Category: Politics

  • MIL-OSI USA: Boozman Introduces Former Governor Mike Huckabee, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Nominee, at Senate Hearing

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Arkansas – John Boozman
    ––U.S. Senator John Boozman (R-AR) introduced former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on his nomination to serve as U.S. Ambassador to Israel.

    Boozman recalled his long-standing relationship with Huckabee, who served as the 44th Governor of Arkansas from 1996-2007. The senator expressed his confidence in the Governor’s leadership and ability to strengthen the relationship between the United States and the Jewish State.

    Click here to watch Boozman’s remarks.
    Below are Boozman’s remarks as delivered:
    Thank you, Chairman Risch and Ranking Member Shaheen, and good morning to my distinguished colleagues.
    It is an honor to be here today to introduce my friend and fellow Arkansan – Governor Mike Huckabee, President Trump’s nominee for U.S. Ambassador to Israel.
    I know Senator Cotton would have liked to be here too. In fact, it was the first call I received very early this morning, reminding me to tell everybody how much he supported this and what a great ambassador he thinks Gov. Huckabee would make. 
    I would also like to say hi to Gov. Huckabee’s family and friends here in attendance, and how glad we are that they are here supporting him. We all know these are family affairs, whether it’s us or people that serve in other aspects of government.
    This is a pivotal moment in history, not just for our country, but for Israel and the special relationship between our nations.
    I’ve had the privilege of knowing the Governor for many years, and I can say without hesitation that he is the right person to be our representative to Israel at this critical moment, and I’m thankful to President Trump for selecting such a staunch and passionate advocate for the Jewish State.
    Mike was raised in Hope, Arkansas, and went on to graduate from Ouachita Baptist University, where he majored in religion. He then attended Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, in preparation for a lifetime of ministry that included pastoring Immanuel Baptist Church in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and later at Beech Street Baptist Church in Texarkana, Arkansas. 
    He went on to serve as president of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention, where his leadership and communications skills intersected at the cornerstone of his life – spreading the gospel and shepherding fellow Christians in their faith – and foreshadowed his calling into public service. 
    Mike served as the 44th Governor of Arkansas for over a decade, with his time as our state’s chief executive marked by his tireless pursuit of pragmatic solutions, a tireless work ethic, and an innate ability to forge relationships across political divides. 
    He brought transformational change to Arkansas, leaving a legacy of lower taxes, job creation, improvement of state infrastructure, K-12 education reform, and his enactment of a nationally recognized health initiative focused on disease prevention.
    Mike is not only qualified to serve as our ambassador to Israel, but he is uniquely suited for this role given the way he has championed Israel throughout his entire life, including as a steadfast supporter of Israel’s right to exist and defend itself.
    He has an intimate familiarity with Israel’s people and its leaders, having frequently visited for over fifty years, leading groups to the region since 1981.
    He also understands the importance of diplomacy and has a profound respect and appreciation for it. And he has worked persistently throughout his life to advocate for strengthening and furthering the distinctly profound ties between our two countries. 
    As the United States Ambassador to Israel, he will bring a thoughtful, principled approach to our relationship – as his extensive experience already shows. 
    He believes, like many of us, that the United States and Israel share a sacred bond that transcends politics – both in terms of shared values and mutual security. 
    In an increasingly dangerous world, where Israel is under constant attack from Iran and its terrorist proxies, the United States needs a representative in Israel who not only understands the complex Middle East geopolitics, but can navigate them with conviction, strength and tact.
    Governor Huckabee’s background, character, and experience all uniquely qualify him to be that figure at this moment and for this purpose.
    His deep understanding and love for Israel and its people will undoubtedly make him an exceptional ambassador.
    I know that he will represent the United States with honor, integrity, and an ironclad commitment to the enduring partnership between our two nations. 
    I look forward to seeing all the great things he will do as the United States Ambassador to Israel. 
    I strongly support his nomination and urge my colleagues to do the same, as does my colleague Sen. Cotton from Arkansas. Thank you very much.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Sergei Sobyanin approved the project for the reconstruction of the MKAD interchange with Kievskoye Highway

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The project for the reconstruction of the MKAD interchange with Kievskoye Highway has been approved. This in his telegram channel Sergei Sobyanin reported.

    “The implementation of this project will allow the transport hub to adapt to the growing traffic intensity due to the active development of the adjacent areas of TiNAO Moscow,” the Mayor of Moscow noted.

    Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @Mos_Sobyanin

    We are talking about the section of the Moscow Ring Road from the 44th to the 47th kilometer. The project provides for the construction and reconstruction of approximately four kilometers of roads. In particular, as part of the interchange of the Moscow Ring Road with Kievskoye Shosse, the right-turn exit from the Moscow Ring Road to Kievskoye Shosse will be reconstructed (the approximate length of the section will be 580 meters, two or three traffic lanes in one direction). In addition, a new right-turn exit from Kievskoye Shosse to the Moscow Ring Road will be built there (the approximate length is 450 meters, one traffic lane in one direction).

    In addition, reconstruction of side roads along the Moscow Ring Road and Kievskoye Highway is planned. Internal roads and ground pedestrian crossings will also be built.

    In essence, the implementation of this project will be the second stage of the reconstruction of the MKAD interchange with Kievskoye Highway (the first was completed in 2014–2015).

    Sergei Sobyanin spoke about the development of Moscow’s largest highways

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

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

    https: //vv.mos.ru/mayor/tkhemes/12543050/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Ernst Outlines Major Reform to America’s “Least Favorite Government Agency”

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA)
    Published: March 25, 2025
    WASHINGTON – With just three weeks until Tax Day, U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) outlined a proposal of major reforms for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to cut down on costs, increase efficiency, and better serve taxpayers.
    “Americans, and their elected representatives in Congress, have lost confidence in the IRS. But you have a unique opportunity to address these issues, which can be accomplished without any changes in law,” wrote Ernst in a letter to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
    Ernst’s three main recommendations to improve America’s “least favorite government agency” include ending the political weaponization of the agency, cracking down on tax-dodging bureaucrats, and bringing the agency’s tech, costing $3.6 billion annually, out of the stone age and into the 21st century.
    Click here to read the full letter.
    Background:
    Senate DOGE Caucus Chair Ernst has repeatedly targeted IRS tax cheats and costly software across government.
    Additionally, Ernst exposed that 5,800 IRS and contractor employees owe nearly $50 million in overdue taxes in July 2024, and a follow-up report revealed that more 800 IRS employees still owed millions in back taxes as of November, 2024.
    Ernst’s $2 trillion roadmap to cut waste highlighted that government-wide there are nearly 150,000 tax cheats owing $1.5 billion in unpaid taxes.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for the DPRK’s UPR

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for the DPRK’s UPR

    UK Statement for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s Universal Periodic Review Outcomes Session Statement. Delivered at the 58th HRC in Geneva.

    Thank you, Madame Vice President.

    The UK welcomes the DPRK’s continued engagement with the UPR process, including its report on the recommendations received. We hope that the DPRK will collaborate with the international community to take tangible steps towards the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.

    However we remain concerned by the lack of guarantees to ensure the implementation of the DPRK’s human rights obligations, and regret that it did not accept any of the UK’s recommendations, which were to:

    1. Ratify the UN Convention against Torture and reform the judicial system to ensure respect for the right to a fair trial and end sentences that constitute cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment;

    2. Grant access to the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the DPRK and accept technical cooperation from UN human rights mechanisms; and

    3. Improve regulations to prevent gender-based discrimination and violence, particularly towards women and girls, including in penal facilities and the military.

    There are still unacceptable reports of ongoing, widespread, and systematic human rights violations in the DPRK. The UK remains open to discussing any recommendations further.

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for Costa Rica’s UPR

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for Costa Rica’s UPR

    UK Statement for Costa Rica’s Universal Periodic Review Outcomes Session Statement. Delivered at the 58th HRC in Geneva.

    Thank you, Mr President.

    The UK welcomes the steps taken by Costa Rica to strengthen its approach to human rights, and the emphasis it places on opportunities to enact change. This includes Costa Rica’s creation of the Inter-Institutional Commission for the Monitoring and Implementation of International Human Rights Obligations. We look forward to following its progress.

    We welcome Costa Rica’s acceptance of the recommendations made relating to freedom of the press and would welcome an update on Costa Rica’s plans to improve the protections for journalists and the media.

    Finally, we welcome Costa Rica’s commitment to implement a new National Policy for a Society Free from Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Other Related Forms of Intolerance. In particular, we would welcome an increased focus on protection of women and girls, and the LGBT+ community.

    As the first country in Latin America and the Caribbean to launch a national strategy against hate speech and discrimination, we look forward to working with Costa Rica on these issues.

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Leicester’s newest free festival brings Romans, St George, dragons and a giant forum to the city

    Source: City of Leicester

    MEET a fire-breathing dragon, learn to march like a Centurion and help to recreate the entrance to a Roman Forum by taking part in Leicester’s newest free festival next month!   

    The Old Town Festival on 26 & 27 April will incorporate traditional festivities for St George’s Day and a celebration of the city’s fascinating Roman heritage.

    Centring on Jubilee Square and the Old Town area of the city centre, the free festival will also feature an urban mosaic workshop at the Guildhall, a living history Roman camp, an artisan craft market and themed storytelling aboard the children’s bookbus.

