Category: MIL-Submissions

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Economy – Great Depression trends on social media amid rising US tariff fears, reveals GlobalData

    Source: Global Data

    The concept of the “Great Depression” has gained traction among the social media influencers in first week of April 2025, largely driven by discussions surrounding the US tariff turmoil and concerns about potential economic downturns.

    The surge in discussion is closely tied to comparisons being drawn between the current economic policies, particularly tariffs, and those enacted during the lead-up to the Great Depression, specifically the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, reveals the Social Media Analytics Platform of GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    The increased tariffs have become a central point of discussion, triggering concerns about potential trade wars, slower GDP growth, and overall economic instability.

    Shreyasee Majumder, Social Media Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Influencers, largely concerned and apprehensive, are using the historical context of the Great Depression to frame their analysis of current economic trends and policies, drawing direct parallels to the events preceding the depression and sparking wider conversations about potential consequences.

    “Certain influencers express grave concern that tariffs, with the US rates potentially escalating and surpassing the peak of the Smoot-Hawley era, may precipitate a global trade war and inflict substantial damage upon the economy. They also point out that the implementation of tariffs could result in higher prices for consumers, reduced global competitiveness for the US companies, and, consequently, a broader economic downturn.”

    Below are a few popular influencer opinions captured by GlobalData’s Social Media Analytics Platform:

    Ben Carlson, Director of Institutional Asset Management at Ritholtz Wealth Management:

    “This was a historic week We just witnessed the biggest economic policy mistake since the Great Depression And they don’t even care”

    Phillips P. OBrien, Professor of Strategic Studies at University of St Andrews:

    “Amazing that Trump talked about the Great Depression and forgot the Smoot-Hawley Tariff–which he seems to be emulating pretty closely….”

    Jason Goepfert, Consultant at White Oak Consultancy LLC:

    “Futures indicate another loss in the Dow Industrials greater than -3%. Futures are finicky, but that’d be its 3rd consecutive loss greater than -3%. Since 1896 – 129 years of history – this only occurred during the Great Depression.”

    Steve Hanke, Professor of Applied Economics at Johns Hopkins University:

    “The US economy has developed some tell-tale signs of the Great Depression. The money supply has contracted. That means an economic slowdown is BAKED IN THE CAKE. Like the Smoot-Hawley Tariffs of 1930, Trump’s tariffs are putting massive downward pressure on the economy.”

    Shane Wright, National Economics Correspondent:

    “Trump re-writing the history of the Great Depression, saying wouldn’t have happened if the US had stayed with tariffs. Of course, the Smoot-Hawley tariffs made worse the depression which wasn’t caused by tariffs…”

    Notes

    Quotes are provided by Shreyasee Majumder, Social Media Analyst at GlobalData
    The information is based on GlobalData Social Media Analytics Platform, which tracks most relevant activity among the selected Influencers on ‘X’ platform
    This article was written using data and information sourced from proprietary databases, primary and secondary research, and in-house analysis conducted by GlobalData’s team of industry experts

    About GlobalData Social Media Analytics Platform

    GlobalData’s Social Media Analytics Platform allows businesses to understand brand sentiments, product led conversations, buzzing trends among the selected influencers on ‘X’ platform tracked by GlobalData, using a combination of AI and human based analysis that curate content and displays only what matters to you. It helps monitor competitor strategies, predict emerging trends, monetize disruptive innovation, decode smart money, mine thought leadership, and capture digital consumers.

    About GlobalData

    4,000 of the world’s largest companies, including over 70% of FTSE 100 and 60% of Fortune 100 companies, make timelier and better business decisions thanks to GlobalData’s unique data, expert analysis and innovative solutions, all in one platform. GlobalData’s mission is to help our clients decode the future to be more successful and innovative across a range of industries, including the healthcare, consumer, retail, financial, technology and professional services sectors.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Asia Pacific – New UN report assesses the readiness of Asia-Pacific economies amid climate change

    Source: United Nations – ESCAP

    Despite driving 60 per cent of the world’s economic expansion in 2024, several countries in the Asia-Pacific region are still not ready to cope with climate shocks and the implications of transitioning to a greener system, according to the 2025 edition of the Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific.

    Published today by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), the report highlights the complex macroeconomic-climate interplay. It outlines the challenges testing the economic resilience of the region – including slower productivity growth, high public debt risks and rising trade tensions.

    “Increasing global economic uncertainty and deepening climate risks are also not making it easy for the fiscal and monetary policymakers,” said Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana, United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ESCAP. “Navigating this evolving landscape requires not only sound national policies but also coordinated regional efforts to safeguard long-term economic prospects and tackle climate change.”

    Among the 30 countries analysed in the Survey, 11 were identified as more exposed to climate risks from the macroeconomic perspective: Afghanistan, Cambodia, the Islamic Republic of Iran, Kazakhstan, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Viet Nam.

    There are also significant disparities in coping ability across the region. While some countries have mobilized sizeable climate finance and adopted green policies, others face a range of challenges, including fiscal constraints, weaker financial systems and limited public financial management capacity.

    The Survey delves into how countries are undertaking policies to manage the diverse economic challenges of climate change. For example, balancing industrial growth with climate goals in the Republic of Korea, addressing climate risks due to the dependence on agriculture in Lao PDR and on fossil fuels in Kazakhstan, and advancing policy action in coastal economies like Bangladesh and small island nations like Vanuatu that face severe climate impacts.

    Despite remaining relatively vibrant in comparison with the rest of the world, average economic growth in the developing economies in the Asia-Pacific region slowed to 4.8 per cent in 2024 from 5.2 per cent in 2023 and 5.5 per cent during the five years prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. In the case of least developed countries, the 2024 average economic growth rate of 3.7 per cent was significantly lower than the 7 per cent per annum GDP growth target set out in Sustainable Development Goal 8.

    Labour productivity growth in Asia and the Pacific has slowed significantly since the global financial crisis in 2008, with stagnating income convergence with the world’s advanced economies. Between 2010 and 2024, only 19 of 44 Asia-Pacific developing countries achieved income convergence, leaving 25 further behind.

    To secure long-term economic prosperity, the Survey underscores the need for proactive government support in upgrading into more productive, higher value-added economic sectors. The region also needs to capitalize its robust competitiveness in green industries and value chains as new engines of economic growth, as well as embrace inclusive regional economic cooperation, which serves the development aspirations of both developed and developing countries.

    Access the full report : https://www.unescap.org/kp/2025/survey2025

    The Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) is the most inclusive intergovernmental platform in the Asia-Pacific region. The Commission promotes cooperation among its 53 member States and 9 associate members in pursuit of solutions to sustainable development challenges. ESCAP is one of the five regional commissions of the United Nations.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Greenhouse gas emissions fall 2.0 percent in the December 2024 quarter – Stats NZ media and information release: Greenhouse gas emissions (industry and household): December 2024 quarter

    Greenhouse gas emissions fall 2.0 percent in the December 2024 quarter8 April 2025 – Seasonally adjusted industry and household greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in Aotearoa New Zealand decreased 2.0 percent in the December 2024 quarter, according to figures released by Stats NZ today.

    The decrease was primarily the result of a 45 percent reduction in emissions from electricity, gas, water, and waste services in the December 2024 quarter.

    “There were substantial falls in the amount of fossil fuels used for electricity generation in the December 2024 quarter, which drove an overall decrease in carbon dioxide emissions from industry,” environment statistics spokesperson Tehseen Islam said.

    Partly offsetting the decrease was an increase in emissions from manufacturing (up 5.0 percent), and transport, postal, and warehousing (up 3.1 percent). Both industries saw increases in GDP during this quarter.

    Files:

    MIL OSI

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Selected price indexes ? rental data for February and March 2025

    Source: Statistics New Zealand

    Selected price indexes − rental data for February and March 2025 – 8 April 2025 – Selected price indexes: March 2025 will include the national-level stock measure for actual rentals for housing for February and March 2025.  

    Actual rentals for housing data were not included in the February 2025 selected price indexes (SPI) as the dataset used to compile this information was incomplete, and Stats NZ was not confident the measure would meet customer expectations.

    Stats NZ has worked closely with the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) to provide some requirements and update processes for the dataset, and we are now confident that the data and stock measure for February and March meet expectations. We do not expect further disruptions.  

    The other series within the SPI remain unaffected, and the upcoming March 2025 quarter Consumers price index (CPI) will be produced using the full three months of actual rentals for housing data for the period  

    Note: The March 2025 SPI release will not include the flow of rental properties measures (national and regional) as we are still working to integrate this, following an update to MBIE’s tenancy bond-lodgement system. The flow measures, which do not affect the CPI, will be included when we are confident they meet customer expectations.

    MIL OSI

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Australia – Payroll and tax shakeup puts extra squeeze on SME cash flow

    Source: New Romans
     
    Australian small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) are bracing for a cash flow crunch as significant new payroll and tax legislation rolls out over the next two years.

    The changes will force SMEs to adjust their financial and administrative practices in order to remain compliant and put further pressure on their ability to effectively manage their cash flow.

    Earlypay CEO James Beeson said: “At a time when SMEs are already battling a tight labour market and rising operational costs, these changes will only add more pressure to their cash flow.

    “Many businesses will need to rethink their finance strategies,” he said.

    Key changes impacting SME cash flow

    From 1 July 2025:

    Super Guarantee Increases to 12%
    The Superannuation Guarantee (SG) rate will rise from 11.5% to 12%, increasing payroll costs for employers. Businesses must check employee contracts to see if super is included in salaries or needs to be paid on top. Late payments will attract the Superannuation Guarantee Charge (SGC), which is not tax-deductible, adding further financial strain. While this benefits employees’ retirement savings, the downside is it potentially increases payroll expenses for employers.

    ATO interest charges no longer tax deductible
    New tax laws will remove the ability to claim deductions for General Interest Charge (GIC) and Shortfall Interest Charge (SIC), making overdue tax liabilities even more costly for SMEs.  Currently, businesses can claim these interest charges as tax deductions, but the proposed change aims to remove this benefit, making overdue tax liabilities more costly for SMEs in an attempt to further discourage late tax liability payments.

    From 1 July 2026:

    Payday super introduced
    Superannuation contributions will need to be paid with every wage cycle instead of quarterly, requiring businesses to have funds available more frequently. Late super payments are not tax-deductible, intensifying cash flow pressure. Payday super was announced as part of the 2023-24 Federal Budget and is yet to be legislated.

    ATO’s free clearing house to close
    The shutdown of the Small Business Superannuation Clearing House (SBSCH) means SMEs will need to find and pay for alternative platforms, such as Xero or MYOB, to process super payments.

    Preparing for the changes

    “SMEs need to act now to stay ahead of the changes and set themselves up for success,” Mr Beeson said.

    To help navigate these shifts, SMEs should:

    Review budgets and payroll structures to account for increased SG rates and tax law changes.
    Ensure payroll systems can handle more frequent super payments.
    Explore alternative superannuation payment platforms before the SBSCH closure.
    Consider invoice finance to maintain steady cash flow and meet payroll and superannuation obligations.

    Supporting SME cash flow with invoice finance

    For businesses concerned about managing cash flow through these changes, invoice finance can provide access to working capital by unlocking funds tied up in unpaid invoices.

    Invoice financing allows SMEs to secure funding against the value of their outstanding invoices, providing a much-needed alternative to traditional bank loans that often require real estate as collateral.

    “Invoice financing smooths cash flow, enabling businesses to pay staff, suppliers, and invest in growth – all without relying on their personal assets like the family home,” Mr. Beeson said.

    Earlypay also integrates with platforms like Xero and MYOB, streamlining access to funds for SMEs.

    Earlypay (ASX: EPY) is a leading provider of working capital finance to Australian small to medium sized businesses with its invoice finance and equipment finance products.

