial compensation:

    “Reparations also have an emotional and symbolic side…. Imagine everything that happened in Syria over the last 14 years, and yet there’s no physical link between us and these memories. No plaques, no memorials. In other countries, they build monuments and organise national days…I don’t want it to be transactional. It should be about restoring human dignity.”

    Any truth, justice, and reparation efforts must address the rights of all victims, including those subjected to abuses by former armed opposition groups. The authorities should also seek reparations from other states and non-state actors, including businesses, responsible for human rights violations and crimes under international law in Syria.

    Research on crimes against humanity

    Amnesty has documented how Syrian government forces for decades have used arbitrary arrests, enforced disappearances and torture to crush dissent. Under Assad’s rule torture was used as part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population amounting to crimes against humanity. More than 100,000 people are estimated to have been forcibly disappeared in Syria, the vast majority by government forces. Amnesty has also documented cases of abduction, torture, and summary killings by former armed opposition groups in Aleppo and Idlib. In 2024, Amnesty documented how the autonomous authorities in Northeast Syria have arbitrarily detained tens of thousands with many held in inhumane conditions and subjected to torture and other ill-treatment.

    MIL OSI NGO –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Syria: Torture survivors of Saydnaya and other detention centres grappling with devastating needs and minimal support 

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Six months after the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government in Syria, survivors of its brutal detention system, including the infamous Saydnaya military prison, are grappling with devastating physical and mental health consequences amid a critical lack of support, said Amnesty International. On the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, the organization is echoing survivor associations in calling for concrete action to guarantee the rights of torture survivors to reparations, including rehabilitation, and to justice. 

    Syria’s government has an obligation to ensure the rights to truth, justice and reparations for survivors of torture and other gross human rights abuses. Amnesty International is also calling on donor governments to urgently fund survivor-led groups, family associations, and programs dedicated to supporting torture survivors. 

    “For years the stories of torture, enforced disappearances and mass hangings in secret in Syria’s detention centers made the blood run cold. It is beyond the pale that the people who made it out alive from these horrific torture dungeons are now struggling to access urgent medical and mental health treatment. The Syrian government is struggling with a myriad of economic and political challenges, but it must still, without any delay, ensure that all those suspected of criminal responsibility for torture and other international crimes are brought to justice in fair trials before ordinary civilian courts,” said Bissan Fakih, Campaigner at Amnesty International. 

    The Syrian government, in place since 29 March, prohibited torture in a recent Constitutional Declaration, noting it would not be subject to a statute of limitations, established a Transitional Justice Commission, which is meant to lead the work on accountability, and has carried out some consultations with survivors. In a May meeting, the Minister of Interior told Amnesty International that the most notorious prisons, including Saydnaya Military Prison and the Palestine Branch, would never be used as prisons again.  

    Last month Amnesty International met with survivors, survivors’ associations and civil society organizations in Syria, attended events organized by survivors and family members of the disappeared, and listened to their demands. These included ensuring meaningful and effective participation of survivors and victims’ families, ensuring comprehensive reparations to meet the needs of survivors, which include immediate physical and mental health support, and ensuring accountability for the crimes to which they were subjected.   

    Years of torture and inhumane conditions have left former detainees with tuberculosis, and conditions affecting their eyes, joints and nerves. Broken teeth from torture are also common among survivors, as well as symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder.  

    Survivors of Syria’s notorious detention system are in need of medical, psychosocial and legal support right now. During this pivotal period, donor states should be restoring or increasing funding to survivors’ groups, civil society organizations and programs offering survivors support, rather than cutting off or cutting down foreign assistance.

    Bissan Fakih, Campaigner at Amnesty International.

    “Survivors of Syria’s notorious detention system are in need of medical, psychosocial and legal support right now. During this pivotal period, donor states should be restoring or increasing funding to survivors’ groups, civil society organizations and programs offering survivors support, rather than cutting off or cutting down foreign assistance,” Bissan Fakih said. 

    Survivors supporting each other amid funding cuts   

    Survivor-led organizations have sounded the alarm over severe gaps in support, particularly after the mass release of detainees following the ousting of former President al-Assad on 8 December 2024.  

    “Right at the time that people were being released from detention centers, the funding stopped,” said Muhannad Younes from Ta’afi, a survivor-led group offering rehabilitation support to fellow survivors. The organization lost a $120,000 grant60% of their funding due to the suspension of U.S. foreign aid, severely limiting its ability to support survivors who emerged from detention both before and after the recent releases. 

