NewzIntel.com

    • Checkout Page
    • Contact Us
    • Default Redirect Page
    • Frontpage
    • Home-2
    • Home-3
    • Lost Password
    • Member Login
    • Member LogOut
    • Member TOS Page
    • My Account
    • NewzIntel Alert Control-Panel
    • NewzIntel Latest Reports
    • Post Views Counter
    • Privacy Policy
    • Public Individual Page
    • Register
    • Subscription Plan
    • Thank You Page

Category: Law

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Shooting at Burton

    Source: South Australia Police

    Police are investigating after a shooting at Burton this morning.

    About 3.50am on Thursday 26 September, police were called to Bolivar Road after reports a man had been shot.

    The victim, a 34- year-old man from Burton, sustained a wound to his leg and was taken to hospital for treatment. His injuries are not considered life threatening.

    Police searched the area and have not located the suspect.

    Later this morning at 4am police and MFS were called to reports of a vehicle fire on Burton Road, police are investigating if the fire is linked to the earlier shooting.

    The incident is not believed to be random.

    Northern District are investigating the incident and ask anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers at http://www.crimestopperssa.com.au or on 1800 333 000. You can remain anonymous.

    MIL OSI News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Lawler Introduces Bipartisan Legislation Prohibiting Discrimination Against Living Kidney Donors by Life Insurance

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Mike Lawler (R, NY-17)

    Today, Representative Mike Lawler (R-NY-17) introduced the Kidney Donation Anti-Discrimination Act, which will prevent life insurance companies from being able to discriminate in the offering, issuance, cancellation, price or conditions of a life insurance policy, or in the amount of coverage provided under a life insurance policy, based solely on the status of an individual as a living kidney donor. The legislation is co-sponsored by Representatives Don Davis (D-NC-01) and Jeff Van Drew (R-NJ-02). It is also endorsed by the National Kidney Registry (NKR).

    “Someone who donates a kidney is giving someone the gift of life,” said Congressman Lawler. “No good deed should go punished, especially not one that saves a life. Studies show that donating a kidney does not impact life expectancy. It shouldn’t have an impact on someone’s life insurance, either, and my new bill will ensure that it doesn’t. I’m proud to introduce the Kidney Donation Anti-Discrimination Act and I look forward to working with my colleagues in both parties to get this important bill passed and signed into law.”

    “Kidney donors are already doing one of the most selfless things an individual can do, and punishing them for their actions makes no sense,” said Congressman Van Drew. “It is a no-brainer that we protect these donors and ensure they face no unnecessary hardship, especially when it comes to life insurance, where they should be supported, not penalized, for their generosity.”

    “We must never punish living organ donors who are making a selfless sacrifice for others,” said Congressman Don Davis. “Eastern North Carolinians are suffering from significant health disparities, and the last thing we should do is discourage good Samaritans.”

    “With approximately 90,000 people on the kidney transplant waitlist, every barrier to donation costs lives,” said Garet Hil, National Kidney Registry (NKR) CEO and Founder. “The NKR is grateful for the leadership of our congressional champions on the Kidney Donation Anti-Discrimination Act and is excited to endorse this critical bill to ensure donors are not penalized for their selflessness and courage.”

    Congressman Lawler is one of the most bipartisan members of the 118th Congress and represents New York’s 17th Congressional District, which is just north of New York City and contains all or parts of Rockland, Putnam, Dutchess, and Westchester Counties.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: CISA Releases Anonymous Threat Response Guidance and Toolkit for K-12 Schools

    News In Brief – Source: US Computer Emergency Readiness Team

    New Resources Will Help K-12 Schools and Law Enforcement Entities Create Tailored Approaches to Addressing Anonymous Threats of Violence

    WASHINGTON – Today, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) released the Anonymized Threat Response Guidance: A Toolkit for K-12 Schools, a new resource to help kindergarten through grade 12 (K-12) schools and their law enforcement and community partners create tailored approaches to addressing anonymous threats of violence, including those received on social media. The toolkit outlines steps school leaders can take to assess and respond to anonymous threats, better prepare for and prevent future threats, and work in coordination with law enforcement and other local partners when these threats arise. It is co-sealed with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which provided expert feedback on the toolkit’s key principles and strategies.

    Social media-based and other types of anonymous threats of violence against K-12 institutions are common. These threats can erode trust that schools are safe places, contribute to losses in learning and instruction time, overwhelm school and law enforcement resources and have lasting psychological impacts on school communities.

    “K-12 schools across the country are experiencing a scourge of anonymous threats of violence. School leaders need scalable solutions to navigate these ever-evolving and burdensome threats,” said CISA Director Jen Easterly. “The K-12 Anonymized Threat Response Guidance provides step-by-step approaches to help schools better assess and respond to these threats, as well as take action to mitigate future risks in coordination with their law enforcement and other community partners.”

    “Families, students and educators should not have to question whether they’re safe when they walk into a classroom,” said FBI Office of Partner Engagement Assistant Director, Robert Contee. “In the face of these ongoing school threats, the strategies the FBI and our partners at CISA put together will hopefully prepare our educators and administrators to maneuver through difficult challenges. The more parents, teachers and administrators know, the more likely we are to keep our kids safe. The FBI is dedicated to safeguarding schools and communities who are impacted by anonymous threats, but we also want to urge parents to talk with their children about the consequences that come with making these threats. We all need to work together.”

    The K-12 Anonymized Threat Response Guidance was developed to provide K-12 stakeholders with information to both protect school communities and limit the disruption and trauma that can be caused by anonymous threats of violence. By providing guidance to inform decision-making about the urgency and credibility of individual threats, school and public safety leaders may be able to more effectively balance the full range of risks faced by K-12 organizations.

    The toolkit emphasizes six key strategies for schools to consider when addressing anonymous threats:

    • Build awareness about reporting to detect threats early and deter future threats.
    • Develop a partnership structure that will help address threats. This includes school administrators, law enforcement personnel and mental health professionals.
    • Engage law enforcement to manage threat situations and decide when to scale response actions up or down.
    • Balance initial response steps to ensure the campus is safe. Most critically, treat each threat as credible, and from there, work with necessary partners to determine how to approach an immediate response.
    • When appropriate, tap into multidisciplinary threat assessment teams to support interventions and expedite response if the subject who made the threat becomes known.
    • Take steps throughout the school year to prepare for threats. Establish a response protocol and practice other types of emergency management activities, such as training exercises for staff.

    Today’s release also includes a supplemental reference guide that provides streamlined information for K-12 stakeholders to understand and utilize some of the best practices from the full toolkit. Both products were developed to support the diverse range of K-12 school settings across the United States and are based on current practices of K-12 organizations and law enforcement agencies.

    The new toolkit and guide were announced at CISA’s 2024 National Summit on K-12 School Safety and Security, an annual event that brings together K-12 school leaders and practitioners to discuss and share actionable recommendations that enhance safe and supportive learning environments.

    To learn more and access the K-12 Anonymized Threat Response Guidance, please click here. 

    ###

    About CISA 

    As the nation’s cyber defense agency and national coordinator for critical infrastructure security, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency leads the national effort to understand, manage, and reduce risk to the digital and physical infrastructure Americans rely on every hour of every day.

    Visit CISA.gov for more information and follow us on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram. 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: US Department of Labor, Albany State University launch partnership to support veterans, enhance employment opportunities at HBCUs

    Source: US Department of Labor

    WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Labor’s Veterans’ Employment and Training Service today signed a memorandum of understanding with Albany State University designed to enhance career readiness and employment opportunities for veterans and military-affiliated students at historically Black colleges and universities.

    The memorandum of understanding marks the beginning of this unique collaboration, which will give veterans – including Albany State alumni who have served, ROTC cadets, military spouses and servicemembers currently on active duty, in the reserves or the National Guard – access to career resources and support from VETS job training programs. They also will gain access to apprenticeships, internships and employment placement services aimed at easing the transition into the civilian workforce.

    The memorandum was signed by Assistant Secretary for Veterans’ Employment and Training James D. Rodriguez and Albany State University Interim President Dr. Lawrence M. Drake II.

    “Veterans bring a wealth of experience, leadership and skill to the workforce, and we are excited to partner with Albany State University to support their students as they matriculate and move toward civilian careers,” said Assistant Secretary Rodriguez. “This memorandum of understanding formalizes a partnership that will open doors to career development, job training and employment opportunities for veterans and military students at Albany State University and more HBCUs.” 

    The partnership is part of a larger initiative to connect the department with HBCUs nationwide, enhancing opportunities for veteran students, alumni and military-affiliated individuals. It also aligns with the Biden-Harris Administration’s broader efforts to support HBCUs and veterans, building on executive orders focused on workforce development, education and expanding career pathways for underrepresented groups.

    For more information on the services provided to veterans through VETS please visit dol.gov/vets.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: His Majesty’s Canadian Ships Edmonton and Yellowknife Return from Successful Operation CARIBBE

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Today, His Majesty’s Canadian Ships (HMCS) Edmonton and Yellowknife returned to their home port of Esquimalt, British Columbia, after a successful seven-week deployment on Operation CARIBBE.

    September 25, 2024 – Esquimalt, B.C. – Department of National Defence / Canadian Armed Forces

    Today, His Majesty’s Canadian Ships (HMCS) Edmonton and Yellowknife returned to their home port of Esquimalt, British Columbia, after a successful seven-week deployment on Operation CARIBBE.

    During this deployment, on September 5, 2024, HMCS Yellowknife intercepted a drug smuggling vessel, in close partnership with the embarked United States Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachment. This interdiction, approximately 430 nautical miles southwest of Acapulco, Mexico, resulted in the seizure approximately 1,400 kilograms of cocaine, with an estimated street value of $60 million (Canadian).

    Operation CARIBBE is Canada’s contribution to the U.S.-led Enhanced Counternarcotics Operations under Joint Interagency Task Force – South, which is responsible for conducting interagency and international detection, monitoring operations, and facilitating the interdiction of illicit trafficking. This Operation is one of the many activities undertaken by the Government of Canada to suppress transnational criminal activity at sea and help keep drugs off Canadian streets.

    “The performance of HMCS Edmonton and Yellowknife on Operation CARIBBE was outstanding, bringing great credit to Canada’s Pacific Fleet. The skill and professionalism of both crews, in joint operations with our American allies, enabled the seizure of tens of millions of dollars’ worth of dangerous narcotics. This impressive seizure demonstrably showcases how Canada’s Navy contributes to the overall safety of Canadians. Welcome home and congratulations— you’ve earned it.”

    – Rear-Admiral Christopher Robinson, Commander Maritime Forces Pacific 

     “I would like to thank the crews of HMCS Edmonton and Yellowknife, as well as the embarked U.S. Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachment team who deployed with us. We are proud of our contribution to multinational efforts impeding the flow of illicit narcotics into North America. Through our collaborative efforts, we helped improve the safety and security of Canada.”

    – Lieutenant-Commander Tyson Babcock, Commanding Officer of HMCS Yellowknife

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Experts of the Committee on Enforced Disappearances Commend Morocco on its Transitional Justice Process, Ask Questions on Cases of Disappeared Migrants and on Criminal Investigations into Cases of Enforced Disappearances

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee on Enforced Disappearances today concluded its consideration of the initial report of Morocco, with Committee Experts commending the State on its transitional justice process, while raising questions on recent cases of disappeared migrants and criminal investigations into cases of enforced disappearances.

    Matar Diop, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the transitional justice process in Morocco was a unique experience, which allowed the State to revisit its past.  This commendable initiative had achieved tangible results. 

    Juan Pablo Alban Alencastro, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said worrying information had been received about an event in 2022 regarding migrants who left Morocco trying to reach the Spanish coast and disappeared, and two other recent cases.  Had the State party begun investigations into these events?  Had they carried out search operations?  Had relatives of the victims been able to participate in those search processes? 

    Mr. Alban Alencastro also asked if there had there been any criminal prosecutions resulting from the transitional justice process?  How was it ensured that victims could be involved in these search activities and receive updates, as part of the right to truth?  The Committee would welcome information on efforts taken to excavate mass graves.  What measures were taken to ensure criminal investigations into the disappearances which took place between 1956 and 1999? 

    Regarding the cases of migrants, the delegation said autopsies of 23 victims had been carried out and it was found that one had died of asphyxiation.  The individuals had clustered together, and some managed to get out while others did not, and they died.  There were also hearings with those involved in the operation. Criminal operators had been seeking to push 2,000 people through the crossing point and had used forceful means to try and push them through.  Security forces had sought to respond properly to what was happening. 

    The delegation said the Equity and Reconciliation Commission had dealt with 25,000 cases and treated them all on an equal footing.  Wherever a death had occurred, the family was notified.  Thirteen regions had benefited from the community reparations programmes.  Authorities had been requested to carry out the exhumation of remains in burial sites. After exhumations were carried out, bone analysis was conducted to try to find out who the individuals were. This was one of the key tasks of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission.  It was clear that many violations had occurred between 1956 and 1999. The remains of victims found in these mass graves showed excessive use of force was used against them. Notifying relatives was critical and the State also sought to provide updates through the media. 

    Introducing the report, Abdellatif Ouahbi, Minister of Justice of Morocco and head of the delegation, said Morocco was one of the first contributors to the compilation of the Convention and one of the first States to sign it.  The Equity and Reconciliation Commission adopted the concept of enforced disappearance, as outlined in the Convention.  The Commission was able to fulfil its mission within five years and was able to expand its competence to include all types of violations, including enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention and torture, among others.  Over 27,000 victims or their families received around $212 million in compensation, more than 20,000 people gained health coverage, and 13 regions were covered by the communal reparations programme and received more than $16 million. 

    In concluding remarks, Mr. Ouahbi said Morocco had come a long way and aspired to the best rule of law.  The State had paid more than 200 million dollars in compensation to ensure human dignity.  Mr. Ouahbi thanked the Committee members for their comments and advice.  When the Committee next reviewed Morocco, it was hoped that Morocco’s new Penal Code would be completely adopted.  The Minister thanked the delegation and civil society for their support. 

    Olivier De Frouville, Committee Chair, in his concluding remarks, said the dialogue had been an important first step to pursue cooperation.  The Committee would draw up concluding observations which would pay particular attention to the developing situation in the country and the issues raised in the constructive dialogue.  The State party could count on the Committee’s support in its efforts to implement the Convention.

    The delegation of Morocco consisted of representatives of the House of Representatives; the Chamber of Advisors; the Interministerial Delegation for Human Rights; the Ministry of Justice; the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, African Cooperation and Moroccans living abroad; the Ministry of Health and Social Protection; the General Delegation to Penitentiary, Administration and Reintegration; the Presidency of the Public Ministry; the General Directorate of National Security; and the Permanent Mission of Morocco to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Committee will issue its concluding observations on the report of Morrocco at the end of its twenty-seventh session, which concludes on 4 October.  Summaries of the public meetings of the Committee can be found here, while webcasts of the public meetings can be found here. The programme of work of the Committee’s twenty-seventh session and other documents related to the session can be found here.

    The Committee will next meet in public this afternoon, Wednesday 25 September, at 3 p.m. to begin its consideration of the initial report of Norway (CED/NOR/1).

    Report

    The Committee has before it the initial report of Morocco (CED/MAR/1).

    Presentation of Report

    ABDELLATIF OUAHBI, Minister of Justice of Morocco and head of the delegation, said Morocco was one of the first contributors to the compilation of the Convention and one of the first States to sign it.  It had also supported its international engagement, becoming a member of the Global Initiative for the Convention, which led to a joint action plan to advance universal ratification and implementation.  Morocco was also one of the first States to establish the national mechanism for implementation, reporting, and follow-up, which contributed to the enhancement of interaction with the United Nations human rights mechanisms. 

    During the reporting period, Morocco became a party to the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture, the first Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.  Morocco also welcomed the visit of the Working Group on Enforced Disappearances in 2009, which was the first visit to a State in the region.  The country then hosted the one hundred and eighth session of the Working Group in 2016 and facilitated its successful conduct. 

    Morocco had turned the protection and promotion of human rights into the foundation of the modern State, emphasising the transitional justice workshop to achieve national reconciliation.  In Morocco, there was a limited number of enforced disappearances; most of the victims remained alive and were able to contribute to revealing the truth and participating in the transitional justice process.  Victims also benefited from various measures and procedures aimed at redressing and rehabilitating damages.

    The Equity and Reconciliation Commission adopted the concept of enforced disappearance, as outlined in the Convention.  The files of the persons whose fate was unknown, relating to death during social events, were the most significant files processed.  The Commission adopted the criteria for compensation and reparation, and the principle of not enforcing time limits for cases submitted after the legal period. 