    Earlypay’s invoice finance helps SMEs bridge the cash flow gap between issuing invoices and receiving payment from customers by providing early payment of unpaid invoices. Earlypay also provides equipment finance to SMEs to assist with capital expenditure.

    Earlypay has been supporting Australian SMEs since 2001 and has built a trusted legacy of delivering reliable, flexible and innovative working capital finance.

    Key facts:

    Australian small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) are bracing for a cash flow crunch as significant new proposed payroll and tax legislation rolls out over the next two years.

    Super guarantee increase to 12% and – ATO clearing house to close

    – Proposed ATO interest charges no longer tax deductible and proposed payday super

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Global Economy – China braces for tariff shock with strategic policy measures, says GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    Following President Donald Trump’s announcement of sweeping unprecedented tariffs on Chinese imports;

    Arnab Nath, Associate Project Manager, Business Fundamentals at GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company, offers his view:

    “In a move set to redefine global trade dynamics, the US President Donald Trump has announced a sweeping 34% hike in tariffs on Chinese imports—bringing the total tariff burden to 54%. These measures, scheduled to take effect from 09 April 2025, follow the rollout of a broader 10% universal tariff on all US imports, effective 05 April. GlobalData forecasts China’s GDP growth to slow to 4.2% in 2025 and 4.1% in 2026, down from 4.8% in 2024, amid these tariffs and ongoing domestic challenges such as a property market downturn and weak consumer demand.

    “In response, China announced to impose a 34% retaliatory tariff on all US imports starting 10 April, alongside immediate restrictions on exports of seven rare earth minerals vital to global supply chains. The moves mark a significant escalation in US-China trade tensions, reviving fears of a full-blown trade war like the 2018-19 standoff. With Chinese goods exports to the US totalling $524.9 billion in 2024 (ITC Trade Map data), key sectors—electronics, machinery, and consumer goods—face significant headwinds in the coming 12 months.

    “To offset the economic impact, Beijing is preparing macroeconomic support. Policymakers may reduce the reserve requirement ratio (RRR), cut interest rates, and boost fiscal spending through special treasury bonds and deficit financing. These efforts aim to stimulate domestic demand and safeguard market confidence.

    “Despite the near-term strain, China is accelerating trade diversification, enhancing links with ASEAN, Latin America, and the Middle East. While exporters—especially SMEs—may face immediate pressure, China’s fiscal and monetary readiness positions it to weather this shock and recalibrate global trade relationships.”

    About GlobalData

    4,000 of the world’s largest companies, including over 70% of FTSE 100 and 60% of Fortune 100 companies, make more timely and better business decisions thanks to GlobalData’s unique data, expert analysis and innovative solutions, all in one platform. GlobalData’s mission is to help our clients decode the future to be more successful and innovative across a range of industries, including the healthcare, consumer, retail, financial, technology and professional services sectors.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Africa – ATIDI Helps Strengthen Benin’s Fiscal Resilience with Second-Loss Guarantee for Deutsche Bank’s EUR507.5 Million Loan

    Source: Media Fast for ATIDI

    ·       The Republic of Benin, acting through its Ministry of Economy and Finance, has successfully secured a EUR507.5 million, 15-year facility to support its sustainable development agenda.

    ·       This transaction benefits from a Partial Risk Guarantee (PRG) of EUR200 million provided by the International Development Association (IDA) and a second-loss insurance cover of up to EUR614 million (principal plus interest) from ATIDI for the tenor of the loan.

    ·       The facility will enable the Government of Benin to undertake a critical debt reprofiling exercise to buy back part of the country’s Eurobonds. The resulting debt savings will be strategically allocated to finance or refinance eligible expenditures under the country’s SDG Framework.

    Nairobi, 7 April 2025 — The African Trade & Investment Development Insurance (ATIDI) supported the Republic of Benin’s latest financing transaction, providing a second-loss guarantee for Deutsche Bank’s EUR 507.5 million loan to the country. This milestone transaction reinforces ATIDI’s commitment to unlocking access to innovative financial solutions that enhance economic stability and sustainable development across Africa.

    The senior unsecured amortizing term loan, arranged solely by Deutsche Bank, is backed by a first-loss guarantee of up to EUR200 million from the International Development Association (IDA), part of the World Bank Group. ATIDI’s second-loss guarantee complements this structure, covering the remaining principal and interest, thereby strengthening investor confidence and reducing financing costs for Benin.

    “This landmark financing demonstrates the power of strategic partnerships in unlocking sustainable investment for African economies. Our collaboration with Deutsche Bank in supporting the Republic of Benin highlights ATIDI’s essential role in facilitating innovative financial solutions that enhance fiscal resilience. By providing a second-loss guarantee, we help ensure that Benin secures long-term, cost-effective financing, reinforcing its economic stability while channelling resources toward its sustainable development goals,” ATIDI CEO Manuel Moses said.

    ATIDI’s involvement underscores its unique role in providing risk mitigation solutions that enable African sovereigns to access long-term, cost-effective financing on favorable terms. This transaction is the first IDA-backed guarantee under the World Bank’s new guarantee platform launched in July 2024.

    Key Highlights of the Transaction:

     ·  Debt Reprofiling – The facility will provide fiscal space for Benin to reprofile its debt, ensuring long-term financial sustainability.

     ·  SDG Alignment – Savings from the transaction will be channeled toward priority projects under Benin’s SDG Framework.

     · Risk Mitigation – The IDA’s Partial Risk Guarantee and ATIDI’s second-loss insurance cover provide robust risk mitigation, enhancing investor confidence and ensuring the successful execution of the facility.

    Commenting on the facility, Deutsche Bank Managing Director Maryam Khosrowshahi said the transaction consolidates the Bank’s position as a leading arranger of complex transactions on the African continent, notably after being named Best Foreign Investment Bank in Benin for the 2nd year in a row by EMEA Finance African Banking Awards 2024.

    “We are proud to have acted as sole mandated lead arranger and sole lender to the Republic of Benin on this novel transaction with IDA and ATIDI. We leveraged our successful financing track-record with the Republic of Benin as well as our excellent relationship with the Republic’s advisor Rothschild & Co, and extensive transaction experience with the World Bank Group and ATIDI to deliver this critical financing in an effective and timely manner. Timing was indeed of the essence as the Facility was signed on 8 January 2025 concurrently to the announcement of a tender offer targeting up to EUR 250 million of Benin’s EUR2032s notes and of a new USD 500 million bond issue to complement the country’s 2025 budgetary needs.”

    The facility was concluded in parallel with Benin’s return to international capital markets through a USD500 million bond issuance. A portion of the loan proceeds was allocated to a debt reprofiling exercise, including the buyback of Benin’s EUR 2032 bond. By extending the average maturity of its public debt portfolio and achieving substantial debt service savings, Benin can redirect funds toward strategic initiatives under its SDG financing framework, driving long-term social and economic impact.

    ATIDI remains at the forefront of de-risking African economies and facilitating transformative financial solutions. Through partnerships with global financial institutions like Deutsche Bank and development partners such as the World Bank Group, ATIDI continues to provide innovative credit and investment insurance products that foster sustainable growth across Africa.

    Notes

    About ATIDI

    ATIDI was founded in 2001 by African States to cover trade and investment risks of companies doing business in Africa. ATIDI predominantly provides Political Risk, Credit Insurance and, Surety Insurance. Since inception, ATIDI has supported USD85 billion worth of investments and cross border trade into Africa. For over a decade, ATIDI has maintained an ‘A/Stable’ rating for Financial Strength and Counterparty Credit by Standard & Poor’s, and in 2019, ATIDI obtained an A3/Stable rating from Moody’s, which has now been upgraded to A2/Positive.

    www.atidi.africa

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Global Bodies – IPU marks milestones with gender equality drive in 2025

    Source: Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU)

    The Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) is pleased to announce its new gender campaign for 2025, Achieving gender equality, action by action.

    This initiative marks a pivotal year, in which the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, the global blueprint for gender equality, is marking its 30th anniversary.

    The campaign aims to mobilize the global parliamentary community to accelerate progress in achieving gender equality in politics and society.

    With progress on women’s representation in parliaments stalling, as detailed in the IPU’s recent report Women in parliament 1995-2025, and a concerning rollback of women’s rights in some countries, the campaign emphasizes the urgency of immediate action.

    The campaign promotes 10 key actions structured around three key thematic areas:

    Promoting parity in parliament and politics
    Encouraging gender-sensitive institutions
    Combating gender-based violence and discrimination

    40 years of bringing women MPs together

    The campaign was launched at the 150th IPU Assembly in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, coinciding with the 40th anniversary of the IPU Forum of Women Parliamentarians.

    Initially formed in 1985 as an informal global women’s caucus, the first of its kind, the Forum of Women Parliamentarians has since evolved into a powerful platform for women MPs worldwide, driving significant advancements in gender equality and women’s empowerment.

    For example, the Forum has played a key part in parliamentary efforts to address violence against women, with 104 countries now having comprehensive laws addressing domestic violence.

    The Forum provides an opportunity for women MPs to learn about how other countries are addressing gender inequality and to share good practices.

    More recently, male MPs have also participated in the Forum, underlining the shared responsibility of both men and women in achieving gender equality.

    Recognizing MPs who have promoted gender equality

    As part of its push for gender equality in 2025, the IPU is also inviting nominations for the Cremer-Passy Prize, named after the Organization’s founders, which this year will honour a parliamentarian with an outstanding record in promoting gender equality.

    The IPU is the global organization of national parliaments. It was founded in 1889 as the first multilateral political organization in the world, encouraging cooperation and dialogue between all nations. Today, the IPU comprises 182 national Member Parliaments and 15 regional parliamentary bodies. It promotes peace, democracy and sustainable development. It helps parliaments become stronger, younger, greener, more innovative and gender-balanced. It also defends the human rights of parliamentarians through a dedicated committee made up of MPs from around the world.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Environment report shows human activities are driving changes affecting health, livelihoods and homes: New Zealand’s environmental reporting series: Our environment 2025

    Source: Statistics New Zealand

    Environment report shows human activities are driving changes affecting health, livelihoods and homes8 April 2025 – The way New Zealanders choose to live is continuing to have a significant impact on the environment, affecting our health, quality of life, homes and livelihoods in both positive and negative ways, a major report on the environment shows.

    Our environment 2025 is the Ministry for the Environment and Stats NZ’s latest three-yearly update on the state of New Zealand’s environment. The report draws on regular six-monthly reporting in the air, atmosphere and climate, freshwater, land, and marine domains, to provide an overall picture of the environment, including how each of these domains are connected.

    Secretary for the Environment, James Palmer, says much of the change seen in our air, water, climate, marine environment, and land over time has been caused by people whose lives are in turn affected by those changes.