    Diab Serrih from the Association of Detainees and Missing Persons of Sednaya (ADMSP), set up by former survivors from Sednaya military prison said:  “The general reduction in U.S. and European funding will inevitably increase the suffering of victims. Mental health services in a post-conflict country are not a luxury… They are fundamental for the long-term recovery and reintegration of survivors.” 

    Survivor associations and detainees recently released from Saydnaya Military Prison interviewed by Amnesty International in Damascus said that survivors have been unable or desperately struggling to access urgently needed medical care, in a country in which much of the healthcare system has crumbled.    

    An activist in Damascus told Amnesty International he received a call from a Saydnaya survivor about a fellow survivor struggling to get medical care: “He required an MRI which he wasn’t able to get at government hospitals. He told me the other survivors were pooling their money together, 600,000 SYP [the equivalent of 70 USD], to get him the medical test he needed.” 

    Abdulmoneim al-Kayed, a Saydnaya survivor released on 8 December, confirmed that survivors had been trying to pool their money together to support this person and others in need of medical care. He said that while there had been a quick response to tuberculosis, other medical needs were neglected. At least 12 former detainees he is in contact with still require urgent surgery, particularly neurological and ophthalmological operations, and the vast majority need dental treatment for teeth broken during torture.  

    Samira Shawarba, from The Female Survivor Union, emphasized the need for comprehensive medical tests, including bloodwork, to assess the long-term health impact of years in overcrowded, unsanitary conditions without sunlight. 

    The need for mental health support is equally urgent and largely unmet. Al-Kayed said: “We tried every possible way to get psychological support, but unfortunately, we couldn’t find any.”  

    Ahmed Helmi from Ta’afi said very few organizations are able to provide mental health support : “Support exists, but it’s limited, especially because those organizations have had cuts in funding. The  organizations we used to work with on mental health support for example can’t always take referrals anymore because they can’t afford it.” 

    Survivors and survivor networks emphasized that those emerging from Syria’s detention facilities needed particular and trauma-informed support to achieve dignified lives.  “Survivor-centred approaches are essential,” Younes said, explaining that many grassroots survivor networks have adopted such approaches in their work, taking into account that survivors suffer from memory loss, and that extensive questionnaires to offer aid could come across as interrogations to survivors of detention.  

    Shawarba stressed the rights of survivors to rehabilitation, not just short-term, but also long-term support that enables survivors to regain their independence and self-esteem.  

    Truth, justice, and reparations 

    Survivors interviewed by Amnesty International consistently emphasized that accountability is crucial for their healing. Al-Kayed, said many detainees families were extorted. His own family had 25,000 euros extorted from them on  promises he would be released: “I call for accountability for the heads of security branches so they don’t escape justice, and for every person who traded in our lives and extorted our families.” 

    Ahmed Helmi from Ta’afi said guarantees of non-recurrence were key to him as a survivor of detention: “There was a part of our lives where we were removed from the face of the Earth, placed somewhere behind the sun and subjected to horrors. That place and that period will always be a black stain, and it will only continue to grow until we can make meaning of it. And it can only gain meaning if it becomes a foundation for making sure our children never go through it. The value and meaning of what we experienced only comes from ensuring it never happens again. If we can’t guarantee that, then what happened has no meaning.”  

    Younes explained that reparations extend beyond financial compensation: “Reparations also have an emotional and symbolic side…. Imagine everything that happened in Syria over the last 14 years, and yet there’s no physical link between us and these memories. No plaques, no memorials. In other countries, they build monuments and organize national days…I don’t want it to be transactional. It should be about restoring human dignity.” 

    Any truth, justice, and reparation efforts must address the rights of all victims, including those subjected to abuses by former armed opposition groups. The authorities should also seek reparations from other states and non-state actors, including businesses, responsible for human rights violations and crimes under international law in Syria. 

    Background 

    Amnesty International has documented how Syrian government forces for decades have used arbitrary arrests, enforced disappearances and torture to crush dissent. Under Assad’s rule torture was used as part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population amounting to crimes against humanity. More than 100,000 people are estimated to have been forcibly disappeared in Syria, the vast majority by government forces. The organization has also documented cases of abduction, torture, and summary killings by former armed opposition groups in Aleppo and Idlib. In 2024 Amnesty documented how the autonomous authorities in Northeast Syria have arbitrarily detained tens of thousands with many held in inhumane conditions and subjected to torture and other ill-treatment.  