    Detention centres were known to civil society organizations and the press.  The Commission was able to fulfil its mission within five years (September 1999 to November 2005), which included completing investigations, preparing arbitration decisions, holding public hearings, and the issuance of a final report.  The Commission was able to expand its competence to include all types of violations, including enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention and torture, among others.  The concept of the victim was also expanded.  Over 27,000 victims or their families received around $212 million in compensation, more than 20,000 people gained health coverage, and 13 regions were covered by the communal reparations programme and received more than $16 million. In addition, the Commission adopted regional development programmes and launched a programme to rehabilitate detention centres and preserve the memory associated with them.

    The positive dynamics led to the adoption of a new Constitution in 2011, which enabled the prohibition of enforced disappearance, torture and other gross human rights violations.  Morocco also engaged in a comprehensive reform of the justice system through the adoption of the Code of Military Justice and through the establishment of an independent judicial power and institutional mechanisms.  The State issued laws relating to the Supreme Council of the Judicial Power.  Mr. Ouahbi assured the Committee of Morocco’s close cooperation during the dialogue. The State was helping with the organisation of the first world conference on enforced disappearances in January 2025.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the large delegation from Morocco testified to the extent to which the State valued human rights and human dignity.  It also demonstrated the State’s determination to effectively implement the provisions of the Convention.  Morocco had ratified the Convention in May 2013.  Since its ratification, no national court had been seized of a case of enforced disappearance, within the meaning of the definition set out in the Convention.  However, this did not mean there were no issues to discuss.  The Committee hoped to have a constructive dialogue which would allow them to revisit the past. 

    The Equity and Reconciliation Commission aimed to address the weight of the past.  Could Morocco provide clarification on articles 31 and 32 of the Convention regarding individual and inter-State communications? 

    The National Human Rights Council was a fully independent national constitutional institution in the exercise of its mandate to promote and protect human rights and prevent possible violations of human rights.  The members were selected to represent the different regions of the country, Moroccans living abroad, young people, persons with disabilities and children. The Committee recognised that the process was commendable.  Who appointed the members and how was their independence guaranteed?  Did these members have a mandate and what were the terms? 

         

    Which administrative or judicial authority managed the database on missing persons?  Did this information overlap with other databases, such as the registers of persons deprived of their liberty, and were these databases accessible to all interested persons?  The State party had indicated that a revision of the Criminal Code was underway, which included a definition of enforced disappearances, in line with the Convention, which provided for penalties proportionate to the gravity of the offences committed.  Had the bill moved out of the drafting stage?  Was it before Parliament for consideration?  Why had it taken so long – 15 years – to adopt this document?  Was the definition of enforced disappearance as defined in the draft Criminal Code the final version?  Nothing was specified about the nature of the offence.  Was it ensured that enforced disappearance was a crime, not an offence? 

    On the issue of criminal responsibility, how did Morocco reconcile two texts regarding responsibility of enforced disappearance, with the provisions of article 6.2 of the Convention, which stated that “No order or instruction issued by a public authority, civil, military or otherwise, may be invoked to justify a crime of enforced disappearance”?

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the Committee would appreciate an explanation on whether there were specific provisions under domestic law that addressed the issue of the application of the statute of limitations to enforced disappearance cases, in line with the Convention?  Could the State explain whether other remedies aside from compensation were available for victims, aside from civil claims? 

    How were domestic law provisions applicable to cases of enforced disappearance, given that enforced disappearance had not been expressly defined as an offence in national law?  What prosecutions were in place for this crime under national law?  What existing legal and administrative measures were in place as vehicles for conducting a preliminary inquiry or investigation to establish the facts?  Given that enforced disappearance had not been expressly defined as an offence in national law, could the Committee clarify whether military courts were competent to investigate or prosecute persons accused of committing crimes of abduction and unlawful detention? 

    How was it ensured in practice that all reported cases of enforced disappearance were investigated? What measures were taken to ensure that a search was immediately initiated when the authorities become aware of a case of enforced disappearance?  Was there a mechanism in place to exclude from investigations into alleged cases of enforced disappearance, any State officials who were suspected of having committed the offence?  Did national law establish that a State official suspected of involvement in an offence of enforced disappearance should be suspended from duty? The Committee would welcome information on the status of the investigations and search efforts concerning the events of 1956–1999, and the disappearance of Sahrawi victims in Western Sahara?  Could the State party provide specific examples on how victims’ family members were protected from reprisals? 

    Worrying information had been received about an event in 2022 regarding migrants who left Morocco trying to reach the Spanish coast and disappeared, and two other recent cases. Had the State party begun investigations into these events?  Had they carried out search operations?  Had relatives of the victims been able to participate in those search processes? 

    Given that enforced disappearance was not established as an offence in the Criminal Code, what measures had been adopted to ensure that it was included as an extraditable crime in all treaties?  Were there any potential obstacles to extradition under national legislation, or extradition treaties or agreements with third countries with regard specifically to enforced disappearance?  The Government had stated that it had not received any requests to provide assistance to victims.  Had measures been planned at the domestic level? 

    When dealing with deceased persons, were there measures to ensure reciprocal action for exhumation and the return of remains?  This was very relevant considering that according to information received, at least in cases involving the disappearance of Sahrawi victims in Western Sahara, there had been explicit requests for assistance which may not have been responded to positively.

    A Committee Expert thanked Morocco for their input in working on the general comment on enforced disappearance and migration.  The general comment was adopted in 2023; how was the State following up its recommendations? The Committee had received information that people were still missing from Sudan and Chad.  What were the findings in this regard?

    Another Expert welcomed the sizable delegation of Morocco which indicated the importance they attached to the Convention. Had the guiding principles adopted by the Committee been broadly disseminated within the bodies responsible for searching for disappeared persons?  Could there be dual incrimination for enforced disappearances, with a view to extradition?     

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the reform of the Penal Code was a long-term process.  The Equity and Reconciliation Commission had produced recommendations which aimed to reform the Criminal Code.  Following a national dialogue, a partial bill was created which was submitted to Parliament.  The amendments included the criminalisation of enforced disappearance.  The new parliament aimed to comprehensively reform the Criminal Code, which was why the partial bill was withdrawn.  The draft revision now had legal definitions and had raised enforced disappearance to a crime, which was punishable with up to life imprisonment.  Penalties were increased according to aggravated circumstances. 

    The Criminal Code stated that enforced disappearance was a crime against humanity, in line with the Convention. There were 90 bilateral agreements in the areas of extradition and the transfer of convicted criminals.  Since the adoption of the 2011 Constitution, Morocco had not responded to any request from a bilateral partner which would entail a risk to the extradited person.  However, the State did respond positively in cases of criminal proceedings where there were no such risks. 

    Morocco continued to participate in the individual communication mechanisms of the United Nations. The National Human Rights Council was a pluralist and constitutional body which played a key role in the promotion of human rights in the country.  It had been awarded A status.  Eight members of the body were selected from civil society organizations.

    Morocco left no stone unturned to ensure that international human rights instruments were made well known, including their related protocols.  This included the Convention and the Committees’ concluding observations, which were published on various channels, including the Gazette of Morocco, which was freely available to anyone in the country.  Texts of treaties and conventions to which Morocco was a party were also published online, as were studies in key human rights areas.
    Training was provided to law enforcement officials on human rights and human rights instruments.  This was a key part of continuous and ongoing training as well as basic training for law officials. 

    Morocco had shared several observations and comments on the topic of migration and enforced disappearance.  The general comment on this issue was disseminated to all relevant bodies and was part of the training for those who worked in these entities.

    Morocco had duly criminalised enforced disappearance.  The Constitution prohibited enforced disappearance because it was a violation of international humanitarian law and international human rights law.  Legislation had been strengthened to properly cover the crime of enforced disappearance, including human trafficking and torture.  Anyone who had born witness to enforced disappearance was obliged to report what they had witnessed. 

    Tools were in place for reparation, remedy and compensation, which were made available to all victims.  Criminal proceedings could also be pursued before the courts.  Regarding the cases of migrants who disappeared in 2022, investigations included the identification of those who disappeared.  Steps were taken to involve diplomatic missions to identify remains and bodies.  Relatives were involved in these investigations.  Photos were taken and evidence was gathered and sent to laboratories, including fingerprints.  For the 23 bodies which could not be identified, seven had been able to be identified through conferring with the families.  Investigations were ongoing on the other cases. 

    Morocco had an electronic database system, which contained all search notices, including those issued by the judicial police, and those involving other people who had disappeared.  The database was extensive and contained all necessary information on disappeared persons and fugitives.  When no trace of a disappeared person could be found, accelerated measures were applied, and relatives were contacted. 

    Morocco was undergoing a unique experience on transitional justice, and the Equity and Reconciliation Commission had achieved a lot in five years.  Civil society was needed as a key partner. 

    In 1991, after the body was established, it launched a unique initiative, calling for all detention centres under the dictatorship to be closed.  Thanks to this action, 511 persons who had been forcibly disappeared were liberated.  These people served as the living memory of a clandestine system which was not properly documented.  It also helped the State to understand the fate of others who were disappeared. Fifty-five different graves had been uncovered due to ramped up activity, supported by the authorities. Hearings had been held across the country, where victims of violations were interviewed.  They spoke directly and frankly about what they had experienced. 

    For the past few years, Parliament had called for a full reform of the judiciary.  Morocco had worked on adopting the rules of fair trial. A special institute worked on forensic and legal medicine, which helped in cases such as rape, or other matters like inheritance.  DNA was the only way to effectively determine the identity of a person. 

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the transitional justice process in Morocco was a unique experience, and the existence of the body allowed the State to revisit its past.  This commendable initiative had achieved tangible results. What had happened to the searches carried out as part of the transitional justice process?  Did the State party intend to prosecute the perpetrators of the crimes of enforced disappearances if they knew who they were?  If not, did they intend to find them?  To pay historic debt, it was important to bring perpetrators to justice. 

    Did the State intend to recognise the competence of the Committee so it could receive individual victim complaints or communications?  What was the central body which managed the database? Exoneration for carrying out enforced disappearance, due to acting in hierarchical order, was outlined in the State party’s Constitution, although the Convention did not allow for this.

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, asked what necessary conditions needed to be met so Morocco could recognise the competency of the Committee to receive individual communications? Morocco stated that enforced disappearance was criminalised within the Constitution.  Was article 23 of the Constitution directly applicable in criminal proceedings?  How far had enforced disappearance been criminalised as a stand-alone crime, as well as a crime against humanity?  Today, the delegation had said that a statute of limitations started as of when the situation of a disappeared person was determined.  Could clarification on this be provided?  What had been the outcomes of the search efforts deployed in relation to the almost 70 migrants who had disappeared?  Had the State been able to bring the perpetrators to justice?  How did the authorities decide whether a case was one of enforced disappearance?  How were active extradition proceedings handled? 

    An Expert asked if Morocco received a request for extradition for a Moroccan, where there was an enforced disappearance in a different country, and this was denied because of nationality, on what basis would they be judged? 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said eight members of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission were victims of flagrant human rights violations.  The Chair regularly gathered victims of human rights violations.  A symposium in 2001 brought together civil society and political parties.  All victims received a document containing details, including name, date of release, and where they were held, as applicable.  The State made it clear to the victim that the Moroccan State took responsibility as the perpetrator of those acts.  The State had a national strategy to ensure the non-recurrence of these atrocities.  It was clear that the judiciary needed to be independent and just. 

    Irrespective of the duration of the enforced disappearance, it was considered to be a crime. Extradition occurred in the legal phase and the administrative phase.  It was up to the judiciary to weigh in on the issue of a dual penalty. There was constant monitoring and oversight of individuals in custody on a daily basis.  There was no definition of enforced disappearance as provided for in the Convention.  Morocco would take steps to align the definition with the Convention.

     

    Regarding the cases of migrants, autopsies of 23 victims had been carried out and it was found that one had died of asphyxiation.  The individuals had clustered together, and some managed to get out while others did not and they died.  There were also hearings with those involved in the operation. Criminal operators had been seeking to push 2,000 people through the crossing point and had used forceful means to try and push them through.  Security forces had sought to respond properly to what was happening.  There was no statute of limitations applied to cases of enforced disappearances.

    Morocco believed that meetings like this would help the State further develop its human rights approach.  It was hoped Morocco would be the gold standard when it came to human rights. The State had duly acknowledged what had happened and had accepted the blame.  It was important these events never happened again.  The State was determined to ensure non-repetition and non-recurrence.  To achieve this, society needed to understand what their rights were. 

    The State had major problems on the issue of illegal migrants; 50,000 residents’ permits had been issued to respond to this crisis.  Female illegal migrants had access to healthcare in hospitals, irrespective of their illegal status.  Addressing the criminal gangs involved in illegal migration was a major challenge for the State.  The State needed to protect the rights of these migrants, some of whom had no identity documents.  Morocco was dealing with a mass wave of illegal migrants of which they knew very little about.  Some of these people, such as Sudanese migrants, could not go home in the current circumstances.  Morocco was close to Europe and many migrants were aiming to reach Europe as their final destination. 

    Often security forces were attacked in the discharge of their duties.  Democracy was the only way to ensure there was no repetition of the crimes of the past.  The State was aware of amendments to legislation which needed to be made, and these conversations were happening.  The State wanted to further develop the country and ensure full respect for all peoples, including Palestinian people. 

    This year, more than 200 trafficking networks had been dismantled and over 48,000 persons involved in illegal migration had been stopped.  In coordination with the International Organization on Migration, voluntary returns were organised.  The State did not use collective extradition and was working on a draft bill on migration. 

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said article 16 of the Convention contained the principle of “non-refoulment.”  What measures was the State party taking to always guarantee strict adherence to the principles of non-refoulment?  Could a decision authorising the return or expulsion of an individual be appealed?  What was the procedure for lodging an appeal?  Who approved appeals?  Which mechanisms ensured each case was reviewed individually before any expulsion or extradition took place?   

    Was the risk of enforced disappearance taken into account when considering the expulsion of a foreign national?  Which authority took the decision to expel an individual?  How was this notified to the concerned parties?  What timeframe did the individual have to lodge an appeal? Were they informed of their right to an appeal?  If one appealed the extradition order, was the expulsion order immediately suspended? How was it ensured that all persons deprived of their liberty were guaranteed their rights from the outset of detention, including the right to contact their lawyer and receive visits? Whatever the place of deprivation of liberty, it was vital that the person was able to receive information concerning their case.  This was vital to prevent secret detentions.

    What sanctions were in place for those who violated rules and norms in places of detention? Where did things currently stand with regard to the project to implement an electronic custody register, to allow for one single central database?  Could an irregular migrant in the country be held in custody prior to their return?

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the Committee had noted that under domestic law, a person affected by a crime could institute a civil action.  How did the national legislation define a victim?  How had the definition of a victim been amended in national legislation to ensure it conformed with the Convention?  Was a victim of enforced disappearance obliged to initiate criminal proceedings of any kind?  How was it guaranteed in practice that cases of enforced disappearances were duly investigated?  When a person was disappeared, what measures were taken to ensure a search was immediately initiated and that authorities were made aware of their disappearance?

    Had there been any criminal prosecutions resulting from the transitional justice process? How was it ensured that victims could be involved in these search activities and receive updates, as part of the right to truth?  The Committee acknowledged the State party’s efforts in regard to the Equity and Reconciliation Commission.  Could further information be provided on measures to facilitate access to archives? What steps were taken to preserve these archives?  Who was responsible for their maintenance and integrity? 

    The Committee would welcome information on efforts taken to excavate mass graves.  What measures were taken to ensure criminal investigations into the disappearances which took place between 1956 and 1999? Was there a mechanism for launching an immediate search at a local level whenever disappearances were reported? What mechanisms were in place to guarantee effective collaboration between the authorities involved in the search for and investigations on disappeared persons? 

    The Committee took note of reparations documented by the Equity and Reconciliation Commission, which were welcomed.  What criteria were used to establish the amount of compensation to be paid to each victim?  Could victims lodge their own claims for reparation?  How were reparation rules applied to Sahrawi victims in Western Sahara? The Committee had received information that there were housing projects built on places of burial.  What was being done to preserve these areas?  What institutional reforms had been adopted to ensure that democracy and the rule of law could flourish?  What was being done to try and investigate the death of a disappeared person, despite a death certificate? 

    The Committee acknowledged the information provided by the State on all the different crimes committed against children.  In Fez, allegedly the babies of teenage unmarried mothers were taken away from them and trafficked by gangs.  Civil society organizations had reported that there were thousands of unaccompanied migrant children who had disappeared after landing in Europe, with many being Moroccan.  Could the delegation comment on this?  How many times had DNA been used in cases of enforced disappearances?  How was the principle of non-refoulment respected in extradition proceedings?  How was the right of a detainee to communicate with their family guaranteed? How could a foreign detainee communicate with the consular authority of their country?  How was the right of communication guaranteed for detainees? 