    Files:

    MIL OSI

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Aid cuts threaten fragile progress in ending maternal deaths, UN agencies warn

    Source: UNICEF Aotearoa NZ

    Countries must recommit to ending deaths in childbirth amid major headwinds
    7 April 2025 – Women today are more likely than ever to survive pregnancy and childbirth, according to a major new report released today, but United Nations (UN) agencies highlight the threat of major backsliding as unprecedented aid cuts take effect around the world.
    Released on World Health Day, the UN report, Trends in Maternal Mortality, shows a 40 per cent global decline in maternal deaths between 2000 and 2023 – largely due to improved access to essential health services. Still, the report reveals that the pace of improvement has slowed significantly since 2016, and that an estimated 260,000 women died in 2023 as a result of complications from pregnancy or childbirth – roughly equivalent to one maternal death every two minutes.
    The report comes as humanitarian funding cuts are having severe impacts on essential health care in many parts of the world, forcing countries to roll back vital services for maternal, newborn and child health. These cuts have led to facility closures and loss of health workers, while also disrupting supply chains for lifesaving supplies and medicines such as treatments for haemorrhage, pre-eclampsia and malaria – all leading causes of maternal deaths.
    Without urgent action, the agencies warn that pregnant women in multiple countries will face severe repercussions – particularly those in humanitarian settings where maternal deaths are already alarmingly high.
    “While this report shows glimmers of hope, the data also highlights how dangerous pregnancy still is in much of the world today – despite the fact that solutions exist to prevent and treat the complications that cause the vast majority of maternal deaths,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO). “In addition to ensuring access to quality maternity care, it will be critical to strengthen the underlying health and reproductive rights of women and girls – factors that underpin their prospects of healthy outcomes during pregnancy and beyond.”
    The report also provides the first global account of the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on maternal survival. In 2021, an estimated 40,000 more women died due to pregnancy or childbirth – increasing to 322,000 from 282,000 the previous year. This upsurge was linked not only to direct complications caused by COVID-19 but also widespread interruptions to maternity services. This highlights the importance of ensuring such care during pandemics and other emergencies, noting that pregnant women need reliable access to routine services and checks as well as round-the-clock urgent care.
    “When a mother dies in pregnancy or childbirth, her baby’s life is also at risk. Too often, both are lost to causes we know how to prevent,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. “Global funding cuts to health services are putting more pregnant women at risk, especially in the most fragile settings, by limiting their access to essential care during pregnancy and the support they need when giving birth. The world must urgently invest in midwives, nurses, and community health workers to ensure every mother and baby has a chance to survive and thrive.”
    The report highlights persistent inequalities between regions and countries, as well as uneven progress. With maternal mortality declining by around 40 per cent between 2000 and 2023, sub-Saharan Africa achieved significant gains – and was one of just three UN regions alongside Australia and New Zealand, and Central and Southern Asia, to see significant drops after 2015. However, confronting high rates of poverty and multiple conflicts, the sub-Saharan Africa region still counted for approximately 70 per cent of the global burden of maternal deaths in 2023.
    Indicating slowing progress, maternal mortality stagnated in five regions after 2015: Northern Africa and Western Asia, Eastern and South-Eastern Asia, Oceania (excluding Australia and New Zealand), Europe and North America, and Latin America and the Caribbean.
    “Access to quality maternal health services is a right, not a privilege, and we all share the urgent responsibility to build well-resourced health systems that safeguard the life of every pregnant woman and newborn,” said Dr. Natalia Kanem, UNFPA’s Executive Director. “By boosting supply chains, the midwifery workforce, and the disaggregated data needed to pinpoint those most at risk, we can and must end the tragedy of preventable maternal deaths and their enormous toll on families and societies.”
    Pregnant women living in humanitarian emergencies face some of the highest risks globally, according to the report. Nearly two-thirds of global maternal deaths now occur in countries affected by fragility or conflict. For women in these settings, the risks are staggering: a 15-year-old girl faces a 1 in 51 risk of dying from a maternal cause at some point over her lifetime compared to 1 in 593 in more stable countries. The highest risks are in Chad and the Central African Republic (1 in 24), followed by Nigeria (1 in 25), Somalia (1 in 30), and Afghanistan (1 in 40).
    Beyond ensuring critical services during pregnancy, childbirth and the postnatal period, the report notes the importance of efforts to enhance women’s overall health by improving access to family planning services, as well as preventing underlying health conditions like anaemias, malaria and noncommunicable diseases that increase risks. It will also be critical to ensure girls stay in school and that women and girls have the knowledge and resources to protect their health.
    Urgent investment is needed to prevent maternal deaths. The world is currently off-track to meet the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target for maternal survival. Globally, the maternal mortality ratio would need to fall by around 15 per cent each year to meet the 2030 target – significantly increasing from current annual rates of decline of around 1.5 per cent.
    Notes
    About the data: The SDG target for maternal deaths is for a global maternal mortality ratio (MMR) of less than 70 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births by 2030. The global MMR in 2023 was estimated at 197 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births, down from 211 in 2020 and from 328 in 2000.
    The report includes data disaggregated by the following regions, used for SDG reporting: Central Asia and Southern Asia; Sub-Saharan Africa; Northern America and Europe; Latin America & the Caribbean; Western Asia and Northern Africa; Australia and New Zealand; Eastern Asia and South-eastern Asia, and Oceania excluding Australia and New Zealand.
    About World Health Day: World Health Day is marked around the world on 7th April. Each year, it draws attention to a specific health topic of concern to people all over the world. The World Health Day 2025 campaign focuses on improving maternal and newborn health and survival with the theme “Healthy beginnings, hopeful futures”. The campaign urges governments and the health community to ramp up efforts to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths, and to prioritize women’s longer-term health and well-being.
    About the United Nations Maternal Mortality Estimation Inter-Agency Group:
    The report was produced by WHO on behalf of the United Nations Maternal Mortality Estimation Inter-Agency Group comprising WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, the World Bank Group and the Population Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. It uses national data to estimate levels and trends of maternal mortality from 2000-2023. The data in this new publication covers 195 countries and territories. It supersedes all previous estimates published by WHO and the United Nations Maternal Mortality Estimation Inter-Agency Group.
    A maternal death is a death due to complications related to pregnancy or childbirth, occurring when a woman is pregnant, or within six weeks of the end of the pregnancy.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Thailand: Authorities must end malicious smear campaigns and cyberattacks on civil society – Amnesty International

    Source: Amnesty International

    Amnesty International has called on the Thai authorities to investigate and take any necessary measures to end cyberattacks against human rights activists after leaked internal government documents showed that Amnesty International was among several civil society groups targeted in a coordinated, state-sponsored campaign.

    The documents, which were brought to light in a recent parliamentary debate, revealed Thai police and military units are jointly running a “Cyber Team” which deliberately sought to tarnish the reputations and undermine the legitimate work of civil society organizations and political opposition members.

    It also engaged in phishing attacks and brute-force attempts to access social media accounts. The former Executive Director of Amnesty International’s Thailand office was among those targeted.

    “These cyberattacks are an outrageous assault on Thailand’s civic space. Thai authorities must immediately end these malicious smear campaigns against human rights defenders and activists,” Amnesty International’s Thailand Researcher Chanatip Tatiyakaroonwong said.

    “The Thai government must take any necessary measures to disclose full details regarding state actors’ involvement and hold accountable all those responsible—whether they are state officials, members of the security forces or private individuals.”

    Amnesty International among ‘high-value targets’

    During a parliamentary no-confidence debate on 25 March 2025, opposition parliamentarian Chayaphon Satondee disclosed leaked internal documents of a Cyber Team under a Joint Command Center run by police and military units, including those from the Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC).

    According to the leaked materials, Amnesty International was explicitly identified as a “high-value target”. Other international non-governmental organizations, local civil society groups, prominent activists, and pro-democracy figures were also in this list, including human rights organizations Thai Lawyers for Human Rights and iLaw, as well as young woman human rights defender Anna Annanon.

    The Cyber Team disseminated harmful and defamatory content online. For instance, in response to Amnesty International’s social media posts related to the excessive use of force against protesters in Thailand, the Cyber Team instructed officials to respond by portraying the protesters as violent.

    The documents indicated that during the 2023 election period, the Cyber Team targeted the social media accounts of prominent activists and political opponents, including Amnesty International Thailand’s then Director, Piyanut Kotsan, through attempted brute-force attacks aimed at compromising their online security.

    A brute-force attack is used to gain unauthorized access to systems, networks, or encrypted data by systematically testing all possible combinations of credentials or keys until the correct one is found through trial-and-error.

    At least up until October 2024, the Cyber Team continued to actively monitor Amnesty International’s social media platforms. The leaked documents showed that officials were instructed to respond aggressively to content perceived as threats to national security, notably Amnesty International’s campaigns advocating the dropping of charges against peaceful protesters and highlighting human rights violations such as the unlawful killings of Malay Muslim protesters in Tak Bai, Narathiwat Province.

    Ongoing digital authoritarian practices in Thailand

    In response to these allegations, during the parliamentary debate, a representative of the Thai government categorically denied any involvement in a campaign of digital attacks. Successive Thai administrations have consistently refuted similar claims of targeting activists, human rights defenders and opposition politicians, often amid high levels of secrecy and limited transparency—even despite technical and circumstantial evidence. However, these new revelations are consistent with Amnesty International’s observations that digital authoritarian practices have been a chronic problem in Thailand.

    Amnesty International’s earlier research, published in May 2024, highlighted how Thai authorities and state-aligned actors systematically deployed targeted digital surveillance and online harassment, including smear campaigns, disproportionately impacting women and LGBTI human rights defenders. Such digital violence has been systematically deployed to attack human rights defenders, suppress civic engagement and severely curtail freedom of expression.

    In November 2024, the UN Committee against Torture further expressed serious concerns regarding Thailand’s use of spyware and digital smear campaigns against human rights defenders, calling for prompt, thorough, impartial investigations into these instances.

    Amnesty International has previously been among the civil society organizations targeted in digital attacks. In February 2021, Meta’s Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior report confirmed that the ISOC had orchestrated a coordinated inauthentic online operation that targeted Amnesty International among other civil society organizations and activists.

    Amnesty International Thailand’s former Executive Director, Piyanut Kotsan, has also been repeatedly subjected to intense online smear campaigns, with abusive gender-based speech, threats of sexual violence, and disinformation, notably intensifying since the youth-led protest movements that emerged in 2020.

    “Civil society organizations have repeatedly documented waves of digital attacks against human rights defenders in Thailand and have become a broken record calling on Thai authorities to investigate and end these abuses. This lates evidence only reaffirms the persistent threats facing activists and civil society,” Chanatip Tatiyakaroonwong said.

    Empty promise of protecting human rights online

    In the lead-up to a UN Human Rights Council election in September 2023, the Thai government made various commitments, including to “[d]evelop policies and legislation to promote and protect human rights in the digital and online spaces in light of new technology and to work with relevant partners to address challenges such as disinformation, misinformation and right to privacy while continuing to bridge the existing digital divide in the society.”

    However, these cyberattacks are in direct violation of the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly. The specific attempts to compromise social media accounts through brute-force attacks also constituted a violation of the right to privacy.

    “For too long, human rights defenders in Thailand have endured a hostile environment in the digital space. Now that Thailand has a seat in the UN Human Rights Council, Thai authorities must honour their commitments, starting by ending these harmful smear campaigns and ensuring a safe and enabling environment for human rights defenders,” Chanatip Tatiyakaroonwong said.

    Background

    As a State Party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), Thailand is obligated to protect individuals’ rights to hold opinions without interference, freedom of expression, and to guard against arbitrary and unlawful intrusions into privacy. Furthermore, it has the obligation to undertake any necessary measures to prevent, investigate, punish and redress abuses perpetrated.

    Amnesty International is a non-partisan organization that does not take sides in political disputes and adheres strictly to its mission as a human rights organization.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Afghanistan – Concern Over Planned Deportation of Afghan Refugees in Pakistan Médecins Sans Frontières

    Source: Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

    7 April 2026: Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) expresses deep concern for approximately 900,000 Afghan Citizen Card holders facing deportation from Pakistan. Vulnerable groups, including women, children, and those with disabilities, are disproportionately impacted by such deportations. Women and girls face especially heightened risks due to restrictive policies which limit their access to education, employment, and public life in Afghanistan.

    Since October 2023, over 800,000 people of Afghan origin have been deported from Pakistan. MSF medical teams report significant distress and uncertainty among Afghan communities in Pakistan about returning to Afghanistan. Many fear for their safety and future livelihoods, while also facing limited access to essential needs, such as healthcare. These pressures worsen the vulnerabilities of an already struggling population. “We are Afghan refugees,” the caretaker of one patient told MSF. “We have no money…our community is really in need. If we go back, there is nothing for us, no water, nothing, we are neglected.”