    MIL OSI NGO –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Cambodia: Government allows slavery and torture to flourish inside hellish scamming compounds

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Cambodia: Government allows slavery and torture to flourish inside hellish scamming compounds

    • Amnesty visits more than 50 scamming compounds in 18-month long research
    • Testimony from survivors details human trafficking, slavery and forced labour affecting thousands
    • Findings point towards state complicity in abuses carried out by Chinese criminal gangs

    The Cambodian government is deliberately ignoring a litany of human rights abuses including slavery, human trafficking, child labour and torture being carried out by criminal gangs on a vast scale in more than 50 scamming compounds located across the country, Amnesty International said in a new report published today.

    Survivors interviewed for the report, “I Was Someone Else’s Property”, believed they were applying for genuine jobs but were instead trafficked to Cambodia, where they were held in prison-like compounds and forced to conduct online scams in a billion-dollar shadow economy defrauding people around the world.

    Jobseekers from Asia and beyond are lured by the promise of well-paid work into hellish labour camps run by well-organized gangs, where they are forced to scam under the very real threat of violence.

    Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General

    “Deceived, trafficked and enslaved, the survivors of these scamming compounds describe being trapped in a living nightmare – enlisted in criminal enterprises that are operating with the apparent consent of the Cambodian government,” Amnesty International’s Secretary General Agnes Callamard said.

    “Jobseekers from Asia and beyond are lured by the promise of well-paid work into hellish labour camps run by well-organized gangs, where they are forced to scam under the very real threat of violence.

    “Amnesty’s research reveals the horrifying magnitude of a crisis the Cambodian authorities are not doing enough to stop. Their failures have emboldened a criminal network whose tentacles extend internationally, with millions of people impacted by the scams.”

    Amnesty’s findings suggest there has been coordination and possibly collusion between Chinese compound bosses and the Cambodian police, who have failed to shut down compounds despite the slew of human rights abuses taking place inside.

    ‘High salary and swimming pool’

    In the most comprehensive documentation yet of the issue, Amnesty’s 240-page report identified at least 53 scamming compounds in Cambodia and interviewed 58 survivors of eight different nationalities, including nine children. Amnesty also reviewed the records of 336 other victims of Cambodian compounds. Those interviewed had either escaped from compounds, been rescued or had a ransom paid by their families.

    The interviewees’ testimony gives a detailed insight into a sprawling, violent criminal operation that is taking place often with the full knowledge of the Cambodian authorities, whose woefully ineffective – and at times corrupt – response to the scamming crisis demonstrates its acquiescence and points towards state complicity in the human rights abuses taking place.

    They told me that if I don’t stop screaming, they’re going to keep hitting [me] until I stop.

    *Lisa, who was trafficked at the age of 18 and forced to work on scams

    One survivor, *Lisa, who was 18 and looking for work during a break from school in Thailand when she was trafficked, said: “[The recruiters] said I would work in administration… they sent pictures of a hotel with a swimming pool… the salary was high.”

    Instead, Lisa was taken across a river at night into Cambodia, where she spent 11 months held against her will by armed security guards and forced to work on scams. When she tried to escape, she was severely beaten.

    “There were four men… three of them held me down while the boss hit me on the soles of my feet with a metal pole… They told me that if I don’t stop screaming, they’re going to keep hitting [me] until I stop,” she said.

    Map showing the 53 scamming compounds documented by Amnesty International.

    ‘They kept beating [them] until their body was purple’

    As part of its 18-month long research, Amnesty International visited all but one of the 53 scamming compounds located in 16 towns and cities across Cambodia, as well as 45 similar sites also strongly suspected to be scamming compounds. Many of the buildings were formerly casinos and hotels repurposed by criminal gangs – mostly from China – after Cambodia banned online gambling in 2019.

    Compounds appeared designed to keep people inside, with features such as surveillance cameras, barbed wire around perimeter walls and large numbers of security personnel, often carrying electric shock batons and in some cases firearms. Survivors reported that “escape was impossible”.

    Most victims had been lured to Cambodia by deceptive job advertisements posted on social media sites such as Facebook and Instagram. After being trafficked, survivors said they were forced to contact people using social media platforms and begin conversations aimed at defrauding them. These included fake romances or investment opportunities, selling products that would never be delivered, or building trust with victims before financially exploiting them – known as “pig-butchering”.

    All but one of the survivors interviewed were victims of human trafficking, while everyone had been subjected to forced labour under the threat of violence. In 32 cases, Amnesty International concluded the survivors were victims of slavery as defined under international law, with compound managers exerting a level of control over them that amounted to de facto ownership. Survivors also reported being sold into compounds or witnessing the sale of other people. Many others were told they owed a debt to the compound which they had to work to repay.

