Category: Eurozone

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Lord Mayor announces chosen charities

    Source: Northern Ireland City of Armagh

    Lord Mayor Alderman Stephen Moutray pictured with Carla Smyth from Epilepsy Action Northern Ireland and Deirdre Breen from Evora Hospice Care, formerly known as Southern Area Hospice Services.

    Lord Mayor Alderman Stephen Moutray has officially announced two organisations as the chosen charities for his term in office.

    Charities set to benefit from monies raised throughout the Lord Mayor’s term include Epilepsy Action Northern Ireland and Evora Hospice Care – previously known as Southern Area Hospice Services.

    Welcoming representatives from the local charities to Craigavon Civic and Conference Centre recently, Lord Mayor Alderman Stephen Moutray expressed his enthusiasm for the charities work, commenting:

    “As Lord Mayor, I am honoured to support two charities that hold deep personal significance for me. Having witnessed first-hand the compassion and vital support provided by Epilepsy Action Northern Ireland and Evora Hospice Care to my own family members, I am proud to champion their incredible work during my term.

    “Their dedicated specialist palliative care and support services make a profound difference in the lives of those facing challenging health battles, and I am committed to raising awareness and funds to ensure they can continue their vital work.”

    Carla Smyth, Epilepsy Action Northern Ireland Manager, said:

    “We are absolutely thrilled that the Lord Mayor has selected us as one of his chosen charities of the year. Epilepsy Action Northern Ireland is the only charity in the region dedicated to providing front-line services for those affected by epilepsy, and the funds raised will contribute towards the local support services we provide.

    “With one in 83 people in Northern Ireland living with epilepsy, this partnership will not only help us to raise much-needed funds but more importantly it allows us to raise awareness about such a widespread and challenging condition.”

    Deirdre Breen, Evora Hospice Care fundraiser, commented:

    “I am truly delighted that the Lord Mayor has selected Evora Hospice Care – formerly known as Southern Area Hospice Services – as one of his charities this year. Evora Hospice Care supports patients with life-limiting conditions, empowering them to live well from diagnosis through to end of life, and provides care that honours each individual’s unique needs, choices, and quality of life.

    “As someone who has been fundraising for 25 years, I understand how vital donations and fundraising events are to our work. I am confident the Lord Mayor will do an excellent job raising money for both of his chosen charities.”

    To find out more information or how to donate to the Lord Mayor’s charities, please contact the Lord Mayor’s Office on 0330 0561 030 or

    *protected email*

    .

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: More than 1,000 kids get active at Coventry Children’s Mile

    Source: City of Coventry

    The Coventry Children’s Mile event returned once again last weekend with more than 1,000 children from 33 Coventry primary schools completing a mile to fundraise.

    Home education students also took part in the event for the first time. 

    Students, teachers, support staff and parents all turned out to volunteer their time to support their schools in the War Memorial Park.

    Alongside fundraising for important causes, the event was designed to encourage children to stay active, particularly those from hard-to-reach areas.

    The event supported Team Coventry by raising funds for travel costs for the team to compete in the International Children’s Games which is taking place in Tallinn, Estonia in August, where Coventry will be represented on the international stage.

    Athletes, coaches and supporters of Team Coventry came along too and helped with organisation, marshalling and most importantly, cheering participants on.

    Not only were funds raised for Team Coventry, but funds have also been raised by the event for a local charity.

    All participants received a souvenir event t-shirt and certificate of participation while the mile route was fully accessible for all abilities.

    Councillor Kamran Caan, Cabinet Member for Public Health and Sport, said, “This was a record turn-out for the Children’s Mile which is absolutely fantastic. Seeing more and more schools and parents want to get their children involved in the event is great. It’s the perfect way to get the children moving and be able to show them that physical activity is fun.

    “The event also helps to raise funds for two worthy causes which will help local people, including 18 young athletes in their journey to compete in the International Children’s Games in Estonia to represent our city.

    “Thank you to all who have supported the causes so far and a huge congratulations to all who took part in 2025’s Coventry Children’s Mile.” 

    The Coventry Children’s Mile 2025 is a partnership between Coventry City Council, CV Life and Coventry’s School Games Organisers.

    Without volunteer and partner support from these organisations, the event wouldn’t be able to take place.

    Check out the photos from the day on Flickr 

    If you would like to send a good luck message and donation to Team Coventry ahead of their trip to Tallinn, Estonia to represent the city, please head over to the donation site. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Europe: 2024-03-25 at 19h24 First Council of Ministers at the new Government headquarters The President of the Republic was invited to preside in a gesture intended to “emphasize the importance of Institutional cooperation”

    Source: Government of Portugal (PM)

    The last Council of Ministers of António Costa’s third government was held on Monday 25 March at the Government’s new headquarters in the Caixa Geral de Depósitos building in Lisbon. In a meeting presided over by the President of the Republic Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa the new National Strategy for the Inclusion of the . <. the new government is free to appraise reappraise and not start from scratch rather point where we are now2 ant costa claimed.>

    Institutional solidarity and cooperation

    The meeting was presided over by the President of the Republic Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa – a tradition that began with the Prime Minister António Costa at the last council of Ministers of the last term of the former President of the Republic Aníbal Cavaco Silva on 3 March 2016. 

    “More than an act of courtesy, this is a way of emphasizing the importance of institutional cooperation, of institutional solidarity between the Government and other sovereign bodies, particularly the President of the Republic” said the Prime Minister after the meeting ended.

    “If will be hard to find another period in our constitutional experience where the relations between the Government and the President of the Republic flowed so easily, in such a cooperative and solidary manner as what happened in the essential part of these eight years”, António Costa went on to say.

    The President of the Republic Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa further acknowledged that the institutional solidarity has worked over the last eight year, with three different Governments. “At crucial times, institutional solidarity became national solidarity. And that is highly positive. The relationship between the Head of State and the Head of Government should be like this as much as possible, even if they have different starting points and ways of thinking and differences as to concrete modes of action in day-to-day”, he said.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: 2024-03-27 at 16h49 The four crises and seven structural shifts of the last eight years Prime Minister António Costa took stock of the last years in government

    Source: Government of Portugal (PM)

    António Costa took stock of the government’s action in the last eight years, where he was Prime Minister, during a press conference held in the official residence.<.>

    António Costa also referred to the financial system’s greater stability. “The state-owned bank, which many felt should be privatised and that it would be impossible to capitalise, is today not only solvent, but also generated due revenue for the Portuguese economy and citizens”, the Prime Minister claimed. 

    The wildland fires crisis 

    The second crisis noted by the Prime Minister was that of wildland fires, the answer to which included restructuring the civil protection system and a budget reform, which offered prevention a clear priority over fighting. As a result, “if we were to add up the entire area burnt down in the six years between 2018 and 2023 [the result] is 60.7% of the area burnt down in 2017 alone”, he stressed.

    The Covid-19 pandemic 

    The country’s response to this third crisis was “worthy of note”, claimed the Prime Minister. “We were the first country in the world to reach a vaccination coverage of 85%. And the efforts to support the economy and households allowed us to be one of the countries that best came out of the pandemic”, he added. 

    The inflationist crisis

    The fourth crisis arose from the effects of the pandemic, which was still felt, and the war between Russia and Ukraine. This conflict “worsened a situation that came from the pandemic, with the breakdown in supply chains, which led us to the greatest inflationist crisis of the last 30 years”. 

    The rises in interest rates by the European Central Bank to respond to rising inflation “in a society such as hours where mortgages have a high significance and the variable rates are clearly dominant”, together with rising food costs, shot up household costs. 

    “From the start of 2022 to October 2022, inflation soared. We hit 10.1% inflation in October 2022 and since then we have been on a slow, yet sure, trajectory to lower inflation, until we hit 2.1% last February and the forecast is we will remain on that lowering trajectory”, said the Prime Minister.

    SEVEN STRUCTURAL SHITS

    Higher growth

    The Prime Minister stated that between 2000 and 2015 the country alternated between recession and stagnation. “Only in one year of these 15 did we grow above the European average: in 2009. From 2016 onwards, the reality has been quite different “, he said. “In these eight years, the country grew ten times more than what it had grown in the previous 15”, he signalled, noting the 2.1% growth, including in the two pandemic years, “where product naturally fell drastically”. 

    More jobs and more income

    The creation of jobs and improvement in employment conditions contributed to this economic growth. “Today, we have a record number of people working in Portugal: 5 million people. That is an additional 629 thousand jobs than in 2015. And in a context where it was possible to not just to have minimum wages grow 62%, but also average wages having grown 27.7%”, the Prime Minister indicated.

    In addition to the rise in the minimum wage, the Prime Minister also noted rising pensions and improvement in net income. 

    Always in line with the Social Security Basis Law, in these eight years, average pensions rose 23.3%, “with all the rises set down in the law, as well as extraordinary rises to counter inflation”. 

    The improvement in net income came from the “successive drops in income tax IRS” and the “successive measures of non-monetary transfers that cut household expenses”, such as making school books free, reforming the costs of public transports, increasing the number of households that benefit from energy social rates and the “significant” cut in pubic university fees, that went from more than one thousand euros to 697 euros per annum.

    A more qualified country

    This was the shift the Prime Minister considered “perhaps brings the greatest consequences for the future”. António Costa mentioned the “highly significant” drop in early dropouts, where this year we are below the EU average for 2030, and the rise in the number of youths aged 30 to 34 years who completed higher educaiton in 2015, which can only rise, since “if we look at the youths who are 20 years old, 39% attended university in 2015, and today it’s 54%”. 

    A more competitive economy

    “Every year, we beat records in attracting foreign direct investment. Every year, we beat corporate investment records and corporate investment went up 85% between 2015 and 2023”, the Prime Minister stated, advocating that “what offers a modern economy competitiveness is its capacity to have qualified jobs, being more innovative, and this is what enables that innovation”. 

    António Costa also added that the rise in exports, which in 2022 accounted for more than 50% of GDP, and the change in the nature of exports. “Exports of high and medium tech goods increased 71% over these last eight years, which means that complexifying, qualifying, and the added value of our economy have been clearly on the rise”.

    Less inequality

    “Today we have 600 thousand people less in poverty or social exclusion, and especially 226 thousand children less living in poverty or social exclusion”, said the Prime Minister.