    The public healthcare system in Afghanistan is already under considerable pressure and unable to meet the overwhelming health needs of the population. MSF works closely with the Afghan Ministry of Public Health to provide healthcare services to hundreds of thousands of Afghans every year. But the recent closure or suspension of activities in 202 health facilities in Afghanistan following recent US-Aid cuts, will make access to healthcare even more challenging, and the large-scale return of Afghans could further strain Afghanistan’s dire humanitarian situation. MSF urges immediate consideration of the humanitarian impact of these deportation policies on vulnerable Afghan nationals. We also call on the international community to enhance support for the protection and humanitarian needs of affected Afghans, both in the region and within Afghanistan.

    As a neutral, independent, and impartial medical humanitarian organization, MSF provides assistance based solely on need. MSF remains committed to delivering impartial medical assistance to vulnerable communities in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and neighbouring countries, guided by our humanitarian principles and medical ethics.

    ENDS

    MSF first started working in Pakistan in 1986, and today provides much-needed medical care to people in Balochistan, Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh provinces. Access to healthcare remains a challenge in Pakistan, especially for people in rural communities, informal settlements and areas affected by conflict. MSF has projects providing reproductive, neonatal and paediatric care, diagnosis and treatment of cutaneous leischmaniasis, diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis C, and diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis in the country.

    MSF is an international, medical, humanitarian organisation that delivers medical care to people in need, regardless of their origin, religion, or political affiliation. MSF has been working in Haiti for over 30 years, offering general healthcare, trauma care, burn wound care, maternity care, and care for survivors of sexual violence. MSF Australia was established in 1995 and is one of 24 international MSF sections committed to delivering medical humanitarian assistance to people in crisis. In 2022, more than 120 project staff from Australia and New Zealand worked with MSF on assignment overseas. MSF delivers medical care based on need alone and operates independently of government, religion or economic influence and irrespective of race, religion or gender. For more information visit msf.org.au  

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Australia Events – MCEC serves up sustainability at the Banksia National Awards

    Source: Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre (MCEC)

    Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre (MCEC) proudly hosted the Banksia National Sustainability Awards last night, celebrating outstanding contributions to sustainability across Australia.

    Aligning with the theme of the evening, MCEC’s talented Chefs teamed up with Skyfarm, an urban farm on the venue’s Siddeley St Carpark rooftop, to design a vibrant gala dinner menu showcasing local, seasonal and sustainable ingredients.  

    Executive Sous Chef of Culinary Development, Karl Edmonds said “MCEC is committed to sustainable and responsible practices, and this philosophy extends to our menus.”

    “The Banksia Awards gala dinner menu featured dishes that not only taste great, but are also great for the environment. We utilised fennel seeds, celery green chilli and rainbow silverbeet hand-picked from Skyfarm and delivered on foot to our kitchens. The menu also featured fantastic local suppliers that share our commitments to sustainability.”

    Leftover produce from the evening was donated to community partner OzHarvest, to redistribute to those in need.

    In addition to hosting the awards gala, MCEC proudly sponsored the Circular Economy Award, which recognises initiatives that eliminate waste and pollution while circulating products and materials at their highest value.  

    Sustainability and Impact Manager, Kristen Gillespie said, “The Circular Economy Award strongly aligns with MCEC’s industry-leading sustainability strategy and commitment to promoting environmental responsibility. We’re thrilled to support initiatives that contribute to a more sustainable future for our community and beyond.”

    The Circular Economy Award, sponsored by MCEC, was presented to BlockTexx, a textile recycling company, for their innovative technology that aims to transform the fashion industry.

    BlockTexx created a world-first solution to recycle clothes made from a mixture of polyester and cotton. Their specialised technology breaks down these clothes and turns them into recycled polyester and cellulose, which can be reused in new products.

    “I’d like to congratulate all finalists for their commitments to developing unique solutions to reduce waste, encourage responsible consumption and achieving positive social and environmental outcomes. Congratulations to BlockTexx, they are well deserving of the award,” Kristen said.

    This year marked the fourth consecutive year that MCEC has partnered with Banksia, showcasing our shared commitment to environmental and social sustainability.

    “We’re proud to partner with Banksia to host the National Sustainability Awards every year, inspiring others to make a difference and create a better future for us all. As a globally leading sustainable destination, Melbourne provides the perfect backdrop for this impactful event,” Kristen added.  

    CEO of Banksia Foundation, Graz van Egmond said, “Our collaboration with MCEC has elevated the Banksia National Sustainability Awards to new heights. Their sustainable practices and passion for fostering change complement our mission, ensuring that every aspect of this event inspires action and celebrates excellence in sustainability.”

    MCEC is the first convention centre in the world to be awarded 6-star green star rating and one of only five convention centres worldwide to achieve EarthCheck Platinum Certification. MCEC continues to pave the way for a more sustainable future, demonstrating that responsible practices can coexist with exceptional service and culinary innovation.

    ABOUT MCEC
    At Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre (MCEC), visionary ideas come to life, and the world’s thought leaders gather. The iconic venue hosts dynamic exhibitions, conferences, galas, and concerts—everyone who visits leaves inspired and excited.  

    MCEC loves all communities and interests, creating a space where everyone feels welcome. Blending trendy eats, sustainability, and cutting-edge tech, it creates mind-blowing, globally recognised events.  

    Thanks to its progressive sustainability practices, choosing MCEC means making a positive environmental impact. Feel Melbourne’s vibe, discover the next big thing, and be part of the conversation that shapes the future.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Global Bodies – Belize becomes the 182nd IPU Member Parliament

    Source: Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU)

    At the 150th IPU Assembly in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, the IPU welcomed the National Assembly of Belize as its 182nd Member Parliament, further expanding the Organization’s global reach and bringing it one step closer to universal membership.

    The decision by the National Assembly to join the IPU was confirmed by a resolution that was passed unanimously in December 2024 in its House of Representatives.

    Ms. Valerie Woods, the Speaker of the House of Representatives at the time, said: “We look forward to beginning a fruitful exchange of knowledge and experience with fellow Member Parliaments. The IPU aligns with Belize’s collective international efforts to advance democracy, foster transparency and promote best practices in governance. Our commitment to adhering to the principles and guidelines of the IPU is steadfast, and the National Assembly of Belize is eager to contribute in meaningful ways to the continued inclusivity and diversity of the IPU.”

    The National Assembly of Belize consists of two chambers – the House of Representatives and the Senate:

    The House of Representatives, the lower chamber, is made up of 31 directly elected members, of which 9.7% are women.

    The Senate, the upper chamber, has 14 appointed members, of which women comprise 28.6%.

    The IPU is the global organization of national parliaments. It was founded in 1889 as the first multilateral political organization in the world, encouraging cooperation and dialogue between all nations. Today, the IPU comprises 182 national Member Parliaments and 15 regional parliamentary bodies. It promotes peace, democracy and sustainable development. It helps parliaments become stronger, younger, greener, more innovative and gender-balanced. It also defends the human rights of parliamentarians through a dedicated committee made up of MPs from around the world.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: University Research – Poor oral health linked with body pain and migraines in women – UoS

    Source: University of Sydney (UoS)

    New research from the University of Sydney has revealed poor oral health is significantly associated with higher instances of migraines, abdominal and body pain in women.

    Published in Frontiers in Pain Research, the world-first study identified specific oral microbes correlated with certain pain conditions, suggesting a potential relationship between the oral microbiome and the nervous system.  

    The findings highlight the importance of good oral health to potentially mitigate pain and improve overall wellbeing, prompting further exploration into the role of oral microbiota in chronic unexplained pain conditions. This includes fibromyalgia, a condition experienced by 67 percent of the study participants.

    “This is the first study to investigate oral health, oral microbiota and pain commonly experienced in women with fibromyalgia, with our study showing a clear and significant association between poor oral health and pain,” said lead investigator Associate Professor Joanna Harnett from the Faculty of Medicine and Health.

    “Our findings are particularly important to fibromyalgia which, despite being a common rheumatological condition, is often underrecognised,” said first author and PhD candidate in the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sharon Erdrich.  

    “Fibromyalgia is a chronic condition characterised by widespread musculoskeletal pain, and headaches including headaches, as well as fatigue, sleep disturbances, and cognitive problems.”

    How the research worked  

    The research examined associations between self-reported oral health, the oral microbiome, and various pain presentations in a group of New Zealand women with and without fibromyalgia.  

    Oral health was assessed using the WHO oral health questionnaire and evaluated against body pain, headaches, migraines, and abdominal pain using validated instruments, including the Short-form 36 (which measures quality of life), the International Headache Society headache survey and the functional bowel disorder severity index. Strong associations were evident between oral health scores and pain and each of these were associated with specific microbes found in the mouth, which were assessed using advanced genomic technology.  

    Participants with the poorest oral health were more likely to suffer from higher pain scores: 60 percent were more likely to experience moderate to severe body pain, and 49 percent were more likely to experience migraine headaches. Lower oral health was a statistically significant predictor of frequent and chronic migraine.

    Four oral microbial species from the Dialister, Fusobacterium, Parvimonas and Solobacterium genera were significantly associated with pain after age, BMI and added dietary sugars were considered.  

    A weak but significant inverse correlation with diet quality and oral health was also found, though the researchers note this has yet to be investigated in detail.

    The Australian Dental Association recommends regular oral hygiene appointments and dental health checks, in addition to twice daily teeth brushing and flossing.

    Declaration  

    Ethical review and approval of the study protocol and procedures was granted by the New Zealand Health and Disability Committee. The study was registered with the Australia and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR). Written consent was obtained from all participants prior to undertaking the requirements of the study.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Asia Pacific – WHO in the Western Pacific calls for urgent action to save mothers and newborns

    Source: World Health Organization (WHO)

    Manila, 7 April 2025 – On World Health Day, the World Health Organization (WHO) is calling for immediate and decisive action to ensure that every mother and every baby receives the care they deserve. WHO’s year-long campaign, “Healthy beginnings, hopeful futures” urges countries to renew their commitment to ensure good-quality health care for every mother and every newborn.

     The maternal mortality ratio is a key indicator that tracks how many women die during pregnancy or childbirth, serving as a crucial measure of both women’s health and how well health-care systems protect mothers. The Western Pacific Region has the second-lowest maternal mortality ratio among WHO’s six regions globally. Estimates released today show that there has been progress in this indicator − for every 100 000 babies born in countries and areas of the Western Pacific in 2023, 35 mothers died. In 2010, 49 mothers died per 100 000 live births, indicating a 29% reduction in the past 13 years. However, despite this progress, too many families and communities still lose mothers and newborns to preventable causes.

    “Pregnancy and childbirth should be a time of joy, but for some families and communities it ends in tragedy. The life of every mother and every newborn is precious, and we must do everything possible to save them,” said Dr Saia Ma’u Piukala, WHO Regional Director for the Western Pacific. “We have the power to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths in our Region. Every woman and every baby deserves the highest quality of care to ensure their survival and well-being.”

    According to Dr Piukala, this requires not just better access to care, but a transformation in the quality of health care that women and newborns receive, particularly in the most vulnerable communities.

    Good-quality care is essential for maternal and newborn health

    Most countries in the Western Pacific have made significant strides in increasing access to maternal and newborn care, with 98% of births now attended by skilled health personnel. These countries must now redouble their focus on improving the quality of this care.

    Meanwhile, some countries and areas in the Western Pacific still struggle to provide even basic maternal health-care services, with limited access to skilled birth attendants and essential facilities. These countries require urgent support to build necessary maternal health-care infrastructure. In addition, efforts must be made to ensure that mothers feel safe and empowered.

    “Every mother has the right to a positive and safe pregnancy, birth and postnatal experience,” Dr Piukala emphasized. “This means creating environments where women are heard, respected and involved in decisions about their care. Simply surviving childbirth is not enough, we must ensure that mothers and babies thrive.”

    Empowering health workers and managers to drive change

    Health workers, managers and authorities have the power to make significant changes to improve maternal and newborn health care. They should be encouraged to take proactive steps to ensure that every mother and every baby receives the highest quality of care.