    Forty of the 58 survivors interviewed had suffered torture or other ill-treatment – almost always carried out by compound managers. Some compounds had specific rooms – often known as “dark rooms” – which were designated places for torture of people who did not or could not work or meet work targets, or who contacted the authorities.

    Survivors frequently mentioned deaths inside the compounds or nearby; one survivor described hearing a body hitting the roof of a building. Amnesty International also confirmed the death of a Chinese child inside a compound.

    Survivor *Siti described seeing a Vietnamese person beaten by compound bosses for around 25 minutes. He said: “They just keep beating [the Vietnamese person] until their body was…purple…then [using] the electric baton. Beat the Vietnamese until he can’t scream, can’t get up…then the boss tell me that they wait until another compound want to buy him.”

    Of the nine children interviewed, five were subjected to torture or other ill-treatment. *Sawat, a 17-year-old Thai boy, was beaten by several managers before being told he would be stripped and forced to jump off the building.

    PSP01: compound with suspected guard posts – highlighted with yellow circles – at strategic locations within the perimeter wall.

    Cambodian government’s glaring failures

    Amnesty International’s report found that the Cambodian government has failed to adequately investigate widespread human rights abuses at scamming compounds despite being repeatedly made aware of them.

    “The Cambodian authorities know what is going on inside scamming compounds, yet they allow it to continue. Our findings reveal a pattern of state failures that have allowed criminality to flourish and raises questions about the government’s motivations,” Amnesty International’s Regional Research Director Montse Ferrer said.

    The government has claimed to be addressing the scamming crisis through its National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking (NCCT) and a number of ministerial task forces, which have overseen a series of police “rescues” of victims from compounds. However, more than two thirds of the scamming compounds identified in the report continued to operate even after police raids and “rescues”. At one compound in Botum Sakor, human trafficking has been widely reported by media and police have intervened multiple times to rescue victims, yet the site remains open.

    Police failings stem from their collaboration or coordination with compound bosses. For example, in many of the “rescues”, instead of entering the compounds and investigating, police would simply meet a manager or security guard at the gate, where they would be handed the individual(s) who had called in for help. Business then continued as usual.

    In other instances, several survivors said they were punished with beatings after their secretive efforts to contact police for help were somehow uncovered by bosses. One Vietnamese survivor told Amnesty International that police “work for the compound and will report requests for help back to the compound bosses”.

    Those “rescued” from compounds were often subsequently detained in immigration detention centres in poor conditions for months at a time – the Cambodian authorities having failed to recognize them as victims of human trafficking and provide them with the support required under international law.

    Meanwhile, the authorities have targeted others speaking out about scamming compounds. Several human rights defenders and journalists working on the issue have been arrested, while the news outlet Voice of Democracy was closed in 2023 in apparent retaliation for its reporting on the scamming crisis.

    Amnesty International sent its findings to the NCCT, which responded by sharing vague data on interventions at compounds, none of which clarified whether the state has identified, investigated or prosecuted individuals for human rights abuses other than deprivation of liberty. It also did not respond to Amnesty International’s list of scamming compounds or suspicious locations.

    © Amnesty International, 2024.
    Caged windows behind high walls of a scamming compound with three rungs of barbed or razor wire.

    Slavery thrives when governments look away.

    Montse Ferrer, Amnesty International’s Regional Research Director

    “The Cambodian government could put a stop to these abuses, but it has chosen not to. The police interventions documented appear to be merely ‘for show’,” Montse Ferrer said.

    “Cambodia’s authorities must ensure no more jobseekers are trafficked into the country to face torture, slavery or any other human rights abuse. They must urgently investigate and shut down all scamming compounds and properly identify, assist and protect victims. Slavery thrives when governments look away.”

    Survivors interviewed for Amnesty International’s report were from China, Thailand, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Viet Nam, Indonesia, Taiwan and Ethiopia, but Amnesty International also had access to records of hundreds of others who are nationals of India, Kenya, Nepal and the Philippines among many more.

    Background

    Under international human rights law, the Cambodian state has a duty to ensure that no one is held in slavery or servitude or required to perform forced labour. It is obligated to protect children from economic exploitation and must prevent, prohibit, investigate and prosecute acts of torture. The Cambodian government must also effectively investigate, prosecute and adjudicate trafficking whether committed by governmental or non-state actors; it must identify trafficking victims and provide remedy; and it must implement measures to ensure that “rescue” operations of trafficked persons do not further harm their rights and dignity.