    Hands-on archaeology, Roman theatre, craft activities and Morris dancing will also be on offer, along with face-painting and a dress-up booth so that young festival-goers can become gallant knights, fearsome dragons or magical maidens!

    A fire-breathing dragon will be on the loose in Cathedral Gardens, alongside stilt-walking jesters, magical wizards and a trio of clumsy knights taking on daring quests. Over at Jubilee Square, you can take part in Roman warrior training, where you can learn to march like a legionnaire, wield a sword like a true centurion, or raise a shield to victory.

    Assistant city mayor for leisure and culture Cllr Vi Demspter said: “The Old Town Festival is a new event for 2025, bringing together our traditional St George’s Day celebrations and Leicester’s rich 2,000-year history and Roman heritage.

    “There are lots of great free activities to take part in, and it’s all taking place in our historic Old Town.

    “As well as activities for kids and families, there is also a fantastic programme of trails, talks and debates about the Roman world, meaning that this promises to be a really inclusive and exciting festival with something for everyone.”

    There’s the chance to get involved in the week running up to the festival, too. The Haymarket shopping centre will be hosting a day of free fun on Thursday 24 April, with a dragon on the loose, mosaic and toga making, and fun arts and craft activities.

    And there will be something never before seen in Leicester!  At Highcross from 21-25 April, renowned French artist Olivier Grossetête will recreate a huge life-size construction of a lost piece of the city’s history using just cardboard and tape.

    St George and the dragon

    Image: A. Lyleire

    Image: Tynesight media

    Graham Callister, head of festivals and events at Leicester City Council said: “With your help, we’ll rebuild the grand entrance to the Roman Forum as it may have looked in the 2nd and 3rd centuries. This monumental and unique project combines history, art, and community spirit.

    “Over five days, there will be 10 hands-on workshops at the Highcross Shopping Centre. Then, on Saturday 26 April, participants and passers-by will come together to assemble the structure at Jubilee Square, the site of the original Roman Forum. The following day, Sunday, 27 April, festival-goers will help bring the project to a dramatic close by dismantling it. We’re inviting everyone to participate in the workshops, build and demolition!”

    Support for the Old Town festival has come from the council’s partners BID Leicester, Global Streets, Arts Council England, Highcross Leicester, Haymarket Shopping Centre and Hidden Histories.

    Simon Jenner from BID Leicester said: “The Old Town Festival is a fantastic opportunity to celebrate Leicester’s rich history while bringing exciting, free experiences to the city centre. Events like this create a real buzz, attracting visitors and benefiting local businesses. The festival will shine a spotlight on the city’s Roman past, with an incredible recreation of Leicester’s historic Roman Forum by renowned artist Olivier Grossetête, built entirely from cardboard with the help of the public. We’re proud to support a festival that brings our heritage to life in such an engaging and interactive way.”

    The workshops are suitable for anyone aged 9+. To reserve a place, email festivals@leicester.gov.uk

    To find out more, see www.visitleicester.info

    Festival brochures will also be available soon from the Visit Leicester information centre, within the KRIII Visitor Centre at 4A St Martins, Leicester, LE1 5DB.

    ENDS 

    Main image: Artist Olivier Grossetête’s creation at NOVUM Newcastle Summer Festival 2023, photo by Tynesite Media

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Large parts of iconic gardens set to close so they can be rejuvenated

    Source: City of Canterbury

    Artist impression of what the Dane John Gardens could look like when complete

    Work to transform the Dane John Gardens will get underway in earnest on Monday (31 March).

    Contractors will begin to close off all the lawned areas of the Canterbury city centre park which will remain out of bounds until December.

    The path around the edge of the gardens, which runs close to people’s homes, will stay open so people can get from one end to the other along with the public toilets.

    The children’s play area will remain accessible via the mound from the city wall.

    The work comes after the council was awarded £19.9m by the Government for its bid, Connected Canterbury: Unlocking the Tales of England.

    The money is being used to transform a whole host of Canterbury’s public spaces and heritage to a standard that reflects its status as an international visitor destination and World Heritage Site.

    Head of Digital, Data and Improvement Caroline Marlow, who is leading the project, said: “We’re sorry for any inconvenience the work will cause but we’re convinced it really will be worth it.

    “The full closure is needed for a couple of reasons. We are working as quickly as possible, so the contractor needs the ability to use the space as and when needed.

    “Plus, if you dig anywhere in Canterbury, you are bound to find important historical artefacts which means the contractor may need to move its workforce at short notice.

    “We hope reopening in December is a worst-case scenario and if we can make things happen faster, we will.”

    The council is in discussions with the owner of the Don Juan cafe to find ways to help the business during the disruption.

    The current cafe, which is outdated and coming to the end of its life, will be demolished as part of the scheme and will be replaced with a new building in a similar style to the current one.

    The work in the Dane John will include:

    • resurfacing all the pathways and creating a flexible surface strip either side of the main avenue to enable the tree roots to move and grow
    • replacing lost trees in the avenue
    • reducing the shrubs and vegetation to reveal the mound and the views across the garden
    • returning the flower beds to reflect the original shape in the Victorian garden and planting with perennial shrubs
    • adding more picnic tables by the monument
    • refurbishing the mound to improve views and installing a set of steps to the monument to reduce erosion of the Scheduled Monument
    • refurbishing, and replacing where necessary, historic streetlights through the garden and on the city wall
    • adding lighting to highlight heritage features
    • installing interpretation panels to tell the story of the garden
    • putting in new seating around the Second World War shelters with steps up to the city wall
    • planting perennial wildflower meadows on the slope up to the city wall and on the verge between the city wall and the ring road
    • resurfacing the city wall and adding planting beds to the area above the bus station
    • refurbishing or replacing railings, gates, benches and other street furniture

    For more information on the projects being paid for by the government, visit canterbury.gov.uk/luf.

    Published: 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Revozyn RTU 400 mg/ml Suspension for Injection for Cattle – Recall alert

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Revozyn RTU 400 mg/ml Suspension for Injection for Cattle – Recall alert

    Product defect recall alert for Revozyn RTU 400 mg/ml Suspension for Injection for Cattle by Dechra on behalf of Eurovet Animal Health B.V.

    We wish to inform the wholesalers that Dechra, on behalf of Marketing Authorisation Holder Eurovet Animal Health B.V., has initiated a Class II recall to the wholesaler level for the below mentioned batch of Revozyn RTU 400 mg/ml Suspension for Injection for Cattle – UK (GB) Vm 16849/5000 and UK (NI) Vm 16849/3000.  

    This relates to a stability failure of the product re-suspendability.

    Batch Number Units Manufactured Date Manufactured Expiry date
    24F042 497 June 2024 May 2026

    Dechra is contacting wholesale dealers to examine inventory immediately and quarantine products subject to this recall.

    For further information regarding the recall, please contact eu.recall@dechra.com

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New world-leading nature finance standards launched to encourage green investment

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    New world-leading nature finance standards launched to encourage green investment

    New standards will set the bar for nature investments, prevent greenwashing and helping business invest in restoring nature

    Aerial shot of river

    • The Overarching Principles Standard is the first of its kind, supporting investment in high-quality projects which restore rich habitats. 
    • The move marks the UK out as a world leader in the development of nature markets and will drive economic growth as part of our Plan for Change. 

    New government-backed pioneering green finance standards have been introduced today (Tuesday 25 March) to boost investment into nature and support economic growth, as well as helping to clamp down on “greenwashing”. 

    This landmark standard – launched by British Standards Institution (BSI) – will help nature-friendly investments across the UK to grow, by building confidence among businesses that these investments are making a real difference for our natural environment.   

    These new standards will bring a variety of benefits for the environment. Projects that could be supported include restoring wetlands, improving water quality, building flood resilience, and creating new habitats.  

    Through the Plan for Change this Government is working to deliver economic growth across the country, and to support this, we will make the UK the green finance capital of the world.   

    A healthy natural environment is crucial to economic growth. Without a healthy environment, there is no food, no business, and no economy. The Green Finance Institute found that nature-related risks including water shortages and soil health reduction could lead to a 6% reduction to GDP in the years ahead. That is why economic growth and nature restoration must go hand in hand.  

    This is the first standard for collective nature markets of its kind in the UK, and one of the first in the world, marking the UK out as a global leader and marks our ambition to pioneer nature markets which guard against greenwashing and lead to lasting environmental change.   

    Secretary of State for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Steve Reed said:    

    “We need urgent action from across society to address the nature crisis, and businesses have a crucial role to play in that effort. By having clear standards, we can strike a blow to greenwashing and give businesses confidence that their investment is truly helping our natural world recover.  

    “Through the Plan for Change, this Government is working relentlessly to grow the economy and this move gets us one step closer to fulfilling our ambition to make the UK the green finance capital of the world.”  

    Scott Steedman, Director – General, Standards at BSI said: 

    “Today marks a key milestone for the Nature Investment Standards (NIS) Programme with the launch of updated overarching principles ready for adoption across the UK. 

    “The principles are designed to provide consistency and rigour for high-integrity UK nature markets that trade in real, measurable environmental benefits. This supports the goal of increasing investment into nature, helping to create new revenue streams for farmers, land managers and other suppliers of nature-based solutions. 