    Health workers need proper training and supplies so they can identify issues early, prevent infections and handle difficult situations confidently. They must also treat all patients with dignity, respect their choices and attend to the mental health needs of new parents.

    Meanwhile, health authorities can support better-quality maternal health care by making sustained investments in safe and accessible maternal newborn care; supporting an enabling environment for health workers, such as safeguarding uninterrupted access to water and sanitation; and ensuring health facilities are well-stocked with essential medicines and supplies.

    In addition, Dr Piukala emphasized the importance of collective action: “WHO has worked hard with governments and partners in the Region to make motherhood and the first month of life safer, and we’re making progress. But we are not done yet – we must redouble efforts to ensure good-quality and safe maternal and newborn care across the Western Pacific. Every mother and every baby deserves a healthy beginning and a hopeful future.”

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Pakistan: Amnesty International launches #undothedeadline campaign against unlawful deportation of Afghan nationals

    Source: Amnesty International

    With the Pakistani authorities beginning a new round of deportations for Afghan nationals, including refugees and asylum seekers, living in the country, Amnesty International is launching its new campaign #undothedeadline by releasing a compendium of stories titled ‘ “Treat us like human beings”: Afghans in Pakistan at risk of unlawful deportation.’

    Through the #undothedeadline campaign, Amnesty International aims to amplify the voices of Afghans at risk of unlawful deportation, advocate for the respect of their human rights and raise awareness about the urgent need to stop their forced deportations from Pakistan. The compendium spotlights ten stories of Afghan migrants, refugees and asylum seekers who are artists, journalists and women who cannot afford to go back to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan and not only risk their lives but also stand to lose decades worth of lives built in Pakistan.

    “Afghan nationals including refugees and asylum seekers in Pakistan have been living in a state of fear since the Pakistani authorities announced their phased deportation plans in October 2023. Many Afghans have been in Pakistan for more than four decades. Their lives stand to be completely upended as a result of the Pakistan government’s insistence on violating their obligations under international human rights law, specifically the principle of non-refoulement,” says Babu Ram Pant, Deputy regional director for South Asia at Amnesty International.

    “Afghans seeking refuge and asylum in Pakistan after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021 are particularly at risk. These include Afghan women and girls, journalists, human rights defenders, women protestors, artists, and former Afghan government and security officials who fled Taliban’s persecution. Pakistan must reverse its existing policy of forced return to ensure the safety of these individuals.”

    Amnesty International has repeatedly called on the Pakistan government to reverse its latest decision to expel Afghan nationals from Islamabad and Rawalpindi and formally suspend the ‘Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Plan.’

    Further Information:

    The compendium of stories is available at: Pakistan: ‘Treat us like human beings’: Afghans in Pakistan at risk of unlawful deportation – Amnesty International

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Energy – Ripple effects from Equinor in Norway continue to grow

    Source: Equinor

    04 APRIL 2025 – A new report finds that deliveries within exploration, development projects and operation of Equinor-operated fields and onshore facilities in Norway continued to grow in 2024.

    Equinor procured goods and services with a total value of NOK 142.6 billion, an increase from 134 billion in 2023. 93 per cent of this came from Norwegian suppliers located in 260 different municipalities. This resulted in an employment effect of more than 85 thousand full-time equivalents.

    “The report demonstrates extensive ripple effects and employment effects from Equinor’s activity in Norway. The greatest ripple effects come from operating our fields and onshore facilities, which account for more than 85 billion in deliveries. With the Norwegian continental shelf (NCS) in a mature phase, high levels of exploration activity and maturing of new oil and gas resources are important to ensure that this continues,” says Kjetil Hove, Equinor’s executive vice president for EPN.

    The report was prepared by Kunnskapsparken Bodø (KPB) which analysed actual purchases of goods and services from around 1900 suppliers and several thousand sub-suppliers in nearly 300 sectors.

    Development projects contributed Norwegian deliveries worth more than NOK 36 billion and more than 20 thousand full-time equivalents. The largest share of this comes from subsea developments, which accounted for 31%. Johan Castberg was Equinor’s largest Norwegian field development in 2024, and accounted for 26%. The various electrification projects also created significant ripple effects with 23%.

    “Looking towards 2035, Equinor plans to continue to ramp up activity. On the NCS alone, we want to see 250 exploration wells, 600 more development wells, 75 subsea developments, 3000 interventions, 2500 modification projects and 50 low-pressure projects. This robust activity level will require a cost level that yields profitability. Together with its partners and the supplier industry, Equinor must maintain to achieve competitive solutions. If we succeed with this, we’ll be able to maintain value creation on the NCS, as well as preserve high energy deliveries to Europe over the long term,” Hove concludes.

    Equinor’s exploration activity had deliveries amounting to NOK 10.8 billion, an increase of just over 3 billion from 2023.

    “Equinor’s activity generates work for suppliers all across the country, which demonstrates that this company is important for people and local communities. The competition to secure important contracts and long-term supplier relationships also helps develop competence and innovation throughout the entire supplier industry. We have lots of small suppliers in the Norwegian supplier industry who are the leading specialists within their respective areas. We must continue to build on our strengths as an energy nation,” says Per Steinar Stamnes, head of the union Styrke Norwegian Continental Shelf in Equinor, on behalf of the five trade unions in Equinor; Styrke, SAFE, Lederne, NITO and Tekna.

    The 2024 analysis also includes operation of renewable energy facilities and low-carbon solutions, where the Norwegian supplier industry delivered services worth 170 million from the operation of Hywind Tampen and the development of Northern Lights.

    Facts

    The ripple effects report computes the ripple effects that result from the delivery of goods and services for 46 fields, 6 onshore facilities, exploration, development projects and operation of facilities for renewable energy and low-carbon solutions.
    Kunnskapsparken Bodø (KPB) is responsible for analyses and reporting results. Comparable analyses have been conducted on an annual basis since 2019.
    In addition to Equinor-operated fields and onshore facilities, the analysis has evolved over time to also include activities within exploration (from 2022), development projects (from 2023) and facilities for renewable and low-carbon solutions (from 2024).

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Africa – Applications Open for the 7th Annual GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition – Africa’s Youth Agrifood Entrepreneurs Invited to Drive Food Systems Transformation with a US$160,000 Prize Pool

    SOURCE: 2025 GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition

    Africa’s high entrepreneurship rates further underscore the continent as a potential global leader in youth-driven enterprise, innovation, and job creation

    JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, April 3, 2025 – The 2025 GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize launches its seventh annual competition today in search for Africa’s most promising young co-founders and founders across Africa who have launched businesses across Africa’s agrifood value chain “from seed to fork”. Judges will be looking for innovative, scalable, and impact-driven agripreneurs (aged 18 to 35) who have built tech-savvy, sustainable businesses tackling food security, job creation, and equitable economic growth. Applications are open from 3 April to 10 June 2025. https://GoGettaz.Africa

    In September 2025, GoGettaz finalists will pitch their businesses live on stage in Dakar, Senegal during the annual Africa Food Systems Forum (AFSF) taking place 31 August to 5 September 2025. Two grand prizes of US$50,000 each will be awarded to the most outstanding male and female-led agribusinesses. An additional US$60,000 in Impact Awards will recognize businesses excelling in key areas such as technology, innovation, nutrition, food security, improving rural livelihoods, climate resilience, gender equity, natural resource conservation, and job creation.

    The GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition is an integral part of the Africa Food Systems Forum (AFSF), the world’s premier forum for African agriculture and food systems, bringing together stakeholders to take practical action and share lessons that will empower Africa’s young leaders for food systems transformation.

    With the 2025 AFSF theme “Africa’s Youth: Leading Collaboration, Innovation and Implementation of Agri-Food Systems Transformation,” the GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize competition is set to empower youth entrepreneurs from across West, Northern, Southern, Central, and Eastern Africa who looking to showcase, grow, and scale, their agrifood businesses.

    As Africa faces mounting challenges of lack of infrastructure, access to finance, job creation, and food insecurity, its youth are stepping up as powerful agents of transformation. From the bustling trade hubs of West Africa to the agricultural heartlands of Southern Africa, young innovators are developing solutions that not only tackle immediate crises but also pave the way for a sustainable future. The GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition serves as a platform for these change-makers, offering mentorship, exposure, networking, and resources to enhance their impact across Africa’s diverse regions.

    “I am continually amazed by the ingenuity and determination of the young entrepreneurs we meet through the GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition each year,” said Svein Tore Holsether, President and Chief Executive Officer of Yara International and GoGettaz co-founder. “Their ability to leverage technology and innovative business models showcases the immense potential of the agrifood sector and the pivotal role of entrepreneurship in sustainable development. As we launch the 2025 campaign, we are inspired by the opportunity to empower and support young entrepreneurs who are enhancing job creation, uplifting communities, and nourishing Africa’s growing population.”

    With Africa set to represent one-quarter of the global population and one-third of the world’s youth by 2050, according to United Nations projections, the continent’s youth, over 70% who are younger than 30 years of age, hold immense potential. Africa’s high entrepreneurship rates further underscore the continent as a potential global leader in youth-driven enterprise, innovation, and job creation.

    “Africa’s youth are brimming with creative energy and ideas to solve myriad problems with innovative solutions,” remarked GoGettaz co-founder Strive Masiyiwa, Founder and Chairman of Econet Group who also served as Chair of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa for several years.

    “They aren’t waiting around for the perfect conditions; they are seizing the moment and embracing technology to revolutionize the agrifood industry across the continent,” he noted. “They are launching remarkable ventures, but to ensure they can grow and scale, our youth need the right support, access to capital, skills, and enabling environments to grow their young businesses into multimillion-dollar pan-African and global agribusinesses.”

    “Our amazing young entrepreneurs deserve both recognition and support, which is why GoGettaz exists.” he said.

    Since its inception in 2019, the GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition has spotlighted diverse young entrepreneurs building innovative agribusinesses from traditional farming operations to high-tech AI-driven ventures. The 2025 competition is open to all African agripreneur-led businesses with headquarters on the African continent. Applications will be accepted in English and French.

    “The 2025 GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition is a rallying point for Africa’s brightest young minds to pioneer transformative solutions and drive meaningful change.” said Amath Pathe Sene, Managing Director of the Africa Food Systems Forum.

    “As Africa leads the charge in innovating for resilience, I am eager to see the groundbreaking climate-smart solutions that emerge from the 2025 contestants. The 2024 winners set a high standard by using innovative techniques aimed at preserving nutritional value using renewable energy and natural fibers to produce eco-friendly sanitary pads, improving health and hygiene. With food security under threat, exacerbated by climate change, Africa’s agripreneurs are rising to the challenge, transforming agricultural practices, and spearheading sustainable technologies.” he said.

    Beyond the prize money, top finalists will gain access to mentorship, training, introduction to investors, and other opportunities for collaboration.

    How to Apply

    GoGettaz invites young African agripreneurs across the continent to join the GoGettaz vibrant community and participate in the 2025 GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition. Eligible applicants must :

    Be 35 or younger at the time of submission.
    Be a citizen of an African Union member country.
    Serve as a founder or co-founder of a legally registered venture operating in Africa (ventures must be registered by 10 June 2025).

    Application Process :

    Join the GoGettaz Community: Follow @ GoGettazAfrica on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, TikTok, and YouTube to connect with peers and industry leaders. Share your journey using hashtags #GrowEntrepreneurs and #TransformFood.
    Visit the GoGettaz Website: Access resources, eligibility details, terms and conditions, and updates at https://GoGettaz.Africa.
    Submit Your Entry: Complete the online competition application on the website. You can save and revisit your application to ensure quality. https://GoGettaz.Africa
    Meet the Deadline: Applications must be submitted by 10 June 2025 to be considered for the US$160,000 prize pool and a chance to pitch LIVE at the AFSF Summit in Dakar, Senegal in September.