    *All survivors using pseudonyms for security reasons

    MIL OSI NGO –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Cambodia: Government allows slavery and torture to flourish inside hellish scamming compounds

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Cambodia: Government allows slavery and torture to flourish inside hellish scamming compounds

    • Amnesty visits more than 50 scamming compounds in 18-month long research
    • Testimony from survivors details human trafficking, slavery and forced labour affecting thousands
    • Findings point towards state complicity in abuses carried out by Chinese criminal gangs

    The Cambodian government is deliberately ignoring a litany of human rights abuses including slavery, human trafficking, child labour and torture being carried out by criminal gangs on a vast scale in more than 50 scamming compounds located across the country, Amnesty International said in a new report published today.

    Survivors interviewed for the report, “I Was Someone Else’s Property”, believed they were applying for genuine jobs but were instead trafficked to Cambodia, where they were held in prison-like compounds and forced to conduct online scams in a billion-dollar shadow economy defrauding people around the world.

    Jobseekers from Asia and beyond are lured by the promise of well-paid work into hellish labour camps run by well-organized gangs, where they are forced to scam under the very real threat of violence.

    Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General

    “Deceived, trafficked and enslaved, the survivors of these scamming compounds describe being trapped in a living nightmare – enlisted in criminal enterprises that are operating with the apparent consent of the Cambodian government,” Amnesty International’s Secretary General Agnes Callamard said.

    “Jobseekers from Asia and beyond are lured by the promise of well-paid work into hellish labour camps run by well-organized gangs, where they are forced to scam under the very real threat of violence.

    “Amnesty’s research reveals the horrifying magnitude of a crisis the Cambodian authorities are not doing enough to stop. Their failures have emboldened a criminal network whose tentacles extend internationally, with millions of people impacted by the scams.”

    Amnesty’s findings suggest there has been coordination and possibly collusion between Chinese compound bosses and the Cambodian police, who have failed to shut down compounds despite the slew of human rights abuses taking place inside.

    ‘High salary and swimming pool’

    In the most comprehensive documentation yet of the issue, Amnesty’s 240-page report identified at least 53 scamming compounds in Cambodia and interviewed 58 survivors of eight different nationalities, including nine children. Amnesty also reviewed the records of 336 other victims of Cambodian compounds. Those interviewed had either escaped from compounds, been rescued or had a ransom paid by their families.

    The interviewees’ testimony gives a detailed insight into a sprawling, violent criminal operation that is taking place often with the full knowledge of the Cambodian authorities, whose woefully ineffective – and at times corrupt – response to the scamming crisis demonstrates its acquiescence and points towards state complicity in the human rights abuses taking place.

    They told me that if I don’t stop screaming, they’re going to keep hitting [me] until I stop.

    *Lisa, who was trafficked at the age of 18 and forced to work on scams

    One survivor, *Lisa, who was 18 and looking for work during a break from school in Thailand when she was trafficked, said: “[The recruiters] said I would work in administration… they sent pictures of a hotel with a swimming pool… the salary was high.”

    Instead, Lisa was taken across a river at night into Cambodia, where she spent 11 months held against her will by armed security guards and forced to work on scams. When she tried to escape, she was severely beaten.

    “There were four men… three of them held me down while the boss hit me on the soles of my feet with a metal pole… They told me that if I don’t stop screaming, they’re going to keep hitting [me] until I stop,” she said.

    Map showing the 53 scamming compounds documented by Amnesty International.

    ‘They kept beating [them] until their body was purple’

    As part of its 18-month long research, Amnesty International visited all but one of the 53 scamming compounds located in 16 towns and cities across Cambodia, as well as 45 similar sites also strongly suspected to be scamming compounds. Many of the buildings were formerly casinos and hotels repurposed by criminal gangs – mostly from China – after Cambodia banned online gambling in 2019.

    Compounds appeared designed to keep people inside, with features such as surveillance cameras, barbed wire around perimeter walls and large numbers of security personnel, often carrying electric shock batons and in some cases firearms. Survivors reported that “escape was impossible”.

    Most victims had been lured to Cambodia by deceptive job advertisements posted on social media sites such as Facebook and Instagram. After being trafficked, survivors said they were forced to contact people using social media platforms and begin conversations aimed at defrauding them. These included fake romances or investment opportunities, selling products that would never be delivered, or building trust with victims before financially exploiting them – known as “pig-butchering”.

    All but one of the survivors interviewed were victims of human trafficking, while everyone had been subjected to forced labour under the threat of violence. In 32 cases, Amnesty International concluded the survivors were victims of slavery as defined under international law, with compound managers exerting a level of control over them that amounted to de facto ownership. Survivors also reported being sold into compounds or witnessing the sale of other people. Many others were told they owed a debt to the compound which they had to work to repay.