    Taking the lead in fighting climate change

    The sixth shift had to do with the country’s position in taking the lead in fighting climate change. “We were the first country in the world, at the2016 Marrakesh COP to undertake the goal of being carbon neutral by 2050. Our Climate Law imposed on us a greater ambition of hitting that target in 2045 rather than 2050”. 

    Since 2017, Portugal has cut back its GHG emissions by 17% “due to the public transport policy and bringing targets such as closing down coal-fuelled power stations forward and increasing the capacity to generate energy using renewables”, the Prime Minister signalled.

    Advances in the State reform 

    The last structural shift mentioned by the Prime Minister had to do with the advances in the State reform, namely concerning the decentralisation of powers, such as transferring the PSP’s traffic tasks to the Lisbon and Porto municipal police, making Carri or STCP (public transport) municipal, or the agreement with the National Portuguese Municipalities Association (ANMP) to transfer powers. Lastly, António Costa referred to the reform of the Regional Development Coordination Committees (CCDR), that are now more democratised and with greater autonomy. 

    View the Prime Minister’s presentation here 

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: 2024-03-27 at 16h49 The four crises and seven structural shifts of the last eight years Prime Minister António Costa took stock of the last years in government

    Source: Government of Portugal (PM)

    António Costa took stock of the government’s action in the last eight years, where he was Prime Minister, during a press conference held in the official residence.<.>

    António Costa also referred to the financial system’s greater stability. “The state-owned bank, which many felt should be privatised and that it would be impossible to capitalise, is today not only solvent, but also generated due revenue for the Portuguese economy and citizens”, the Prime Minister claimed. 

    The wildland fires crisis 

    The second crisis noted by the Prime Minister was that of wildland fires, the answer to which included restructuring the civil protection system and a budget reform, which offered prevention a clear priority over fighting. As a result, “if we were to add up the entire area burnt down in the six years between 2018 and 2023 [the result] is 60.7% of the area burnt down in 2017 alone”, he stressed.

    The Covid-19 pandemic 

    The country’s response to this third crisis was “worthy of note”, claimed the Prime Minister. “We were the first country in the world to reach a vaccination coverage of 85%. And the efforts to support the economy and households allowed us to be one of the countries that best came out of the pandemic”, he added. 

    The inflationist crisis

    The fourth crisis arose from the effects of the pandemic, which was still felt, and the war between Russia and Ukraine. This conflict “worsened a situation that came from the pandemic, with the breakdown in supply chains, which led us to the greatest inflationist crisis of the last 30 years”. 

    The rises in interest rates by the European Central Bank to respond to rising inflation “in a society such as hours where mortgages have a high significance and the variable rates are clearly dominant”, together with rising food costs, shot up household costs. 

    “From the start of 2022 to October 2022, inflation soared. We hit 10.1% inflation in October 2022 and since then we have been on a slow, yet sure, trajectory to lower inflation, until we hit 2.1% last February and the forecast is we will remain on that lowering trajectory”, said the Prime Minister.

    SEVEN STRUCTURAL SHITS

    Higher growth

    The Prime Minister stated that between 2000 and 2015 the country alternated between recession and stagnation. “Only in one year of these 15 did we grow above the European average: in 2009. From 2016 onwards, the reality has been quite different “, he said. “In these eight years, the country grew ten times more than what it had grown in the previous 15”, he signalled, noting the 2.1% growth, including in the two pandemic years, “where product naturally fell drastically”. 

    More jobs and more income

    The creation of jobs and improvement in employment conditions contributed to this economic growth. “Today, we have a record number of people working in Portugal: 5 million people. That is an additional 629 thousand jobs than in 2015. And in a context where it was possible to not just to have minimum wages grow 62%, but also average wages having grown 27.7%”, the Prime Minister indicated.

    In addition to the rise in the minimum wage, the Prime Minister also noted rising pensions and improvement in net income. 

    Always in line with the Social Security Basis Law, in these eight years, average pensions rose 23.3%, “with all the rises set down in the law, as well as extraordinary rises to counter inflation”. 

    The improvement in net income came from the “successive drops in income tax IRS” and the “successive measures of non-monetary transfers that cut household expenses”, such as making school books free, reforming the costs of public transports, increasing the number of households that benefit from energy social rates and the “significant” cut in pubic university fees, that went from more than one thousand euros to 697 euros per annum.

    A more qualified country

    This was the shift the Prime Minister considered “perhaps brings the greatest consequences for the future”. António Costa mentioned the “highly significant” drop in early dropouts, where this year we are below the EU average for 2030, and the rise in the number of youths aged 30 to 34 years who completed higher educaiton in 2015, which can only rise, since “if we look at the youths who are 20 years old, 39% attended university in 2015, and today it’s 54%”. 

    A more competitive economy

    “Every year, we beat records in attracting foreign direct investment. Every year, we beat corporate investment records and corporate investment went up 85% between 2015 and 2023”, the Prime Minister stated, advocating that “what offers a modern economy competitiveness is its capacity to have qualified jobs, being more innovative, and this is what enables that innovation”. 

    António Costa also added that the rise in exports, which in 2022 accounted for more than 50% of GDP, and the change in the nature of exports. “Exports of high and medium tech goods increased 71% over these last eight years, which means that complexifying, qualifying, and the added value of our economy have been clearly on the rise”.

    Less inequality

    “Today we have 600 thousand people less in poverty or social exclusion, and especially 226 thousand children less living in poverty or social exclusion”, said the Prime Minister.

    Taking the lead in fighting climate change

    The sixth shift had to do with the country’s position in taking the lead in fighting climate change. “We were the first country in the world, at the2016 Marrakesh COP to undertake the goal of being carbon neutral by 2050. Our Climate Law imposed on us a greater ambition of hitting that target in 2045 rather than 2050”. 

    Since 2017, Portugal has cut back its GHG emissions by 17% “due to the public transport policy and bringing targets such as closing down coal-fuelled power stations forward and increasing the capacity to generate energy using renewables”, the Prime Minister signalled.

    Advances in the State reform 

    The last structural shift mentioned by the Prime Minister had to do with the advances in the State reform, namely concerning the decentralisation of powers, such as transferring the PSP’s traffic tasks to the Lisbon and Porto municipal police, making Carri or STCP (public transport) municipal, or the agreement with the National Portuguese Municipalities Association (ANMP) to transfer powers. Lastly, António Costa referred to the reform of the Regional Development Coordination Committees (CCDR), that are now more democratised and with greater autonomy. 

    View the Prime Minister’s presentation here 

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Informal meeting on migration management in the margins of the European Council

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    In the margins of the European Council meeting, the President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, together with the Danish Prime Minister, Mette Frederiksen, and the Dutch Prime Minister, Dick Schoof, held another informal meeting today with some of the Member States that have the most interest in innovative solutions for the management of migration, and in particular the strengthening of the legal framework regarding returns. 

    In addition to Italy, Denmark, the Netherlands and the European Commission, the meeting was also attended by Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Malta, Poland and Sweden.

    European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen outlined the main areas of the Commission’s work regarding migration, focusing in particular on the progress of negotiations concerning the most recent legislative proposals on migration, starting with the new ‘Returns Regulation’, while also confirming that another meeting of the global coalition against migrant smuggling had been called for 10 December in Brussels.

    President Meloni expressed satisfaction with the results achieved so far by the informal group of the nations most interested in innovative solutions, and also pointed out a number of new focus areas, starting with the follow-up to the open letter dated 22 May regarding international conventions and their ability to respond to the challenges of irregular migration.

    Thanking President von der Leyen for the concrete operational work carried out, the leaders present agreed to continue maintaining close coordination also ahead of the next European summits.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Informal meeting on migration management in the margins of the European Council

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    In the margins of the European Council meeting, the President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, together with the Danish Prime Minister, Mette Frederiksen, and the Dutch Prime Minister, Dick Schoof, held another informal meeting today with some of the Member States that have the most interest in innovative solutions for the management of migration, and in particular the strengthening of the legal framework regarding returns. 

    In addition to Italy, Denmark, the Netherlands and the European Commission, the meeting was also attended by Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Malta, Poland and Sweden.

    European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen outlined the main areas of the Commission’s work regarding migration, focusing in particular on the progress of negotiations concerning the most recent legislative proposals on migration, starting with the new ‘Returns Regulation’, while also confirming that another meeting of the global coalition against migrant smuggling had been called for 10 December in Brussels.

    President Meloni expressed satisfaction with the results achieved so far by the informal group of the nations most interested in innovative solutions, and also pointed out a number of new focus areas, starting with the follow-up to the open letter dated 22 May regarding international conventions and their ability to respond to the challenges of irregular migration.

    Thanking President von der Leyen for the concrete operational work carried out, the leaders present agreed to continue maintaining close coordination also ahead of the next European summits.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: President Meloni attends European Council meeting

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    26 Giugno 2025

    The President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, attended the European Council meeting in Brussels today.

    Before the working sessions got underway, President Meloni, together with the Danish Prime Minister, Mette Frederiksen, and the Dutch Prime Minister, Dick Schoof, held an informal meeting with some of the Member States that have the most interest in innovative solutions for the management of migration, and in particular the strengthening of the legal framework regarding returns.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: President Meloni attends European Council meeting

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    26 Giugno 2025

    The President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, attended the European Council meeting in Brussels today.

    Before the working sessions got underway, President Meloni, together with the Danish Prime Minister, Mette Frederiksen, and the Dutch Prime Minister, Dick Schoof, held an informal meeting with some of the Member States that have the most interest in innovative solutions for the management of migration, and in particular the strengthening of the legal framework regarding returns.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Plenary session of the European Economic and Social Committee

    Source: European Union 2

    589th Plenary session, with the following guests: Roberta Metsola, President of the EP (tbc); János Bóka, Minister of EU Affairs of Hungary;  Nicolas Schmit, EU Commissioner for Jobs and Social Rights, Maxime Cerutti, Director of Social Affairs at Business Europe, Tea Jarc, Confederal Secretary of the EU Trade Union Confederation (ETUC), Rareș Voicu, President of the EU Youth Forum and Nicoletta Merlo, EESC Member; with Teresa Ribera, Minister for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge of Spain (tbc), Svenja Schulze, Federal Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development of Germany (tbc); Saadia Zahidi, Managing Director, World Economic Forum

    Recording of debates

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: European Space Forum

    Source: European Union 2

    Colonel Marcin Mazur is the Vice-President of the Polish Space Agency (POLSA) – an executive agency of the Ministry of Economic Development and Technology, est. 2014. POLSA supports the Polish space industry, cooperates with international agencies and public administration in the field of exploration and use of Outer Space.