    An Expert asked how the State conducted a proper risk assessment, when considering sending someone back to their country?  The Committee had received information of people being returned from Morocco despite facing risks in their own country. 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Morocco was duty bound to protect citizens and everyone in the land.  The State always respected the decisions of the Committee against Torture and would never extradite anyone who was at threat of torture.  On the specific decisions mentioned, Morocco had respected the decisions of the Committee against Torture.  The State was responsible and accountable for acts prior to 1999.  The State did not recruit children, and the abduction of any child was a crime.  If Morocco allowed the abduction of 6,000 children to take place under their noses, were they really a functioning State?  To claim 6,000 children had been abducted in Morocco was shocking. Nothing prevented anyone detained in Morocco from receiving visitors.  Nobody was held in secret detention.  Morocco did not engage in reprisals and did not discriminate against anyone. 

    The Equity and Reconciliation Commission asked what violations had occurred, rather than pushing for proof.  The Commission had learned from the past and worked with national human rights associations. It was important to make a distinction between compensation and reparations.  Women received a 20 per cent bonus on top of any compensation paid to a man.  A larger sum of compensation was also paid to a person who had been held in a secret detention facility.  The State worked with psychologists and psychiatrists to help those affected reintegrate into society.  When all detainees were released by the King, one detainee passed away after being released. The children of those who had died were reintegrated into society by the State.  Enforced disappearance was not subject to the statute of limitations; the State was seeking to close all cases of enforced disappearance. 

    Moroccan law prohibited any form of secret detention.  Detainees were guaranteed contact with their families and legal representation.  Foreigners could contact their consular representatives.  From 2019 to 2023, there were over 16,000 visits to places of detention.  Any person detained had the right to contact a lawyer.  Any person who considered themselves to be a victim could contact the relevant authorities.  The concept of victim also included public benefit organizations or organizations working to combat violence against women. 

    Regarding the disappearance of children, there was a search procedure which aimed to find disappeared children.  The kefala of a child could not be given to a person who had been convicted of a crime relating to morality.  There were many reform workshops which had taken place.  The number of forensic doctors had been increased from 13 to 260. Since adopting genetic digital prints, the State had created a database to collect all the information. Fingerprints and DNA prints from the scene of the crime, or from those accused were collected.  This allowed a biological link to the victim to be established. 

    Morocco had seen huge progress regarding enacting laws and establishing legal systems with a comprehensive, eco-systemic approach.  The State aimed to ensure human rights were a basis and a real doctrine. There was no discrimination within Morocco, and the country was open to the world.  The State did not forget the importance of institutional reform, with regards to the moving of supervision to the Public Prosecutor. 

    The State had independent mechanisms which were not subject to any other authority.  A programme of action had been implemented for continuous training of police, as well as rehabilitation for any kind of detention.  The national commission to combat torture could access all records, as well as the register of persons deprived of liberty. 

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said it was important to get a proper grasp of the refoulment procedure.  Which administrative authority took the decision on expulsion?  How was the decision notified to the interested party?  Did the interested party have a clear timeframe to which they could lodge an appeal against this decision?  Where did the State stand in the reparation and rehabilitation process for victims? Did the National Human Rights Council intend to reopen the compensation files? 

    The Committee had heard reports that former detention centres had fallen entirely into ruin. What was the current status of the community reparation programme?  Mr. Diop thanked the delegation for their willingness to respond to the Committee’s questions. 

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said he had never mentioned 6,000 children; perhaps there was a mistranslation.  Thousands of children had come to Europe, according to sources, with many being Moroccan. What was the State doing to prevent the disappearance of children?  If the State could explain why these statements were false, this would be highly appreciated.  Had the issue of criminal responsibility been sidelined since the State was striving for lasting reconciliation?  Had people who had been indicated as possible violators of human rights been removed from their jobs?  Who was a victim according to the law and Moroccan jurisprudence?  Could tangible examples be provided of how Morocco accommodated the gender perspective, and the needs of women and children who were close to a disappeared person? 

    A Committee Expert asked if persons who were detained had the right to communicate with those stipulated under their rights, including legal representation?  Could persons held incommunicado still communicate? Were discovered remains returned to relatives in a dignified manner?  What role did the Public Prosecutor play in the search for disappeared persons? 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Equity and Reconciliation Commission had dealt with 25,000 cases and treated them all on an equal footing.  Wherever a death had occurred, the family was notified.  Morocco continued to provide assistance to marginalised communities.  Thirteen regions had benefited from the community reparations programmes. Authorities had been requested to carry out exhumation of remains in burial sites.  After exhumations were carried out, bone analysis was conducted, to understand who the individuals were.  This was one of the key tasks of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission. 

    It was clear that there were many violations which occurred between 1956 and 1999.  Remains of victims found in these mass graves showed excessive use of force was used against them.  Notifying relatives was critical and the State also sought to provide updates through the media.  A funeral had been held in Casablanca for 840 people who had been disappeared.  Their remains were transported in trucks and reburied with more dignity. 

    Enforced return related to migration.  Significant work was done on voluntary repatriation.  Everyone had the right to repeal a refoulment procedure before the court. This was considered an urgent procedure. The law stipulated the need to find alternatives, including a country of origin or a third country which could receive the person.  A foreigner who was pregnant or a minor could not be subject to refoulment.  There were guarantees of protection from ill treatment. Any person affected by a crime could request the protection of their rights, be it civil or criminal.  The person could also receive legal assistance upon request.  There were rules and conditions for custody.  As for the Criminal Code, the reform had led to additional guarantees, especially with regard to confessions before judiciary police, which were now considered null and void.  If a decision was claimed to be illegal, it could be appealed, and action needed to be taken within 24 hours. 

    Morocco received everybody without discrimination.  In Morocco, laws addressed every citizen, never a particular community.  The law relating to prisons applied to all detainees, whether they were Moroccan or foreigners.  There was also a law which enhanced the independence of the judiciary and the Public Prosecutor’s Office.  There was a draft civil law which led to a community discussion amongst the people of Morocco.  Every generation in Morocco had more freedom compared to the previous generation.  The State was always seeking to improve and achieve more. 

    The Public Prosecutor’s Office was in charge of search and investigation.  Judges from the Office supervised these processes. Morocco’s national legislation was fully in line with article 6 of the Convention. 

    Closing Remarks

    ABDELLATIF OUAHBI, Minister of Justice of Morocco and head of the delegation, said there needed to be a link between reparation and the person who was subject to harm.  Decisions and rulings had been handed down and victims had been compensated, because the State was responsible for protecting individuals.  Morocco had compensated the families of two Norwegians who were killed by terrorist attacks in Morocco.  Morocco had a committee which held meetings with counterparts in Europe, asking to provide lists of children, and investigations had been carried out.  Most of the children were foreign children, but some were Moroccan who had been released abroad.  Morocco had come a long way and aspired to the best rule of law.  The State had paid more than 200 million dollars in compensation to ensure human dignity.  Mr. Ouahbi thanked the Committee members for their comments and advice.  When the Committee next reviewed Morocco, it was hoped that the new Penal Code would be completely adopted.  The Minister thanked the delegation and civil society for their support. 

    OLIVIER DE FROUVILLE, Committee Chair, said the dialogue had been an important first step to pursue cooperation.  The Committee would draw up concluding observations which would pay particular attention to the developing situation in the country and the issues raised in the constructive dialogue.  The State party could count on the Committee’s support in its efforts to implement the Convention.

     

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

    CED24.008E

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Bharat has emerged as the most buoyant economy in the world that has 8% growth prospects for decades to come, stresses VP

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Bharat has emerged as the most buoyant economy in the world that has 8% growth prospects for decades to come, stresses VP

    India is now a global happening place and Uttar Pradesh is bubbling with activity, says VP

    Local to Global: Propelling India’s Economic Rise, says Shri Dhankhar

    Vice-President lauds Uttar Pradesh’s Transformation into ‘Uttam Pradesh’

    Synergy between PM Modi’s Vision and CM Yogi’s Leadership Driving India’s Journey toward Viksit Bharat by 2047, says VP Dhankhar

    Vice-President inaugurates the 2nd Edition of UP International Trade Show at Greater Noida in UP

    Posted On: 25 SEP 2024 3:53PM by PIB Delhi

    The Hon’ble Vice-President of India, Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar today stated that Bharat is now one of the most buoyant economies in the world and a favorite destination for global investment. Delivering the inaugural address at the 2nd edition of the Uttar Pradesh International Trade Show 2024, held in Greater Noida today, Shri Dhankhar highlighted, “Today, Bharat is a near $4 trillion economy that has 8% growth prospects for decades to come. India is now a global happening place and Uttar Pradesh, the state bubbling with activity”.

    Synergy between the PM’s vision coupled with CM Yogi’s execution, which has no accommodation for corruption, no tolerance for inefficiency has transformed Uttar Pradesh into Uttam Pradesh.

    Sustained efforts of Yogi ji are leading the way and Uttar Pradesh is fast becoming Udyam… pic.twitter.com/zOezsoQFK9

    — Vice-President of India (@VPIndia) September 25, 2024

    Praising the country’s infrastructure development, Shri Dhankhar cited  addition of 8 new airports annually, rapid expansion of metro systems, and the daily construction of 28 kilometres of highway. Shri Dhankhar pointed to the 12 new industrial zones taking shape under Prime Minister Modi’s leadership, which will boost manufacturing and position India to capitalize on emerging technologies like AI, electric mobility, and semiconductors.

    The Vice-President emphasized the significant advancements in India’s infrastructure, stating, “We now have the world’s second-largest metro network, and the number of cities with airports has doubled from 70 to 140. India is the largest connected nation globally, with over 800 million broadband users.” He further highlighted the impact of digital technologies, which have enabled housing for 170 million people, health coverage for 60 million, and loans for 58 million small businesses annually.

    “In terms of digital financial transactions, India records the highest globally, with 13 billion transactions per month. Additionally, we boast the world’s third-largest startup ecosystem, featuring 117 unicorns and the third-largest purchasing power in the world,” he noted.

    Shri Dhankhar also underscored the importance of the semiconductor industry, stating, “This industry, which is critical to our growth, is projected to surpass $55 billion by 2026. I have no doubt this century belongs to Bharat”, he noted.

    Additionally, the Vice-President highlighted Bharat’s remarkable leap from “Make in India” to “Conceptualize, Design, and Make in India.” He noted that India is now engaged in its own concept evolution, with both multinational corporations and Indian companies adopting a synergetic stance.

    Hon’ble Vice-President, Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar visited the stalls of partner country, Vietnam at the 2nd edition of Uttar Pradesh International Trade Show at Gautam Buddha Nagar, Uttar Pradesh today. @UPIntrTradeShow #UPITS2024 @myogiadityanath pic.twitter.com/cdwSpr2l6k

    — Vice-President of India (@VPIndia) September 25, 2024

    This event, Shri Dhankhar remarked, aligns with Prime Minister Modi’s vision of an ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’ and embraces the motto of ‘Local to Global.’ “First, it was ‘Vocal for Local,’ and now we are taking it to the next level with ‘Local to Global.’ India’s progress is evident in various sectors, and this trade show serves as the right epicentre to propel that growth,” he added.

    Shri Dhankhar lauded Uttar Pradesh’s transformation into Uttam Pradesh under the synergy between Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi’s vision and Chief Minister Shri Yogi Adityanath’s execution. He highlighted that this same synergy is propelling India’s transformation towards a Viksit Bharat by 2047.

    Commending the Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Shri Yogi Adityanath, the Vice President highlighted how Uttar Pradesh, once plagued with challenges, has been transformed into a beacon of progress and development. “Nothing is more important for investment than Law and order. Law and order defines Democracy and the CM of UP Yogi Adityanath defines Law and order!” he noted.

    Nothing is more important for investment than Law and order.

    Law and order defines Democracy and the CM of UP Yogi Adityanath defines Law and order! @UPIntrTradeShow #UPITS2024 pic.twitter.com/HvFfLwR7UZ

    — Vice-President of India (@VPIndia) September 25, 2024

    The Vice-President also highlighted the significance of showcasing Vietnam as the Partner Country at the trade show, describing it as a natural partnership that will foster cultural and economic exchanges between the two nations while strengthening the resolve for a greater role for Global South in international affairs. “Vietnam has impressive GDP of $435 billion, and we look forward to witnessing their exceptional products and innovative manufacturing practices”, VP said.

    Shri Dhankhar said, “In this phenomenal economic upsurge and unprecedented infrastructure growth across the nation, the largest state of Uttar Pradesh is playing a pivotal role, unlike the scenario that existed a few years ago.” The Vice President expressed confidence that under CM Yogi Adityanath’s able leadership, Uttar Pradesh will achieve its target of becoming a $1 trillion economy by 2027, contributing significantly to India’s emergence as a $5 trillion economy.

    With its vast resources, burgeoning population, and strategic location, Uttar Pradesh is emerging as a growth engine propelling India’s economic trajectory. The Vice President stated, “Uttar Pradesh is no longer a sleeping giant; it is now a state in action, leveraging its strengths such as fertile land, a young workforce, religious tourism, and a vibrant ecosystem of Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).”

    Recalling the past, the Vice-President noted, “A decade ago, our economy was staggering, and the mood of the nation was shaky. But the last decade has seen unprecedented transformation.

    Finally the Vice-President called for collective effort, stating, “Ladies and gentlemen, as we advance, we are witnessing a new dawn for Uttar Pradesh—a future where our nation stands tall as a global leader in trade, innovation, and cultural heritage.”

    The Vice-President also visited the exhibition on the premises.

    Shri Yogi Adityanath, Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh; Shri Jitan Ram Manji, Minister of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises, Govt. of India, Shri Nand Gopal Gupta ‘Nandi’, Minister of Industrial Development, Export Promotion, NRI, Investment Promotion, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh, Shri Rakesh Sachan, Minister of MSME, Khadi and Villages Industries, Sericulture Industries, Handloom and Textile, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh and other dignitaries were also present on the occasion.

    Read full text here : https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2058592

    ****

    JK/RC/SM

    (Release ID: 2058607) Visitor Counter : 85

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Carbajal Votes to Prevent Harmful Government Shutdown, Avert Pay Cut for Wildland Firefighters

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Salud Carbajal (CA-24)

    Rep. Salud Carbajal (CA-24) voted today on a clean extension of government funding that averts a costly government shutdown, rejects Project 2025 policy riders, and averts an imminent pay cut for federal wildland firefighters currently battling blazes across California.

    “From the beginning of this Congress, House Democrats and I have made it clear that we are prepared to work across the aisle to find bipartisan common ground to responsibly fund our government and sustain programs that help Central Coast families. But since we finalized last year’s budget, House Republican leadership has spent more time pursuing policies from Donald Trump’s Project 2025, putting right-wing extremist priorities like voter suppression ahead of actually governing – all while endangering our national security, veteran’s benefits, and essential services,” said Rep. Carbajal.

    “This lack of bipartisan cooperation has put Congress in a position to once again need to extend government funding to the end of this year while we continue working to finalize a budget for the coming fiscal year. As ever, I remain committed to putting governing ahead of partisan games, and I hope my colleagues will do the same.”

    “I’m glad that this bill averts the impending pay cliff for federal wildland firefighters. As my colleagues and I have advocated for throughout this Congress, I will continue to push for our permanent fix to be included in the final budget agreement later this year. Our wildland firefighters are working day and night to protect our communities from dangerous fires. The last thing we should do is allow a devastating pay cut in the middle of fire season.”

    The funding resolution passed today by the U.S. House of Representatives sustains current government funding levels through December 20, 2024. The measure now advances to the Senate, where it is expected to pass and reach the President’s desk before the end of the Fiscal Year on Monday, September 30.

    Congressman Carbajal pushed to avert the impending pay cut for federal wildland firefighters by advocating for passage of the Wildland Firefighter Paycheck Protection Act to permanently increase the base pay, deployment pay, and benefits for federal wildland firefighters. He introduced this bill with his colleagues last year to make permanent the pay increases provided by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law in 2021.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: Ukraine: Death toll keeps rising – UN Chief at the Security Council | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Briefing by United Nations Secretary-General, Mr. António Guterres, on the Maintenance of peace and security of Ukraine – Security Council, 9731th meeting.

    —————————————-

    “Mr. President, Excellencies,

    Two days ago, in the newly agreed Pact for the Future, world leaders reaffirmed their commitment to international law and to the Charter of the United Nations.

    Our Organization is based on the principle of sovereignty of all Member States – within their internationally recognized borders.

    The Charter unequivocally stipulates that all States must refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any other State – and that international disputes must be settled by peaceful means.

    Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 – following the illegal annexation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and City of Sevastopol a decade ago – is a clear violation of these principles.

    And civilian populations continue to pay the price.

    The death toll keeps rising.

    Nearly 10 million people have fled their homes.

    Systematic attacks against hospitals, schools, supermarkets… are only adding pain and misery.