    Forty of the 58 survivors interviewed had suffered torture or other ill-treatment – almost always carried out by compound managers. Some compounds had specific rooms – often known as “dark rooms” – which were designated places for torture of people who did not or could not work or meet work targets, or who contacted the authorities.

    Survivors frequently mentioned deaths inside the compounds or nearby; one survivor described hearing a body hitting the roof of a building. Amnesty International also confirmed the death of a Chinese child inside a compound.

    Survivor *Siti described seeing a Vietnamese person beaten by compound bosses for around 25 minutes. He said: “They just keep beating [the Vietnamese person] until their body was…purple…then [using] the electric baton. Beat the Vietnamese until he can’t scream, can’t get up…then the boss tell me that they wait until another compound want to buy him.”

    Of the nine children interviewed, five were subjected to torture or other ill-treatment. *Sawat, a 17-year-old Thai boy, was beaten by several managers before being told he would be stripped and forced to jump off the building.

    PSP01: compound with suspected guard posts – highlighted with yellow circles – at strategic locations within the perimeter wall.

    Cambodian government’s glaring failures

    Amnesty International’s report found that the Cambodian government has failed to adequately investigate widespread human rights abuses at scamming compounds despite being repeatedly made aware of them.

    “The Cambodian authorities know what is going on inside scamming compounds, yet they allow it to continue. Our findings reveal a pattern of state failures that have allowed criminality to flourish and raises questions about the government’s motivations,” Amnesty International’s Regional Research Director Montse Ferrer said.

    The government has claimed to be addressing the scamming crisis through its National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking (NCCT) and a number of ministerial task forces, which have overseen a series of police “rescues” of victims from compounds. However, more than two thirds of the scamming compounds identified in the report continued to operate even after police raids and “rescues”. At one compound in Botum Sakor, human trafficking has been widely reported by media and police have intervened multiple times to rescue victims, yet the site remains open.

    Police failings stem from their collaboration or coordination with compound bosses. For example, in many of the “rescues”, instead of entering the compounds and investigating, police would simply meet a manager or security guard at the gate, where they would be handed the individual(s) who had called in for help. Business then continued as usual.

    In other instances, several survivors said they were punished with beatings after their secretive efforts to contact police for help were somehow uncovered by bosses. One Vietnamese survivor told Amnesty International that police “work for the compound and will report requests for help back to the compound bosses”.

    Those “rescued” from compounds were often subsequently detained in immigration detention centres in poor conditions for months at a time – the Cambodian authorities having failed to recognize them as victims of human trafficking and provide them with the support required under international law.

    Meanwhile, the authorities have targeted others speaking out about scamming compounds. Several human rights defenders and journalists working on the issue have been arrested, while the news outlet Voice of Democracy was closed in 2023 in apparent retaliation for its reporting on the scamming crisis.

    Amnesty International sent its findings to the NCCT, which responded by sharing vague data on interventions at compounds, none of which clarified whether the state has identified, investigated or prosecuted individuals for human rights abuses other than deprivation of liberty. It also did not respond to Amnesty International’s list of scamming compounds or suspicious locations.

    © Amnesty International, 2024.
    Caged windows behind high walls of a scamming compound with three rungs of barbed or razor wire.

    Slavery thrives when governments look away.

    Montse Ferrer, Amnesty International’s Regional Research Director

    “The Cambodian government could put a stop to these abuses, but it has chosen not to. The police interventions documented appear to be merely ‘for show’,” Montse Ferrer said.

    “Cambodia’s authorities must ensure no more jobseekers are trafficked into the country to face torture, slavery or any other human rights abuse. They must urgently investigate and shut down all scamming compounds and properly identify, assist and protect victims. Slavery thrives when governments look away.”

    Survivors interviewed for Amnesty International’s report were from China, Thailand, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Viet Nam, Indonesia, Taiwan and Ethiopia, but Amnesty International also had access to records of hundreds of others who are nationals of India, Kenya, Nepal and the Philippines among many more.

    Background

    Under international human rights law, the Cambodian state has a duty to ensure that no one is held in slavery or servitude or required to perform forced labour. It is obligated to protect children from economic exploitation and must prevent, prohibit, investigate and prosecute acts of torture. The Cambodian government must also effectively investigate, prosecute and adjudicate trafficking whether committed by governmental or non-state actors; it must identify trafficking victims and provide remedy; and it must implement measures to ensure that “rescue” operations of trafficked persons do not further harm their rights and dignity.