    For additional details, to apply, or to learn how you can contribute to driving sustainable food systems transformation in Africa, visit https://GoGettaz.Africa. Stay engaged by connecting with @ GoGettazAfrica on social media.

    Application Deadline: 10 June 2025

    Website: https://GoGettaz.Africa

    GoGettaz Co-Founders:

    Yara International: https://www.Yara.com
    Econet: https://www.EconetAfrica.com

    GoGettaz Partners:

    Africa Food Systems Forum: https://AGRF.org
    Alliance for a Green Revolution Africa: https://AGRA.org
    Mastercard Foundation: https://www.MasterCardFDN.org
    Southern African Confederation of Agricultural Unions: http://www.SACAU.org
    SNV Netherlands Development Organisation: https://www.SNV.org

    About GoGettaz:
    GoGettaz is a youth-centric initiative at the heart of the Africa Food Systems Forum, empowering young Africans from across the continent aged 18-35 to drive innovation and transformation in the agrifood sector. Through its annual GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition, GoGettaz Community Platform, and Leadership Programs, young agripreneurs can connect to a vibrant ecosystem, learn new skills, and grow both themselves and their businesses.

    Join the movement to grow entrepreneurs, revolutionize African agriculture, and transform African food systems!

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Stats NZ information release: Tatauranga umanga Māori – Statistics on Māori businesses: December 2024 quarter

    Source: Statistics New Zealand

    Tatauranga umanga Māori – Statistics on Māori businesses: December 2024 quarter4 April 2025 – Tatauranga umanga Māori – Statistics on Māori businesses: December 2024 quarter presents information on one subset of Māori businesses that contribute to our country’s economy. This release includes data on Māori authorities and related businesses. It does not cover all Māori businesses in Aotearoa New Zealand.

    Māori authorities are defined as businesses that receive, manage, and/or administer assets held in common ownership by iwi and Māori. Māori authorities are largely identified through their tax codes as registered with Inland Revenue. Any business within a Māori authority ownership group is also included for the purposes of Tatauranga umanga Māori.

    Key facts
    In the December 2024 quarter, around 1,450 Māori authorities and related businesses were in the Tatauranga umanga Māori population.

    All figures are actual values and are not adjusted for seasonal effects.

    In the December 2024 quarter compared with the December 2023 quarter:

    • the total value of sales by Māori authorities was $1,233 million, up $48 million (4.1 percent)
    • the total value of purchases by Māori authorities was $897 million, up $13 million (1.5 percent)
    • the total number of filled jobs for Māori authorities was 12,160, up 290 jobs (2.4 percent)
    • the total value of earnings by employees of Māori authorities was $253 million, up $33 million (15 percent)
    • Māori authorities exported $254 million worth of goods, up $35 million (16 percent).

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    MIL OSI

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Tech and Data – Databricks Announces the General Availability of Lakeflow Connect

    Source: Databricks

    No-code ingestion connectors for Salesforce, Workday to help enterprise customers unlock full power of Data Intelligence

    ●        The first connectors of many, Salesforce Sales Cloud and Workday provide a simple and scalable method to ingest data into Databricks.

    ●        Lakeflow Connect enables use cases such as analysing consumer behavior, predicting churn, and centralising HR analytics.

    ●        Global enterprise customers like Porsche Holding are already using Lakeflow Connect to strengthen their consumer journeys.

    Sydney, Australia, April 3 – Databricks, the Data and AI company, today announced the General Availability of Lakeflow Connect for Salesforce and Workday. Lakeflow Connect introduces no-code ingestion connectors for popular SaaS applications, databases, and file sources – enabling enterprises to build scalable ingestion pipelines and unlock the full power of their data with the Databricks Data Intelligence Platform. The Salesforce and Workday connectors are the first managed connectors to be released to GA since the Lakeflow Connect announcement last July, with many more on the way.

    Lakeflow Connect enables high-value use cases across industries, such as understanding customer behaviour, analysing HR data, and identifying upsell opportunities. It is powered by serverless compute and is available across AWS, Azure and GCP. Its managed data connectors are fully integrated with the Data Intelligence Platform for governance, observability and enterprise security.

    “It’s challenging for ANZ businesses to build and maintain ingestion pipelines for SaaS applications themselves because each API is unique and changes often, and database ingestion can be even more complex. Enterprises often require additional infrastructure like virtual machines for extraction tools, Kafka for streaming, and a strong understanding of change data capture (CDC) technologies for efficient ingestion,” said Nick Eayrs, Vice President of Field Engineering, APJ, at Databricks.

    “This means organisations spend a lot of time building, optimising, and maintaining a patchwork of pipelines. This slows down projects and can create a fragmented ETL architecture that’s difficult to govern. It also forces highly skilled data engineers to spend time moving data and monitoring pipelines instead of developing strategic innovations.”

    Lakeflow Connect eliminates these challenges by making it easy to create production-ready pipelines with a few clicks in the UI or a few lines of code. Under the hood, ingestion is efficient, with incremental updates and optimised API usage. As your managed pipelines run, we take care of schema evolution, seamless third-party API upgrades, and comprehensive observability with built-in alerts.

    Lakeflow Connect for Salesforce allows enterprises to pair Databricks’ advanced analytics and AI tools with Salesforce’s CRM data to build a more effective seller experience: predicting sales trends, deepening insights into customer behaviors, and personalising engagement strategies. The connector supports Salesforce-specific requirements, like custom objects and formula fields.

    Databricks and Salesforce announced a strategic partnership in 2023 to build robust integrations for our joint customers, and have since then launched the zero-copy Salesforce Data Cloud Connector so customers can discover, query, and govern Salesforce Data Cloud directly from Unity Catalog. Paired with Lakeflow Connect for Salesforce, customers can use both their CRM data and their CDP data within Databricks.

    Lakeflow Connect for Workday also provides simple, low-maintenance ingestion. Enterprises can access custom Workday reports for centralised analytics on their employee workforce.

    Both connectors seamlessly integrate with the Data Intelligence Platform, so businesses can use:

    ●       DLT to transform data declaratively and update transformations incrementally as data continues to stream in

    ●       Databricks Workflows to orchestrate these pipelines

    ●       Databricks Asset Bundles (DABs) to manage continuous integration and delivery

    ●       Advanced analytics and machine learning tools to drive business value

    ●       Unity Catalog to govern data and pipelines

    ●       Lakehouse Monitoring to maintain data quality

    Driving high-value business use cases

    Lakeflow Connect helps unlock high-value use cases across various industries, such as understanding customer behavior, analysing HR data, or identifying upsell opportunities.

    A common use case is predicting customer churn, such as a retailer ingesting Salesforce customer order data and combining it with customer interactions across other channels for enriched insights.

    Another use case is creating a customer support dashboard for executives and support teams. You can even use LLMs to diagnose the trends that appear in the dashboard, as shown in this step-by-step blog post.

    For human resources departments, the Workday connector can help track and predict HR trends, such as employee turnover. For example, HR leaders can ingest relevant Workday reports, transform them with DLT, and incorporate the results into an AI/BI dashboard.

    Use case: Developing a human resources dashboard with Lakeflow Connect for Workday

    “Using the Salesforce connector from Lakeflow Connect helps us close a critical gap for Porsche from the business side on ease of use and price. On the customer side, we’re able to create a completely new customer experience that strengthens the bond between Porsche and the customer with a unified and unfragmented customer journey,” said Lucas Sulzberger, Project Manager, Porsche Holding

    Getting started with Lakeflow Connect

    Data teams can now use Lakeflow Connect to build efficient, incremental pipelines at scale, with just a few clicks or lines of code. Get started today with the Salesforce or Workday connector to help unlock high-value use cases, such as predicting customer churn, running personalised customer analytics, and identifying upsell opportunities.

    Lakeflow Connect’s roadmap includes additional connectors like SQL Server, Google Analytics, ServiceNow, SFTP, SharePoint, and PostgreSQL.

    Lakeflow Connect has a compute-based pricing model. Salesforce and Workday, which run exclusively on serverless infrastructure will incur serverless DLT DBT charges. See more details on rates: https://www.databricks.com/product/pricing/delta-live

    About Databricks

    Databricks is the Data and AI company. More than 10,000 organisations worldwide — including Block, Comcast, Condé Nast, Rivian, Shell and over 60% of the Fortune 500 — rely on the Databricks Data Intelligence Platform to take control of their data and put it to work with AI. Databricks is headquartered in San Francisco, with offices around the globe and was founded by the original creators of Lakehouse, Apache Spark , Delta Lake and MLflow.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Europe – The Hague is hosting the 101st International Session of European Youth Parliament

    Source: The Hague

    The Hague, the Netherlands, 3 April 2025 – From 5 till 13 April 2025 The Hague is hosting the 101st international session of the European Youth Parliament. This event will bring around 300 young Europeans from the network together in the international city of peace and justice for a week of intercultural exchange and political dialogue. The program consists 8 days of core activities, with the help of 15 committees, 60 volunteers and 35 European countries represented.

    Four thematic pillars will be discussed:

    • Peace and Remembrance 
    • Defence and Conflict 
    • Democracy and Participation 
    • Economic and Internal Security.

    With a focus on one of the thematic pillars and an exploration of a related subject, participants will investigate how institutions, the media, and education contribute to enabling, preserving, and advocating peace.

    About the European Youth Parliament

    The European Youth Parliament is one of Europe’s largest youth platforms for civic education, intercultural encounters, and the exchange of ideas – run by young people, for young people. Their mission is to inspire and empower a young generation of informed, open-minded, responsible, and active citizens that shape society and drive impact. The are one of the projects of the Schwarzkopf Foundation Young Europe.

    EYP flagships events take place three or two times a year in different countries. Since 1988, over 100 International Sessions have been organised in more than 29 countries and 70 different cities, allowing over 20,000 young people to experience the #EYP spirit and learn how to collaborate across borders.

    Read more about this and other events in The Hague: https://storiesofpurpose.thehague.com/humanity/101st-session-european-youth-parliament-hague

    About The Hague & Partners

    The Hague & Partners is the official marketing & acquisition organisation for the promotion of The Hague, focused on residents, visitors, conferences, businesses and institutions. https://thehague.com/en

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Energy – What to Expect at Angola Oil & Gas 2025

    SOURCE: Energy Capital & Power

    As Angola marks 50 years of independence, Angola Oil & Gas returns in 2025 with an expanded multi-track program, a larger exhibition space, a dedicated deal room and a pre-conference technical agenda

    LUANDA, Angola, April 2, 2025/ — With a $60 billion upstream investment pipeline, a 2025 licensing round and restructured block opportunities, Angola is positioning itself as the premier destination for upstream investors. Meanwhile, new downstream projects are opening up financing opportunities for technology and capital providers. Against this backdrop, the Angola Oil & Gas (AOG) conference and exhibition returns for its sixth edition from September 3-4 in Luanda, bringing together industry leaders to explore investment opportunities, forge collaborations and drive Angola’s oil and gas sector forward. Here is what to expect from this year’s edition:

    Celebrating 50 Years of Angola

    Taking place on the eve of Angola’s 50th anniversary of independence, AOG 2025 will celebrate five decades of growth in the country’s oil and gas sector. By reflecting on past successes, challenges and lessons learned, the event will not only highlight Angola’s profitability and potential, but also lay the groundwork for future investment and development.

    Multi-Track Agenda

    AOG 2025 offers a dynamic multi-track agenda designed to cater to all segments of the oil and gas value chain. Topics range from upstream exploration and production, to downstream refinery and petrochemical advancements, to regulatory and policy frameworks, and more. Keynote presentations and panel discussions will also provide insights into Angola’s latest licensing round and emerging opportunities in the oil and gas sector.