    Col Mazur’s goal is to execute the Polish Space Strategy issued in 2017, which is in compliance with both the Space Strategy for Europe 2016 and the NATO Overarching Space Policy 2019, and implement the National Space Programme 2022-2026.

    Col Mazur’s responsibility in POLSA is to systematize security and defence activities, in particular the development of dual-use capabilities which may apply for military and civilian applications:

    • EO – Earth Observation satellite systems;
    • SATCOM – Satellite Communications systems;
    • SSA / SST – Space Situational Awareness / Space Surveillance and Tracking;
    • Launching technologies.

    Colonel Mazur was commissioned in 1998 and promoted to his first officer’s rank, 2nd lieutenant, in 2002. He graduated from the Military University of Technology in Warsaw with a Master’s Degree in Topography and Mapping. He started his career as a Geospatial Officer at the 6 th Independent Geographical Unit in Torun where he became the leader of Mobile Geospatial Support Team dedicated for NATO Response Forces. Following that Colonel Mazur served at the Joint Force Command Brunssum, the Netherlands, in the Geospatial Support Section, J2 Intelligence Division and as an IMINT Officer at the Military Geographical Centre in Warsaw from where he was assigned in 2012 to the General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces, P2 Intelligence Division, Imagery Intelligence Branch. As an Intelligence Officer, he was also appointed as a Part-time Inspector for Treaties on Conventional Arms Control in Europe (CFE) and Vienna Document 2011 (VD11) inspections. In August 2017 he became the IMINT Branch Head and in January 2019 was promoted to Colonel rank. As the IMINT Branch Head he was responsible for defining Earth Observation (EO) and Space Situational Awareness (SSA) military requirements. He was the co-chairman of the Polish-Italian Operational Working Group with regards to the COSMO SkyMed (CSK) and OPTSAT-3000 systems. Nationally he served the Chairman role of the Inter-ministerial Earth Observation Task Group.

    EDUCATION

    2003 Master of Science in Topography and Mapping, Military University of Technology, Warsaw

    2013 Military Intelligence Officer Course, Regional Joint Intelligence Training Facility, US European Command / US Africa Command, Warsaw

    2016 Postgraduate Studies, GIS, Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing for Defence and Security Purposes, Military University of Technology, Warsaw

    ASSIGNMENTS

    1998 – 2003 Officer Cadet, Military University of Technology, Warsaw

    2003 – 2008 Geospatial Officer, 6th Independent Geographical Unit, Torun

    2008 – 2010 Geospatial Officer, Joint Force Command Brunssum, the Netherlands

    2010 – 2012 Imagery Intelligence Officer, Military Geographical Centre, Warsaw

    2012 – 2017 Imagery Intelligence Officer, P2 Intelligence Division, General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces, Warsaw

    2017 – 2021 Imagery Intelligence Branch Head, P2 Intelligence Division, General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces, Warsaw

    2021 – Vice-President, Polish Space Agency, Warsaw

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE expands focus on virtual assets taxation in second workshop in Moldova

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

    Headline: OSCE expands focus on virtual assets taxation in second workshop in Moldova

    Building on insights from the first workshop held in May, the OSCE organized a follow-up event on the taxation of virtual assets on 26 and 27 June in Chisinau, Moldova.
    The workshop brought together eighteen representatives from Moldova’s State Tax Service and the Ministry of Finance to enhance their understanding of the complex and evolving landscape of crypto taxation.
    Over the course of the workshop, participants engaged in a mix of theoretical sessions and practical exercises aimed at deepening their technical knowledge and increasing their operational capacity. The workshop covered a range of topics, including blockchain-based taxation mechanisms, common tax avoidance strategies involving cryptocurrencies, and compliance with international standards.
    This training comes at a critical time, as Moldovan authorities are actively working to enhance the anti-money laundering framework and develop clear regulatory guidance for the virtual asset sector.
    The workshop series was organized as part of the OSCE’s extra-budgetary project, “Innovative Policy Solutions to Mitigate Money-Laundering Risks of Virtual Assets”, implemented by the Office of the Co-ordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental Activities and funded by Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, the United Kingdom and the United States.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • India’s engineering exports to US rise in May despite tariff challenges

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    India’s engineering goods exports to the United States saw a 4.6 per cent increase in May this year, reaching $1.74 billion, even as exporters navigated uncertainty over tariff measures announced by President Donald Trump. The uptick reflects resilience in bilateral trade, particularly in high-value engineering segments.
     
    Exports to major European economies also showed a positive trend. Shipments to Germany, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands recorded healthy growth, helping offset a sharp decline in engineering exports to key Middle Eastern markets such as the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
     
    Pankaj Chadha, Chairman of EEPC India, attributed the fall in Middle East-bound shipments to escalating geopolitical tensions and emerging risks in the logistics chain. He added that aluminium exports also faced pressure due to heightened global competition.
     
    This shift in regional trade dynamics contributed to a slight 0.82 per cent drop in overall engineering exports, which stood at $9.89 billion in May 2025. Despite this, engineering goods strengthened their position in India’s export basket, accounting for 25.53 per cent of total merchandise exports in May — a sign of the country’s growing manufacturing capabilities and rising demand for technologically advanced products.
     
    On a cumulative basis, engineering exports rose by 4.77 per cent to $19.40 billion during the April-May period of FY 2025-26, up from $18.52 billion during the same period last year. The growth was more pronounced in April 2025, when engineering exports jumped 11.28 per cent to $9.51 billion.
     
    Out of the 34 engineering export categories tracked in May, 26 showed positive year-on-year growth. Sectors such as machine tools, aircraft and spacecraft components, ships and boats, as well as non-ferrous metals like aluminium and zinc, recorded a decline in exports.
     
    North America remained India’s top export destination for engineering goods with a 21.3 per cent share, followed by the European Union at 17.7 per cent and the West Asia and North Africa region at 14.3 per cent.
     
    -IANS
  • MIL-OSI Africa: Coffee exporters from Africa, the Pacific, Latin America, and Southeast Asia showcase at World of Coffee Geneva 2025


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    The International Trade Centre (ITC) is showcasing its longstanding leadership in sustainable coffee development at the Specialty Coffee Association’s World of Coffee – Europe’s largest coffee trade show – hosted for the first time in Geneva from 26–28 June 2025.

    For over two decades, ITC has worked closely with the International Coffee Organization and regional institutions to support coffee value chains and SMEs across Latin America, Africa and Asia. From its flagship publication, The Coffee Guide – now in its fourth edition and widely regarded as the industry reference – to its deep partnerships promoting circular economy and inclusive business models, ITC supports building resilience, competitiveness and sustainable value chains for SME development..

    This year’s presence at the World of Coffee spotlights how ITC is investing in value addition, technical capacity building, regional trade, and youth and women-led entrepreneurship – with a focus on accompanying small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in their efforts to benefit from trade while securing better market access and stronger returns. 

    ITC Executive Director Pamela Coke-Hamilton said: ‘Coffee is more than a commodity – for the many small businesses we support in countries across the world, the ability to improve the quality of their beans, process at origin and meet sustainability requirements in the face of rising climate concerns means they’re able to adapt to changes to tap into new markets and compete at the global level.’

    ICO Executive Director Vanusia Nogueira said: ‘No one can tackle the coffee sector’s challenges alone. We need expertise, funding, capable people and strong partnerships for collective action. The ICO and ITC have worked together for many years, and Pamela and I have deepened this collaboration – going beyond The Coffee Guide to drive calls to action across numerous coffee-producing countries. Together, we’ve supported efforts ranging from EUDR compliance and new field procedures to market access and boosting local consumption – each critical to increasing incomes where coffee is grown.’

    Hon. Bwino Fred Kyakulaga, Uganda’s Minister of State for Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries, said: ‘Uganda reaffirms its ambitious commitment to transform its export trajectory—from $50 billion to $500 billion—through strategic value addition. Coffee will be one of the primary drivers for achieving this target, reinforcing not only our economic competitiveness but also our national transformation agenda. Additionally, the Government of Uganda has set aside $100 million to support investment in the gradual transition of the coffee sector from green bean export to both green bean and soluble coffee exports in a bid to generate more revenue and income for the farmers and the country as a whole.’

    In a separate meeting with ITC Deputy Executive Director Dorothy Tembo and her team, Hon. Bwino explored the possibility of a partnership with ITC focusing on value addition through science and technology transfer for sustainably increased coffee processing production.

    ITC at World of Coffee

    Booth 1359 | Palexpo Geneva | 26–28 June

    At Booth 1359, visitors can taste unique coffees from across the globe, connect directly with producers, and learn how ITC programmes are enabling sustainable and inclusive coffee growth from seed to sip.

    ITC will also co-host national booths with coffee sector stakeholders from:

    • Booth 1359: Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana 

    • Booth 2469: Burundi

    • Booth 2365: Kenya

    • Booth 2531: Lao People’s Democratic Republic 

    • Booth 2467: Papua New Guinea

    • Booth 2271: Rwanda

    • Booth 2377: United Republic of Tanzania

    • Booth 2371: Uganda

    ITC Programmes represented

    • ITC Window I Trust Fund, related to the development of methodologies associated with accompanying SMEs in the green transition

    • European Union-East African Community Market Access Upgrade Programme (MARKUP) II, funded by the EU, will support over 40 coffee companies from East Africa to exhibit and engage with buyers.

    • African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) Business-Friendly, funded by the EU and Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States, empowers small businesses through value addition, circular economy and trade development.

    • Netherlands Trust Fund V, funded by the Government of the Netherlands, supports coffee producers in Ethiopia, Ghana, and Senegal to grow exports and secure livelihoods.