    “BSI, in its role as the UK National Standards Body, looks forward to working closely with Defra to enable the take up of the revised standard and its implementation in the market.” 

    The new Overarching Principles Standard was created following an established BSI market led process for standards development which included extensive consultation with businesses and land managers.   

    BSI is also launching a consultation on a first version of a Natural Carbon Standard, as part of a wider framework of standards. This will gather market views specifically on high integrity principles for projects selling nature-based carbon credits in UK markets. These credits will consist of habitats which store carbon, such as woodlands or peatlands, helping us to reach Net Zero while providing benefits for landscapes and wildlife.     

    The Overarching Principles Standard (BSI Flex 701) is immediately available for use by market participants and will support investment in high quality nature and sustainable farming projects in the UK.    

    NOTES TO EDITORS:     

    • More information on the Overarching Principles Standard can be found here: [BSI Flex 701 v2.0 Nature Markets – Overarching Principles BSI](https://eur03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.bsigroup.com%2Fen-GB%2Finsights-and-media%2Finsights%2Fbrochures%2Fbsi-flex-701-nature-markets-overarching-principles-and-framework%2F&data=05%7C02%7CAlex.Walsh%40defra.gov.uk%7C36f86aa99f89489ac9a808dd6b9546c8%7C770a245002274c6290c74e38537f1102%7C0%7C0%7C638785011065753774%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=3zYbDOEaWTOIbHmYRo41Re%2BKFETlrYC%2F0YiDLaRJdVo%3D&reserved=0)  
    • The Overarching Principles and Natural Carbon standards are part of a family of standards which will apply to nature markets.  Other standards are in development and will cover Biodiversity markets, Nutrients projects and schemes and guidance on how projects should engage with local communities.  There is a new BSI navigation tool available on the BSI Nature Markets online Hub – to help stakeholders navigate the suite of BSI nature investment standards. 

    • Further details of a formal assurance framework to verify compliance will be set out in due course.   

    • The BSI have published research on assurance which sets out options for Government to ensure compliance with the new standards.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Sharing information and experiences at Maritime Accessibility Conference

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Sharing information and experiences at Maritime Accessibility Conference

    Disability organisations and maritime transport operators from across the country have come together for the Maritime Accessibility Conference 2025.

    Organised by the Department for Transport and the Maritime and Coastguard Agency, the day of talks, presentations and networking today (25 March) was an opportunity to encourage communication and objectives between the two sectors and Government.

    This is the second time the conference has run, with representatives from DfT, MCA, Disabled Persons Transport Advisory Committee (DPTAC), Wetwheels Foundation, and Unseen Aware being just some of the guests and speakers involved, alongside vessel and port operators, authorities and charities.

    The event at the Museum of Liverpool opened with a talk from DPTAC chairman Professor Matthew Campbell-Hill. DPTAC provides advice to DfT on the transport needs of disabled people to assist in the development of policy and other proposals.  

    The use of REAL during staff training – Respect, Empathise, Ask, Listen – was just one of the discussion points during the afternoon; the programme developed by DfT with the engagement of transport sector professionals and those with lived experience of disability. 

    As well as talks and activities, the floor was open to organisation representatives and individuals to come forward with thoughts on accessibility schemes, experiences and future objectives. 

    Ahead of the conference MCA Passenger Rights Enforcement Lead Danny Light said:

    The DfT/MCA Accessibility Conference is an opportunity to provide guidance and understanding of accessibility rights and regulations already in action, while highlighting where improvements can be made within the industry.

    The event is an opportunity for both information and experience sharing, helping us to continue our mission of making transport accessible for all.

    Maritime Minister Mike Kane said:

    Everyone has the right to travel with dignity and today’s summit brings together experts and those with lived experiences to make meaningful improvements for maritime travel.

    As part of our Plan for Change to break down barriers, we are determined to ensure that maritime remains an accessible, safe and enjoyable experience for everyone.

    Press office

    Email public.relations@mcga.gov.uk

    Press enquiries (Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm) 0203 817 2222

    Outside these hours or on bank holidays and weekends, for media enquiries ONLY, please send an email outlining your query and put #Urgent in the subject title.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Negotiations update on an enhanced UK-Switzerland Trade Agreement

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Press release

    Negotiations update on an enhanced UK-Switzerland Trade Agreement

    The sixth round of negotiations on an enhanced Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with Switzerland took place in Switzerland between 3 and 10 March 2025.

    Economic growth is the core mission of this government and FTAs have an important role to play in achieving this. We are seeking an enhanced FTA with Switzerland that guarantees market access for UK services suppliers, facilitates the seamless flow of data and ideas between two world-leading services powerhouses and provides long-term certainty on UK business travel to Switzerland. An enhanced FTA will contribute to growth and prosperity across the UK and build on our existing trading relationship with Switzerland. This currently supports 130,000 services jobs and more than £17 billion in services exports, including over £700m from Scotland and the North West.

    The UK government’s focus in talks continues to be on agreeing ambitious outcomes in services, investment and digital trade which are not covered in the existing UK-Swiss FTA. During the latest round, good progress was made in financial services in particular, with both sides focussed on agreeing the most comprehensive chapter either country has signed. On digital trade, provisions on data, source code and cryptography were discussed.

    A number of chapters were provisionally closed during this round, including customs and trade facilitation, and transparency.

    The government will only ever sign a trade agreement which aligns with the UK’s national interests, upholding high standards across a range of sectors, alongside protections for the National Health Service.   

    The next round of negotiations is expected to take place in the UK in early summer 2025.

    Any organisations or individuals interested in speaking to the Department for Business and Trade about negotiations with Switzerland should do so by emailing ch.fta.engagement@businessandtrade.gov.uk.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Lamont Highlights Significant Investments in Towns and Cities

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    (HARTFORD, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont today announced that the FY 2026/2027 biennial state budget proposal that he presented to the Connecticut General Assembly last month continues recent trends under his administration of increasing state funding for Connecticut’s town and city governments to support the administration and delivery of municipal services, even while the state has made challenging funding decisions and streamlined costs across state government.

    Municipal aid is the largest category of state spending within the entire general fund. Since taking office since 2019, every state budget Governor Lamont has enacted has not only held municipal funding harmless, but it has also increased that funding each year.

    “My budgets prioritized significant municipal aid investments because that funding is about more than ensuring our unique towns and cities are incredible places to live, but because that funding supports our children’s education and gives them the best opportunity at the starting line in life,” Governor Lamont said. “Over the last several years, our budgets have doubled municipal aid and PILOT funding, and in my next biennium proposal we kept with those investments by proposing more special education funding, community economic development grants, and school and local capital improvement projects.”

    Over the last five years:

    • The Education Cost Sharing (ECS) grant to municipalities, which supports the operations of K-12 public schools, has increased 17%. The state’s per pupil spending of $22,000 is among the highest in the country (top five) and nearly $5,000 above the national per pupil average of $16,665.
    • PILOT funding to municipalities has doubled.
    • General government aid to municipalities has doubled.
    • More than $400 million in state grants have been provided to the state’s most distressed municipalities through the Community Investment Fund, which Governor Lamont and the General Assembly established in 2022 to support capital improvement projects in towns and cities.
    • More than $3.3 billion has been provided to municipalities to fund school construction projects.

    The FY 2026/2027 budget that Governor Lamont proposed and is currently being considered by the state legislature contains several areas of increases for municipal services, including:

    • An $85 million increase in the ECS grant to municipalities in FY 2026. This increase will bring ECS aid to municipalities a full two-years ahead of the schedule planned in the state’s current ten-year phase-in timeline.
    • A $40 million increase in the Excess Cost Grant in FY 2027 to support special education services.
    • The creation of a new state grant to municipalities called the High-Quality Special Education Incentive Grant, which will support the ability of school districts to provide high-quality special education programming in-district and regionally, reducing reliance on out-of-district placements and meeting students’ needs as identified by their individualized education program in the least restrictive environment. The budget proposal invests $10 million from the general fund and $4 million in bond funds in this grant program for FY 2027.
    • The largest expansion of preschool access in Connecticut history through the creation of the Universal Preschool Endowment, which will be seeded by $300 million from the FY 2025 surplus and in the following years will receive funding from any unappropriated surpluses in the general fund.
    • An investment of $9.9 million in FY 2027 to continue the Learner Education and Engagement Program (LEAP), which Governor Lamont established during the COVID-19 pandemic to help address chronic student absenteeism and engagement.
    • An investment of $700,000 in FY 2026 to eliminate reduced price lunch and breakfast fees for students statewide.
    • An additional investment of $12.4 million in FY 2027 to provide universal free school breakfast.
    • An investment of $5 million in FY 2027 to support a High Dosage Tutoring Grant program, which will serve nearly 12,000 students to provide tutoring support.
    • An investment of $350 million in FY 2026 and 2027 combined to continue grants through the Community Investment Fund.

    The General Assembly’s Appropriations Committee and Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee are currently reviewing the governor’s budget proposal and are anticipated to act on it in the coming weeks.