    Pre-Conference Program

    Leading up to the main event, AOG 2025 introduces an expanded pre-conference program, including specialized technical workshops and training sessions led by global energy experts. Designed for engineers, geologists, project managers and energy financiers, these sessions will explore cutting-edge advancements in drilling technologies, reservoir management, digital transformation and sustainable energy practices. To take part in the pre-conference program, contact sales@energycapitalpower.com

    Dedicated Deal Room

    A centerpiece of AOG 2025 is the exclusive Deal Room, designed as a high-impact ‘Dragon’s Den’-style platform where companies, service providers, SMEs and technology firms can showcase their solutions to investors, project developers and government representatives. This setup fosters direct engagement, driving collaboration and deal-making.

    Expanded Exhibition

    AOG 2025 will feature an expanded exhibition space, spotlighting the latest technologies, services and innovations shaping the oil and gas industry. Exhibitors will gain access to unparalleled brand exposure, senior decision-makers, high-value networking and targeted lead generation. The exhibition serves as a vital platform for companies looking to increase visibility and forge new business relationships.

    Networking Prospects

    As Angola’s largest oil and gas industry event, AOG 2025 welcomes the participation of over 2,500 attendees from 40 countries and 450 organizations. The event unites the entire oil and gas value chain, connecting upstream exploration and production to downstream infrastructure and services to finance, policy and technology. Delegates will have the unique opportunity to strengthen cross-sector collaboration and grow their brand in one of Africa’s most exciting oil and gas markets.

    Secure Your Place at AOG 2025

    Don’t miss the chance to engage with one of Africa’s largest oil and gas markets. Join the AOG 2025 conference today and be a part of the discussion on turning Angola’s oil and gas industry into a fuel for long-term, sustainable economic development. AOG 2025 offers a range of participating opportunities, including sponsorships, exhibition, speaking slots and delegation prospects. Visit www.AngolaOilandGas.com for more information.

    AOG is the largest oil and gas event in Angola. Taking place with the full support of the Ministry of Mineral Resources, Oil and Gas; the National Oil, Gas and Biofuels Agency; the Petroleum Derivatives Regulatory Institute; national oil company Sonangol; and the African Energy Chamber; the event is a platform to sign deals and advance Angola’s oil and gas industry. To sponsor or participate as a delegate, please contact sales@energycapitalpower.com.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Household income and saving increase in the December 2024 quarter – Stats NZ media and information release: National accounts (income, saving, assets, and liabilities): December 2024 quarter

    Source: Statistics New Zealand

    Household income and saving increase in the December 2024 quarter3 April 2025 – New Zealand household net disposable income rose 1.5 percent to $59.4 billion in the December 2024 quarter. The main driver of this increase was a rise in the income of self-employed business owners up 6.5 percent, according to figures released by Stats NZ today.

    Household net disposable income is the amount of money a household has after all income (such as wages, interest, and child support) and outgoings (such as taxes) have been accounted for. It represents the money available for a household to spend, save, or invest.

    These statistics describe the household sector as a whole rather than the experience of different individual households.

    “Increases in the income from self-employed business owners and partnerships meant that household income rose during the December 2024 quarter, despite a decrease in salaries and wages for the second quarter in a row,” institutional sectors spokesperson James Mitchell said.  

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    MIL OSI

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Household net worth little changed in December 2024 – Stats NZ media and information release: National accounts (income, saving, assets, and liabilities): December 2024 quarter

    Source: Statistics New Zealand

    Household net worth little changed in December 20243 April 2025 – Household net worth showed little change in the December 2024 quarter, up $834 million to $2,440 billion, according to figures released by Stats NZ today.

    Net worth is the value of all assets owned by households less the value of all their liabilities.

    “In the December 2024 quarter, a rise in total household assets was largely offset by a rise in total liabilities, resulting in only a minor change in household net worth,” institutional sectors spokesperson James Mitchell said.

    In the September 2024 quarter, household net worth was also little changed (down $1.0 billion). In the June 2024 quarter, net worth fell $23.8 billion (1.0 percent).

    Total household assets rose $4.3 billion (0.2 percent) in the December 2024 quarter – a rise in financial assets was partly offset by a fall in non-financial assets.

    Files:

    MIL OSI

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Gaza: Critical medical supplies running out one month into deadly siege imposed by Israeli authorities – MSF

    Source: Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

    Shortage of medication is forcing MSF teams to dress wounds with no pain relief and ration essential medicines. Israeli authorities must end collective punishment of people in Gaza.

    Jerusalem, 2nd April – A month-long siege imposed by Israeli authorities in Gaza, Palestine, means some critical medications are now short in supply and are running out, leaving Palestinians at risk of losing vital healthcare, warns Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF). As Israeli forces continue to bomb the Gaza Strip, depriving people of basic needs, including food, water, and medicines may lead to a high number of health complications and deaths. MSF calls on Israeli authorities to immediately cease the collective punishment of Palestinians, end their inhumane siege of Gaza, and to uphold their responsibilities as an occupying power to facilitate humanitarian aid at scale.

    For over a month, no aid or commercial trucks have entered Gaza, marking the longest period since the start of the war without any trucks entering the Strip and on 2 March, Israeli authorities imposed a complete siege of Gaza. On 9 March they cut the electricity, needed to power water desalination plants. This total blockade of aid and electricity has deprived people of most basic services, amounting to collective punishment.

    “The Israeli authorities’ have condemned the people of Gaza to unbearable suffering with their deadly siege,” says Myriam Laaroussi, MSF emergency coordinator in Gaza. “This deliberate infliction of harm on people is like a slow death; it must end immediately.”

    The siege has forced MSF teams have already to start rationing medications such as pain killers, providing less effective treatment or turning patients away. Teams are also running out of surgical supplies such as anaesthetics, paediatric antibiotics and medicines for chronic conditions like epilepsy, hypertension and diabetes. As a result of rationing, our teams in some primary health care clinics conduct wound dressings for injured people without providing them with any pain relief.

    In addition, MSF teams are no longer able to donate blood bag donations to Nasser hospital due to a lack of stock, while the influxes of patients war-wounded by relentless Israeli force’s relentless continue.

    The lack of soap and clean water for people means in primary health care clinics across the Strip, our teams are seeing an increase of people with skin conditions. In February, MSF teams treated 565 cases of skin conditions at the Al Hekker clinic in Deir Al Balah and 1,198 cases at the Al Attar clinic in Khan Younis. Just in two weeks in March, the number of cases at Al Hekker had already reached 437—nearly 80 percent of February’s total—while at Al Attar, 711 cases had been treated, almost 60 percent oof the number seen in February.

    The blockade has left MSF teams are unable to provide medication to treat skin conditions, just small amounts of lotion to alleviate the pain. Skin conditions like scabies require treatment for the entire family to prevent spread and reinfection, but without medications, and clean water this is impossible.

    For people with non-communicable diseases, such as hypertension and diabetes, the consequences of the lack of treatment may lead to severe complications, such as permanent disabilities and in some cases even death. Since the blockade, we have only been able to give patients medication to cover their needs for seven to 10 days.

    “I don’t have any blood pressure medication left. My son searched for two days and couldn’t find any,” explains Sobheya Al-Beshiti, a patient of the MSF clinic in Attar, Khan Younis. “What can I do? Stay without treatment? If I don’t take my blood thinner, my nose starts bleeding, and I start coughing blood.”

    During the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and Eid, patients in MSF clinics are reporting weight loss and lack of access to proper food.

    “Right now, my blood levels are low, and my weight is also low. There aren’t enough food supplies to help me gain weight or increase my blood levels,” explains pregnant mother in an MSF clinic in Mawasi, Khan Younis. “The rising prices are a huge problem in the city: people simply cannot afford to buy necessities because of how expensive everything is.”

    MSF is an international, medical, humanitarian organisation that delivers medical care to people in need, regardless of their origin, religion, or political affiliation. MSF has been working in Haiti for over 30 years, offering general healthcare, trauma care, burn wound care, maternity care, and care for survivors of sexual violence. MSF Australia was established in 1995 and is one of 24 international MSF sections committed to delivering medical humanitarian assistance to people in crisis. In 2022, more than 120 project staff from Australia and New Zealand worked with MSF on assignment overseas. MSF delivers medical care based on need alone and operates independently of government, religion or economic influence and irrespective of race, religion or gender. For more information visit msf.org.au  

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Universities – NTU Singapore scientists create ‘fungi tiles’ with elephant skin texture to cool buildings

    Source: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore)

    Proof-of-concept shows promise as a sustainable passive cooling solution

    A team of scientists led by Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have developed ‘fungi tiles’ that could one day help to bring the heat down in buildings without consuming energy.

    These wall tiles are made from a new biomaterial combining fungi’s root network – called mycelium – and organic waste. Earlier research has shown that mycelium-bound composites are more energy efficient than conventional building insulation materials such as expanded vermiculite and lightweight expanded clay aggregate.

    Building on this proven insulating property, the NTU Singapore team worked with local ecology and biomimicry design firm bioSEA to add a bumpy, wrinkly texture to the tile, mimicking an elephant’s ability to regulate heat from its skin. Elephants do not have sweat glands and rely on these wrinkles and crevices on their skin to regulate heat.

    In laboratory experiments, the scientists found that the cooling rate of their elephant skin-inspired mycelium tile was 25 per cent better than a fully flat mycelium tile, and the heating rate was 2 per cent lower. They also found that the elephant skin-inspired tile’s cooling effect improved a further 70 per cent in simulated rain conditions, making it suitable for tropical climates.

    The construction industry accounts for nearly 40 per cent of all energy-related emissions worldwide, so the search for eco-friendly insulation materials is critical. NTU’s Associate Professor Hortense Le Ferrand, who led the study, said mycelium-bound composites could be a promising alternative.

    Assoc Prof Le Ferrand, who holds a joint appointment at NTU’s Schools of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (MAE) and Materials Science and Engineering (MSE), said: “Insulation materials are increasingly integrated into building walls to enhance energy efficiency, but these are mostly synthetic and come with environmental consequences throughout their life cycle. Mycelium-bound composite is a biodegradable material that is highly porous, which makes it a good insulator. In fact, its thermal conductivity is comparable to or better than some of the synthetic insulating materials used in buildings today.

    “We worked closely with bioSEA to integrate natural design principles that can optimise its performance as a building insulator. The result is a promising proof of concept that takes us one step closer to efficient, sustainable, and cheaper passive cooling solutions in hot and humid conditions.”

    Dr Anuj Jain, the Founding Director of bioSEA explained the inspiration behind the elephant-linked innovation: “Elephants are large animals that live in hot and sometimes humid tropical climates. To withstand the heat, elephants evolved to develop a skin that is heavily wrinkled which increases water retention and cools the animal by evaporation. We were inspired by how an elephant could cool itself in hot weather without sweat glands, and tried to see how we could replicate the same cooling mechanisms of shading, trapping cool air, and increasing the surface area for water to evaporate.”

    This study, published in Energy & Buildings in February, builds on Assoc Prof Le Ferrand’s work on possible uses for mycelium-bound composites, such as for greener construction materials.

    Turning fungi into a functional material

    Mycelium-bound composites are created by growing fungi on organic matter such as sawdust or agricultural waste. As the fungus grows, it binds the organic matter into a solid, porous composite.

    For this study, the NTU scientists used the mycelium of oyster mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus) – a commonly found fungus – and bamboo shavings collected from a furniture shop.

    These two components were mixed with oats and water and packed into a hexagonal mould with an elephant skin-inspired texture designed by bioSEA using computational modelling and algorithms to select the optimal design.

    The mycelium tiles were left to grow in the dark for two weeks, then removed from the hexagonal mould and left to grow in the same conditions for another two weeks.

    Finally, the tiles were dried in an oven at 48°C for three days. This final step removes any remaining moisture, prohibiting further mycelial growth.

    Elephant skin-inspired texture improves heat regulation

    Previous research has shown that mycelium-bound composites have thermal conductivity comparable to conventional building insulation materials like glass wool and extruded polystyrene.