    • United Kingdom Trade Partnerships Programme (UKTP), funded by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, aims to increase trade from developing countries to the United Kingdom and the European Union by maximizing the benefits of respective Economic Partnership Agreements and the United Kingdom’s Developing Countries Trading Scheme. 

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of International Trade Centre.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Belgium and IOM Renew Longstanding Partnership with New Multi-Year Funding Agreement

    Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    Geneva/Brussels, 27 June 2025 – The Government of Belgium has officially confirmed a new flexible funding agreement with the International Organization for Migration (IOM), providing an unearmarked contribution of €1 million per year from 2025 to 2028. The announcement, made during IOM’s 36th Standing Committee on Programmes and Finance, follows a high-level bilateral meeting earlier this month and reaffirms Belgium’s longstanding commitment to principled and effective migration governance. 

    “Belgium has been a steadfast and valued partner to IOM since our founding, consistently supporting our mission to protect people on the move and promote safe, orderly, and dignified migration,” said IOM Director General Amy Pope. “This renewed support reflects Belgium’s commitment to international solidarity and allows us to continue assisting migrants and communities facing the greatest challenges, from protracted displacement to human trafficking and climate-driven mobility.” 

    Belgium’s contributions have been pivotal to IOM’s field operations, from supporting early recovery in Ukraine, where IOM is helping communities rebuild livelihoods and infrastructure, to funding a regional project across six countries in West Africa that strengthens resilience to climate shocks, improves data governance, and promotes sustainable development.  

    In Belgium, IOM maintains close collaboration with partners at all levels of government, as well as with civil society, diaspora, and the private sector to support whole-of-society approaches to migration management.   

    Since 1984, IOM has supported Belgium with the voluntary return of more than 90,000 migrants, ensuring dignified return and sustainable reintegration in countries of origin, in collaboration with the Federal Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers, Fedasil. Partnerships with the Belgian Immigration Office, Fedasil, regional governments, and the private sector have also forged new pathways for regular mobility for students, workers, and displaced populations. 

    Belgium also plays a leading role in diaspora engagement through its strong partnership with IOM. IOM’s Country Office in Belgium and Luxembourg, with over 20 years of experience in diaspora engagement, implements the Organization’s global strategy to enable, engage, and empower diaspora, ensuring their inclusion in all stages of project development and execution. 

    Key initiatives such as the O-REMIT project, supported by the Belgian Directorate-General for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid, are opening new pathways for migrants to send remittances more affordably and invest in their countries of origin, while the Conex programme strengthens the ability of diaspora leaders to assist and protect vulnerable members of their communities through targeted training and capacity building. At the core of this approach is the IOM Belgium Diaspora Advisory Board, which ensures that all initiatives remain firmly grounded in the needs and priorities of the communities IOM serves.  

    These efforts leverage the skills of diaspora communities, networks, and resources to strengthen migration governance and foster development in both origin and host countries. Guided by the priorities of migrants and diaspora communities, Belgium’s partnership with IOM continues to foster meaningful engagement and lasting impact. 

    For more information, please visit IOM’s Media Centre. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI China: City hit five, Madrid cruise through at Club World Cup

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

    Manchester City and Real Madrid clinched top spot in their groups with commanding wins at the FIFA Club World Cup on Thursday, as Al-Hilal advanced and Salzburg bowed out.

    Manchester City struck three second-half goals to beat Juventus 5-2 in Orlando and clinch top spot in Group G.

    Jeremy Doku opened the scoring for the Premier League side, showing composure after Rayan Ait Nouri’s through ball to slot past goalkeeper Michele Di Gregorio.

    Dutch midfielder Teun Koopmeiners equalized by intercepting Ederson’s pass out from the back, driving into the box and firing a low shot that beat the Brazilian goalkeeper at his near post.

    Pierre Kalulu then put the ball in his own net while attempting to clear Matheus Nunes’ cross, restoring City’s lead.

    Erling Haaland made it 3-1 by bundling home a Nunes cross from the right and Phil Foden added a fourth with a tap-in after combining with Savinho.

    The Brazilian winger added to the Turin club’s misery with a long-range strike that bounced in off the underside of the bar after Di Gregorio’s rushed clearance.

    Juventus pulled one back late through Dusan Vlahovic, who held off his marker after Kenan Yildiz’s slide-rule pass and rifled low past Ederson.

    “I liked the way we did it,” City manager Pep Guardiola said. “It has been a long time since we had a performance like this on and off the ball. The players were committed and we are happy to beat a top side.”

    Juventus manager Igor Tudor admitted his team was outclassed in all aspects.

    “It’s a bad feeling after the match,” he said. “Conceding five goals is never a good sign. We rotated the squad because we were already qualified, but they played incredibly well. Their pressing didn’t let us breathe. We couldn’t get out.”

    Manchester City will meet Al-Hilal in Orlando on Monday while Juventus, which finished second in the group, will face Real Madrid in Miami on Tuesday.

    In Washington D.C., Kodjo Laba and Kaku scored either side of halftime as Al Ain recovered from a goal down to beat Wydad Casablanca 2-1.

    The Moroccan side went ahead through Cassius Mailula’s fourth-minute strike but Laba equalized from the penalty spot after Ayoub Boucheta brought down Adis Jasic just before halftime.

    Paraguayan midfielder Kaku completed the turnaround shortly after the restart as he lashed home from distance after Matias Palacios’ layoff.

    There was little at stake for either side beyond pride, with both teams already eliminated before the Group G fixture began.

    “This has been a good experience for us. It was a difficult group, with [Manchester] City and Juventus, but we competed until the end,” Kaku told reporters.

    Mailula said his team had taken positives from its participation in the tournament, despite scoring only two goals in three games.

    “It’s been difficult and we are sorry that we didn’t get the best results,” the South Africa international striker said. “But we learned a lot and that’s the most important thing, to take lessons and grow.”

    In Philadelphia, Vinicius Junior scored one goal and set up another as Real Madrid cruised to a 3-0 win over Salzburg. The result guaranteed top spot in Group H for Xabi Alonso’s men while the Austrian club was eliminated.

    Vinicius gave the Spanish giants the lead in the 40th minute, running onto Jude Bellingham’s perfectly weighted pass and cutting inside before hitting a low 18-yard drive into the near corner.

    The Brazilian forward then set up Federico Valverde with an ingenious backheel as the Uruguayan swept a first-time effort past Christian Zawieschitzky.

    Twenty-one-year-old forward Gonzalo Garcia put the result beyond doubt six minutes from time by capitalizing on chaotic defending to dink a clever shot over Zawieschitzky.

    Real Madrid finished the group stage with seven points, three ahead of third-placed Salzburg.

    “We were happy with our first half but we eased off a bit in the second,” Vinicius said after the match. “We have to make sure that doesn’t happen in the next match, because we’re now in the round of 16. It’s the most important part of the competition and every player wants to be involved.”

    In Thursday’s other match, goals from Salem Al-Dawsari and Marcos Leonardo handed Al-Hilal a 2-0 win over Pachuca, ensuring the Saudi Pro League side to be the only Asian club to reach the knockout stage. They will meet Manchester City on Monday.

    Al-Dawsari fired Al-Hilal ahead in the 22nd minute by controlling Nasser Al-Dawsari’s pass and expertly lifting a shot over goalkeeper Sebastian Jurado.

    Brazilian forward Marcos Leonardo doubled the advantage in second-half stoppage time, beating the offside trap to latch onto Ruben Neves’ pass before rounding Jurado and tapping into an empty net.

    Al-Hilal finished second in Group H and is yet to lose a match in the tournament while Pachuca bowed out without a point. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: IOC to review process for future Olympic host election

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

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has decided to pause the host election process for future Olympic and Winter Olympic Games after a two-day Executive Board meeting concluded in Lausanne, Switzerland, on Thursday.

    Newly-elected IOC President Kirsty Coventry invited IOC members to participate in a day-and-a-half of consultations on Tuesday, following a presidency handover ceremony on Monday.

    An LA 2028 sign and a blazing Olympic cauldron are seen at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the United States, Sept. 13, 2017. (Xinhua/Zhao Hanrong)

    The “Pause and Reflection” workshop with IOC members focused on five main topics, namely athletes, the Olympic Games, the Olympic Movement, a Better World Through Sport, and other aspects such as revenue generation and engagement.

    “There were so many incredible ideas. We really just touched the surface. I think the members felt that we could have probably spent a week together to really come out with stronger recommendations,” Coventry said.

    One of the main topics is the bidding process and the proper time of host selection of the Olympic Games and the Olympic Winter Games.

    “We will be setting up a working group to look into this for two main reasons. Members want to be engaged more in the process. And secondly, there was a very big discussion in and around when the next host should be awarded,” Coventry said.

    “We want to use the learnings from LA [the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics)] and from Brisbane [the 2032 Olympics], as well as the French Alps [2030 Winter Olympics], who have had a much shorter lead time. But in the case of LA and Brisbane, a much longer lead time. So there was a lot of discussion from all the members on when is the appropriate time to select a future host,” she added.

    The IOC Future Host Commission nominated the French Alps as the hosts of the Games in November 2023, seven years before the start of the event. Los Angeles was formally awarded the 2028 Games in September 2017, and Brisbane was awarded at the 138th IOC Session in Tokyo in July 2021, both 11 years ahead of time.

    Coventry said: “All the interested parties are going to be a part of this consultation. They wanted to be included in the process a little bit more and to be able to better understand the process. How do we include the members so that they can also be educated on those steps taken? When do we award the Games? What does that look like? Let’s have a reflection. Let’s have a review of the process to really analyze when is the best time to award the Games.”

    As the first female IOC President, Coventry has positioned herself as a leading advocate on gender issues.

    “There was an overwhelming support — not just the majority, but all the members — shared with us before they left that we should protect the female category.

    “With that, we are going to set up a working group, made up of experts and International Federations. We understand that there will be differences depending on the sports, but it was fully agreed that we should make the effort to place emphasis on the protection of the female category and that we should ensure that this is done in consensus with all the stakeholders,” she said.

    The EB meeting reallocated the medals of the women’s 1,500m in athletics after the disqualification of Russia’s Tatyana Tomashova due to an anti-doping violation. Tomashova’s silver medal was awarded to Abeba Aregawi of Ethiopia, and the bronze medal went to Shannon Rowbury of the United States.