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Transcript: Governor Hochul On “Mornings With Zerlina”

    Source: US State of New York

    arlier today, Governor Kathy Hochul was a guest on SiriusXM’s “Mornings with Zerlina” with Zerlina Miller. The Governor spoke on her proposal for universal free school meals, the ongoing Budget negotiations and which challenges she is prioritizing from the Trump administration.

    AUDIO: The Governor’s remarks are available in audio form here.

    A rush transcript of the Governor’s remarks is available below:

    Zerlina Miller, SiriusXM: Welcome back to “Mornings with Zerlina.” Joining us on the phone is the first woman to ever be Governor of the great State of New York. Governor Kathy Hochul is all on the line. Good morning, Governor.

    Governor Hochul: Good morning.

    Zerlina Miller, SiriusXM: It is quite a time. There is so much going on and I’m so grateful that you were able to join us this morning.

    One of the things we’ve been focused on since January 20 is the role and the importance of Democratic Governors in being the bulwark against some of the authoritarian moves of the Trump administration. How do you see yourself and your role as the Governor of New York in holding the line for democracy?

    Governor Hochul: That’s an excellent question, and I appreciate the role that Congress plays. I’m a former member of Congress and I would’ve stayed if I had not voted to support the Affordable Care Act representing a very Republican district. So, I have been there. But also — now serving as Governor for the last three-and-a-half years — there is enormous power in being able to speak up with one voice to represent an entire state, a large state like New York, and to call out what is happening to not just the people of our state, but the people all across America. And if we abrogate that responsibility at this moment in history, then we’re not fulfilling our obligations to our citizens or to this nation, and that’s what I feel so strongly about — the role I can play now.

    There are pathways to have a relationship that’s workable on infrastructure and other areas where there’s common interest with the Trump administration, but what I’ve said from the very beginning, and say it all the time: If you cross the line and you come after policies and programs that help New Yorkers and take them away, or you challenge our very values — the ideals that we hold dear in the State of New York — then you have a fight with me.

    So, that’s our position.

    Zerlina Miller, SiriusXM: What are some of the things that you’re speaking up about?

    Governor Hochul: Well, first of all, women’s rights — and this is an issue we have, actually with a judge right now in Louisiana who’s trying to force us to extradite a medical doctor, an abortion provider who prescribed telemedicine abortion pills to a family, a woman and her mother in Louisiana.

    They want me to extradite this person and send her there to face criminal charges. This is, again, a fallout from administration stacking the Supreme Court, overturning Roe v. Wade and the fallout continues all these years later. So, standing up for women’s rights, but also, Medicaid. I was out the very first days they talked about undoing the Medicaid promise that we’ve made to our citizens since the 1960s that we will take care of them. They think it’s just people in poverty who aren’t working — they are wrong. These are our senior citizens in nursing homes and these are programs for children. So, I’ve been out there speaking out strongly on those issues.

    Now we have cuts to FEMA. Are you kidding me? Have they watched the news? Did they see the weather? They see the devastation all across America and at this time of great crisis, you are now talking about eliminating FEMA assistance for states. So, I will tell you this — on education, school lunches, I was in a school just a couple days ago saying, “Don’t touch this essential program that the Department of Education provides,” and there’s almost too much and, in that sense, you have to be a little bit selective or your voice becomes just one of many and you really have to pick your fights.

    But I have to say this, there are plenty of fights to choose from.

    Zerlina Miller, SiriusXM: There are plenty of fights to choose from. Just the ones you just listed off — the Medicaid cuts, FEMA cuts, Department of Education. I feel like cutting the department — I mean they’re really cutting everywhere. You have Elon Musk and his unelected crew of “tech bros,” I guess is the way to describe them. Running from agency to agency and cutting staff and funding. I mean, talk a bit about the impact specifically of the Department of Education cuts in addition to the free school lunches, because I think that that is still very much new, right? It just happened and so the impact has not necessarily been felt by everyone yet.

    Governor Hochul: Right. Before I get to that, let me just quickly say that when we first started seeing these cuts from Elon Musk, we took an exact opposite approach here. We actually have advertising in Union Station in Washington and here in New York at Penn Station. People going on a train see the message, which Elon Musk may say, “You are fired,” but in New York, we say, “You’re hired.” We are trying to hire these individuals because they’re enormously talented. We value public servants. We know the critical role they have in keeping the plane safe, and protecting our nuclear codes, and making sure social security checks are received by our grandparents and parents.

    But on education, New York State receives about $5 billion in assistance, whether it’s $2 billion for Pell Grants — creating that pathway to a higher education, which changes everything, including my own family’s trajectory — $2 billion for school lunches. I mean, you have to go to some of these school lunch rooms and know that there are children whose stomach should be growling throughout the day because their parents, their mom, most likely, did not have the ability to pack that lunch, send them along with money to buy lunch and these are the kids that are the collateral damage of this war on government.

    And if we as moms and parents — first Mom Governor of New York — if I don’t use my voice to stand up for those children across my state in this nation, then what am I doing here? And that’s how strongly I feel about these fights when it comes to the education cuts. There’s a lot of uncertainty and chaos, and we’re trying to do our Budget here in the State of New York, not knowing whether or not the $93 billion we receive from the federal government is going to be affected, so it’s complicating things. But, if our voices don’t rise up at this moment, then why are we sitting in these seats?

    Zerlina Miller, SiriusXM: In the last few minutes here, I want to ask about tariffs because one of the things that is true about New York, it is quite large and it goes up right on the line of Canada and some of the folks who live in New York — the farmers and the folks who benefit from being able to have small businesses in that area will be impacted by Trump’s tariffs. Talk a bit about, number one, the impact and what you can do as Governor to protect their interests.

    Governor Hochul: That is something that has been top of mind, particularly in our farm community. Literally on Saturday morning, I was out celebrating Maple Syrup Weekends. New York is the number two producer of maple syrup in the nation, so I was out there with farmers.

    They said, “What will the tariffs do to you out in this rural area?” Probably a red county. I’m pretty sure that the father who ran the farm was a Republican supervisor, and they are so frightened about tariffs for their farms. Everything from the steel that goes into how they process the maple syrup all the way to the fertilizer.

    I mean, how many people think about fertilizer? There’s something called potash — most of it from our country, in New York, particularly — comes from Canada and it’s only manufactured in Canada, Ukraine, and Russia. So I’d rather get it from Canada any day of the week. But this is what’s jeopardized. So it’s the farm community that is really, really, really anxious at a time when they don’t need this extra stress.

    But also, I’m from Buffalo. I’m from Western New York. The synergy between Ontario and Western New York. It is just one large committee. Everybody supports the Buffalo Bills, everybody watches the hockey games, and so there’s a lot of cross pollination. This is not a foreign country to us. These are our friends to the north, so there’s a lot of business exchange, a lot of trade back-and-forth.

    We have a $50 billion trade balance, which is pretty much in balance with our largest trading partner, which is Canada. That being jeopardized sends chills down the spines of our business leaders who don’t know whether all their costs, all the materials they need. We get so much lumber, we build housing with lumber from Canada, and what is that going to do to our ability to be able to build the housing that I am pushing for — to make up for years of people not having the ambition to do it.

    So, I have to say this: The ripple effect touches every sector of our economy here in New York. And what that means, contrary to what Donald Trump promised, which is lower prices on Election Day. Remember he said that countless times on the campaign trail? The opposite is true.

    Prices are going up and will be going up. And lastly, Canada, because they’re frustrated with these policies — threatened to raise our energy costs that we get from Canada by 25 percent. Now, that is the last thing New Yorkers need right now is a higher energy bill because of the Trump tariffs. So it’s wide ranging and my fear is only just beginning.

    Zerlina Miller, SiriusXM: In the last few minutes here, I wanted to ask you about being somebody who has to stand up for the people in the State of New York against the administration that is trying to grab all the power that they can in such a short amount of time. Do you ever feel afraid or nervous about becoming a target by this administration? They obviously are targeting and attacking people who stand up against them.

    Governor Hochul: No, fear is never an option for someone in my position. Fear is paralyzing at this moment in history when we’re called to stand up to basically the disintegration, the destruction of our democracy and our nation as we know it.

    I do not want to be, as Theodore Roosevelt described as “The Man in the Arena,” which I changed to “The Woman in the Arena.” I will never be the timid soul on the sidelines, questioning what others do. I will be in that arena. I will stand up. I will cooperate and have a partnership with the Trump administration on areas of mutual interest.

    And I will do that because it’s important to my state to get Penn Station redone and focus on infrastructure. But I said this in my first call with the president, after he was elected, I said, “But I will stand up to you. You go after women’s rights, you have to get through me. You’re going to challenge my citizens on issues. And my immigrant community, we are going to have a fight.” So I cannot let fear dictate how I respond. I must govern with strength at this moment. And then that’s exactly what we’re doing.

    Zerlina Miller, Sirius XM: New York Governor Kathy Hochul, thank you so much for being with us. It’s Women’s History Month, it’s the perfect time to have this conversation. Thank you, again. Come back anytime.