    Power cuts and infrastructure damage have left millions in the dark.

    I strongly condemn all attacks on civilians and civilian facilities – wherever they occur and whoever is responsible. They all must stop immediately.

    And I remain deeply concerned about the safety, humanitarian needs and basic human rights of people residing in occupied areas.

    Mr. President,

    Despite immense challenges, the United Nations remains fully engaged as the largest international presence in Ukraine.

    This year alone, and together with our partners, we have provided lifesaving aid to more than 6.2 million people.

    But we need the support of the international community.

    15 million people in Ukraine require humanitarian assistance – more than half of them women and girls.

    But – as winter is approaching – less than half of our 2024 Humanitarian Response Plan is funded.

    I urge donors to help us pursue our vital work on the ground.

    We are also assisting the government of Ukraine in its recovery and reconstruction efforts.

    This includes access to basic services and the restoration of Ukraine’s energy production capacities.

    In recent weeks, we have seen a resurgence of inflammatory rhetoric and incidents around nuclear sites – particularly at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, and alarmingly, at the Kursk Nuclear Power Plant in the Russian Federation.

    I commend the International Atomic Energy Agency, including its critical presence in Ukraine’s nuclear sites, to help ensure nuclear safety and security.

    I urge all parties to act responsibly and avoid any declaration or action that could further destabilize an already incendiary situation.

    Mr. President,

    Two and half years since the full-blown invasion of Ukraine, more than 11,000 civilians have been killed.

    The longer this tragic war continues, the greater the risk of escalation and spillover.

    This would not only impact the region, but further deepen global tensions and divisions – at a time when our world desperately needs more cooperation and collective action.

    We must stop the suffering and break the cycle of violence – for the sake of the people of Ukraine, the people of Russia, and the world.

    The Black Sea Initiative and the continued exchanges of prisoners of war serve as reminders that, when there is political will, diplomacy can succeed – even in the darkest hour.

    Today, though the prospects for peace may seem distant, I am inspired by the growing calls for dialogue.

    So let us intensify our efforts to seek peace in Ukraine – a just, comprehensive and sustainable peace, in line with the UN Charter, international law and resolutions of the General Assembly.

    United Nations stands ready to support all efforts towards achieving this goal.

    Thank you”.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Gd58Brn2fA

    MIL OSI Video –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Lee Introduces the Saving Privacy Act to Protect Americans’ Financial Data

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Utah Mike Lee
     
    WASHINGTON –Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) introduced the Saving Privacy Act, a bill to end government abuse of Americans’ financial information. For years, federal agencies have been overreaching in their surveillance, collecting vast amounts of personal financial data from law-abiding citizens without just cause. Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) is an original co-sponsor of the bill.
    “The federal government has no business surveilling the financial activities of millions of innocent Americans,” said Senator Lee. “The current system erodes the privacy rights of citizens, while doing little to effectively catch true financial criminals. My Saving Privacy Act ensures that Americans’ personal information is protected and that government agencies operate within the bounds of the Constitution.”
    “Big government has no place in law-abiding Americans’ personal finances. It is a massive overreach of the government and a gross violation of their privacy,” said Senator Rick Scott. “That is why I am teaming up with Senator Lee so that we can protect Americans’ personal financials for good. Our Saving Privacy Act will allow federal agencies to go after criminals while also protecting innocent Americans’ data. This is commonsense legislation, and I am urging my colleagues to support its immediate passage.”
    “This kind of reform restores the proper balance—as provided by the Fourth Amendment—between Americans’ privacy rights and law enforcement’s ability to gather evidence to enforce laws. It would protect individuals’ financial privacy and improve federal agencies’ abilities to prosecute criminal activity rather than sift through millions of low-value reports. This kind of reform is long overdue.” – Norbert Michel, Jennifer Schulp, and Nicholas Anthony of the Cato Institute
      “Financial privacy is of paramount importance in the digital age,” said Bryan Bashur, Director of Financial Policy for Americans for Tax Reform. “Lawmakers should support Sen. Lee’s efforts to further preserve financial privacy and prevent the federal government from easily accessing this information. Enacting this legislation will also protect consumers from other existential threats to financial privacy—such as tracking stock trading and electronic payment activity. 
    Government surveillance efforts have been largely ineffective, as demonstrated by the dismal success rate of suspicious activity reports (SARs) submitted to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). In FY2023, financial institutions submitted 25.4 million SARs and currency transaction reports (CTRs), yet less than 0.3% of these reports resulted in relevant IRS-CI and FBI cases.
    In recent years, FinCEN and the FBI surveilled the financial transactions of individuals and solicited banks for information on purchases related to “Trump,” “MAGA,” firearms, and even religious texts. Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has quietly been constructing a centralized database, the Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT), designed to track every single stock market transaction and the personal information of millions of Americans without any congressional approval.
    Senator Lee’s bill, the Saving Privacy Act, seeks to curb these abuses and restore Fourth Amendment protections for all Americans.
    Key Provisions of the Saving Privacy Act:
     
    Repeals the Bank Secrecy Act’s SAR and CTR reporting requirements while maintaining recordkeeping provisions.
    Repeals the Corporate Transparency Act.
    Strengthens Fourth Amendment protections, bolstering warrant requirements in the Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978.
    Repeals the SEC’s Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT) database.
    Requires congressional approval for any new databases that collect personally identifiable information of U.S. citizens.
    Prohibits the creation of a Central Bank Digital Currency.
    Requires congressional authorization for financial regulations deemed major rules.
    Institutes penalties for federal employees who illegally seek constitutionally protected financial information.
    Establishes a private right of action for Americans and financial institutions harmed by illicit government activity.
      
    Bill text | One-pager

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Department of Consumer Affairs, Government of India, continues to observe Swachhata Hi Seva-2024 campaign

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 25 SEP 2024 6:29PM by PIB Delhi

    The National Consumer Dispute Redressal Commission, celebrated the Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam (Plant4Mother) Campaign at their office today. The event was graced by the Hon’ble Mr Justice A.P. Sahi, President and Hon’ble Mr Justice R.S. Maurya, Member at the Upbhokta Nyay Bhawan, New Delhi.

    Group photograph of all the employees at NCDRC, New Delhi along with Hon’ble Mr Justice A.P. Sahi and Hon’ble Mr Justice R.S. Maurya in front of the NCDRC Building.

     

    Hon’ble Mr Justice A.P. Sahi and Hon’ble Mr Justice R.S. Maurya planting a tree under the campaign Ek Ped Maa ke Naam.

    Spirit of Cleaning office space continues: The autonomous and subordinate bodies of DoCA BIS, Kolkata Branch Office –I and RRSL, Bangalore and RRSL, Faridabad cleaned their office workspace like office cupboards, files, tables and chairs in order to keep cleanliness around office surroundings.

     

     

       

    Employees of BIS, Kolkata and RRSL, Bangalore cleaning their office workspace.

     

    RRSL, Nagpur conducted a mass Scale Cleanliness Drive at Ambazaari Lake, Nagpur where all employees of the office participated in cleaning the lake and its nearby area.

     

     

    Employees of RRSL, Nagpur holding the banner of SHS (above). RRSL, Nagpur employees participated in cleaning the area near the lake (below)

     

    RRSL, Bhubaneshwar also cleaned the office premises today.

     

    Cleaned office garden of RRSL, Bhubaneshwar today

    Quiz, drawing and slogan writing competition: RRSL, Ahmedabad organized a quiz competition on swachhata with the school students. The competition was designed to educate the students about the importance of Swachhata and various policies regarding it.

    Quiz competition organized by RRSL, Ahmedabad in a nearby school.

    RRSL, Varanasi organised the drawing and slogan writing at nearby village Government primary school. The employees also interacted with students about sanitation and cleaning activities. In the end, a prize distribution ceremony was also held.

     

    Glimpses from the drawing and slogan competition held today at nearby village Government primary school of RRSL, Varanasi

    NTH, Varanasi conducted a painting competition today in their office for all the employees. Employees showcased their artistic talents, depicting various aspects of cleanliness and its significance in our daily lives.

     

    Employees of NTH, Varanasi participating in painting competition.

    ****

    AD/NS

    (Release ID: 2058730) Visitor Counter : 30

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Representatives of States/UTs attended the meeting organized by NCPCR to discuss the status of implementation of NCPCR’s Model Guidelines with respect to Support Persons under POCSO Act, 2012

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 25 SEP 2024 8:37PM by PIB Delhi

    The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case titled “We the women of India v. Union of India and Ors. Writ Petition(s) (Civil) No. 1156/2021 and in Writ Petition No. 427/2022 title BachpanBachaoAndolan v. Union of India” vide its order dated 09.10.2023 had directed the Commission to formulate Model Guidelines with respect to Support Persons under Section 39 of the POCSO Act, 2012 in consultation with the State Governments and the Government of Union Territories.

     

    ​Accordingly, the Commission had prepared the Model Guidelines and the same was filed before the Hon’ble Supreme Court. Now, the Hon’ble Court vide its order dated 30.07.2024 was pleased to pass an order thereby directing all the States/UT’s to implement the aforesaid guidelines and thereafter informing the Commission regarding the status of implementation.

    ​Therefore, the NCPCR in compliance to the order of the Hon’ble Supreme Court organised a meeting to discuss the status of implementation of NCPCR’s Model Guidelines with respect to Support Persons under Section 39 of POCSO Act, 2012. The meeting was held on 25/09/2024 at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi. Representatives of 24 States/UTs attended the meeting.

    ​Smt. Preeti Bharadwaj Dalal, Member (Law Relating to Children) and Smt. Divya Gupta, Member (Child Health, Care, Welfare), NCPCR, welcomed all attendees and addressed the gathering while emphasizing the need of implementation of the Model Guidelines with respect to Support Persons under Section 39 of POCSO Act, 2012 in every State and UT.

    ​Shri Priyank Kanoongo, Chairperson, NCPCR, gave the keynote address to welcome the officers from States and Union Territories and further emphasized that this meeting has been organised to ensure compliance of the Hon’ble Supreme Court’s orders passed for implementation of the Model Guidelines with respect to Support Persons under Section 39 of POCSO Act. Shri Kanoongo also discussed the key objective of Support Persons under the POCSO Act, 2012 which is to provide emotional and psychological support to the child victims during the legal proceedings and further ensure their wellbeing and protection.

    ​Chairperson, NCPCR informed that necessary directions had been issued for the implementation of the aforesaid guidelines to all States/UTs and thereafter the States/UTs had been directed to submit a Compliance Report regarding the implementation in this regard as well as to furnish the information in respect of copy of the order regarding implementation of Guidelines in all the districts of the State, copy of the advertisement for Empanelment of Support Persons and copy of order issuing the directions to upload details of Support Persons on NCPCR’s “POCSO Tracking Portal”.

    ​He also suggested that rehabilitation of a victim of child sexual abuse is possible when a Support Person is engaged with the victim. He further emphasised that it is important to empanel Support Persons in ratio of the pendency of cases of child sexual abuse in a particular State and the details of such empanelled Support Person shall be uploaded on the “POCSO Tracking Portal” in order to ensure transparency and timely support to child victims.

    ​The meeting was followed by open house discussion and suggestions on the status of implementation of the guidelines from the present representatives of the States/UTs.

    ​At the end of the program, Smt. Rupali Banerjee Singh, Member Secretary, NCPCR thanked all the participants for their active participation.

    ** **

    SS/MS

    (Release ID: 2058818) Visitor Counter : 65

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Ruppersberger, Bipartisan Group Secures SNAP Theft Reimbursement in Stop-Gap Funding Bill

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger (2nd District of Maryland)

    (Washington, DC) – Victims of food stamp theft will continue to be reimbursed thanks to a provision in a stop-gap funding bill secured by a bipartisan group of lawmakers led by Congressman C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger. H.R. 9747, the Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act of 2025, passed in the U.S. House of Representatives today in a 341-82 vote, keeping the government funded – and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits flowing – through December 20, 2024. It is expected to be taken up in the U.S. Senate quickly.

    Last month, Ruppersberger, along with Representatives Mike Lawler (R-New York),  Lori Chavez-DeRemer (R-Oregon), James P. McGovern (D-Massachusetts), Dan Goldman (D-New York), Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pennsylvania), Anthony D’Esposito (R-New York), Marc Molinaro (R-New York), Kweisi Mfume (D-Maryland), Brittany Pettersen (D-Colorado) and Grace Meng (D-New York) sent a letter to Congressional leadership urging them to allow victims of SNAP theft to continue to be reimbursed from federal and state coffers.

    Reports of SNAP theft – in which perpetrators use skimming devices to steal SNAP benefits distributed on electronic debit cards (EBT) – are skyrocketing across the nation. States are currently required to replace stolen benefits under a measure included in the 2023 omnibus funding bill passed by Congress at the end of 2022. But that provision was set to expire on September 30.

    “I want to thank my colleagues on both sides of the aisle who recognize the dire straits that SNAP theft leaves its victims, which often include veterans, families, low-income workers, children, the elderly and the disabled,” said Congressman Ruppersberger (MD-02). “While Congress continues to work toward its long-term and strategic spending bills, I am relieved to know these innocent constituents will not lose their primary source of healthy food.”

    “Ensuring that SNAP recipients who have their benefits stolen are made whole is my top priority and is deeply important to New York families,” said Congressman Mike Lawler (NY-17). “That’s why I joined colleagues in both parties and chambers to introduce the Enhanced Cybersecurity for SNAP Act to protect these programs from fraud, and it’s why I have been adamant about the need to include SNAP protections in FY25’s appropriations. I was pleased to see these provisions in the CR being voted on this week. We must complete our appropriations work while protecting the most vulnerable in our society.”

    “I was proud to join this bipartisan group of my colleagues in urging congressional leaders to prevent critical SNAP theft reimbursements from ending,” said Congresswoman Lori Chavez-DeRemer (OR-05). “I’m glad our message was heard and an extension was included in this stopgap funding bill. I’ll keep working to ensure victims of SNAP theft are protected.”

    “I am proud to have helped secure an extension that will allow states to use existing federal funding to reimburse vulnerable victims of SNAP theft so that families in need can put food on the table,” Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10) said. “SNAP theft can be devastating for working families and these reimbursements are a critical lifeline that allows working families to make ends meet. I will continue fighting alongside my colleagues to ensure that states retain this authority when Congress passes its final budget at the end of the year.”

    “Families that rely on SNAP to put food on the table each day should never go hungry, especially as a result of their benefits being stolen,” said Congresswoman Grace Meng (NY-06), a senior member of the House Appropriations Committee. “That’s why I fought to help over 36,000 New Yorkers recover more than $17.5 million in stolen SNAP benefits. I’m glad to see that this provision was included and extended in this critical government funding bill. I’ve also been fighting to make EBT benefit cards more secure to deter scams, and I’m excited that this bill includes language that will hopefully lead to more secure EBT cards. Many beneficiaries in Queens and across the country continue to be targeted by these scams, and we must continue fighting for the families in our communities experiencing the greatest needs.”

    “It is appalling that Americans are being targeted at record rates in major SNAP benefit theft. These sickening crimes are carried out against veterans, families, low-income workers, children, the elderly, and the disabled – all of whom are just trying to put food on their table,” said Congressman Kweisi Mfume (MD-07). “Our letter represented a unified effort, across the political aisle, to bring justice to victims in all our respective Congressional Districts. Today’s triumph was a culmination of fierce collaboration between both Democrats and Republicans and boldly fighting for justice on behalf of all households that rely on SNAP,” he concluded. 

    “Because of our bipartisan push, victims of SNAP theft will continue to be protected through the SNAP Reimbursement Extension,” said Congressman Marc Molinaro (NY-19). “I’m proud to have helped lead the effort to ensure Upstate New York families who rely on SNAP benefits always have access to the meals they deserve.”

    “Thousands of Bucks and Montgomery County residents depend on SNAP to put food on their tables, which is why I was proud to join my colleagues in the critical fight to prevent SNAP theft reimbursements from ending. This common-sense reimbursement provision is essential to safeguarding the integrity of the SNAP program and ensuring families in my community and nationwide who have fallen victim to SNAP theft can quickly recover their benefits. Today’s victory is a powerful reminder that when we unite across party lines, we can achieve meaningful change and stand firm in our commitment to uplift our communities and safeguard the well-being of those who need it most,” said Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (PA-1).

    “SNAP recipients who had their food benefits stolen—through no fault of their own, I would add—should not be kicked while they’re down by an indifferent government that tells them ‘too bad’ and leaves them to fend for themselves,” said Congressman Jim McGovern (MA-02). “Especially when the average SNAP benefit is barely over $2 per person, per meal. We’re talking about people who rely on these benefits to feed themselves and their families. When they are stolen, people go hungry. I’m glad that because of our continued advocacy, Congress is making sure that food insecure families are protected through the end of the year.”