    The disqualification of Belgium’s Domien Michiels also resulted in the modification of the ranking of the Equestrian Team Finals at the 2024 Olympics, as Belgium was disqualified from its fifth-place finish.

    Among other topics, Patricia O’Brien was appointed interim Chair of the Ethics Committee until the next IOC Session. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: IOC to review process for future Olympic host election

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

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has decided to pause the host election process for future Olympic and Winter Olympic Games after a two-day Executive Board meeting concluded in Lausanne, Switzerland, on Thursday.

    Newly-elected IOC President Kirsty Coventry invited IOC members to participate in a day-and-a-half of consultations on Tuesday, following a presidency handover ceremony on Monday.

    An LA 2028 sign and a blazing Olympic cauldron are seen at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the United States, Sept. 13, 2017. (Xinhua/Zhao Hanrong)

    The “Pause and Reflection” workshop with IOC members focused on five main topics, namely athletes, the Olympic Games, the Olympic Movement, a Better World Through Sport, and other aspects such as revenue generation and engagement.

    “There were so many incredible ideas. We really just touched the surface. I think the members felt that we could have probably spent a week together to really come out with stronger recommendations,” Coventry said.

    One of the main topics is the bidding process and the proper time of host selection of the Olympic Games and the Olympic Winter Games.

    “We will be setting up a working group to look into this for two main reasons. Members want to be engaged more in the process. And secondly, there was a very big discussion in and around when the next host should be awarded,” Coventry said.

    “We want to use the learnings from LA [the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics)] and from Brisbane [the 2032 Olympics], as well as the French Alps [2030 Winter Olympics], who have had a much shorter lead time. But in the case of LA and Brisbane, a much longer lead time. So there was a lot of discussion from all the members on when is the appropriate time to select a future host,” she added.

    The IOC Future Host Commission nominated the French Alps as the hosts of the Games in November 2023, seven years before the start of the event. Los Angeles was formally awarded the 2028 Games in September 2017, and Brisbane was awarded at the 138th IOC Session in Tokyo in July 2021, both 11 years ahead of time.

    Coventry said: “All the interested parties are going to be a part of this consultation. They wanted to be included in the process a little bit more and to be able to better understand the process. How do we include the members so that they can also be educated on those steps taken? When do we award the Games? What does that look like? Let’s have a reflection. Let’s have a review of the process to really analyze when is the best time to award the Games.”

    As the first female IOC President, Coventry has positioned herself as a leading advocate on gender issues.

    “There was an overwhelming support — not just the majority, but all the members — shared with us before they left that we should protect the female category.

    “With that, we are going to set up a working group, made up of experts and International Federations. We understand that there will be differences depending on the sports, but it was fully agreed that we should make the effort to place emphasis on the protection of the female category and that we should ensure that this is done in consensus with all the stakeholders,” she said.

    The EB meeting reallocated the medals of the women’s 1,500m in athletics after the disqualification of Russia’s Tatyana Tomashova due to an anti-doping violation. Tomashova’s silver medal was awarded to Abeba Aregawi of Ethiopia, and the bronze medal went to Shannon Rowbury of the United States.

    The disqualification of Belgium’s Domien Michiels also resulted in the modification of the ranking of the Equestrian Team Finals at the 2024 Olympics, as Belgium was disqualified from its fifth-place finish.

    Among other topics, Patricia O’Brien was appointed interim Chair of the Ethics Committee until the next IOC Session. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Athletic Club ask LaLiga if Barcelona able to sign Williams

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

    Athletic Club and FC Barcelona are in open conflict over Barca’s attempts to sign Spain international winger Nico Williams.

    Barcelona is trying to sign Williams for the second consecutive summer, but with Athletic unwilling to negotiate the sale of their star player, Barca’s only option is to trigger his release clause, reportedly set at 58 million euros (68 million U.S. dollars).

    Nico Williams (R) of Spain shoots during the UEFA European Championship 2024 Qualifying group round match between Spain and Cyprus in Granada, Spain, on Sept. 12, 2023. (Photo by Gustavo Valient/Xinhua)

    Barca has struggled to comply with La Liga’s strict financial fair-play rules. Dani Olmo was only cleared to play after the club appealed to Spain’s Superior Sports Committee, and it remains unclear whether the club is now in a financial position to register new signings without first offloading players.

    Athletic was angered by an interview Barcelona sporting director Deco gave to La Vanguardia earlier this week, in which he openly discussed Williams, claiming the player had informed Athletic of his desire to join Barcelona.

    In response, Athletic asked both La Liga and the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) to examine Barca’s financial situation – a move that angered Barcelona president Joan Laporta, who told local press that Athletic should “mind its business.”

    Athletic president Jon Uriarte met with La Liga president Javier Tebas on Wednesday, and the club confirmed Thursday that Barca’s “ability to sign players” was among the topics discussed.

    “The meeting was held in Madrid in response to a request from Athletic Club made within the framework of compliance with financial fair play. Among the topics discussed was FC Barcelona’s ability to sign players,” confirmed the Athletic website.

    The club also responded to Laporta’s remarks, saying it was defending its “legitimate interest… after FC Barcelona sporting director Anderson Luis de Souza ‘Deco’ publicly acknowledged that they will attempt to sign a player from our first team. This player has a contract with Athletic Club until June 30, 2027. Our job is to ensure that the rules of the competition are followed.”

    Athletic further noted that Deco’s comments follow Laporta’s own admission that Barca “is working to comply with the 1:1 rule” – the regulation that allows clubs to spend income from player sales – and, therefore, the club is not currently meeting the conditions to register new players.

    The pro-Barca press insists the club will sign Williams next week, but the saga looks set to continue throughout the summer. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: How Brazilian teams toppled Europe’s elite at Club World Cup

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

    A “Samba Whirlwind” swept through the FIFA Club World Cup group stage as all four Brazilian clubs stormed into the knockout phase, leaving European giants reeling and igniting global fascination.

    Botafogo’s 1-0 stunner over Champions League holder Paris Saint-Germain and Flamengo’s commanding 3-1 victory against Chelsea underscored Brazil’s resurgence on club football’s grandest stage, with European media scrambling for explanations.

    Niklas Suele (down) of Borussia Dortmund vies with Kevin Serna of Fluminense FC the Group F match between Fluminense FC of Brazil and Borussia Dortmund of Germany at the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 in New Jersey, the United States, June 17, 2025. (Xinhua/Li Rui)

    “It is an incredible moment for me, for the team, for the fans, for our country,” Fluminense star Nonato told FIFA. “We have four Brazilian teams in the round of 16, so the feeling is amazing. We have to enjoy it now, rest a bit but enjoy this moment because it is unique for the history of the club.”

    “For us, it is not a surprise (that the four Brazilian teams did so well at the Club World Cup) because [we] already knew our level of play, our quality. This tournament gives us an opportunity to show the quality of the Brazilian championship,” Nonato added.

    While fatigue and fixture congestion were cited as factors, data from analytics firm Sofascore revealed a stark counter-narrative: Brazil’s clubs dominated the pre-tournament workload charts. Flamengo led globally with 77 games in 12 months, followed by Botafogo (72), Fluminense (72) and Palmeiras (69). Europe’s busiest side, Real Madrid, ranked sixth with 64 matches.

    Brazil’s success springs from famed youth academies and strategic imports. Flamengo, a club supported by one-quarter of Brazil’s population, exemplifies this. Vitor Zanelli Albuquerque, Flamengo’s vice president of youth football, women’s football and futsal, told Xinhua that its youth academy in Rio de Janeiro, where stars like Vinicius Jr. honed their skills, invested 50 million BRL (about 9.12 million U.S. dollars) in 2024.

    Xinhua’s visit to the base last year revealed facilities mirroring the first team: age-specific coaching offices, tactical rooms, analytics labs, gyms and nutrition teams. Youth players start futsal training at age six, progressing to full-field academies at 11. With 30 players per age group (U7 to U20), training integrates with Brazil’s half-day school system – a minimum of two hours of daily sessions plus weekend matches. On-site lodging supports early game schedules.

    “Players face technical and psychological evaluations every three months,” explained Albuquerque. “Only the best stay.”

    This pipeline feeds national U17 and U20 leagues and continental tournaments like the Copa Libertadores U20, where Flamengo remained unbeaten in 2024.

    “We pursue excellence relentlessly,” Albuquerque said. “We generated 1.02 billion BRL (about 185 million US dollars) from player sales in five years – the highest outside Europe.”

    With top talents departing early, Brazilian clubs now recruit aggressively from neighboring countries. Foreigner quotas allow up to nine non-Brazilians on the field in the domestic league, with Uruguay’s Giorgian de Arrascaeta (Flamengo), Colombia’s Jhon Arias (Fluminense), Paraguay’s Gustavo Gomez (Palmeiras) and Venezuela’s Jefferson Savarino (Botafogo) now orchestrating attacks.

    Returning veterans and experienced tacticians also bridge the continental gap. Thiago Silva (Fluminense), former Italy international Jorginho (Flamengo) and ex-Everton and Napoli midfielder Allan (Botafogo) have brought elite experience. Coaches like Portugal’s Abel Ferreira, who won two Copa Libertadores titles with Palmeiras, and Flamengo’s Felipe Luis have outmaneuvered their European counterparts.

    Meanwhile, Brazilian fans have transformed U.S. stadiums into home turf. Flamengo’s faithful turned Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field into another Maracana, while Palmeiras supporters outsang Messi’s global fans in Miami.

    “The fans have put on a show,” said Nonato. “They are holding our team, pushing us forward so I think it is unbelievable the synergy between the team and fans. This is a unique moment in my life.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: How Brazilian teams toppled Europe’s elite at Club World Cup

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

    A “Samba Whirlwind” swept through the FIFA Club World Cup group stage as all four Brazilian clubs stormed into the knockout phase, leaving European giants reeling and igniting global fascination.

    Botafogo’s 1-0 stunner over Champions League holder Paris Saint-Germain and Flamengo’s commanding 3-1 victory against Chelsea underscored Brazil’s resurgence on club football’s grandest stage, with European media scrambling for explanations.