    Governor Hochul: Alright, thank you. Bye-bye.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Imposes Tariffs on Countries Importing Venezuelan Oil

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    PROTECTING UNITED STATES NATIONAL SECURITY: Yesterday, President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order imposing tariffs on countries that import Venezuelan oil.
    President Trump is levying a 25% tariff on all goods from any country that imports Venezuelan oil, whether directly from Venezuela or indirectly through third parties.
    The tariffs will lapse one year after a country ceases importing Venezuelan oil—or sooner if officials deem it appropriate.
    If tariffs are imposed on China, they will also apply to Hong Kong and Macau to prevent transshipment and evasion.
    These tariffs aim to sever the financial lifelines of Nicolás Maduro’s corrupt regime and curb its destabilizing influence across the Western Hemisphere.
    This action targets transnational criminal threats, such as the Tren de Aragua gang, and addresses the humanitarian crises fueled by Venezuela’s actions.
    ADDRESSING AN EMERGENCY SITUATION: The Maduro regime poses an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.
    The Maduro regime systemically undermines democratic institutions by suppressing free and fair elections and consolidating power illegitimately.
    Venezuela’s endemic corruption and mismanagement under Maduro have crushed its people and triggered a regional humanitarian and public health crisis.
    Millions of Venezuelans have fled Maduro’s oppressive rule, imposing significant burdens on neighboring countries and destabilizing the Western Hemisphere.
    The Maduro regime has aided and facilitated the infiltration of the Tren de Aragua gang—a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization—into the United States by failing to secure its borders, allowing the gang to flourish within Venezuela, and refusing to take action against its members.
    These dangerous criminals exploited the previous administration’s open-border policies, establishing a foothold in U.S. communities and preying on American citizens through violent acts, including kidnapping, assault, and murder.

    USING OUR LEVERAGE TO SAFEGUARD OUR INTERESTS: President Trump is using America’s economic might to safeguard our interests and punish those who support Maduro’s regime.
    Tariffs are a powerful, proven source of leverage for protecting the national interest.
    President Trump is sending a clear message that access to our economy is a privilege, not a right, and countries importing Venezuelan oil will face consequences.
    As President Trump said in the Presidential Memorandum on American First Trade Policy, trade policy is a critical component in national security.
    President Trump has successfully used tariffs in the past to advance America’s interests and address urgent national security threats and is doing so again today.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: NFB feature doc Parade: Queer Acts of Love & Resistance opens Hot Docs 2025. Six National Film Board of Canada documentaries, including five world premieres.

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    March 25, 2025 – Toronto – National Film Board of Canada (NFB)

    The National Film Board of Canada (NFB) will be at Hot Docs in Toronto with a stellar selection of six NFB documentaries, including Winnipeg director Noam Gonick and Toronto producer Justine Pimlott’s feature doc Parade: Queer Acts of Love & Resistance, presented Thursday, April 24, at the Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema as the festival’s opening night film.

    NFB filmmakers will be attending select screenings. The Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival runs from April 24 to May 4, 2025.

    Parade: Queer Acts of Love & Resistance to kick off festival

    A world premiere Special Presentation at Hot Docs, Parade captures pivotal moments that sparked Canada’s 2SLGBTQI+ movement, told through first-person accounts and rarely seen archival footage. Key milestones illustrate the power of taking it into the streets and underscore how easily the rights we’ve fought for can be revoked, making the documentary essential viewing for all Canadians. Unflinching, bold, enraging, hopeful; Parade is a vital new chapter in the queer canon.

    Quotes

    “With the attacks that are once again being faced by trans people and other members of our rainbow collective, it is urgently time for a refresher on the activist movements that got us this far. Queer archives shouldn’t be allowed to get dusty; those snapshots, video clips and film reels ought to see the light of day—so we can give flowers to those that made a difference. With Parade we wanted to put viewers on the street where our rights were won. To hear, see and feel the invigorating protests that moved the needle and opened up Canadian society. May this film act as a guidebook, lest those phalanxes need resurrecting in the days to come.” – Noam Gonick, director

    “This is a history that many people are not even aware of, both among the general Canadian public and within 2SLGBTQI+ communities. So, the intention in bringing this film to the screen was to ensure that our histories are documented and that they’re also told by the activist/witnesses themselves, in their own words. It’s important to know whose shoulders we stand on and to pay our respects to them. We need to learn from history so that we don’t repeat the mistakes of the past. Having the platform of the opening night film of Hot Docs 2025 is an incredible gift and wonderful opportunity to get this story out into the world and to reach as wide an audience as possible.”

    – Justine Pimlott, producer 

    Parade screening times
    OPENING FILM: Thursday, April 24, 6:15 p.m. (industry) and 9:30 p.m. (public), Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema
    Saturday, April 26, 11:15 a.m., Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema
    Saturday, May 3, 10 a.m., TIFF Lightbox 1

    More NFB premieres at Hot Docs

    Ghosts of the Sea by Virginia Tangvald (micro_scope/NFB/Urban Factory; 97 min) – ONTARIO PREMIERE | CANADIAN SPECTRUM
    Sunday, April 27, 10:30 a.m., TIFF Lightbox 1
    Wednesday, April 30, 5:15 p.m., TIFF Lightbox 4

    • While searching for clues about the death of her brother, who was lost at sea, Montreal-raised filmmaker Virginia Tangvald embarks on a fascinating investigation into her family’s dark secrets. Calling into question the idyllic life of her father, legendary sailor Peter Tangvald, her quest dismantles the myth of absolute freedom and offers the hope that a toxic cycle has been broken.

    King’s Court by Serville Poblete (20 min) – WORLD PREMIERE | SHORTS PROGRAM
    Thursday, May 1, 4:30 p.m., TIFF Lightbox 4
    Saturday, May 3, 12:15 p.m., TIFF Lightbox 4

    • A fast-paced look at friendship, family and the journey to manhood in modern society, King’s Court blurs the line between documentary and fiction, immersing viewers in the raw emotions and struggles of two lifelong friends of filmmaker Serville Poblete in Toronto’s Bleecker Street neighbourhood—one of Canada’s most diverse and densely populated areas.

    The Nest by Chase Joynt and Julietta Singh (89 min) – WORLD PREMIERE | SPECIAL PRESENTATION
    Sunday, April 27, 8 p.m., TIFF Lightbox 1
    Wednesday, April 30, 11:15 a.m., TIFF Lightbox 1

    • At the end of her mother’s life, decolonial writer Julietta Singh returns to say goodbye to her childhood home in Winnipeg. As she digs into the history of the house, she uncovers 140 years of forgotten matriarchs and political histories she never knew. In this genre-defying cross-community collaboration, a single home is transformed from a place of siloed stories into a site of radical potential.
    • The filmmakers will take part in the Hot Take presentation Cross-Community Collaboration as Documentary Practice, Tuesday, April 29, at the Yorkville Royal Sonesta.

    Night Watches Us by Stefan Verna (42 min) – WORLD PREMIERE | TIPPING POINT
    Thursday, May 1, 2025, 5 p.m., TIFF Lightbox 2
    Saturday, May 3, 2:45 p.m., TIFF Lightbox 3

    • On August 21, 2018, a son lost his father, a mother lost her son, and a nephew lost his uncle. Nicholas Gibbs was a 23-year-old Black man plagued by mental health issues who was murdered by police. Montreal filmmaker Stefan Verna examines the systemic forces that lead to Nicholas’s tragic death, telling the story through the eyes of a family and community united in grief.

    Siksikakowan: The Blackfoot Man by Sinakson Trevor Solway (77 min) – WORLD PREMIERE | CANADIAN SPECTRUM
    Saturday, April 26, 5:45 p.m., TIFF Lightbox 2
    Monday, April 28, 11 a.m., TIFF Lightbox 2

    • Siksika filmmaker Sinakson Trevor Solway intimately portrays the lives of Blackfoot men as they navigate identity, kinship and the complex expectations of manhood. Through unfiltered moments and revealing conversations set against the breathtaking landscape of the Prairies, the film reimagines what it means to be a Native man. Siksikakowan: The Blackfoot Manis a profound ode to strength, vulnerability and love across generations.

    – 30 –

    Stay Connected

    Online Screening Room: nfb.ca
    NFB Facebook | NFB Twitter | NFB Instagram | NFB Blog | NFB YouTube | NFB Vimeo
    Curator’s perspective | Director’s notes

    About the NFB

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Eddington Man Arrested, Charged with Making Online Threat

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    PORTLAND, Maine: An Eddington man, Thadius Wind, was arrested today and charged by criminal complaint with transmitting an interstate threat.

    As alleged in the criminal complaint, in 2024, the FBI received information from Meta about a Facebook user who had discussed committing violence against police and military. The FBI also received online tips from members of the public about threatening statements made on X (previously known as Twitter). After further investigation, in November 2024 the FBI obtained and executed a search warrant relating to the X account. The recovered posts contained threats to Jews, political figures, the Supreme Court, and others. Details associated with the account were traced to Thadius Wind.

    The FBI and Secret Service are investigating the case with assistance from the Penobscot County Sheriff’s Office.

    A complaint is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Inaugural Congo Energy & Investment Forum Kicks Off, Positioning Congo as a Key Energy Player

    Source: Africa Press Organisation – English (2) – Report:

    BRAZZAVILLE, Congo (Republic of the), March 25, 2025/APO Group/ —

    The inaugural Congo Energy & Investment Forum (CEIF) officially opened with welcome and keynote addresses by key industry leaders operating in the Republic of Congo’s energy sector. With an ambition to double oil production to 500,000 barrels per day by 2027, and with the upcoming launch of a new Gas Master Plan, CEIF 2025 offers a platform for attendees to connect with leaders in Congo’s energy market.