    ####

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Support for domestic abuse survivors impacted by the early release scheme

    Source: City of Birmingham

    The early release scheme was implemented this month, and some offenders have been released from prison having served 40% of their sentence rather than 50%.

    This move intends to ease overcrowding in prisons. Early release is based on the offences offenders were in prison for, and not for any other crimes they may have committed.

    Domestic abuse crimes that are not eligible for early release include:

    • Stalking offences 
    • Controlling or coercive behaviours in an intimate or family relationship 
    • Non-fatal strangulation and suffocation 
    • Breach of restraining order, non-molestation order, and domestic abuse protection order.

    For survivors of domestic abuse, this means perpetrators who were in prison for a different crime may have been released from prison early, under this scheme.

    Birmingham City Council understands this may be causing fear and anxiety for survivors. Partners across the city have been working together to manage any safety risks. The Domestic Abuse Prevention team commissions specialist support for all survivors, including men and the LGBT+ community.

    Councillor Nicky Brennan: Cabinet Member for Social Justice, Community Safety and Equalities, said: “Whilst the reports in the news highlight that prisons are nearly full, perpetrators of domestic abuse can still be sent to prison if convicted or remanded in custody by the courts.

    “Perpetrators released under this scheme will still have licence conditions and will be recalled if they break any of these conditions.

    “Birmingham City Council’s Domestic Abuse Prevention team along with our partner organisations provide specialist support services for anyone who is scared or worried about a loved one who may need help. I urge you to reach out to us so we can help.”

    For more information and how to get help, visit: birmingham.gov.uk.

    If someone commits a crime, you can still call the police to report it: Birmingham is committed to holding perpetrators of domestic abuse to account. In an emergency, please call 999.

    To find out more about the scheme, visit the gov.uk webpage.

    If you are scared or worried, whether it’s for yourself or a loved one, you are not alone. There are specialist support services to talk to:

    For all survivors:

    Birmingham and Solihull Women’s Aid Helpline is open every day 9:15 – 5:15 on 0808 800 0028

    Webchat is open Monday to Friday 10 – 4. 

    For men:

    Cranstoun’s helpline is open Monday to Friday 9-5 on 0121 633 1750, or their website has more information.

    For LGBT+ people:

    Birmingham LGBT’s helpline is open Monday to Friday 10am – 9pm and Saturdays 11:30am to 7pm on 0121 643 0821, or their website has more information.

    You can also find independent victim support through the Victim and Witness Information website.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Big lithium plans for Imperial Valley, one of California’s poorest regions, raise a bigger question: Who should benefit?

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Manuel Pastor, Distinguished Professor of Sociology and American Studies & Ethnicity, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

    The edge of the Salton Sea, a heavily polluted lake with large geothermal and lithium resources beneath it. Manuel Pastor

    Imperial County consistently ranks among the most economically distressed places in California. Its Salton Sea, the state’s biggest and most toxic lake, is an environmental disaster. And the region’s politics have been dominated by a conservative white elite, despite its supermajority Latino population.

    The county also happens to be sitting on enough lithium to produce nearly 400 million batteries, sufficient to completely revamp the American auto fleet to electric propulsion. Even better, that lithium could be extracted in a way consistent with broader goals to reduce pollution.

    The traditional ways to extract lithium involve either hard rock mining, which generates lots of waste, or large evaporation ponds, which waste a lot of water. In Imperial Valley, companies are pioneering a third method. They are extracting the mineral from the underground briny water brought up during geothermal energy production and then injecting that briny water back into the ground in a closed loop. It promises to yield the cleanest, greenest lithium on the planet.

    The hope of a clean energy future has excited investors and public officials so much that the area is being rechristened as “Lithium Valley.”

    In a region desperate for jobs and income, the prospect of a “white gold rush” is appealing. Public officials have been working to roll out the red carpet for big investors, including trying to create a clear plan for infrastructure and a quicker permitting process. To get community groups’ support, they are playing up the potential for jobs, including company commitments to hire local workers.

    But Imperial Valley residents who have been on the butt end of get-rich schemes around water and real estate in the past are worried that their political leaders may be giving away the store. As we explore in our new book, “Charging Forward: Lithium Valley, Electric Vehicles and a Just Future,” the U.S. has an opportunity to ensure that these residents directly benefit from the lithium extraction boom, which is an important part of the global shift to clean energy.

    Possibilities and perils in ‘Lithium Valley’

    Imperial Valley is emblematic of the potential and the risks that have long faced impoverished communities in resource-rich regions.

    To understand the possibilities and perils in Imperial Valley, it’s useful to remember that the world is not just moving away from fossil fuel extraction but toward more mineral extraction. Today’s battery technology – necessary for electric vehicles and energy storage – relies on minerals including cobalt, magnesium, nickel and graphite. And mineral extraction is often accompanied by obscured environmental risks.

    A prototype for CTR’s lithium-producing geothermal facility, in the Hell’s Kitchen area of Imperial Valley.
    Manuel Pastor

    In Imperial Valley, environmental and community organizations are worried about lithium extraction’s water use, waste and air pollution as production steps up and truck traffic increases. When your region’s childhood asthma rate is already more than twice the national average, and dust from the drying lake is toxic, kicking up a “little extra dust” is a big deal.

    Comite Civico del Valle, a long-established environmental justice organization in Imperial Valley, has sued to slow down a streamlined permitting process for Controlled Thermal Resources, a company planning lithium extraction there. The group’s concern is that inadequate environmental reviews could result in harm to residents’ health. Both the company and public officials are warning that the lawsuit could stop the lithium boom before it begins.

    Local communities are also concerned about how much benefit they will see while the industry profits. They note that the electric vehicle boom driving lithium demand occurred precisely because of public policy. Tesla, for example, has benefited from multiple rounds of state and federal zero-emissions vehicle incentives, including the sale of emissions credits that accounted for 85% of Tesla’s gross margin in 2009 and rose to US$1.8 billion a year by 2023.

    Behind these policies and financial incentives have been public will and taxpayer money.

    Young advocates with the Imperial Valley Equity & Justice Coalition have been spreading their concerns through the community.
    Chris Benner

    We believe that local residents, not just companies, deserve a return. Rather than promising to just pay for community “benefits,” such as environmental mitigation, contributions to municipal coffers or jobs, the companies could pay “dividends” directly to local residents and communities.

    There are models of this dividend approach. For example, the Alaska Permanent Fund gives an annual amount to all residents of that state from revenues obtained from the oil beneath the ground.

    In Imperial Valley, the actual ownership of the lithium is complex, involving a mix of privately owned subsurface rights, public lease rights obtained by companies and public rights held by the regional water district to whom companies will pay royalties.

    Given the ownership complexities and the desire to benefit as development takes place, local authorities and community organizations persuaded the state in 2022 to pass a per-metric-ton lithium tax to address local needs.

    Controlled Thermal Resources CEO Rod Colwell, right, walks near the Salton Sea with a colleague.
    AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

    That “flat tax” was bitterly resisted by some in the emerging industry on the grounds that it could make Imperial Valley’s less-polluting extraction method too costly to compete with environmentally damaging imports; after the vote, CTR’s CEO called the legislators “clowns.” Meanwhile, CTR has also agreed to hire union workers in the construction phase. Everyone – companies, communities and government officials – is struggling to balance economic viability with accountability.

    Lessons for a just transition

    The hesitance of low-income Imperial Valley residents to immediately buy into the lithium vision is deeply rooted in history.

    Decades of racial exclusion, patronizing practices and broken promises have led to deep distrust of outsiders who assert that things will be better this time.

    Irrigation at the turn of the last century was supposed to bring an agriculture boom, but the early result was a broken canal that released enough water over nearly two years of disrepair to create what is now the Salton Sea. The Salton Sea was then supposed to fuel recreational tourism, but the failure to replenish it with anything but agricultural runoff helped to kill fish, birds and recreation. A more recent scheme to attract solar farms in recent decades delivered little employment and more worries about agricultural displacement.

    You can still find old billboards promising a resort life on the Salton Sea, which today is one of the state’s most polluted lakes. Wind kicks up toxic dust when the water is low.
    Manuel Pastor

    Building the supply chain here, too

    In recent years, some people have pinned their hopes on lithium. The main site so far in Imperial Valley has been CTR’s Hell’s Kitchen. It’s a fitting moniker on summer days when temperatures regularly exceed 110 degrees.

    Ensuring that the surrounding communities benefit from this new lithium boom will require thinking about how to attract not just companies extracting the lithium but also those that will use it. So far, Imperial County has had limited success in attracting related industries. In 2023, a company named Statevolt said it would build a “gigafactory” there to assemble batteries. However, the company’s previous efforts – Britishvolt in the United Kingdom and Italvot in Italy – have stalled without any volts being produced. Imperial County will need serious suitors to make a go of it.

    A potentially promising future for modern transportation and energy storage may be brewing in Imperial Valley. But getting to a brighter future for everyone will require remembering a lesson from the past: that community investments tend to be hard-won. We believe that ensuring everyone benefits long term is essential for achieving a more inclusive and sustainable future.

    Research for the book from which this article draws was supported by the James Irvine Foundation, New Energy Nexus, the California Wellness Foundation, and Open Society Foundations. Manuel Pastor was also supported by a Residency at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center.

    Research for the book from which this article draws was supported by the James Irvine Foundation, New Energy Nexus, the California Wellness Foundation, and Open Society Foundations. Chris Benner was also supported by a Residency at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center.

    – ref. Big lithium plans for Imperial Valley, one of California’s poorest regions, raise a bigger question: Who should benefit? – https://theconversation.com/big-lithium-plans-for-imperial-valley-one-of-californias-poorest-regions-raise-a-bigger-question-who-should-benefit-238397

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: How the US government can stop ‘churches’ from getting treated like real churches by the IRS

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, Professor of Law, University of Notre Dame

    Uniformed members of Trail Life USA present the colors at the Family Research Council’s 2018 Values Voter Summit. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    The Family Research Council is a conservative advocacy group with a “biblical worldview.” While it has a church ministries department that works with churches from several evangelical Christian denominations that share its perspectives, it does not represent a single denomination. Although its activities are primarily focused on policy, advocacy, government lobbying and public communication, the Internal Revenue Service granted the council’s application to be treated as “an association of churches” in 2020.

    Concerned that the IRS had erred in allowing the council and similar groups to be designated churches or associations of churches, Democratic members of the House of Representatives sent the Treasury secretary and the IRS commissioner letters in 2022 and 2024 expressing alarm. The House Democrats pointed to what appeared to be “abuse” of the tax code and asked the IRS to “determine whether existing guidance is sufficient to prevent abuse and what resources or Congressional actions are needed.”

    As a professor of nonprofit law, I believe some groups that aren’t churches or associations of churches want to be designated that way to avoid the scrutiny being a charitable organization otherwise requires. At the same time, some other groups that should qualify as churches may have difficulty doing so because of the IRS’ outdated test for that status.

    Together with my colleague Ellen P. Aprill, I recently published a paper outlining two main arguments in favor of revising the federal government’s definitions of churches as they pertain to tax law.

    No 990s means less scrutiny

    All charitable nonprofits, including churches, get the same basic benefits under federal tax law. This means they don’t have to pay taxes on their revenue and that donors can deduct the value of their gifts from their taxable income – as long as they itemize deductions on their tax return.

    Unlike other tax-exempt charities, churches don’t have to file 990 forms. That means the public does not have access to churches’ staff pay, board membership and funding details, which are in this publicly available tax form that all other charities must complete every year. The availability of 990 forms enhances the transparency and accountability of the nonprofit sector.

    And churches and associations of churches are unlikely to get audited by the IRS. Federal law requires that a senior IRS official “reasonably believes” the church or association has violated federal tax rules before beginning an investigation. This means that an official must have reason to believe the organization has violated federal tax law before obtaining any information from the organization.

    This standard is higher than what’s needed before an audit can begin for all other tax-exempt organizations and indeed all taxpayers. For everyone else, the IRS is free to begin an examination based only on a suspicion of a violation or even based on random selection.

    Also, unlike other tax-exempt charities, churches and church associations are automatically eligible for their tax-exempt status. They don’t have to apply for it.

    Why churches get special treatment

    Congress has passed laws granting churches and what it calls “integrated auxiliaries” and “conventions or associations of churches” special protections because the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects religious freedom.

    Churches include houses of worship ranging in size from a handful of parishioners to megachurches with 10,000 or more people attending weekly services. Houses of worship of all faiths, including synagogues, mosques and temples, count as churches, according to the IRS.

    Integrated auxiliaries are church schools and other organizations affiliated with churches or conventions and primarily supported by internal church sources, as opposed to by the public or government.

    Conventions or associations of churches are organizations that have houses of worship from either a single denomination or from multiple denominations as their members. Most denominational bodies, such as the executive committee of the Southern Baptist Convention and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, are likely conventions or associations of churches, although the IRS does not publish a list of such entities.

    Not every religious nonprofit belongs in one of these categories.

    For example, the University of Notre Dame, where I teach law students and conduct legal research, and World Vision, a global humanitarian group, are both religious organizations that do not fall into any of these categories. This makes sense, because Notre Dame and World Vision are primarily engaged in activities other than fostering a religious congregation or coordinating the activities of churches within a single denomination.

    The IRS has long relied on a 14-factor test to distinguish churches from the other religious nonprofits. Examples of those factors include having ordained ministers, a formal doctrine, a distinct membership and a regular congregation attending religious services.

    It’s not necessary for all the factors to apply to pass this test.

    Yet for almost as long, courts have been uncomfortable with this test because it draws heavily on the traditional characteristics of Protestant Christian churches, as the U.S. Court of Federal Claims explained in a 2009 ruling. This system therefore may be a poor fit for houses of worship of other faiths, especially given the increasing diversity of faith communities.

    These courts have instead adopted an “associational test.” It focuses on whether the organization’s congregants hold religious services on a regular basis and gather in person on other occasions.

    With the growth of virtual and televised religious services, an update of this test is overdue.

    A couple get married in May 2020 in a mostly empty church, with a screen set up so guests can watch over Zoom.
    Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

    Proposed solutions

    Aprill and I recommend that the IRS change its definition for churches to the associational one adopted by some courts in rulings as early as 1980. As the U.S. Court of Federal Claims explained in that 2009 ruling, this test focuses on whether a body of believers assembles regularly to worship. Given technological advances, the IRS should also make it clear that this test can be satisfied through remote participation in religious services using interactive, teleconferencing apps such as Zoom.

    This definition would be also better suited for congregations of all faiths because some faiths do not prioritize many of the factors included in the IRS test, such as having a formal code of doctrine or requiring members to not be associated with other houses of worship or faiths. And it would better reflect how some Americans participate in religious services today.

    We recommend that the IRS revisit its test for being a church and that Congress pass a law that would change the definition of church associations. The new law could limit associations of churches to organizations that represent a single denomination, as Congress likely initially intended.

    This latter change would make it harder for religious organizations that are primarily involved in bringing churches from multiple faiths together to engage in advocacy or other activities to obtain this status and the lack of transparency and accountability that come with it. We believe Congress, not the IRS, should make this change because of the potential political tensions that narrowing the definition could create.

    We don’t think the changes would impinge upon the special role that churches have in our society. Indeed, the revised test for qualifying as a church would better fit with both the increasing variety of faiths in our country and technological advancements.

    Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer is affiliated with the University of Notre Dame, a tax-exempt religious nonprofit corporation. Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer is also affiliated with South Bend City Church, a tax-exempt religious nonprofit corporation that is classified as a church for federal tax purposes.

    – ref. How the US government can stop ‘churches’ from getting treated like real churches by the IRS – https://theconversation.com/how-the-us-government-can-stop-churches-from-getting-treated-like-real-churches-by-the-irs-237922

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Traliant Unveils Active Shooter Response Training to Enhance Workplace Safety

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, Sept. 26, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Traliant, an innovator in online compliance training, today announced new Active Shooter Response training to equip employees with the knowledge to act swiftly and confidently in an active shooter situation, safeguarding both staff and customers.

    With nearly 31% of active shooter incidents happening at workplaces, and 79% of companies acknowledging they’re not fully prepared, according to The National Institute of Justice, it’s more important than ever to be ready. While these events are rare, knowing the warning signs of violence and how to respond can be lifesaving.

    “When seconds count, having a workforce trained to respond to workplace violence can make all the difference,” said Michael Johnson, Chief Strategy Officer at Traliant. “Our Active Shooter Response training builds a culture of safety and preparedness, giving employers and employees the confidence to act decisively if the unthinkable happens.”

    As workplace violence increases nationwide, states are implementing new laws to ensure businesses are better equipped. Most recently, New York passed the Retail Worker Safety Act requiring employers to include active shooter response training as part of their workplace violence prevention programs.