    *All survivors using pseudonyms for security reasons

    MIL OSI NGO –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Corporate Library Systems: Technologies and Innovations

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    On June 23-24, the Polytechnic University hosted the XXIII conference “Corporate Library Systems: Technologies and Innovations” – KorFor-2025. Participants included library managers and employees, IT specialists, suppliers of electronic databases and equipment for automating institutions.

    The conference has been held since 2001, with a break in 2020. This year, more than 250 people participated in person and 500 specialists online from Russia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Italy. Experts discussed the activities of university, public and departmental libraries. The work took place in the format of discussion panels, strategic and thematic sections.

    At the plenary session, the Director of the Information and Library Complex of SPbPU Alexander Plemnek spoke with a report “AI as a driver of the transformation of libraries and librarianship on the horizon until 2035.” He compared the development forecasts that he made at conferences five and ten years ago, showing that many have come true, and earlier than predicted. Alexander Plemnek paid attention to one of the innovations of AI in 2025 – autonomous agents that are able to act independently, without direct human control, to achieve their goals. They resemble digital employees.

    The integration of GenAI and autonomous agents doesn’t just add new tools to a librarian’s toolbox; it fundamentally redefines what a library is and what librarians do. The profession is at a crossroads, facing extraordinary opportunities for growth and innovation, said Alexander Plemnek.

    Professor Fabio Di Bello, Wiley Client Training Manager, spoke online with a report entitled “Expanding the Possibilities of Academic Librarianship: Artificial Intelligence, Large Language Models, and the Future of Knowledge Management.” The expert demonstrated the capabilities of AI in translation. On the screen, a digital double of the speaker, who does not speak Russian, not only recited the text in literate Russian, but also reproduced facial expressions and phonetics of the language.

    The expert panel “From the instruction of the President of the Russian Federation to the implementation of the Concept of the federal project “Development of scientific and technical libraries”” became the most important event of the conference. It was attended by the acting Director General of the Russian State Public Library for Science and Technology Natalia Mikhalchenkova, Director of the M. Gorky Scientific Library of St. Petersburg State University Marina Karpova, Vice President of the Russian Library Association, Director of the Fundamental Library of the Herzen State Pedagogical University Natela Kvelidze-Kuznetsova, as well as representatives of other universities.

    Natalia Mikhalchenkova revealed the goals of the federal project aimed at transforming the state system of scientific and technical information to achieve technological leadership of the country. She focused on the project’s tasks in 2025 related to the creation of an up-to-date register of scientific and technical libraries subordinate to various ministries and departments, as well as the development of programs for improving the qualifications of librarians. Representatives of the universities of St. Petersburg and Kazan showed a variety of areas of development of university libraries dedicated to the collection, distribution and recording of scientific resources.

    Experts of the section “More than a library” presented a project for promoting and supporting the results of intellectual activity, new digital platforms for interaction with library services in 24/7/365 mode, spoke about events for creating educational video content, organizing a literary club and open lectures.

    The strategic session “Vectors of Development of Russian Discovery Systems: What Users Really Need” brought together developers of a modern domestic information search service that has replaced foreign systems, and representatives of universities that use it. A fruitful dialogue allowed us to see the progress over the first year of the system’s existence and discuss development directions based on the results of surveys of service users.

    Leading providers of scientific and educational databases shared their vision for the development of online resources and services for integration with university libraries.

    At the section “Electronic libraries, repositories, sites and applications” experts presented various options for electronic storage. For example, in the National Electronic Library of the Udmurt Republic – preservation of cultural heritage, in the repository of scientific data of SPbPU – various results of scientific research, including unpublished ones.

    The section “New library environment: developing vs. breaking traditions” showed different approaches to transforming libraries, from changing physical premises to introducing new virtual services, using AI assistants for readers and employees. Of particular interest was the report on projects for digital transformation of departmental library activities (using the Bank of Russia library as an example).

    At the round table “Practice of using the services of the SuperStat and FEDURUS projects in libraries,” a discussion was held on new forms of access to subscription resources based on a login and password, and the organization of collection and analysis of statistics on the use of online resources in an automated mode.

    The expert discussion “Acquisition and new regulatory documents: monitoring the situation, adapting to practice” concluded the conference program. Specialists from the National Library of Russia considered current issues related to the introduction of new regulatory documents that cause difficulties.

    On June 25, excursions were organized to the libraries of St. Petersburg, after which the participants became acquainted with the features of digital transformation in the libraries of the Republic of Karelia.