    Speaking during the opening session Congo’s Minister of Hydrocarbons Bruno Jean-Richard Itoua outlined Congo’s potential as a key driver of energy in Central Africa, highlighting critical reforms and initiatives aimed at maximizing the country’s energy potential.

    “It is with great pride and happiness that I’m taking the floor today to deliver the official opening of Congo Energy & Investment Forum,” Minister Itoua stated, adding, “The outline of this forum is in line with Congo’s National Development Goal of 2022-2026 and our ambitious vision to modernize infrastructure and create an inclusive investment environment.”

    Meanwhile, Sébastien Brice Poaty, General Secretary of Congo’s parastatal Société National de Pétroles du Congo (SNPC) explained that Congo remains committed to the development of hydrocarbons, as well as renewable energy, to drive access throughout the country. Poaty indicated that the parastatal has finalized the Gas Master Plan – set to launch at CEIF 2025 – and is preparing for the coming adoption of the new Gas Code, which is expected later this year.

    “This conference is part of a broader aspect on the future of the Congo. SNPC was created to valorize the energy potential of the Congo and support economic development while engaging in a sustainable transition,” stated Poaty, adding, “Investing in Africa remains one of the keys to the continent’s development.

    Speaking on Congo’s potential to attract investment to the energy market, Haitham Al Ghais, Secretary General of OPEC, stressed the importance of stability in the market. “Congo is an extremely valuable member of the OPEC family,” Al Ghais said, adding, “Congo’s oil will be essential considering the future growth of oil demand.”

    Dr. Omar Farouk Ibrahim, Secretary General, the African Petroleum Producers’ Organization (APPO) stressed the importance of the Congolese government to review its strategies and revitalize its hydrocarbons sector. Additionally, Dr. Ibrahim highlighted that, while the global energy landscape is undergoing a massive paradigm shift, Congo must remain committed to driving the development of its oil and gas resources.

    “The Republic of Congo has long been a significant player in Africa’s oil and gas industry. As the third-largest producer in sub-Saharan Africa, with proven crude oil reserves of 1.8 billion barrels, Congo possesses immense potential for development in frontier basins,” he said.

    The Opening Ceremony also included keynote presentations by key industry players in Congo’s energy industry including energy majors TotalEnergies and Eni, as well as independent producers Imperatus Energy and Ammat Global Resources and the African Energy Chamber.

    “With increasing global competition for capital, future success in Congo depends on maintaining a competitive fiscal framework and a stable regulatory and legal environment to ensure long-term viability on investments,” stated Mike Sangster, Senior Vice President for Africa, TotalEnergies E&P.

    Andrea Berberi, Managing Director, Eni Congo announced during his presentation that the company completed its ninth cargo of LNG on March 24, reaching 1 million cubic meters of LNG produced and exported in the market. “Today, we are proud to be part of this new sector in the Republic of Congo,” Berberi stated.

    “There are great operators in the country working on different projects,” stated Massimiliano Mignacca, Director General, Ammat Global Resources, adding, “Ammat’s activities are notably in upstream, but we are committed along the entire lifecycle of hydrocarbons.”

    Calling on Congo to replicate the success of neighboring oil producers such as Angola, NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, the African Energy Chamber, expressed his optimism for the country to capitalize on regulatory reforms and improved governance to attract global investment.

    “At a time when we look at the energy industry, when we look at global shifts in energy, we look at Congo for energy stability. It is for that reason that Congo takes a very strong position, but we need to recognize that energy reforms need to happen,” stated Ayuk.

    Meanwhile, Oumar Semega, CEO and Founder, Imperatus Energy Group noted that energy plays a key and strategic role for the Congo. “At Imperatus, we have a clear vision to create value across every stage of the oil and gas sector, from extraction to commercialization,” stated.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI: Annual General Meeting of Jyske Bank A/S on 25 March 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    At the annual general meeting, the management’s review was presented, and the annual report for 2024 was approved, including the Supervisory Board’s proposal for a dividend payment of DKK 24 per share, corresponding to DKK 1,543m.

    The motions proposed by the Supervisory Board, cf. item c (remuneration report) and item d (remuneration to the Shareholders’ Representatives and the Supervisory Board) were both adopted.

    The Supervisory Board’s motion to the effect that the Bank be authorised to acquire own shares (item e of the agenda) was adopted.

    The motions proposed by the Supervisory Board, cf. items f.1-f.3 of the agenda (motions of amendments to the Articles of Association) were all adopted.  As the members in general meeting with a right to vote represented less than 90% of the share capital, an Extraordinary General Meeting is hereby called for the purpose of final adoption of the proposed amendments of the Articles of Association. Notice of the extraordinary general meeting will be given in a separate corporate announcement and will be available at Jyske Bank’s website.

    Elected as new Shareholders’ Representatives (item g.1 of the agenda):

    Electoral Region North:
    Diana Østergaard, Herning
    Steen Hintze, Skive
    Electoral Region South:
    Camilla Avlbjerg Christiansen, Kolding
    Eva Berner, Faaborg
    Jesper Norup, Vejle
    Lisbeth Henricksen, Havndal
    Pia Møller Rasmussen, Copenhagen
    Electoral Region East:
    Christel Arpalice Piron, Solrød Strand
    Lars Andersen, Fuglebjerg

    The 27 Shareholders’ Representatives who sought re-election were all re-elected.

    The two Supervisory Board members, Lisbeth Holm and Glenn Söderholm, were both re-elected (item g.2 of the agenda).

    In addition, EY Godkendt Revisionspartnerselskab was re-elected under item h.1 of the agenda as well as re-election of EY Godkendt Revisionspartnerselskab under item h.2 of the agenda.

    At the subsequent meeting of the Shareholders’ Representatives, Birgitte Haurum was elected, and Anker Laden-Andersen was re-elected to the Supervisory Board. The Supervisory Board elected Kurt Bligaard Pedersen as its chairman and Anker Laden-Andersen as its deputy chairman.

    Yours sincerely,
    Jyske Bank

    Contact person: CFO, Finance, Birger Krøgh Nielsen, tel. +45 89 89 64 44.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Olli Rehn: Eurozone outlook and European Central Bank monetary policy

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Presentation accompanying the speech

    Let me first thank MNI for inviting me to speak at this conference. To kick off, I will briefly discussthe economic outlook in the eurozone and the current lines of thought in the ECB’s monetary policy.

    In presenting my remarks here, I will focus particularly on how the significant shifts in world politics of recent weeks will, in my view, affect the euro area economy and the European Central Bank’s monetary policy.

    Slide 2: Geopolitics dominates economic outlook

    Geopolitics currently dominates and weighs on the outlook for the global economy, and does so with exceptional force. 

    Russia’s illegal, brutal war of aggression in Ukraine has been going on for more than three years. It has shaken the European security order, and more recent events since the Munich Security Conference a month ago have marked a major disruption in the world order – in a way that is dangerous for Europe. This has forced the European Union to seek to strengthen its common defences.

    It is clear that the United States is undergoing a fundamental change of direction both in its foreign and security policy and in its domestic political development. This is not necessarily just a temporary phenomenon, but may be a more permanent turn in US politics. And US foreign policy is now operating under a very different kind of rationality than it used to.

    “America first” trade policy in the US is profoundly protectionist but highly unpredictable. There will be no winners in a trade war. Tariffs and the related uncertainty will hit investment and slow down growth everywhere. The latest indicators on the US economy point to weaker than expected growth, which would also affect growth prospects in Europe.

    As a result of the turmoil in world politics in recent weeks, Europe has woken up to the necessity of strengthening common defence. The situation is acute, and many EU countries, led by Germany, have announced significant decisions to increase defence spending. Europe is now taking action and responding to the challenge of forming and financing a common, strong defence.

    These defence investments will have to be made in a situation where the public deficits of EU Member States are already large. However, the investments required for defence are of such a magnitude that they cannot be financed simply by increasing taxation or cutting other public sector expenditure. It is therefore, in my view, justified, in the short term, to utilize the flexibility elements included in the EU’s new fiscal rules, provided that longer-term debt sustainability is not compromised. 

    This is why we also need common European financing solutions, implemented in a way that strengthens our common security and accelerates joint procurement and production – I am thinking of air defence and drone production, for example.

    Slide 3: Bank of Finland’s scenario calculation: A trade war would weaken growth worldwide

    Recent statements from the United States about imposing import tariffs have raised the threat of a trade war in the global economy. An analysis published a week ago by the Bank of Finland illustrates the significant risks that a trade war would pose to economic growth.

    The study assumes that the United States would impose a 25% tariff increase on all imports from the euro area and a 20% increase on all imports from China. It also assumes that the euro area and China would impose equivalent tariffs on the United States. Moreover, the calculations take into account the potential economic effects of increased uncertainty affecting economic policy.

    The scenario demonstrates that there are no winners in a trade war. As a result, world GDP would decline by more than 0.5% per year. The effects on the euro area and China would be even greater. A key aspect of a trade war is the rise in uncertainty, which we are already witnessing and which could lead to a reduced willingness to investment among businesses.