    Niklas Suele (down) of Borussia Dortmund vies with Kevin Serna of Fluminense FC the Group F match between Fluminense FC of Brazil and Borussia Dortmund of Germany at the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 in New Jersey, the United States, June 17, 2025. (Xinhua/Li Rui)

    “It is an incredible moment for me, for the team, for the fans, for our country,” Fluminense star Nonato told FIFA. “We have four Brazilian teams in the round of 16, so the feeling is amazing. We have to enjoy it now, rest a bit but enjoy this moment because it is unique for the history of the club.”

    “For us, it is not a surprise (that the four Brazilian teams did so well at the Club World Cup) because [we] already knew our level of play, our quality. This tournament gives us an opportunity to show the quality of the Brazilian championship,” Nonato added.

    While fatigue and fixture congestion were cited as factors, data from analytics firm Sofascore revealed a stark counter-narrative: Brazil’s clubs dominated the pre-tournament workload charts. Flamengo led globally with 77 games in 12 months, followed by Botafogo (72), Fluminense (72) and Palmeiras (69). Europe’s busiest side, Real Madrid, ranked sixth with 64 matches.

    Brazil’s success springs from famed youth academies and strategic imports. Flamengo, a club supported by one-quarter of Brazil’s population, exemplifies this. Vitor Zanelli Albuquerque, Flamengo’s vice president of youth football, women’s football and futsal, told Xinhua that its youth academy in Rio de Janeiro, where stars like Vinicius Jr. honed their skills, invested 50 million BRL (about 9.12 million U.S. dollars) in 2024.

    Xinhua’s visit to the base last year revealed facilities mirroring the first team: age-specific coaching offices, tactical rooms, analytics labs, gyms and nutrition teams. Youth players start futsal training at age six, progressing to full-field academies at 11. With 30 players per age group (U7 to U20), training integrates with Brazil’s half-day school system – a minimum of two hours of daily sessions plus weekend matches. On-site lodging supports early game schedules.

    “Players face technical and psychological evaluations every three months,” explained Albuquerque. “Only the best stay.”

    This pipeline feeds national U17 and U20 leagues and continental tournaments like the Copa Libertadores U20, where Flamengo remained unbeaten in 2024.

    “We pursue excellence relentlessly,” Albuquerque said. “We generated 1.02 billion BRL (about 185 million US dollars) from player sales in five years – the highest outside Europe.”

    With top talents departing early, Brazilian clubs now recruit aggressively from neighboring countries. Foreigner quotas allow up to nine non-Brazilians on the field in the domestic league, with Uruguay’s Giorgian de Arrascaeta (Flamengo), Colombia’s Jhon Arias (Fluminense), Paraguay’s Gustavo Gomez (Palmeiras) and Venezuela’s Jefferson Savarino (Botafogo) now orchestrating attacks.

    Returning veterans and experienced tacticians also bridge the continental gap. Thiago Silva (Fluminense), former Italy international Jorginho (Flamengo) and ex-Everton and Napoli midfielder Allan (Botafogo) have brought elite experience. Coaches like Portugal’s Abel Ferreira, who won two Copa Libertadores titles with Palmeiras, and Flamengo’s Felipe Luis have outmaneuvered their European counterparts.

    Meanwhile, Brazilian fans have transformed U.S. stadiums into home turf. Flamengo’s faithful turned Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field into another Maracana, while Palmeiras supporters outsang Messi’s global fans in Miami.

    “The fans have put on a show,” said Nonato. “They are holding our team, pushing us forward so I think it is unbelievable the synergy between the team and fans. This is a unique moment in my life.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI: Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd. – Notice of Annual General and Special Shareholder Meeting

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd.
    (“Falcon”)
     Notice of Annual General and Special Shareholder Meeting

    27 June 2025 – Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd. (TSXV: FO, AIM: FOG,) announces that its Annual General and Special Shareholder meeting will be held at the Conrad Hotel, Earlsfort Terrace, Dublin 2, Ireland on 27 August 2025 at 11:00 a.m. (Dublin time).

    A complete notice and related documents will be sent to the shareholders of record as at 21 July 2025 and will also be filed on the Canadian System for Electronic Document Analysis and Retrieval (“SEDAR+”) at www.sedarplus.ca and Falcon’s website at www.falconoilandgas.com.

    The Notice of the Annual General and Special Shareholder meeting and record date has been filed on SEDAR+.

    Falcon will conduct a Q&A via the Investor Meet Company platform later that day for those unable to attend the meeting in person, details of which will be announced in due course.

    Ends.

    For further information, please contact:

    CONTACT DETAILS:

    Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd.          +353 1 676 8702
    Philip O’Quigley, CEO +353 87 814 7042
    Anne Flynn, CFO +353 1 676 9162
     
    Cavendish Capital Markets Limited (NOMAD & Broker)
    Neil McDonald / Adam Rae +44 131 220 9771

    About Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd.
    Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd is an international oil and gas company engaged in the exploration and development of unconventional oil and gas assets, with the current portfolio focused in Australia. Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd is incorporated in British Columbia, Canada and headquartered in Dublin, Ireland.

    For further information on Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd. please visit www.falconoilandgas.com.

    Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Security: Commander’s Visit to East Africa Reiterates Security Partnerships, Cooperation

    Source: United States AFRICOM

    STUTTGART, Germany – General Michael Langley, Commander of United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) and USMC Sgt. Maj. Michael Woods, command senior enlisted leader, visited Djibouti, Somalia and Ethiopia June 16-20 to meet with African partner leaders and attend the Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa change of command.

    During the official trip to Djibouti City, Langley and U.S. Ambassador to Djibouti Cynthia Kierscht met with Djibouti’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Abdoulkader Houssein Omar; Minister of Defense Hassan Omar Mohamed Bourhan; and Chief of Defense General Zakaria Chiek Ibrahim on Tuesday, reiterating the United States’ commitment to security cooperation and counterterrorism in the region.

    “Despite the growing threats of terrorist groups like ISIS and al Shabaab, our continued partnership with Djibouti furthers our ability to counter terrorism and promote peace and security,” Langley said.

    On Wednesday, the general flew to Hargeisa and Berbera Airfields in Somalia, and, alongside U.S. Ambassador Richard Riley IV, met with Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi (Irro), Minister of Defense Muhammad Yusuf Ali, Chief of Staff of the Army, Brig Gen Nimcaan Yusuf Osman, and Coast Guard Commander, Adm. Ahmed Hurre Huriye.

    “We greatly value the security partnership we have with the Federal Government of Somalia as we work together to counter the threats of al Shabaab and ISIS-Somalia.”

    Langley and Woods attended the CJTF-HOA change of command on Wednesday, and then traveled with U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia Ervin Massinga to Addis Ababa to meet with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, Chief of the General Staff Field Marshal Birhanu Jula, and Head of Military Cooperation Major General Teshome Gemechu to reaffirm AFRICOM’s commitment to Ethiopia’s critical role in counterterrorism operations and regional security in the Horn of Africa. He noted that AFRICOM’s partnership with Ethiopia is part of a wider strategy to help African nations build resilient and self-reliant security sectors.

    Throughout the trip, Langley emphasized that U.S. military engagement in Africa is based on enabling African-led solutions, strengthening capable institutions, and addressing the root causes of instability. AFRICOM works closely with African partners to counter terrorist organizations like al Shabaab and ISIS, which threaten U.S., regional, and international security. Langley also met with Selma Malika Haddadi, deputy chairperson of the African Union Commission and reiterated U.S. support for the African Union Support and Stabilization Mission in Somalia.

    General Langley also addressed the growing security threats across the continent, including the rise of terrorist activity in the Sahel and along West Africa’s coastal regions. At the African Union, Gen Langley paid respects at the African Union Memorial Wall, honoring heroes and heroines of the AU who paid the ultimate sacrifice in support of AU missions. The visit reaffirmed AFRICOM’s long-term commitment to its partnership with the continent and to collective efforts for lasting security in the region.

    AFRICOM is one of seven U.S. geographic combatant commands, responsible for military engagement across 53 African nations. Working with partners and allies, the command counters malign actors and transnational threats, responds to crises, strengthens African security forces, and supports U.S. government efforts in Africa to advance U.S. national interests and promote regional security, stability, and prosperity.

    MIL Security OSI

  • EU leaders discuss new US trade proposal as deal clock ticks down

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    European Union leaders discussed new proposals from the United States on a trade deal at a summit in Brussels on Thursday, with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen not ruling out tariff talks could fail and saying “all options remain on the table”.

    Time is running out for the bloc to find a common position before a respite on higher tariffs threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump expires on July 9, which could hammer exporters from cars to pharmaceuticals.

    European leaders were meeting to decide whether they want to push for a quick trade agreement or keep fighting for a better deal, with the EU’s two biggest economies apparently at odds.

    German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged the EU to do a “quick and simple” trade deal rather than a “slow and complicated” one.

    But in a separate briefing, French President Emmanuel Macron, while also wanting a quick and pragmatic trade deal, said his country would not accept terms that were not balanced.

    All tools must be used to ensure a fair deal and if the U.S. baseline rate of 10% remained in place, then Europe’s response would have to have an equivalent impact, he said.

    “Our goodwill should not be seen as a weakness,” Macron added.

    French officials have argued that the Commission should take a firmer stance including by targeting U.S. services.

    Similarly, Merz said European leaders were “basically united” on concluding the Mercosur trade deal with the South American trade bloc, but Macron said he could not support the deal in its current form.

    Von der Leyen said the EU had received the latest U.S. document on Thursday for further negotiations and the bloc was still assessing it.

    “We are ready for a deal. At the same time, we are preparing for the possibility that no satisfactory agreement is reached,” she told reporters. “In short, all options remain on the table.”

    No specifics were immediately available on the document, which one EU diplomat described as a “two-pager, principle agreement”, adding the United States did not want to get into specific industrial sectors.

    The bloc is already subject to U.S. import tariffs of 50% on its steel and aluminium, 25% for cars and car parts along with the 10% tariff on most other EU goods that Trump has threatened could rise to 50% without an agreement.

    The European Union has agreed, but not imposed, tariffs on 21 billion euros ($24.55 billion) of U.S. goods and is debating a further package of tariffs on up to 95 billion euros of U.S. imports.