    Traliant’s 35-minute interactive course prepares employees and managers to recognize a potential active shooter situation and respond using the FBI-endorsed “Run, Hide, Fight” method, while also covering communication with law enforcement and first responders.

    To learn more about Traliant, visit: https://www.traliant.com/.

    About Traliant
    Traliant combines in-house legal expertise with modern, emotionally engaging course design to redefine compliance, training experiences and services. It helps thousands of organizations create a culture of ethics, inclusion and safety by addressing dozens of critical topics including sexual harassment training, DEI training and code of conduct training. Traliant’s innovative and interactive approach to learning can be easily customized into affordable and cost-effective solutions for clients to address their industry, branding, policies, risks and job-specific needs. Backed by PSG, a leading growth equity firm, Traliant is ranked on Inc.’s 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024 lists of 5000 fastest-growing private companies in America and named to Inc.’s 2023 list of Best Workplaces. For more information, visit http://www.traliant.com and follow us on LinkedIn. 

    Contact
    Reagan Bennet
    traliant@v2comms.com

    The MIL Network –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Happy Valley-Goose Bay — Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP investigates hit and run collision involving pedestrian

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP is investigating a hit and run collision that occurred on September 24, 2024. A pedestrian was transported to the Labrador Health Centre with non-life-threatening injuries.

    The collision occurred at approximately 10:30 p.m. on Tuesday on Hamilton River Road near the baseball field. A number of other pedestrians were nearby. The vehicle departed after the collision occurred and did not stop to render assistance to injured individual.

    The vehicle is described as possibly a dark-colored SUV. The investigation is continuing.

    Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP asks the public to check all available surveillance footage and to report any information that could assist police with this investigation.

    Anyone having information about this incident or the involved vehicle or the identity of the driver is asked to contact Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP at 709-896-3383. To remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers: #SayItHere 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), visit http://www.nlcrimestoppers.com or use the P3Tips app.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: CS chairs inter-departmental working group meeting on festival arrangements (with photo)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         As directed by the Chief Executive, the Chief Secretary for Administration, Mr Chan Kwok-ki, chaired the inter-departmental working group meeting on festival arrangements today (September 26) to holistically review and steer the overall co-ordination work of various government departments in welcoming visitors to Hong Kong during the National Day Golden Week. The Deputy Chief Secretary for Administration, Mr Cheuk Wing-hing; the Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism, Mr Kevin Yeung; the Under Secretary for Security, Mr Michael Cheuk; and representatives of the Home and Youth Affairs Bureau, the Transport and Logistics Bureau, and other relevant Government departments attended the meeting.     At the meeting, Mr Chan instructed various departments to better prepare for receiving visitors during the Mainland’s National Day Golden Week, actively coordinate and consolidate supporting services of boundary control points (BCPs), traffic and public transport, promptly respond to various emergency situations, and strengthen information dissemination, with a view to providing quality experience to residents and visitors in celebration of the National Day.Estimated visitor flow and preparatory work     According to the Immigration Department (ImmD)’s estimate, around 7.01 million passengers (including Hong Kong residents and visitors) will pass through Hong Kong’s sea, land and air control points during the Mainland’s National Day Golden Week (October 1 to October 7) this year, among which 5.98 million passengers will pass through land control points. The number of outbound and inbound passengers using land boundary control points will peak on October 1 (Tuesday).     In terms of Mainland inbound visitors, it is estimated that about 1.23 million passengers will visit Hong Kong via various sea, land and air control points during the seven-day Mainland’s National Day Golden Week.     The Travel Industry Authority has reminded travel agents receiving Mainland inbound tour groups to stagger arrival time as far as possible, and will coordinate with agencies such as tourist spots to adopt appropriate diversion measures to enable proper management of the flow of visitors and tour buses, with a view to offering a pleasant travel experience to visitors.     There will be a rich array of celebratory activities before, during and after the Mainland’s National Day Golden Week. Major mega events include the “Celebration of National Day – The Next Generation Chorus Performance” at the West Kowloon Cultural District on September 30 night (Monday) and the 2024 National Day Fireworks Display at the Victoria Harbour on October 1 night (Tuesday). The Hong Kong Police Force (Police) will arrange sufficient police manpower to implement corresponding crowd management measures and special traffic arrangements as necessary to ensure that all celebrations will be conducted in a safe and orderly manner. Various district offices will also closely monitor the flow of visitors within their corresponding districts during the Mainland’s National Day Golden Week and strengthen management of the relevant spots having regard to the actual circumstances.Coordinate control points, traffic and public transport facilities     The Inter-departmental Joint Command Centre set up by Hong Kong Customs, the Police, the ImmD and other departments will be activated from September 28 (Saturday) to October 7 (Monday) to monitor the real-time situation at various control points, maintain close liaison with the Mainland port authorities through the established port hotlines and real-time notification mechanism, and take timely contingency actions to flexibly deploy manpower at the BCPs to ensure smooth operation of the land control points. The Security Bureau will also activate the Emergency Monitoring and Support Centre in a timely manner to closely monitor and co-ordinate the public order situation at various BCPs and facilitate interdepartmental follow-up actions where necessary to respond promptly to various kinds of emergencies.     For transport arrangements, the Transport Department (TD) has worked with relevant Mainland authorities and relevant operators to formulate plans to strengthen services at various ports, including increasing the frequency of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge (HZMB) shuttle bus (Gold Bus) and the Lok Ma Chau-Huanggang cross-boundary shuttle bus (Yellow Bus), as well as arranging dedicated public transport lanes at the HZMB Port, Lok Ma Chau/Huanggang Port and Shenzhen Bay Port as necessary, with a view to ensuring smooth public transport services. Regarding local public transport services, the TD has approached various public transport operators proactively to enhance the capacity, and reserve vehicles and manpower to meet the travel needs of visitors. Amongst them, the MTR Corporation Limited will enhance train service of railway lines during September 28 to October 13, with a total of about 950 extra trips, so as to facilitate the travelling of local residents and visitors. The TD’s Emergency Transport Co-ordination Centre will operate 24 hours to closely monitor the traffic conditions and public transport services of different districts including various BCPs and major stations. The TD will adopt various measures including increasing the frequency of public transport services as appropriate so as to cope with the service demand and passenger flow, and will disseminate the latest traffic information through various channels.     As regards the two homeporting calls of a mega cruise ship at the Kai Tak Cruise Terminal during the Mainland’s National Day Golden Week, while the cruise terminal operator will continue to coordinate with the cruise company, transport service operators and travel agents etc. to make proper transport planning, the Tourism Commission (TC) has also liaised with the bus companies and the taxi trade through the TD to provide additional support. Shuttle bus services will also be strengthened subject to demand. As it is anticipated that many Mainland visitors will come to Hong Kong to join cruise itineraries via the land BCPs, the TC has also assisted the trade in coordinating with BCPs to ensure smooth immigration clearance. Direct coach services will be provided to take visitors from the BCPs to the cruise terminal.Weather forecast     The weather in Hong Kong is expected to be generally fine during the Mainland’s National Day Golden Week, with low chances of being affected by heavy rain and tropical cyclones. A fresh to strong northeasterly monsoon is expected to arrive in Guangdong on the National Day, followed by a couple of days of slightly cooler and drier weather, with a minimum temperature of around 22 degrees Celsius in the urban areas. The above forecast is a preliminary assessment, and the Observatory will update the forecast depending on the latest weather changes.Information dissemination     To facilitate visitors in planning their itineraries, the inter-departmental working group will strengthen information dissemination including the latest inbound visitor arrivals, the situation at various BCPs, information on celebratory events, transport arrangements and the latest weather information, etc, to facilitate residents and visitors to plan their itineraries according to the latest situation.     The Tourism Board (TB) has also launched a dedicated webpage to consolidate various useful information during the Mainland’s National Day Golden Week, including the operating arrangements of major tourist attractions in Hong Kong, details of various unique celebratory events, special discount and promotional activities around the National Day, so as to facilitate residents and visitors to plan their itineraries more conveniently. The TB has also stepped up promotion in the Mainland, including launching special offers with major online integrated tourism platforms in the Mainland, in order to promote large-scale events with characteristics, explore the unique cultural and tourism experiences in Hong Kong through the promotional channel of the platforms and boost spending of more Mainland visitors in Hong Kong as well as enhance visitors’ experience.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: NIO minister Fleur Anderson praises community resilience after visiting arson attack Church

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The minister visited the Church of the Holy Name in Greenisland following a recent arson attack

    NIO minister Fleur Anderson and Rev Dr Isobel Hawthorne-Steele look at the damage inside the Church of the Holy Name.

    The Northern Ireland Office minister Fleur Anderson has visited the Church of the Holy Name in Greenisland to show solidarity following a recent arson attack. 

    The Church provides an integral service to local people through a community shop and a range of activities that involve all ages as well as offering a place for parishioners to gather.

    It was badly damaged in a fire on September 1. 

    Minister Anderson, who is Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the NIO, spoke with the Rev Dr Isobel Hawthorne-Steele, Minister of the Church about the attack and viewed the scale of the destruction.

    She also heard about the experiences of the community in the aftermath of the attack. 

    Minister Anderson said: “The discussions I had with Rev Dr Hawthorne-Steele were very constructive.

    “It was sad to see the scale of the destruction to a place that is a beacon of hope for many in the community.

    “It was encouraging to hear the positive support shown by local churches in Greenisland, the understanding shown to the families of the young boys involved and the plans for the future rebuilding.

    “I stand in solidarity with this entire community and I commend their resilience and forgiveness. 

    “I must also commend the quick response of the Northern Ireland Fire Service, and the Police Service of Northern Ireland, for their valiant efforts in tackling the blaze.”

    The Rev Dr Hawthorne-Steele said:

    “Having met with the minister it was encouraging to learn that she is a fellow community practitioner with extensive experience in building community cohesion and promoting transformative grassroots initiatives. 

    “Having spent considerable time chatting and seeing first hand the devastation caused by the fire to our parish centre and church, the minister captured the full impact of the far-reaching consequences on our church and the wider community that this disaster has caused. 

    “As a church, we greatly appreciate the fact that the minister acknowledged the efforts we are making to grow resilience in partnership with multi-faceted groups and organisations that work within this local area as we rebuild and renew our faith by revealing God’s grace.”

    NIO minister Fleur Anderson and Rev Dr Isobel Hawthorne-Steele outside the Church of the Holy Name where the damage can bee seen.

    NIO minister Fleur Anderson and Rev Dr Isobel Hawthorne-Steele look inside the Parish Centre which was affected by the recent arson attack.

    Share this page

    The following links open in a new tab

    • Share on Facebook (opens in new tab)
    • Share on Twitter (opens in new tab)

    Updates to this page

    Published 26 September 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Hanwell, Oromocto, St. Stephen — RCMP issue 160 tickets during traffic enforcement operation

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    A recent RCMP traffic enforcement operation in the Southwestern region of the province has resulted in 160 tickets being issues, and eight vehicles being towed.

    On September 19, 20 and 21, 2024, members of the New Brunswick RCMP’s Tactical Traffic Enforcement Unit (TTEU) conducted a traffic enforcement operation in the Hanwell, Oromocto and St. Stephen, N.B., areas.

    In total, police issued 160 tickets and eight vehicles were towed under the New Brunswick Motor Vehicle Act. These included 83 tickets for speeding, 26 of which for speeding over 25 km/hr over the posted speed limit.

    Furthermore, 77 tickets for various infractions were issued, including 19 vehicles with no current inspection certificate and 16 tickets for an expired vehicle registration, 17 tickets for not wearing a seatbelt, and eight tickets for using a hand-operated electronic device while driving.

    Police also arrested one individual on outstanding warrants, two individuals for driving while impaired, and one prohibited driver. A number of warnings were also issued.

    “We all have a role to play when it comes to making our roads and communities safer,” says Sgt. Ghislain David with the Tactical Traffic Enforcement Unit.

    The RCMP’s TTEU conducts regular, targeted traffic enforcement on roadways throughout the province with the goals of improving road safety, educating motorists about traffic laws, and to reduce serious injury and fatal collisions.

    The public can also assist in keeping dangerous drivers off the road by reporting them to police. If you see a dangerous or a suspected impaired driver, call 911. Your description of the driver, vehicle, licence plate number and direction of travel can assist police in making New Brunswick roads safer.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Attorney General Merrick B. Garland Delivers Remarks at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi

    Source: United States Attorneys General 13

    Remarks as Delivered

    Thanks, Todd, and thanks for the warm welcome.

    I am very happy to be here in Mississippi.

    In just a few moments, Todd and I will meet with our federal, state, and local law enforcement partners to talk about the work that everyone is doing to keep Mississippi safe.

    I am grateful that I have the chance to meet with our law enforcement partners here today. You do the work, the most dangerous work, protecting people in Mississippi. You are indispensable partners for us.

    I am very happy to hear that the sheriff’s investigator is okay, and that the perpetrators have been arrested. Just another piece of evidence about how dangerous the work that local law enforcement does, and we are grateful for everything that you do to protect the citizens of these communities and to work with our law enforcement and our U.S. Attorney’s Office on the same mission. Thank you.

    I am also grateful to have the chance to recognize the extraordinary public servants of this office for their extraordinary work and their extraordinary hard work.

    This U.S. Attorney’s Office is the face of the Justice Department here in the Southern District of Mississippi. When people in this District look to see what the Justice Department stands for, they look to this U.S. Attorney’s Office. I have been consistently impressed with the work that you guys do.

    That work, and the work of our state and local law enforcement partners, is making a difference.

    Three-and-a-half years ago, the Justice Department launched an ambitious strategy to combat violent crime. That strategy is rooted in exactly the kinds of partnerships we see around this table. Today, we are seeing results.

    Just earlier this week, the FBI released a report noting an 11.6% drop in homicides last year and one of the lowest violent crime rates nationwide in 50 years.

    And newly released data indicates that this trend is continuing. Earlier this month, the Justice Department’s Violent Crime Reduction Steering Committee announced data from across 88 cities that indicates that violent crime has continued to decline considerably in 2024. That included a further 16.9% drop in homicides.

    But we know that progress in many communities is still uneven. And, of course, there is no acceptable level of violent crime.

    That is why the Justice Department is continuing to work with our partners here in Mississippi and across the country to combat violent crime, and drug trafficking, and gun trafficking.

    Last month, working with the DEA, this office secured a guilty plea from a member of a drug-trafficking organization in California that sent packages of narcotics to Mississippi. During the investigation, we seized more than 5,700 grams of methamphetamine, 236 grams of fentanyl, and 84 grams of cocaine.

    In July – following a joint operation with ATF, DEA, and other federal agencies – this office secured guilty pleas from five men who participated in a scheme to purchase firearms, machinegun conversion devices, and explosives for delivery to Mexico. Three of the men sought to barter the weapons in exchange for cocaine.

    In March – working with the ATF and the Clinton Police Department – this office secured a 10-year sentence for a man who illegally possessed a firearm and fired a weapon at a law enforcement officer during a high-speed chase in Jackson.

    As we work together to reduce violent crime, we know that building and maintaining public trust is essential to public safety. That is why the Justice Department has taken action when that trust has been violated.

    Earlier this year, the Department worked to secure [10 to 40-year] sentences against six law enforcement officers in Rankin County who violated the civil rights of Black men.

    The officers kicked in the door of a home where the men were residing; handcuffed and arrested them without probable cause; called them racial slurs; and punched, kicked, tased, and assaulted them. After one of the officers fired his gun in the mouth of a victim, the group went outside to come up with a cover story.

    Those actions were a betrayal of the community the officers were sworn to protect, a betrayal of their profession, and a betrayal of their fellow officers.

    To help the community rebuild trust, the Justice Department launched a civil pattern or practice investigation to examine allegations that the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department systematically violates people’s constitutional rights. We are committed to working with local officials, deputies, and the community to conduct a comprehensive investigation.

    The Justice Department is also committed to providing resources necessary to support public safety here in Mississippi.

    Earlier this year, the Justice Department added Jackson to its Violent Crime Initiative. That initiative surges law enforcement tools and resources to target gangs and other violent groups that threaten our communities. In particular, it directs prosecutors from the Justice Department’s headquarters Criminal Division to partner with our prosecutors here on the ground in Jackson to target the individuals who are most responsible for the violence.

    In addition to using our investigative and prosecutorial resources, we are also committed to using our grantmaking capabilities to invest in public safety.

    For example, today, the Justice Department awarded nearly $300,000 to enhance the City of Jackson’s forensic science capabilities. We also awarded nearly $900,000 under our Coordinated Tribal Assistance Program, which funds Tribes’ efforts to develop comprehensive and coordinated approaches to public safety.

    These grants are part of the more than $29 million that the Justice Department is awarding to organizations and government agencies in Mississippi this month to support law enforcement activities and community initiatives.