    Efforts should, in any case, be made to prevent the threat of a trade war through a fair negotiated solution to mitigate the negative effects on growth. To support a negotiated solution, Europe should be prepared to respond to the imposition of tariffs with potential countermeasures.

    It must also be said that when a brutal war is being fought on European soil, a trade war is the last thing we need right now – especially among allies.

    Slide 4: Growth in the euro area economy picking up gradually

    US tariffs and increased uncertainty are already having adverse effects on economic growth outlook in the euro area in the immediate and near term.

    Europe’s response to the deterioration of the security situation will have its own effects on European economies, which are very difficult to quantify at this stage.

    The growth outlook for the euro area remains subdued. According to the ECB’s March forecast, growth in the euro area is gradually picking up, but at a slower pace than expected, and growth risks are on the downside.

    In addition to cyclical factors, the euro area economy is also experiencing structural problems. In the ECB’s new forecast, productivity growth is slower than before. The weakness appears to be more structural than previously. But it would be wrong to say that it is entirely structural.

    One – if not the only – reason for Europe’s slow productivity growth is precisely the weak development of investment in recent years. The background is a great deal of uncertainty fuelled by geopolitics, but there were also tight financial conditions for a long time.

    Let me reveal that I don’t belong to those who makes a crystal-clear distinction between structural and cyclical factors – it would be against my macroeconomic training. Rather, I see the distinction as a line drawn in water. Here, I feel like applying a giant of economics: “In the long run, we will all retire. But in the meantime, we need more productive investment.”

    In other words: although the euro area’s longer-term challenges of growth and competitiveness cannot be solved by monetary policy, the fall in interest rates brings welcome room for manoeuvre for households and companies. Rate cuts have been supportive of the investments that are required to improve productivity. Of course, in the long term, the level and growth of investments is determined by their expected real returns.

    Although there is little to be positive about in the security situation in Europe, the expected increases in defence spending and investment are at least likely to support GDP growth over the medium-term.

    Slide 5: Euro area inflation stabilising at the 2% target

    Inflation in the euro area is stabilising at the ECB’s 2% target. The path of disinflation has been pretty much in line with forecasts. Wage inflation has largely decelerated, and forward-looking wage indicators point to a clear slowdown in wage growth. Most measures of core inflation − which excludes energy and food prices − also point to a sustained convergence of inflation around the 2% target over the medium term.

    Risks to the inflation outlook are two-sided. Protectionism in world trade dampens growth and increases uncertainty about the inflation outlook. Geopolitical tensions pose a wide range of risks to the energy market, consumer confidence and corporate investment.

    Slide 6: ECB’s decision to ease monetary policy spurred by inflation stabilising and growth weakening

    The ECB’s latest decision to ease monetary policy leaned on the fact that inflation is stabilising and growth weakening. Thus, the Governing Council decided to cut the key policy rate by 25 basis points.

    The rate cut was the sixth since we started easing monetary policy. Since last June, the deposit facility rate has been lowered by a total of 1.5 percentage points, from 4% to 2.5%. Monetary policy is thus becoming meaningfully less restrictive.

    The decision was based, as usual, on three elements: the inflation outlook, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission.

    We are not pre-committed to any interest rate path. Policy rates are set at each meeting based on the latest information and our comprehensive assessment, next time on 17 April. The Governing Council retains full freedom of action in times of pervasive uncertainty.

    Slide 7: Europe is under challenge from the world of geopolitics – investment is needed now in security and productivity

    Let me now conclude. The world is now experiencing a transition of potentially similar magnitude as 30 years ago, when the Berlin Wall fell, the Cold War ended and Europe united. At that time, the evolution of humanity took a step forward and security rooted in cooperation was strengthened.

    Today the world only is in reverse gear: power politics has returned in a brutal way with Russia’s invasion, the United States is standing by Russia and playing sphere-of-influence politics, and China is challenging the entire international order. 

    But we must be able to navigate even in this geopolitically difficult terrain. With the Munich Security Conference, Europe has received yet another wake-up call.

    At the same time, we must focus on our own economic problems. Europe needs investments in productivity growth – in human capital and in research and innovation. Protectionism highlights the need to complete the single market and expand the EU’s network of free trade agreements.

    The stabilisation of inflation and the weakening of the growth outlook have supported monetary policy easing since last summer. The ECB’s monetary policy has been reasonably successful in bringing inflation down without inflicting unnecessary pain to the real economy.

    The past few weeks have shown that Europe must urgently get its act together and stand united in the face of external security threats. In the coming weeks and months, Europe will have to demonstrate that it is taking action and meeting the challenge of strengthening its defence. There is no time to waste.

    Thank you very much. I am happy to take any questions you have.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Global: How Donald Trump’s trade war against Canada reveals tensions inherent in friendship

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Jason Wang, Postdoctoral Fellow, Modern Literature and Culture Research Centre, Toronto Metropolitan University

    In his second inauguration address, United States President Trump began by declaring “the golden age of America begins right now” and closed with, “and our golden age has just begun.” Between these lines, he vowed to “tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our citizens.”

    Tying his trade policies to dubious claims about fentanyl trafficking and illegal immigration, Trump’s approach appears less about economic strategy and more about asserting dominance. Invoking the language of imperial expansion, he even proposed the idea of making Canada the “cherished 51st state.”

    Historians like American Richard White quickly drew parallels to the 19th-century Gilded Age when robber barons thrived, leaving social inequality in their wake.




    Read more:
    Elon Musk’s bid to take over Twitter recalls the robber barons of the 19th century


    The celebrated Canada-U.S. friendship — further entrenched over the past three decades by the 1989 Canada-U.S. free-trade agreement, cross-border activity and snowbirds wintering in Florida and elsewhere in the U.S. — has long balanced underlying tension stemming from the two nations’ power differences. This alludes to tensions inherent in friendships that have long been explored by philosophers.

    A ‘great relationship?’

    Trump’s recent sweeping tariffs on Canadian imports are only the latest chapter in a long history of economic clashes.

    From the U.S.’s Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, which hit Canada hard during the Great Depression, to Richard Nixon’s 10 per cent import surcharge in 1971 and the long fight over softwood lumber that persisted through the early 2000s despite Canada’s favourable World Trade Organization rulings, these conflicts expose the fragility of Canada-U.S. relations. The uneasy reality is that friendship between nations is never as stable as it seems.

    The trade war has triggered a wave of cultural and economic nationalism in Canada that has gone beyond the “Buy Canadian” movement. At the National Ballet of Canada’s Swan Lake, recently, a stirring rendition of O Canada brought the audience to its feet.

    Chrystia Freeland, now minister of transport and internal trade, voiced the nation’s outrage on CNN: “Canadians are angry,” she said, condemning the tariffs as a betrayal of what she called the “great relationship.”

    Friendship ideals and power dynamics

    But beneath the outrage lies a harsher truth: Canada’s “friend” status is conditional, tied to America’s shifting priorities. The real question isn’t whether Canada is a trusted ally — it’s whether it was ever more than a subordinate in this “friendship.” At stake is the concept of friendship between nations.

    Philosophers exploring the intersection of friendship and politics offer a useful framework for understanding this imbalance.

    Written in the post-Cold War era, French Algerian philosopher Jacques Derrida’s The Politics of Friendship, first published in French in 1994, questions the very possibility of pure, stable friendship, arguing that it is never equal or unconditional.

    Instead, said Derrida, it is always a negotiation of power. Derrida questions idealized Aristotelian notions of friendship between nations — ideals that still quietly underpin our thinking about friendship, loyalty and betrayal.

    Friendship in fiction, Aristotle

    In his study of friendship in fiction, literary scholar Allan Hepburn points out that friendships are inherently political, foundational to social relations and embody democratic ideals of equality and fraternity, as Aristotle suggested.

    Tyrannical systems, by contrast, lack true friendships, while an ideal democracy extends mutual respect to all citizens. In this way, strangers are recognized as equals and potential friends, regardless of legal obligation, as Derrida emphasized.

    In Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, he distinguished transactional and virtuous friendship. The former is built on mutual advantage or shared pleasure, which to Aristotle is the lesser kind of friendship.

    In contrast, virtue-based friendship is both the most enduring and the rarest. Aristotle idealizes this latter type of friendship, describing it as “perfect friendship” in which individuals are “alike in virtue,” wishing well to each other as something good in itself, and are themselves morally upright.

    This ideal friendship — expected to be stable, enduring and intrinsically valuable — underpins discourses about the bond between nations based on shared values.




    Read more:
    What makes a good friend?


    True friendship reserved for individuals

    Political scientist Evgeny Roshchin argues that friendship, as a historical concept in international relations, helped mediate the shift from hierarchical to equal political relationships, shaping sovereignty and political order.

    In contrast, philosopher Simon Keller questions the idea of “friendship between countries,” asserting true friendship is reserved for individuals. He warns that comparing nations to friends may mislead us by shifting focus from genuine human connections to political dynamics.

    Yet the Aristotelian model of the friend as “a second self” has significant limitations, often ignoring differences and reinforcing hierarchy. For Derrida, friendship is not a fixed, harmonious ideal but an ongoing, unpredictable negotiation that blurs the boundary between ally and adversary.