    To assess how an elephant skin-inspired texture affects the mycelium tile’s heat regulation, the scientists heated mycelium tiles on a 100°C hot plate for 15 minutes and tracked temperature changes using an infrared camera.

    They found that the elephant skin-inspired tile absorbed heat more slowly. When its bumpy textured surface faced the heat source, its temperature increased by 5.01°C per minute, compared to 5.85°C per minute when its flat surface was exposed to heat. As a control, the scientists also heated a flat mycelium tile and found it gained 5.11°C per minute.

    To measure the tile’s cooling efficiency, the scientists heated one side at 100°C for 15 minutes, then exposed it to ambient conditions (22°C, 80% humidity) and measured temperature changes on the tile’s opposite side.

    The elephant-skin-inspired tile cooled fastest when heated from the flat side, losing 4.26°C per minute. When heated from the textured side, its flat side lost 3.12°C per minute. The fully flat control tile lost 3.56°C per minute.

    Based on these findings, the scientists recommended installing the tiles with the flat side adhered to the building façade and the textured surface exposed to external heat for optimal thermal performance (See image in Notes to Editor for how tiles could be used).

    Tiles perform better in wet weather

    To simulate the effect of rain on the tiles, the scientists heated the tiles as described earlier. While allowing them to cool, the scientists sprayed water onto the tiles at one-minute intervals over a 15-minute period.

    When misted on its bumpy side, the elephant skin-inspired tile lost 7.27°C per minute – a 70 per cent improvement compared to its performance in dry conditions.

    The scientists attributed this effect to the mycelium-bound composite’s hydrophobic nature. “The fungal skin that develops on the tile’s surface repels water, allowing droplets to remain on the surface rather than roll off immediately. This promotes evaporative cooling, increasing the cooling rate,” explained Eugene Soh, an NTU researcher and the study’s first author.

    Building on this proof of concept, the scientists are now exploring ways to enhance the tiles for real-world use, such as increasing their mechanical stability and durability or using different mycelium strains.

    The scientists are also working with local start-up Mykílio to scale up the size of the mycelium tiles and conduct outdoor tests on building façades.

    A challenge they foresee in scaling up the production of the tiles is the time needed to grow the mycelium tiles. While it requires minimal energy resources, the process takes three to four weeks.

    The scientists also expect high inertia towards using mycelium tiles as an alternative construction material due to the well-established infrastructure in production, storage, and transportation of common insulating materials.

    Said Assoc Prof Le Ferrand: “We’ve developed a promising eco-friendly alternative that transforms waste into a valuable resource while rethinking conventional thermal management materials. This opens the pathway for more elephant skin-inspired designs and the use of different mycelium strains to overcome the challenges that come with using mycelium tiles as an alternative construction material.”

    Notes

    The research paper titled “Biodegradable mycelium tiles with elephant skin inspired texture for thermal regulation of buildings” was published in Energy and Buildings in Volume 328, 1 February 2025, 115187

    DOI: 10.1016/j.enbuild.2024.115187  

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Myanmar: Inhumane military attacks in earthquake areas hindering relief efforts – Amnesty International

    Source: Amnesty International

    Myanmar’s military must refrain from deliberate air strikes and other forms of attack on civilian targets in areas impacted by last week’s 7.7-magnitude earthquake, Amnesty International said today as it called for aid to more quickly reach people in the epicentre of the disaster.

    Testimony gathered by Amnesty International in the days following the earthquake corroborates reports that the military has continued its campaign of deadly air strikes, adding to the strain of recovery efforts and the fear and anxiety of survivors.

    “Myanmar’s military, along with all other actors involved in earthquake relief efforts, must ensure that human rights principles are fully respected and that the humanitarian needs of survivors are the top priority,” Amnesty International’s Myanmar Researcher Joe Freeman said.

    “You cannot ask for aid with one hand and bomb with the other. Carrying out air strikes and attacking civilians in the same region where the earthquake struck is inhumane and shows a blatant disregard for human rights.” 

    At least 2,065 people have been killed and more than 3,900 injured as a result of the earthquake, according to military-controlled media in Myanmar. The rapid spike in figures from day to day as well as communication challenges have prompted fears of a much larger toll.

    The earthquake epicentre is in Sagaing, a sprawling region in central Myanmar. Significant damage is also being reported in Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-biggest city, the capital Naypyitaw and parts of Shan State and Bago Region.

    The air strikes, which have become a daily fact of life in Myanmar since the 2021 coup, have now hit areas near the focus of earthquake recovery efforts, and in other conflict zones such as Karen and Karenni States.

    The sound is ‘like a chainsaw’

    Since the coup, the military has fought fierce battles with armed resistance groups in Sagaing and in central Myanmar generally, carrying out unlawful air strikes, extrajudicial executions and large-scale burning of homes. In some instances, groups fighting against the military have also been accused of abuses.

    Amnesty International spoke to a Myanmar nurse in Nwe Khwe village, which is in Sagaing Region’s Chaung-U township, and a local rescue worker in the same township.

    The rescue worker described taking cover from attacks after the earthquake, which included several on Tuesday morning (1 April) and one on the day of the earthquake. These were carried out with manned motorized paragliders, referred to locally as “paramotor attacks,” a new tactic of the Myanmar military in central Myanmar that requires fewer resources like jet fuel.

    “I was in an underground shelter. [During attacks] I can hear the sound of the engine crossing over my village. The paramotor attack noise is like a chainsaw,” the rescue worker said. “It becomes like our daily life, surviving the air strikes. I don’t know why it doesn’t stop yet.”

    The nurse, who is affiliated with the Civil Disobedience Movement which opposes the military through protests and boycotts, also said a paramotor attack occurred in the evening after the earthquake, as well as one on 31 March. There were no fatalities from the paramotor attacks this time, largely because of established early warning systems.

    “I am not mentally well, everybody in the village is frightened because of the attacks and the earthquake,” she said.

    The opposition National Unity Government, which oversees armed People’s Defense Forces created in the aftermath of the 2021 coup to fight the military, announced a two-week suspension of hostilities starting on 30 March. On 1 April a separate but aligned armed faction, the Three Brotherhood Alliance, announced a one-month humanitarian pause except in the case of defensive actions.

    ‘The situation is like Covid-19’

    Contrary to previous natural disaster responses that Amnesty has documented, Myanmar’s military has issued a rare appeal for international aid, and Amnesty has received information that aid is getting through to some affected areas. But the picture is mixed, complicated by internet outages and reports of deliveries being blocked or held up.

    In Sagaing town, the capital of the Sagaing Region, Amnesty spoke to three residents. It also reviewed a report on recovery efforts from a coordinating group drawn from Myanmar civil society, which said that in Sagaing town there are rising needs for body bags and quicklime powder, torches, medical supplies and mosquito repellant coils.

    It also said that the military, which largely controls the town, was imposing “strict surveillance” for light vehicles en route to Sagaing from Mandalay. Soldiers are inspecting deliveries, and checks can take longer if they come from other areas in Sagaing that have more connections to resistance groups.

    The residents said most of the town had been damaged and that people do not have regular access to drinking water, food, shelter, medicine, adequate medical treatment or electricity, with some using small solar panels. They said people are sleeping on streets, using mats, tarpaulin and mosquito nets.

    “The Myanmar Red Cross is here, and local civil societies based in Sagaing are active and they are functioning. But I don’t see international groups coming into town,” one resident said on 31 March. “They cannot buy food and drinking water because there is no supplier in the town.”

    Another town resident who was helping deliver aid locally said people need dry rations such as canned food and packaged noodles, and that local groups were using their own equipment to carry out search and rescue work.

    International agencies had reportedly been granted access to deliver aid to Sagaing, but no one Amnesty spoke to at the time had seen them in the town as of 31 March.

    A pregnant woman described scenes of horror in the local hospital after the earthquake.

    “The situation in the hospital [Sagaing General Hospital] was just like Covid-19, there are tons of dead bodies in the hospital, without knowing who they are and who they belong to. The hospital just put them in the crematorium.”

    The woman said she was told she needs a c-section but that it needs to be done in Mandalay, which she can’t reach. As of 31 March, she was staying out in the open area of the hospital compound.

    “Human rights are most in jeopardy in situations of crisis and emergency. The Myanmar military and other parties to the conflict must address the immediate and essential needs of all affected communities and ensure that rescue and relief efforts are carried out without discrimination,” Joe Freeman said.

    “Priority in the provision of international aid – such as safe and potable water, food and medical supplies – and financial aid should be given to the most vulnerable or marginalized groups of the population.”

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Tech – The world spent $8.5 trillion on IT devices in a decade, more than Germany and the UK’s economies combined

    Source: Techgaged.com

    Every year, consumers and businesses pour staggering amounts of money into IT devices- desktop PCs, laptops, tablets, mobile phones, and printers. While annual spending has fluctuated since 2021, the past three years have seen steady growth, pushing the market toward a record-breaking $810 billion in 2025. This massive figure will push the total spending over the past decade to shocking highs.  

    According to data presented by Techgaged.com, the world has spent a jaw-dropping $8.5 trillion on IT devices in a decade, surpassing the combined economies of Germany and the United Kingdom.

    If IT device spending were a country, it would be the third-largest economy in the world

    The surging popularity of AI applications, IoT devices, and hybrid work models has fueled the need for high-performance devices, and this trend will only speed up in 2025. According to the new survey, global spending on IT devices hit $735 billion in 2024, or 6% more than the year before that. However, 2025 is set to witness an even bigger growth, with the annual spending surging by 10.3% to a record $810.2 billion. Moreover, this means 2025 will see the second-largest spending increase in a decade, trailing only the COVID-19-driven boom in 2021, when it soared by 15%.

    Even the world’s wealthiest billionaires wouldn’t have enough to cover this bill, as $810 billion is more than the combined net worth of Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg. But this shocking figure is just a fraction of the total amount the world spent on IT devices over the past decade. With a record $810 billion in spending in 2025, the cumulative 10-year figure will hit a jaw-dropping $8.5 trillion.

    To put this into perspective, If IT device spending were a country, it would be the world’s third-largest economy, following China and the United States. Also, the ten-year spending of $8.5 trillion outpaces three years’ worth of global defense budgets, and it is enough money to fund NASA for 85 years, with its annual budget being around $100 billion.

    The world spends 25% more on IT devices annually than a decade ago

    The data also revealed how much annual spending on IT devices has increased over the past ten years. Back in 2014, consumers and companies spent $646 billion on IT devices. The next three years saw similar annual spending before it hit over $700 billion for the first time in 2017. The next major leap came in 2021 when the pandemic fueled a massive surge in tech purchases, reaching over $808 billion that year.

    According to the latest forecast, with a projected $810 billion in 2025, the world is now spending 25% or $164 billion more on PCs, tablets, and smartphones per year than a decade ago. For context, that $164 billion increase is more than the entire GDP of a country like Kuwait and close to that of Ukraine. In other words, in just ten years, global IT device spending has grown larger than the entire GDP of a mid-sized economy.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Annual number of home consents down 7.4 percent – Stats NZ media and information release: Building consents issued: February 2025

    Source: Statistics New Zealand

    Annual number of home consents down 7.4 percent2 April 2025 – There were 33,595 new homes consented in Aotearoa New Zealand in the year ended February 2025, down 7.4 percent compared with the year ended February 2024, according to figures released by Stats NZ today.

    “The annual number of new homes consented has been plateauing for nine months now,” economic indicators spokesperson Michelle Feyen said.

    “Although the annual number of multi-unit homes consented decreased for the second year in a row, the number of stand-alone houses saw a slight increase compared with the year ending in February 2024,” Feyen said.

    In the year ended February 2025, there were 17,743 multi-unit homes consented, down 15 percent compared with the year ended February 2024. There were 15,852 stand-alone houses consented, up 2.3 percent over the same period.

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    MIL OSI