    Among the EU rebalancing options is a tax on digital advertising, which would hit U.S. giants like Alphabet Inc’s Google GOOGL.O, Meta META.O, Apple AAPL.O, X and Microsoft MSFT.O and eat into the trade surplus in services the U.S. has with the EU.

    The EU leaders also discussed ideas to carve out a new form of trade cooperation with Asia-Pacific countries that would be a way of reforming what they see as an ineffective World Trade Organisation.

    Merz said the idea was in its early stages but could include mechanisms to resolve disputes, as the WTO was meant to do.

    “You all know that the WTO doesn’t work any more,” he said.

    OTHER ISSUES

    The EU summit pivots from a NATO meeting this week that agreed to drastically raise defence spending in the military alliance but left some European countries finding it difficult to pay, and Spain explicitly demanding an opt-out.

    Aside from tariffs, the EU bloc also has to tackle a raft of other issues, including its support for Ukraine and the prospect of EU membership for a country still at war against nuclear-armed Russia. Hungary is firmly opposed.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy had urged the EU to pass a new sanctions package on Russia targeting its oil trade and banks, as well as to give a clear signal on his country’s EU accession.

    “What’s needed now is a clear political message – that Ukraine is firmly on the European path, and that Europe stands by its promises,” he told EU leaders. “Any delay by Europe at this point could create a global precedent – a reason to doubt Europe’s words and commitments.”

    On the sidelines of the summit, EU leaders also sought to allay the concerns of Slovakia and Hungary over ending their access to Russian gas as foreseen by the EU’s plan to phase out all Russian gas imports by the end of 2027.

    Before the start of the summit however, Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico said he would block a vote on the EU’s 18th package of sanctions against Russia until Slovak concerns on gas were addressed.

    (Reuters)

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese skater Han Cong to run for IOC Athletes’ Commission

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

    Chinese figure skater Han Cong and 10 other athletes will run for election to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Athletes’ Commission (AC), the IOC announced on Thursday.

    Sui Wenjing (R)/Han Cong of China perform their free skating at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, Feb. 19, 2022. (Xinhua/Zhang Yuwei)

    Han, along with his Olympic gold medal-winning partner Sui Wenjing, announced earlier this month their return to competition next season after being absent since their victory at the Beijing 2022 Winter Games.

    The 11 athletes were approved by the IOC Executive Board to be candidates for the AC during the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympic Winter Games. The eight men and three women from five different sports and 11 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) will vie for the two available positions on the commission.

    The list of the candidates is:

    Oleksandr Abramenko (Freestyle Skiing, Ukraine)

    Zhanbota Aldabergenova (Freestyle Skiing, Kazakhstan)

    Dario Cologna (Cross-Country Skiing, Switzerland)

    Yohan Goncalves Goutt (Alpine Skiing, Timor-Leste)

    Han Cong (Figure Skating, China)

    Ilkka Herola (Nordic Combined, Finland)

    Adam Konya (Cross-Country Skiing, Hungary)

    Magnus Nedregotten (Curling, Norway)

    Johanna Taliharm (Biathlon, Estonia)

    Marielle Thompson (Freestyle Skiing, Canada)

    Won Yun-jong (Bobsleigh, South Korea)

    All athletes competing at Milano Cortina 2026 will be eligible to vote, starting Jan. 30. Voting closes Feb. 18, with results announced the following day.

    The two candidates who receive the most votes from at least two different sports will be elected to serve eight-year terms on the IOC AC. They will replace Emma Terho and Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen, whose terms will end during the Games.

    Following the election, the commission will elect a chair and two vice chairs.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Sino-German cooperation deepens in smart manufacturing

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

    As China emerges as a global hub for smart manufacturing and technological innovation, German companies are ramping up their presence and partnerships in the country, moving beyond traditional technology transfer to embrace joint R&D and ecosystem-level collaboration.

    At the Sino-German Smart Manufacturing Matchmaking Conference held from Tuesday to Thursday in Hefei, east China’s Anhui Province, nearly 100 German enterprises — including industry leaders like BMW and Siemens — gathered to explore new opportunities, signaling a renewed momentum in bilateral industrial cooperation.

    The three-day conference included field visits, matchmaking sessions and in-depth exchanges, resulting in 28 trade and investment deals worth over 6.8 billion yuan (about 949.46 million U.S. dollars). These covered a wide range of sectors, from new energy and intelligent connected vehicles to high-end equipment, life sciences, environmental protection, and artificial intelligence.

    For Helmut Heuser, managing director of Wurth Electronic ICS (Shenyang) Co., Ltd., it was already his third trip to Anhui this year — a province now widely recognized for its high-tech orientation and smart manufacturing strengths.

    “This region’s automotive industry and innovation capabilities are booming,” said Heuser. “We hope to gain new customers, discover new market possibilities, and seize fresh opportunities here.”

    His company has already provided battery management systems and smart controllers for several Chinese companies, including Anhui-based auto giant JAC Motors, and is collaborating in fields like industrial robotics to co-develop new intelligent solutions.

    As China’s innovation engine gathers strength, Sino-German cooperation is evolving from one-way technology import into a model of joint innovation and mutual empowerment, offering a collaborative blueprint for global smart manufacturing.

    “We are cooperating for decades and decades in the past 40 years. It was very successful, mainly because German companies brought a lot of technology here and support the Chinese companies to upgrade,” said Maximilian Butek, executive director and board member of the German Chamber of Commerce in China, the east China region.

    However, he noted that the two sides are now engaged in a different game, as Chinese enterprises and talent are demonstrating strong innovation potential, attracting many German companies to carry out R&D in China and export technologies to the global market.

    According to the 2024/2025 Business Confidence Survey by the German Chamber of Commerce in China, 92 percent of member companies plan to stay in China, and about half intend to increase their investment over the next two years.

    This long-term commitment reflects not only confidence in the Chinese market, but also recognition of the country’s growing innovation capacity.

    In fact, 55 percent of German companies operating in China expect their Chinese counterparts to become innovation leaders in their industries within the next five years, and nearly half of the surveyed firms plan to enhance competitiveness through partnerships with Chinese players.

    German high-tech firm Trumpf Group, a century-old leader in machine tools and laser technology, has seen rapid growth in China since entering the market in 2000. It has also deepened cooperation with local partners in advancing manufacturing digitization.

    “In the new energy vehicle sector alone, over 2,000 processes require lasers. For example, copper and aluminum alloys — key materials in power batteries — are highly reflective and can create welding splashes that pose safety risks,” said Yang Gang, president of Trumpf Group (China). “By working with Chinese partners, we’ve developed processes to suppress splatter and overcome these technical bottlenecks.”

    Sino-German cooperation is now scaling from individual projects to ecosystem-level coordination, encompassing shared technologies, harmonized standards, and integrated production capacity.

    Reflecting this growing momentum, earlier this year BMW deepened its local AI ecosystem by integrating DeepSeek, following its strategic partnership with Alibaba in large language models. In June, the Sino-German Standardization Innovation Center was officially launched, aiming to produce more joint standardization outcomes in smart manufacturing and beyond.

    Meanwhile, Feiwo Technology signed a strategic cooperation agreement with German aerospace parts manufacturer Heggemann, combining China’s cost-efficiency and Germany’s lean production expertise to jointly develop core aircraft components.

    Smart manufacturing has been identified as a national priority in China. And international cooperation — particularly with Germany, a long-time industrial partner — plays a crucial role in driving technological advancement and industrial upgrading.

    In the face of growing global uncertainties, many German companies noted that Sino-German cooperation in smart manufacturing is expected to generate mutual benefits and contribute to greater stability in global supply chains.

    “Sino-German cooperation offers mutual benefits,” said Heuser. “For China, it is access to German industrial know-how and EU market pathways. For Germany, it is faster innovation cycles and access to China’s vast data resources. Together, we believe we can set global benchmarks for Industry 4.0, combining Germany’s quality-first approach with China’s speed-to-market advantage.” 

    MIL OSI China News

  • Vinicius dazzles as Real Madrid ease past Salzburg into Club World Cup round of 16

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Vinicius Jr scored one and set up another as Real Madrid secured a 3-0 victory over RB Salzburg on Thursday to seal top spot in Group H and advance to the Club World Cup round of 16.

    The Spaniards finished with seven points, two clear of Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal, who defeated Pachuca 2-0 in the day’s other group fixture. Austria’s Salzburg, with four points, and Mexican side Pachuca, who failed to register a point, were eliminated.

    Real Madrid will next face Group G runners-up Juventus on Tuesday at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, while Al-Hilal take on Manchester City in Orlando on Monday.

    Under steady rain in Philadelphia, Xabi Alonso’s Real Madrid dominated proceedings against a lacklustre Salzburg, who created few clear-cut chances.

    Salzburg’s 18-year-old goalkeeper Christian Zawieschitzky was sharp from the outset and denied Vinicius an early opener with a point-blank save.

    The Brazilian forward squandered further opportunities while Gonzalo Garcia also missed a golden chance from a Vinicius cross near the half-hour mark.

    The breakthrough finally arrived in the 40th minute with Jude Bellingham threading a perfectly timed pass through to Vinicius, who danced past two defenders and unleashed from the edge of the box to leave Zawieschitzky with no chance.

    Vinicius played a pivotal role in Real’s second during first-half added time, picking up a loose ball in the box and delivering an audacious back-heeled pass to Federico Valverde, who fired home from close range.

    Real Madrid maintained control in the second half but continued to waste chances in front of goal and it was not until the 84th minute that Gonzalo Garcia wrapped up the win, lobbing over the Salzburg goalkeeper in a quick counter.

    “I’m very happy with the goal and the assist. But now comes the most important part, the knockouts, and we’re looking forward to it,” Vinicius told DAZN.

    “The vibes were good. We played very well in the first half, but we were a bit slower in the second. That’s normal given the matches coming up, where we can’t afford to slip up.”

    Real should also be able to call on Kylian Mbappe for the knockout rounds after the French forward missed the entire group stage due to illness.

    Mbappe returned to training on Wednesday after being struck down by acute gastroenteritis last week but Alonso said they decided to leave him out of the Salzburg match to allow him to make a full recovery for the knockout stage.