    These funds will, among other things, help law enforcement agencies in Mississippi hire more officers, prevent and combat violent crime and drug trafficking, and improve services for survivors of domestic and dating violence, sexual assault, stalking, and other crimes.

    We remain committed to providing our law enforcement and community partners with the resources they need to protect their communities.

    The examples I have shared today are just a snapshot of the extraordinary work that this office is doing every day to protect people in the District, and to fulfill the Justice Department’s mission to ensure the rule of law, to keep our communities safe, and to protect civil rights.

    I am very proud of the public servants who make up this office. And I am equally proud of the relationships that they have built with the law enforcement agencies around this table. Those partnerships are the essence of the way in which we combat violent crime and protect our communities.

    I thank you. I am looking forward to our meeting now.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Principal Deputy Associate Attorney General Benjamin C. Mizer Delivers Remarks at the 2024 Hate Crimes Grantee Conference

    Source: United States Attorneys General 13

    Thank you, Liz Ryan, for that introduction and thank you also to Director Karhlton Moore and the Bureau of Justice Assistance for putting together this week’s conference. This inaugural conference has brought together grantees of the Justice Department’s hate crime grants, which includes law enforcement agencies, states, community-based organizations, and national civil rights organizations, for important discussions on best practices for investigating and prosecuting hate crimes, supporting victims of hate, and preventing hate crimes and hate incidents.

    I also want to take a moment to thank Houston Police Department Senior Officer Jamie Byrd-Grant, daughter of James Byrd Jr., and Judy and Dennis Shepard, the parents of Matthew Shepard, for being part of this week’s conference and for their strength and advocacy for so many years after the murder of their loved ones.

    I remember vividly when both of those heinous crimes were committed in 1998. I was almost exactly the same age as Matthew and, like him, was a young gay man living in a small college town. So Matthew’s murder in particular struck a fearful chord in me.

    But thanks to the Byrd and Shepard families’ commitment, and the advocacy of many people in this room, Congress passed, and President Obama signed, the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act 15 years ago. That law gave the Justice Department some of the most important tools it has today.

    So we can both acknowledge how far we have come in the last 26 years but also recognize how much more needs to be done to make sure everyone feels safe in this country.

    The latest FBI hate crime statistics released on Monday demonstrate just how much work remains to do. There were a record number of hate crimes in 2023, and we know that hate crimes are underreported. Nearly 30% of all reported hate crimes were anti-Black or African American. Anti-Latino hate crimes increased from 2022, and there was a record number of hate crimes because of the victim’s sexual orientation. There were also a record number of anti-Arab and anti-Jewish hate crimes, with increases of 34% and 63% respectively, and anti-Muslim hate crimes increased by 49%. Yet the numbers alone do not tell the full story. Behind each of the 11,862 hate crimes is a tragic or traumatic story of intimidation and bigotry.

    Hate crimes instill fear in communities and undermine our democracy. The Justice Department has and will continue to use all the tools at our disposal to combat hate in this country.

    That includes prosecuting those who perpetrate these terrible crimes. Earlier this month, for example, the Justice Department charged two leaders of the Terrorgram Collective, a transnational terrorist group that operates on the digital messaging platform Telegram, where they promote a white supremacist ideology. Among other charges, the defendants are charged with soliciting users to commit hate crimes against those in the United States and abroad that they deemed to be enemies of the white race, with the goal of igniting a race war.

    But prosecutions are not the only tool available to us to help promote public safety. We also provide financial support to communities through grants to combat hate. Those grants go to a range of recipients, including state and local law enforcement and prosecution agencies, community-based organizations, and civil rights groups.

    I am thrilled to announce that this year, the Justice Department’s Office of Justice Programs is awarding close to $30 million to law enforcement agencies, states, community-based organizations, and national civil rights organizations to fight the rise in hate and bias crimes and incidents. Over the last four fiscal years, the Department has given over $100 million in anti-hate crime grants, a number that demonstrates our strong commitment to this work.

    Through the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Program, we are awarding nearly $12 million to local law enforcement agencies and prosecutors’ offices to investigate and prosecute hate crimes, as well as to collaborate with community partners on outreach and education to targeted communities.

    For example, the University of Colorado Boulder’s Police Department and Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence will launch a project across the University of Colorado system. That project will educate students, faculty, and community members about hate crime prevention and intervention and train campus officials on strategies for addressing hate crimes and hate-based incidents on campus.

    The 9th Circuit State Attorney’s Office in Orlando, Florida, will use its grant funds to establish an online complaint system for hate crimes to be reported, vetted, and referred to the proper law enforcement agency. It will also provide mediation where appropriate for non-violent hate crimes and provide trauma-informed mental health services to victims of hate crimes.

    Through the Community-based Approaches to Prevent and Address Hate Crime Program, the Department is also awarding more than $7.6 million to 11 different community-based and civil rights organizations. That money will fund projects dedicated to developing and implementing comprehensive hate crimes prevention and response strategies.

    For example, the Faith-Based Information Sharing and Analysis Organization will implement a hate crimes preparedness program for approximately 350,000 religious congregations to better prepare for and mitigate the threat from hate crimes and incidents. The No al Odio (or “No to Hate”) project will work with Hispanic communities in California to understand and report hate crimes through a comprehensive education and outreach strategy. And the Global Peace Foundation will use funds to work with Black and African immigrant populations in Maryland to train participants in conflict resolution and to build trust between diverse community members.

    To improve hate crime reporting and access to services for victims, the Department is awarding $1.1 million under the Jabara-Heyer NO HATE Act State-Run Hate Crime Reporting Hotlines. That funding, awarded to the Washington State Attorney General’s Office, will support the launch of its statewide hate crimes and bias incidents hotline by investing in partnerships with LGBTQI+, Latino, Black, immigrant, and refugee organizations.

    Both California and Illinois received hate crime reporting hotline grants in FY2022, and both states now have active hotlines for victims to report incidents in multiple languages, speak to trained professionals, and seek support and trauma-informed services.

    Also through Jabara-Heyer NO HATE Act funding, the Department is providing $2.5 million to its research and analysis project that evaluates FBI crime data and hate crime reporting patterns within and across states, as well the variation among state laws on hate crimes. The Department is also providing $650,000 to its project on NIBRS data and police service calls, with a focus on identifying hate crimes.

    And through the Emmett Till Cold Case Investigation and Prosecution Program, we are awarding $1 million to the Orleans Parish District Attorney’s Office (D.A.’s Office) to continue its work identifying, researching, and cataloguing Jim Crow cold case homicides, as well as unsolved homicides of LGBTQI+ victims, particularly those killed during the late 1970s.

    Through a previous grant under this program, the D.A.’s Office is investigating nearly 175 racial terror homicides in New Orleans and over 300 cases statewide.

    In addition to these grants, the Department is also combating hate by supporting resource centers. This includes the launch of a new Coordinated Hate Crimes Resource Center through a $2.7 million award to RTI and its subrecipients, the Eradicate Hate Global Summit and the International Association of Chiefs of Police. The Resource Center will serve as a hub for resources, training, and education, and it will support practitioners who are countering hate crimes and supporting victims in local, state, federal, and Tribal jurisdictions across the nation.

    Additionally, in June, through funding by the Department, the Shepard-Byrd Hate Crimes Training and Technical Assistance Program announced the launch of a website that provides resources for law enforcement, prosecutors, community groups, and the public on how to identify, investigate, prosecute, and prevent hate crimes, as well as on how to address the needs of victims and communities.

    We know that a key tool to combat hate and support victims of hate crimes and incidents is research. To that end, the Department is providing over $2.5 million in funding for three research projects to advance the understanding of law enforcement responses to hate crimes and the needs of survivors and survivor communities. The studies will generate new information to improve specialized law enforcement bias crime units, the use of LGTBQI+ liaison units to respond to anti-transgender hate crimes, and outcomes for survivors of hate crimes and their communities.

    This research will also lead to the development of recommendations and guidance to help practitioners and policymakers improve responses to hate crimes.

    In addition to these new grant awards, I am pleased to announce two new trainings. First, the Justice Department’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention is releasing a new Youth Hate Crimes and Identity-Based Bullying Prevention Curriculum, designed for middle and high school-aged youth and the teachers, counselors, and others who work with them.

    The curriculum was informed by 19 roundtable discussions with youth across seven states, along with pilot testing in many communities. It is designed to empower young people to change attitudes and behaviors and make them less likely to engage in or be victimized by hate crimes or bullying.

    The curriculum is also designed to educate adults who work with youth about the potential use of online technologies to break down cultural barriers and bias. The Department is dedicated to continuing to provide more resources to address hate crimes, bias incidents, and bullying among youth. You are going to hear more about the training from Director Ryan momentarily.

    Second, the Department’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (or the COPS Office) is launching a new training on investigating hate crimes. That training was developed in conjunction with the International Association of Chiefs of Police and other subject matter experts. It builds on the training the COPS Office released in 2022 on recognizing and reporting hate crimes aimed at line-level officers. Both trainings can be requested at no cost by state and local agencies.

    I have touched on the importance of the Justice Department’s prosecutions, grants, and trainings to combat hate. Another critical pillar to our work is our engagement with the communities we serve. The Department’s Community Relations Service (or CRS) is working with communities across the country who are victimized by hate crimes and hate incidents. Using facilitated dialogues and programs, CRS is in communities responding to threats of violence against community members because of who they are and where they are from.

    CRS is also involved in many of the United Against Hate Programs that the Justice Department launched in all 94 U.S. Attorneys’ Offices across the country. Those programs connect federal, state, and local law enforcement with communities to increase community understanding and reporting of hate crimes, build trust between communities and law enforcement, and create stronger alliances to prevent and combat hate crimes.

    Over the past two years, U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, in close partnership with FBI, CRS, and the Civil Rights Division, have held over 550 United Against Hate events nationwide with over 18,500 participants. Just yesterday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Alabama and the FBI Office here in Birmingham hosted a United Against Hate symposium at Alabama A&M University for students and faculty.

    As the many programs and tools I have mentioned today underscore, the Justice Department remains committed to combating and preventing hate crimes and incidents. The partnerships that we have built across the country and continue to build with everyone here this week are indispensable to that work. I am grateful to stand with you as we work together to reject bigotry used to justify hate-fueled threats and violence and attempts to divide us. We are stronger together. Every person deserves to feel safe in their communities, and we will continue to fight back against hate in all its forms.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Attorney General Merrick B. Garland Delivers Remarks at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of South Carolina

    Source: United States Attorneys General 13

    Remarks as Prepared for Delivery

    Good morning. Thank you, Adair, for that warm welcome.

    Before we get started, I want to address a major development that took place late yesterday.

    The Justice Department secured a federal indictment of Ryan Routh, charging him with attempting to assassinate former President Donald Trump.

    These new charges returned by the grand jury build on the firearms felony charges we filed last week, which permitted the defendant’s arrest and detention as our investigation continued.

    Immediately after the assassination attempt on September 15th, I made clear that the Justice Department would bring every available resource to bear in this investigation.

    Over the last 11 days, the Department has done just that.

    As alleged in the indictment, and as reflected in court documents filed in this case, evidence uncovered in the investigation sheds new light on the defendant’s actions in the days leading up to this crime, and supports the charge of attempted assassination. This evidence includes:

    A handwritten list seized from the defendant’s car cataloging the dates and venues of the former President’s past and expected appearances.

    A box the defendant left with a witness several months ago, which contained a handwritten letter addressed to “the World,” stating: “This was an assassination attempt on Donald Trump but I failed you.”

    And cell site records indicating that on multiple days and times in the weeks leading up to the assassination attempt, the defendant was repeatedly in the immediate vicinity of the Trump International Golf Club and the former President’s residence at Mar-a-Lago.

    This investigation is still in its early stages and remains active and ongoing. And as in all cases, the allegations we make in our filings are just that until we prove them in court beyond a reasonable doubt.

    The Justice Department is committed to using the full force of our authorities to thoroughly investigate every lead and ensure accountability in this matter.

    Our nation has now experienced two assassination attempts against the former President in just the last three months. That is abhorrent.

    Violence and threats of violence targeting public officials are dangerous to their safety, the safety of their families, and the safety of the people who protect them. They are dangerous to everything this country stands for.

    The Justice Department will not tolerate violence that strikes at the heart of our democracy. And we will find and hold accountable those who perpetrate it.

    This must stop.

    Now, I want to turn to the topic of today’s meeting, the work of this office and its law enforcement partners.

    In just a few moments, U.S. Attorney Boroughs and I will meet with our federal, state, and local law enforcement partners about our work to keep communities across South Carolina safe.

    I am grateful to have the chance to thank our partners today, in person, for the difficult and often dangerous work they do to protect communities here in Columbia and across the state.

    I am also grateful to have the chance to recognize the public servants of this Office for their extraordinary work.

    This U.S. Attorney’s Office is the face of the Justice Department here in South Carolina. When people across the state look to see what the Department stands for, they look to this U.S. Attorney’s Office. I have been consistently impressed not only with the work you do, but with the way you do that work.

    That work, together with the work of our state and local law enforcement partners, is making a difference.

    Three-and-a-half years ago, the Justice Department launched an ambitious strategy to combat violent crime. That strategy is rooted in exactly the kinds of partnerships that are represented in this room. Today, we are seeing results.

    According to the South Carolina State Law Enforcement Division, South Carolina’s violent crime rate decreased by 5.8% from 2022 to 2023, making 2023 the third consecutive year of decline. That included a 5.9% decrease in the murder rate.

    We have also seen encouraging trends on the national level. Just earlier this week, the FBI released a report indicating we saw an 11.6% drop in homicides last year and one of the lowest violent crime rates in 50 years.

    And recent data indicates this trend is continuing.

    Earlier this month, the Justice Department’s Violent Crime Reduction Steering Committee announced new data from across 88 cities, which indicates that violent crime has continued to decline considerably in 2024. That included a further 16.9% drop in murders.

    But we know that progress in many communities is still uneven. And, of course, there is no acceptable level of violent crime.

    That is why the Justice Department is continuing to work with our partners here in South Carolina and across the country to combat violent crime, drug and gun trafficking, and gang violence.

    For example, on a single day earlier this month, this office announced three significant developments in our work to combat drug trafficking and the fentanyl crisis.

    First – in partnership with ATF, Homeland Security, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and local law enforcement in Cherokee, Spartanburg, and Greenville counties – the office secured guilty pleas from six members of a methamphetamine trafficking ring responsible for distributing at least 250 kilograms of meth in the Upstate.

    Second – together with ATF, DEA, and the Richland County Sheriff’s Department – the office secured 10-year and seven-year prison sentences, respectively, for two individuals on fentanyl and gun charges.

    Third, together with DEA and the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, this Office secured a 10-year prison sentence for a man who provided a syringe loaded with drugs, including fentanyl, to a victim who later died of fentanyl poisoning.

    And, just last month, the office worked with federal law enforcement partners – as well as law enforcement in Spartanburg, Greenville, and Anderson counties – to secure a 23-year prison sentence for a cocaine and meth dealer.

    The dealer also conscripted others to buy guns for him so that he could modify them into fully automatic weapons. He sold some of the machine guns, and he kept at least one of them with him during his drug deals.

    And this spring, this office – in partnership with federal law enforcement, the Duncan Police Department, and several Canadian law enforcement agencies – secured sentences for three international gun traffickers. As part of that scheme, two of the defendants recruited straw purchasers to buy  guns on their behalf and then smuggled them to Canada.

    Finally, earlier this year, this office announced the results of a months-long investigation conducted in partnership with 19 federal, state, and local public safety agencies. That investigation resulted in charges against 13 defendants and the seizure of multiple firearms, ammunition, and drugs, including fentanyl.

    That investigation came after the FBI identified communities in Myrtle Beach that were experiencing high levels of gang and narcotics-related violence; in response, federal, state, and local law enforcement concentrated resources and personnel in those areas.

    In addition to using our investigative and prosecutorial resources to protect communities here in South Carolina, we are also committed to using our grantmaking capabilities to invest in public safety.

    For example, today, the Department is awarding $3 million in funding through the National Criminal History Improvement Program, which provides funding to states and localities to improve the quality, timeliness, and immediate accessibility of criminal history records and related information.

    This grant is part of the more than $36 million that the Department is awarding to organizations and government agencies in South Carolina this month to support law enforcement activities and community initiatives.

    These funds will, among other things, help law enforcement agencies in South Carolina hire more officers, prevent and combat violent crime and drug trafficking, and improve services for survivors of domestic and dating violence, sexual assault, stalking, and other crimes.

    We remain committed to providing our law enforcement and community partners with the resources they need to protect people across this state.

    The examples I have shared today are just a snapshot of the work this office is doing every day to protect people in this state, and to fulfill the Justice Department’s mission to keep our country safe, to protect civil rights, and to uphold the rule of law.