    An exhibition was held in the reading room of the IBC SPbPU, where one could get acquainted with the latest generation of book scanners from ELAR, which have improved the digitization and recognition of texts in many languages due to the introduction of AI, and test RFID equipment from various suppliers to optimize reader service.

    All speeches and presentations will be made publicly available. The conference materials will be posted in the Electronic Library of SPbPU and indexed in the Russian Science Citation Index.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: US shouldn’t deceive and mislead its people and international community: Defense Spokesperson 2025-06-26 18:00:27 “China never threatens any country with its own development, neither does it resort to deterrence and coercion like a certain country,” said a Chinese defense spokesperson at a regular press conference on Thursday.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – Ministry of National Defense

      BEIJING, June 26 — “China never threatens any country with its own development, neither does it resort to deterrence and coercion like a certain country,” said a Chinese defense spokesperson at a regular press conference on Thursday.

      It is reported that the US Secretary of Defense recently claimed at a congressional hearing that China is a “pacing threat”, and that the US will prioritize re-establishing deterrence in the “Indo-Pacific” region to “achieve peace through strength”. The One Big Beautiful Bill of the US would allocate 12 billion US dollars for the “Pacific Deterrence Initiative”, further strengthening combat readiness of the US forces in the “Indo-Pacific” and boosting defense capabilities of Taiwan.

      In response to that, Senior Colonel Zhang Xiaogang, spokesperson for China’s Ministry of National Defense, said that zero sum game should not be the way that major countries get along with each other, and peaceful coexistence should be the bottom line that both China and the US should keep. China never threatens any country with its own development, neither does it resort to deterrence and coercion like a certain country. The Chinese military has always been a staunch force for maintaining world peace.

      “The Taiwan question is purely China’s internal affair which brooks no foreign interference. The US side has repeatedly gone back on its own words and kept arming Taiwan, which would only backfire,” said the spokesperson, adding that China urges the US side to have an objective and rational perception of China, stop blaming China on everything, and stop deceiving and misleading the US people and the international community, so as to create favorable conditions for developing state-to-state and mil-to-mil relations between China and the US.

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    MIL OSI China News –

    June 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese military will work with SCO member states to deepen defense cooperation: Defense Spokesperson 2025-06-26 17:29:50 The spokesperson stressed that the Chinese military will work with militaries of other SCO member states to carry forward the Shanghai Spirit and further broaden and deepen defense cooperation.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – Ministry of National Defense

      BEIJING, June 26 — “The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Defense Ministers’ Meeting was held in Qingdao City in east China’s Shandong Province from June 25 to 26, 2025. China’s Defense Minister Admiral Dong Jun presided over the meeting and delivered a speech,” said Senior Colonel Zhang Xiaogang, spokesperson for China’s Ministry of National Defense, at a regular press conference on Thursday. This year, China is the rotating chair of the SCO, and hosting the Defense Minister’s Meeting is an important activity to perform its duties.

      When being asked to introduce the Chinese military’s participation in the SCO defense and security cooperation, the spokesperson said that throughout the process of the establishment and development of the SCO, defense and security cooperation has played a role of special significance. The Chinese side has actively promoted strategic communication, deepened substantive cooperation, and initiated many cooperation programs.  

      The spokesperson added that first, China has organized or participated in the Defense Minister’s Meeting, the Chiefs of General Staff Meeting, the meeting of International Military Cooperation Organs, etc. Through these events, China has communicated and exchanged views with all member states, reaching consensus and promoting the “SCO voice” on international and regional security issues. Second, China has hosted the “Peace Mission” joint exercise, the “Fanfare for Peace” military tattoo and the Expert Working Group meetings, participated in them for multiple times, and conducted professional exchanges on military medicine, military transportation, military translation and other areas. Cooperation in various fields has been deepened and solidified. Third, China has initiated and held the SCO Seminar for Senior-Level Officers, the SCO Junior-and-Middle-Level Officers’ Exchange, and the “SCO+” Young Scholars’ Salon, all of which have enriched the channels for exchanges among service members of the SCO member states, and strengthened their friendship and mutual trust.

      The spokesperson stressed that the Chinese military will work with militaries of other SCO member states to carry forward the Shanghai Spirit, further broaden and deepen defense cooperation, and join hands in building a common home featuring solidarity and mutual trust, peace and tranquility, prosperity and development, good-neighborliness and friendship, and fairness and justice, thereby contributing to building a community with a shared future for mankind.

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    MIL OSI China News –

    June 26, 2025
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