    -Reuters

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: New Caledonian delegates to learn about NZ economy

    Source: New Zealand Government

    A New Caledonian delegation will tour New Zealand next week to learn about aspects of our economic development, Foreign Minister Winston Peters says.
     “As New Caledonia seeks to recover economically from a challenging period in its history, New Zealand is pleased to be sharing our own lessons and experiences. 
     “When visiting New Caledonia twice in the past year, we heard from businesses, including Kanak entrepreneurs, significant interest in New Zealand’s economic development – including the Māori economy.
     “We are therefore delighted to welcome this high-level delegation, which will be introduced to all aspects of our economic development – including the Māori economy and how Māori operate in key sectors like youth training, economic development, and technology.
     “This study tour is an important element of New Zealand’s commitment to New Caledonia’s development through ongoing and constructive exchanges.”
     The programme includes a meeting with Māori policymakers and engagement with a range of iwi on areas such as youth, tourism, services and private sector partnerships.
     The study tour follows Mr Peters’ visits over the last six months to Paris, Nice and Nouméa, where he has met France’s President Emmanuel Macron, Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot, and Overseas Territories Minister Manuel Valls, as well as the new President of the Government of New Caledonia, Alcide Ponga. 
    The 20-person study tour includes visits to Wellington, Hamilton, Tauranga, and Auckland.
    “We have a shared interest in promoting economic development, good governance and regional security,” Mr Peters says. 
     The delegation arrives in New Zealand on Sunday 29 June, will meet Mr Peters on Friday 4 July, before returning to Nouméa the following day.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Do all Iranians hate the regime? Hate America? Life inside the country is much more complex and nuanced

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Simon Theobald, Postdoctoral researcher, Institute for Ethics and Society, University of Notre Dame Australia

    From 2015 to 2018, I spent 15 months doing research work in Mashhad, Iran’s second-largest city. As an anthropologist, I was interested in everyday life in Iran outside the capital Tehran. I was also interested in understanding whether the ambitions of the 1979 Revolution lived on among “ordinary” Iranians, not just political elites.

    I first lived on a university campus, where I learned Persian, and later with Iranian families. I conducted hundreds of interviews with people who had a broad spectrum of political, social and religious views. They included opponents of the Islamic Republic, supporters, and many who were in between.

    What these interviews revealed to me was both the diversity of opinion and experience in Iran, and the difficulty of making uniform statements about what Iranians believe.

    Measuring the depth of antipathy for the regime

    When Israel’s strikes on Iran began on June 13, killing many top military commanders, many news outlets – both international and those run by the Iranian diaspora – featured images of Iranians cheering the deaths of these hated regime figures.

    Friends from my fieldwork also pointed to these celebrations, while not always agreeing with them. Many feared the impact of a larger conflict between Iran and Israel.

    Trying to put these sentiments in context, many analysts have pointed to a 2019 survey by the GAMAAN Institute, an independent organisation based in the Netherlands that tracks Iranian public opinion. This survey showed 79% of Iranians living in the country would vote against the Islamic Republic if a free referendum were held on its rule.

    Viewing these examples as an indicator of the lack of support for the Islamic Republic is not wrong. But when used as factoids in news reports, they become detached from the complexities of life in Iran. This can discourage us from asking deeper questions about the relationships between ideology and pragmatism, support and opposition to the regime, and state and society.

    A more nuanced view

    The news reporting on Iran has encouraged a tendency to see the Iranian state as homogeneous, highly ideological and radically separate from the population.

    But where do we draw the line between the state and the people? There is no easy answer to this.

    When I lived in Iran, many of the people who took part in my research were state employees – teachers at state institutions, university lecturers, administrative workers. Many of them had strong and diverse views about the legacy of the revolution and the future of the country.

    They sometimes pointed to state discourse they agreed with, for example Iran’s right to national self-determination, free from foreign influence. They also disagreed with much, such as the slogans of “death to America”.

    This ambivalence was evident in one of my Persian teachers. An employee of the state, she refused to attend the annual parades celebrating the anniversary of the revolution. “We have warm feelings towards America,” she said. On the other hand, she happily attended protests, also organised by the government, in favour of Palestinian liberation.

    Or take the young government worker I met in Mashhad: “We want to be independent of other countries, but not like this.”

    In a narrower sense, discussions about the “state” may refer more to organisations like the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and the Basij, the paramilitary force within the IRGC that has cracked down harshly on dissent in recent decades. Both are often understood as being deeply ideologically committed.

    Said Golkar, a US-based Iranian academic and author, for instance, calls Iran a “captive society”. Rather than having a civil society, he believes Iranians are trapped by the feared Basij, who maintain control through their presence in many institutions like universities and schools.

    Again, this view is not wrong. But even among the Basij and Revolutionary Guard, it can be difficult to gauge just how ideological and homogeneous these organisations truly are.

    For a start, the IRGC relies on both ideologically selected supporters, as well as conscripts, to fill its ranks. They are also not always ideologically uniform, as the US-based anthropologist Narges Bajoghli, who worked with pro-state filmmakers in Tehran, has noted.

    As part of my research, I also interviewed members of the Basij, which, unlike the IRGC proper, is a wholly volunteer organisation.

    Even though ideological commitment was certainly an important factor for some of the Basij members I met, there were also pragmatic reasons to join. These included access to better jobs, scholarships and social mobility. Sometimes, factors overlapped. But participation did not always equate to a singular or sustained commitment to revolutionary values.

    For example, Sāsān, a friend I made attending discussion groups in Mashhad, was quick to note that time spent in the Basij “reduced your [compulsory] military service”.

    This isn’t to suggest there are not ideologically committed people in Iran. They clearly exist, and many are ready to use violence. Some of those who join these institutions for pragmatic reasons use violence, too.

    Looking in between

    In addition, Iran is an ethnically diverse country. It has a population of 92 million people, a bare majority of whom are Persians. Other minorities include Azeris, Kurds, Arabs, Baloch, Turkmen and others.

    It is also religiously diverse. While there is a sizeable, nominally Shi’a majority, there are also large Sunni communities (about 10-15% of the population) and smaller communities of Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians, Baha’is and other religions.

    Often overlooked, there are also important differences in class and social strata in Iran, too.

    One of the things I noticed about state propaganda was that it flattened this diversity. James Barry, an Australian scholar of Iran, noticed a similar phenomenon.

    State propaganda made it seem like there was one voice in the country. Protests could be dismissed out of hand because they did not represent the “authentic” view of Iranians. Foreign agitators supported protests. Iranians supported the Islamic Republic.

    Since leaving Iran, I have followed many voices of Iranians in the diaspora. Opposition groups are loud on social media, especially the monarchists who support Reza Pahlavi, the son of the deposed Shah.

    In following these groups, I have noticed a similar tendency to speak as though they represent the voice of all Iranians. Iranians support the shah. Or Iranians support Maryam Rajavi, leader of a Paris-based opposition group.

    Both within Iran, and in the diaspora, the regime, too, is sometimes held to be the imposition of a foreign conspiracy. This allows the Islamic Republic and the complex relations it has created to be dismissed out of hand. Once again, such a view flattens diversity.

    Over the past few years, political identities and societal divisions seem to have become harder and clearer. This means there is an increasing perception among many Iranians of a gulf between the state and Iranian society. This is the case both inside Iran, and especially in the Iranian diaspora.

    Decades of intermittent protests and civil disobedience across the country also show that for many, the current system no longer represents the hopes and aspirations of many people. This is especially the case for the youth, who make up a large percentage of the population.

    I am not an Iranian, and I strongly believe it is up to Iranians to determine their own futures. I also do not aim to excuse the Islamic Republic – it is brutal and tyrannical. But its brutality should not let us shy away from asking complex questions.

    If the regime did fall tomorrow, Iran’s diversity means there is little unanimity of opinion as to what should come next. And if a more pluralist form of politics is to emerge, it must encompass the whole of Iran’s diversity, without assuming a uniform position.

    It, too, will have to wrestle with the difficult questions and sometimes ambivalent relations the Islamic Republic has created.

    Simon Theobald received funding from the Australian National University during his research.

    ref. Do all Iranians hate the regime? Hate America? Life inside the country is much more complex and nuanced – https://theconversation.com/do-all-iranians-hate-the-regime-hate-america-life-inside-the-country-is-much-more-complex-and-nuanced-259554

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese, French legislative bodies pledge to strengthen ties

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

    Zhao Leji, chairman of the National People’s Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, and Yael Braun-Pivet, speaker of the French National Assembly, co-chair the 12th meeting of the exchange mechanism between the legislative bodies of China and France, in Beijing, capital of China, June 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    China’s top legislator Zhao Leji and Yael Braun-Pivet, speaker of the French National Assembly, co-chaired a meeting in Beijing on Thursday, pledging to strengthen ties.

    China is willing to enhance all-round exchanges and cooperation with France, Zhao said in a keynote address at the 12th meeting of the exchange mechanism between the legislative bodies of China and France.

    Zhao, chairman of the National People’s Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, said both sides should deepen cooperation in traditional fields, expand cooperation in emerging fields such as artificial intelligence and green and low-carbon development, and properly resolve trade differences through consultation and dialogue.

    He called on the two countries to deepen exchanges in culture, education and tourism and strengthen coordination in multilateral frameworks, adding that China believes France will abide by the one-China principle with concrete actions.

    As this year marks the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the European Union, China hopes for continuously improving China-EU relations that inject more stability and positive energy into the world, he said.

    This meeting marks the resumption of the exchange mechanism between the two legislative bodies after a five-year hiatus, and is of great significance for deepening the cooperation between the two sides, Zhao said.

    Zhao said China’s NPC is willing to work with the French parliament to implement the important consensus reached by the two heads of state and provide legal support for practical cooperation between the two countries, adding that the NPC is ready to enhance exchanges and cooperation with the European Parliament.

    In the face of grave international situation, it is of vital importance for France and China, supporters of multilateralism, to enhance communication and solidarity, Braun-Pivet said.

    The French side hopes to strengthen cooperation with the Chinese side in trade and investment, artificial intelligence, climate change, culture and education, and jointly address global challenges, Braun-Pivet said.

    She said the French National Assembly is willing to deepen dialogue with the NPC of China to inject new vitality into the development of France-China relations.

    MIL OSI China News