    I am very proud of the public servants who make up this office.  And I am equally proud of the relationships they have nurtured with the people and agencies around this table. They are the Justice Department’s indispensable partners.

    I look forward to our meeting.

    Thank you. 

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Cramer: Department of Energy Awards Initial Funding to Project Tundra

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND)

    ***Click here for audio***

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced an award of $4.2 million to Project Tundra. This is the first installment of up to $350 million to Project Tundra. These funds will be distributed through the fully-paid-for Bipartisan Infrastructure Law’s Carbon Capture Demonstration Projects Program, which supports the development of community-informed integrated carbon capture, transport, and storage projects.

    “This initial award really brings Project Tundra one step closer to being the first user of carbon capture utilization storage technology at a coal plant with on-site storage in the country, and how appropriate that it would be done in North Dakota,” said U.S. Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND). “This project demonstrates our state’s ingenuity and decades of energy development, experience, and dominance.  Obviously, more work lies ahead, but this is really welcome progress.”

    Project Tundra will capture up to 4 million metric tons of CO2 annually from the Milton R. Young Station, a lignite coal-based power plant. The CO2 would then be safely stored in geologic formations, roughly a mile underground. The facility’s commercial operation is set to begin in 2028. In June 2023, he announced Project Tundra entered into the final stage of development and congratulated the effort to deploy carbon capture at scale in North Dakota. 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Place for meetings and walks: the portal “Discover Moscow” has published a route along the embankments

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    On the portal and in the mobile application “Get to Know Moscow” a new walking route has appeared. The path goes through the Krymskaya, Prechistenskaya, Bersenevskaya, Sofiyskaya, Raushskaya and Kremlevskaya embankments. Thanks to the audio guide, you can put the excursion in the background and enjoy a leisurely promenade through the capital without being distracted by the screen.

    City residents and tourists will be able not only to admire the colorful views and ancient buildings, but also to learn interesting facts about their history and architecture. In addition to familiar places, participants will discover completely new routes. For example, during a walk along the Krymskaya Embankment, you can walk along the pedestrian bridge over the Vodootvodny Canal of the Moscow River, which opened this summer.

    “The capital’s embankments are among the favorite walking places of Moscow residents and guests. Each of them has its own history, style and architectural features. The new route is an opportunity to look at familiar, well-known places from a different point of view, learn more about them and experience the atmosphere of the capital in a new way. Users can study their favorite embankment in detail or devote a day to a leisurely stroll around all the points. And the audio guide will make the excursion more exciting and memorable,” the press service said.

    Department of Information Technology the city of Moscow.

    In the mid-19th century, there were meadows on this site where horses were grazed, and in architectural plans the location appeared as the Crimean Dam, the rampart from the Crimean Bridge, or the passage from the Crimean Bridge.

    It is suggested to start your acquaintance with the Krymskaya Embankment with a look at the monument to Peter I at the confluence of the Moscow River and the Vodootvodny Canal. The impressive sculpture made of steel and bronze weighs over two thousand tons and rises 98 meters above the ground. It was installed in 1997, when Moscow celebrated its 850th anniversary.

    This summer, a new pedestrian bridge across the Vodootvodny Canal of the Moscow River was opened near the monument to Peter the Great. It is 58 meters long and eight meters wide. The bridge connects Balchug Island with the Krymskaya and Yakimanskaya embankments, adding beauty and convenience to walks in the city center. There is a long bench on the bridge where you can rest and admire the scenery.

    Prechistenskaya Embankment is located on the left bank of the Moskva River in the Khamovniki district. It owes its name to the street of the same name, which appeared on the map of Moscow back in the 16th century. The pedestrian Patriarch’s Bridge, located next to the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, connects it with Bersenevskaya Embankment.

    The architectural pearls of Prechistenskaya Embankment have been mansions for many years. For example, the building of the patron Ivan Tsvetkov, designed by the famous Viktor Vasnetsov. Or the house of Alexander Levenson, designed by Fyodor Shekhtel. And not without the city estate of Ivan Mazurin, decorated with a turret.

    The main attraction of the embankment is the apartment building of Z.A. Pertsova. The building with majolica, resembling a fairy-tale tower, is rightfully considered one of the most outstanding buildings of the capital in the neo-Russian style. Each of these mansions has its own stories, legends and ancient secrets.

    Bersenevskaya Embankment is located opposite the Cathedral of Christ the Savior. It starts near the Bolshoy Kamenny Bridge, curving towards the monument to Peter I. According to one version, the embankment owes its name to gooseberries: once upon a time, there were Bersenevskaya gardens on this bank of the Moscow River.

    The legendary Krasny Oktyabr factory is located in the Bersenevskaya Embankment area. The old brick buildings are an example of industrial architecture from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. The famous House on the Embankment, immortalized in Yuri Trifonov’s novel, is also located in the historical Yakimanka area.

    Sofiyskaya Embankment stretches along the right bank of the Moskva River directly opposite the Kremlin. It starts from Serafimovich Street and ends near the Bolshoy Moskvoretsky Bridge. This place is famous for its beautiful view of the Kremlin.

    The name of the embankment is associated with the Church of St. Sophia the Wisdom of God in Srednie Sadovniki, one of the oldest buildings in Zamoskvorechye. The wooden church itself was destroyed in a fire in 1493, and in 1682 a stone St. Sophia Church was built here.

    Walking along the embankment, listeners will pass by the legendary Kokorevsky Podvorye. The old hotel building with shops and wholesale warehouses was built in the early 1860s on the initiative of the entrepreneur and philanthropist Vasily Kokorev.

    Raushskaya Embankment runs along the Moskva River in the Zamoskvorechye district. It is located between Balchug Street and the Bolshoy Ustinsky Bridge. The name of the embankment is presumably associated with the ravushki — canals that used to drain water from the floodplain lands of Zamoskvorechye.

    In 1896, the Raushskaya power plant, which is still operating today, appeared here. Built by order of Emperor Alexander III, it was the first station to produce alternating current. The building of GES-1 of PAO Mosenergo supplies energy to the center of Moscow. The oldest power plant in Russia is included in the UNESCO World Heritage List as a unique object of industrial architecture. The appearance of the Raushskaya Embankment is complemented and decorated by the Church of St. Nicholas in Zayatskoye, built in the middle of the 18th century under the supervision of the famous master Prince Dmitry Ukhtomsky.

    The Kremlin Embankment, the first stone embankment in Moscow, has long been depicted on all city postcards and is still the most recognizable symbol of the capital. It is about one kilometer long. The embankment offers a good view of Red Square and Vasilievsky Spusk, as well as the southern wall of the Kremlin with its unique ancient towers. In addition, the embankment overlooks the Alexander Garden, as well as the Zotov Estate, an architectural monument of the 18th–19th centuries.

    “Discover Moscow” is a joint project of the departments of information technology, culture, cultural heritage, education and science. The interactive guide contains photographs and descriptions of more than 2.3 thousand buildings, 704 monuments, 410 museums, 490 places, over 270 walking routes, as well as information about 333 historical figures. All this is also available in the mobile application “Get to Know Moscow”.

    The implementation of digital solutions in the cultural sphere corresponds to the objectives of the national project “Culture” and the regional project of the city of Moscow “Digital Culture”. More information about this and other national projects implemented in Moscow can be found on a special page.

    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 accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/144474073/

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Rosen-Backed Bill to Reauthorize the Lake Tahoe Restoration Act Passes Congress, Heads to President’s Desk

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV)

    The Authorization Of The Lake Tahoe Restoration Act Was Set To Expire On October 1, 2024
    WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV) announced that legislation she helped pass in the Senate to extend the authorization of the Lake Tahoe Restoration Act for 10 years has passed the U.S. House of Representatives. The legislation is led by Senator Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV) and also cosponsored by Senators Laphonza Butler (D-CA) and Alex Padilla (D-CA) in the Senate. The Senate passed this bill in July, and it now goes to the President’s desk to be signed into law.
    “For the last two decades, lawmakers from both parties have come together and worked in a bipartisan way to protect Lake Tahoe and the surrounding communities,” said Senator Rosen. “I’m proud to continue this legacy by working with Republicans and Democrats in Congress to pass the Lake Tahoe Restoration Reauthorization Act and reauthorize this much-needed funding to help preserve one of Nevada’s most unique natural wonders for generations to come.”
    “I was thrilled to pass the reauthorization of the Lake Tahoe Restoration Act through the Senate this summer, and today’s vote means this critical legislation is officially on its way to becoming law,” said Senator Cortez Masto. “I’m proud of our bipartisan work to deliver funding for vital programs that keep the lake clean, support local jobs, and support our tourism economy. It is an honor to help lead Team Tahoe and fight for the resources the basin needs to thrive.” 
    “The Lake Tahoe Region is grateful to Congress for their leadership in passing this critical piece of legislation to continue the collaborative work to protect and restore Lake Tahoe,” said Tahoe Regional Planning Agency Executive Director Julie Regan. “Extending the federal investment in the EIP will leverage millions of dollars in state and local funding to implement the top priority projects for the lake and our communities.”
    The Lake Tahoe Restoration Act is bicameral, and is cosponsored in the U.S. House of Representatives by Representatives Mark Amodei (R-Nev.-02), John Garamendi (D-Calif.-03), Dina Titus (D-Nev.- 01), Susie Lee (D-Nev.-03), Steven Horsford (D-Nev.-04), John Duarte (R-Calif.-13), and Kevin Kiley (R-Calif.-06). It will allow critical funding to support environmental protection and habitat restoration programs across the basin for the next ten years. This law has delivered millions in federal dollars to Lake Tahoe since the original law passed in 2000.
    Senator Rosen has consistently worked across the aisle to protect Lake Tahoe and ensure it has the federal resources it needs to thrive. She also delivered critical funding to protect Lake Tahoe in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and recently helped secure $24 million to extend the popular East Shore Trail around Lake Tahoe.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: WEBTOON SHAREHOLDER ALERT: CLAIMSFILER REMINDS INVESTORS WITH LOSSES IN EXCESS OF $100,000 of Lead Plaintiff Deadline in Class Action Lawsuit Against WEBTOON Entertainment Inc. – WBTN

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ClaimsFiler, a FREE shareholder information service, reminds investors that they have until November 4, 2024 to file lead plaintiff applications in a securities class action lawsuit against WEBTOON Entertainment Inc. (“Webtoon” or the “Company”) (NasdaqGS: WBTN), if they purchased the Company’s shares pursuant and/or traceable to the Company’s registration statement issued in connection with its June 2024 initial public offering (“IPO”). This action is pending in the United States District Court for the Central District of California.

    Get Help

    Webtoon investors should visit us at https://claimsfiler.com/cases/nasdaq-wbtn/ or call toll-free (844) 367-9658. Lawyers at Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC are available to discuss your legal options.

    About the Lawsuit

    Webtoon and certain of its executives and others are charged with failing to disclose material information in its IPO Registration Statement and Prospectus (collectively, the “Offering Documents”), violating federal securities laws.

    On August 8, 2024, the Company announced its financial results for 2Q 2024, disclosing total revenue growth of only 0.1% and that advertising revenue had declined 3.6%, that IP adaptations revenue had declined 3.7%, and that its quarterly net loss was $76.6 million. Further, the Company also disclosed a quarterly net loss of $76.6 million, and that its revenue and revenue growth had been “offset by the Company’s significant exposure to weaker foreign currencies.”

    On this news, shares of Webtoon fell by more than 38%, and by the commencement of the lawsuit, the Company’s stock has traded as low as $12.45 per share, a more than 40% decline from the $21.00 per share IPO price.

    The case is Brookman v. WEBTOON Entertainment Inc., et al., No. 24-cv-07553.

    About ClaimsFiler

    ClaimsFiler has a single mission: to serve as the information source to help retail investors recover their share of billions of dollars from securities class action settlements. At ClaimsFiler.com, investors can: (1) register for free to gain access to information and settlement websites for various securities class action cases so they can timely submit their own claims; (2) upload their portfolio transactional data to be notified about relevant securities cases in which they may have a financial interest; and (3) submit inquiries to the Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC law firm for free case evaluations.

    To learn more about ClaimsFiler, visit http://www.claimsfiler.com.

    The MIL Network –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: METHODE ELECTRONICS SHAREHOLDER ALERT: CLAIMSFILER REMINDS INVESTORS WITH LOSSES IN EXCESS OF $100,000 of Lead Plaintiff Deadline in Class Action Lawsuit Against Methode Electronics, Inc. – MEI

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ClaimsFiler, a FREE shareholder information service, reminds investors that they have until October 25, 2024 to file lead plaintiff applications in a securities class action lawsuit against Methode Electronics, Inc. (NYSE: MEI), if they purchased the Company’s shares between June 23, 2022 and March 6, 2024, inclusive (the “Class Period”). This action is pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

    Get Help

    Methode Electronics investors should visit us at https://claimsfiler.com/cases/nyse-mei/ or call toll-free (844) 367-9658. Lawyers at Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC are available to discuss your legal options.

    About the Lawsuit

    Methode and certain of its executives are charged with failing to disclose material information during the Class Period, violating federal securities laws.

    On March 7, 2024, the Company announced its financial results for 3Q2024, disclosing that its Automotive Segment generated only $139.7 million in net sales for the quarter and suffered an $11 million loss from operations, and that it was withdrawing its prior guidance due in substantial part to the “operational challenges” at its Monterrey facility and that its prior statements regarding the guidance should no longer be relied upon. On this news, the price of Methode’s shares fell 31%, from $21.04 per share when the market closed on March 6, 2024 to $14.49 per share when the market closed on March 7, 2024, on abnormally high volume.

    The case is Salem v. Methode Electronics, Inc., No. 24-cv-07696.

    About ClaimsFiler

    ClaimsFiler has a single mission: to serve as the information source to help retail investors recover their share of billions of dollars from securities class action settlements. At ClaimsFiler.com, investors can: (1) register for free to gain access to information and settlement websites for various securities class action cases so they can timely submit their own claims; (2) upload their portfolio transactional data to be notified about relevant securities cases in which they may have a financial interest; and (3) submit inquiries to the Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC law firm for free case evaluations.

    To learn more about ClaimsFiler, visit http://www.claimsfiler.com.

    The MIL Network –

    January 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: SUPER MICRO COMPUTER SHAREHOLDER ALERT: CLAIMSFILER REMINDS INVESTORS WITH LOSSES IN EXCESS OF $100,000 of Lead Plaintiff Deadline in Class Action Lawsuits Against Super Micro Computer, Inc. – SMCI

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ClaimsFiler, a FREE shareholder information service, reminds investors that they have until October 29, 2024 to file lead plaintiff applications in securities class action lawsuits against Super Micro Computer, Inc. (“SMCI” or the “Company”) (NasdaqGS: SMCI), if they purchased the Company’s securities between February 2, 2021 and August 28, 2024, inclusive (the “Class Period”). These actions are pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.

    Get Help

    SMCI investors should visit us at https://claimsfiler.com/cases/nasdaq-smci-3/ or call toll-free (844) 367-9658. Lawyers at Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC are available to discuss your legal options.

    About the Lawsuits

    SMCI and certain of its executives are charged with failing to disclose material information during the Class Period, violating federal securities laws.

    On August 27, 2024, Hindenburg Research released a report entitled “Super Micro: Fresh Evidence of Accounting Manipulation, Sibling Self-Dealing and Sanctions Evasion at this AI High Flyer” that detailed its “3-month investigation” which uncovered “glaring accounting red flags, evidence of undisclosed related party transactions, sanctions and expert control failures, and customer issues,” and that the Company continued to engage in channel-stuffing despite being charged by the SEC for doing so. On this news, the price of SMCI’s shares fell from a closing price of $562.51 per share on August 26, 2024 to $443.49 per share on August 28, 2024.

    The first-filed case is Averza v. Super Micro Computer, Inc., 24-cv-06147. Two subsequent cases were filed, Menditto v. Super Micro Computer, Inc., 24-cv-06149 and Spatz v. Super Micro Computer, Inc., 24-cv-06193.

    About ClaimsFiler

    ClaimsFiler has a single mission: to serve as the information source to help retail investors recover their share of billions of dollars from securities class action settlements. At ClaimsFiler.com, investors can: (1) register for free to gain access to information and settlement websites for various securities class action cases so they can timely submit their own claims; (2) upload their portfolio transactional data to be notified about relevant securities cases in which they may have a financial interest; and (3) submit inquiries to the Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC law firm for free case evaluations.

    To learn more about ClaimsFiler, visit http://www.claimsfiler.com.

    The MIL Network –

    January 22, 2025
←Previous Page
1 … 966 967 968 969 970 … 1,000
Next Page→
NewzIntel.com

NewzIntel.com

MIL Open Source Intelligence

  • Blog
  • About
  • FAQs
  • Authors
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Patterns
  • Themes

Twenty Twenty-Five

Designed with WordPress