    He contends: “‘Good friendship’ supposes disproportion. It demands a certain rupture in reciprocity or quality, as well as the interruption of all fusion or confusion between you and me.”

    Even at its most personal, friendship is marked by power dynamics — who holds it, who benefits from it and who can be cast aside. Not a cynical rejection of friendship, however, Derrida’s model calls for broadening its moral and political dimensions.

    Transactional structure

    Derrida’s model applies to the Canada-U.S. relationship, which has long been framed as one of mutual respect, built on democratic values and shared economic interests. But its underlying structure is transactional.

    The rhetoric of friendship has always served a function: to justify co-operation when it is useful and to smooth over conflict when it is not. The moment those interests diverge, the limits of the relationship become clear.

    Trump’s tariffs have exposed this dynamic in the clearest possible terms. Canada’s position as a friend to the U.S. is fragile and contingent, shaped by the fluctuating interests of the more powerful side.

    But the rupture is not new, nor is it a break from the norm. It’s simply a reminder of how the relationship has always worked. The question now is not whether Canada can restore its friendship, but whether it can afford to continue believing in it on the same terms.




    Read more:
    Amid U.S. threats, Canada’s national security plans must include training in non-violent resistance


    Embrace inherent fragility

    Derrida’s model of friendship offers a way forward. His model defies the simplistic binary of friend and foe, loyalty and betrayal, as these terms are ultimately mutually constitutive. Derrida calls for relationships that embrace their inherent fragility.

    For Canada, this doesn’t mean abandoning the discourse of friendship with the U.S. entirely, but rather acknowledging the bond’s fragile, conditional nature — always deferred, always on the brink of rupture.

    The challenge for Canada is to redefine its position in North America beyond the framework of mutuality and dependence. At the policy level, with Canada-U.S. relations, this means diversifying trade and diplomatic ties, resisting automatic alignment and asserting independent leadership in global affairs.

    At home, it means forging a national identity that is self-defined and free from the shadow of comparison.

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

    ref. How Donald Trump’s trade war against Canada reveals tensions inherent in friendship – https://theconversation.com/how-donald-trumps-trade-war-against-canada-reveals-tensions-inherent-in-friendship-252260

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Video: UK Take a midweek tour of Parliament

    Source: United Kingdom UK Parliament (video statements)

    In 2024, the Palace of Westminster welcomed 560,317 visitors, and rose 112 places in the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions rankings.

    “We are thrilled to have welcomed a record number of visitors to Parliament in 2024. This achievement is a testament to the dedication of our Visitor Experience team, who work tirelessly to deliver a world-class experience for every visitor,” said Abbie Fox-Smith, Director of Visitor Experience.

    Nick, a member of our Visitor Experience team, shows you what to expect on a midweek tour of Parliament

    Book your tickets to visit the Palace of Westminster: https://tickets.parliament.uk/timeslot/uk-parliament-english-guided-tour

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iqbokbo2Ii0

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Kevin Rooney announced as new Senior Traffic Commissioner

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Kevin Rooney announced as new Senior Traffic Commissioner

    Secretary of State for Transport appoints Kevin Rooney as the new Senior Traffic Commissioner.

    • Kevin Rooney will start his new role on 1 June 2025
    • he has been appointed following 13 years’ service as Traffic Commissioner for the West of England, a role he will maintain while in his new position
    • Transport Secretary thanks outgoing Senior Traffic Commissioner Richard Turfitt for his great work, including seeing the arm’s length body through the pandemic

    The Secretary of State for Transport is pleased to announce the appointment of Kevin Rooney as the new Senior Traffic Commissioner, effective from 1 June 2025.

    In his role as Senior Traffic Commissioner, Kevin will oversee the work of the Traffic Commissioners, who are responsible for regulating the road transport industry across the UK, with specific oversight of public service vehicles (such as buses and coaches), freight operators, and drivers.

    Kevin takes on the Senior Traffic Commissioner from his current position as Traffic Commissioner for the West of England and brings extensive knowledge from his experience at the Vehicle Inspectorate and Vehicle and Operator Services Agency (VOSA). In these roles, he managed the introduction of the first MOT emission tests, diesel smoke tests and led the programme to upgrade VOSA’s enforcement processes, alongside working as a road safety consultant to new EU member states.

    As the role of Senior Traffic Commissioner must be held by a serving Traffic Commissioner, Kevin will retain his role as West of England Traffic Commissioner alongside his new position. Kevin is hoping to continue the excellent work done by his predecessor, Richard Turfitt, to improve and develop the Traffic Commissioner service.

    Richard leaves the role following the natural conclusion of his second 4-year term as Senior Traffic Commissioner. During his time in office, Richard has responded to a period of unprecedented and unparalleled change, first working through the issues emerging from the UK’s departure from the EU including drafting statutory guidance on the contingency of the European Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT) Permits and then working to provide support during COVID-19 and the recovery period. 

    Under his stewardship, the Traffic Commissioners were guided through the pandemic, maintaining critical services, which led to a complete overhaul of operations, including the move to virtual hearings and the use of digital technologies, alongside strengthened ties with the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA).

    Richard’s liaison with the sector via key note addresses and industry engagements has also been widely appreciated by industry leads, and served to bring visibility to the Traffic Commissioner’s important role in regulation and road user safety. As Kevin steps into the role, Richard will be continuing in his role as Traffic Commissioner for the East of England.

    Heidi Alexander, Secretary of State for Transport, said:

    I’m delighted to confirm Kevin Rooney as the new Senior Traffic Commissioner.

    He arrives with a wealth of experience from his time as Traffic Commissioner for the West of England and we’re all excited to see him build on the fantastic work of his predecessor, Richard Turfitt.

    I’d like to extend my thanks to Richard for his 2 full terms of service in the role, during which he has seen the team through the difficult pandemic period, and wish him the very best for the future, as he returns to his vital role as Traffic Commissioner for the East of England.

    Kevin Rooney, incoming Senior Traffic Commissioner, said:

    It is a great privilege to be appointed as Senior Traffic Commissioner for Great Britain.

    I want to pay tribute to Richard Turfitt and the work he has done as Senior Traffic Commissioner for the past 8 years. Arguably, he led the commissioners through some of the toughest times we have seen during the pandemic, making quick decisions to keep the haulage and passenger industries working compliantly and to facilitate service recovery thereafter.

    Following in his footsteps will not be easy, but I look forward to that challenge, working equally closely with those who support commissioners and those we serve.

    Richard Turfitt, outgoing Senior Traffic Commissioner, said:

    I am pleased that the work of traffic commissioners is being recognised. It has been humbling to hold this judicial leadership role at times of crisis and to then be able to help the many responsible operators, transport managers and drivers who make up the regulated industries.

    It is undoubtedly a challenging and often isolating role, which requires support from officials, colleagues, tribunal and licensing staff and stakeholders to be effective. The working relationship with professional bodies and trade representatives has proved invaluable to serving Great Britain and in securing the safety of road transport.

    I look forward to continuing and supporting Kevin in that work, as he takes up the mantle.

    Roads media enquiries

    Media enquiries 0300 7777 878

    Switchboard 0300 330 3000

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: MHRA launches new monthly safety bulletin and redesigned safety alerts

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    MHRA launches new monthly safety bulletin and redesigned safety alerts

    The new MHRA Safety Roundup provides a monthly summary of the latest safety advice for all medicines, medical devices, and healthcare products regulated by the MHRA, as part of our 3-year strategy to improve safety communications.

    The MHRA has today (25 March 2025) launched a new monthly safety bulletin, the ‘MHRA Safety Roundup’, the latest step in a three-year Strategy for Improving Safety Communications to make medicines and medical device information clearer and more accessible for healthcare professionals.

    The bulletin, which will be sent to subscribers and published online at the end of each month, provides a summary of all the MHRA safety alerts for the past month including drug safety updates (DSU), device safety information (DSI), national patient safety alerts, recalls and medicines notifications, and letters sent to healthcare professionals.

    It also contains an MHRA news section highlighting key safety information about medicines, medical devices and healthcare products that may be of interest to readers.

    The creation of the ‘MHRA Safety Roundup’ is in response to findings from our consultation on how the MHRA communicates safety information with healthcare professionals and organisations, which showed that healthcare professionals including GPs, nurses, and pharmacists found it useful to receive information at different frequencies, including monthly summaries, to suit their needs.

    As part of our commitment to delivering the first year’s goals of the strategy, we have redesigned all our MHRA safety alerts to make critical safety advice clearer and easier to action, utilising colour, and relevant imagery to better engage healthcare professionals who often need to disseminate the information to their patients.

    Work continues to improve the MHRA safety communications, and the next focus will be on strengthening engagement with patients and the wider public, including through use of communication methods that are tailored to their needs.

    Healthcare professionals can subscribe to the ‘MHRA Safety Roundup’ here. For further information on how to find and subscribe to individual safety communications, visit our website.

    ENDS

    Follow us on X: @MHRAgovuk

    Follow us on LinkedIn: Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency

    Follow us on Instagram: @mhragovuk

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Diplomacy and dialogue are the best ways to achieve a stable future in Syria: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Diplomacy and dialogue are the best ways to achieve a stable future in Syria: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward, UK Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on Syria.

    I’d like to start by thanking Special Envoy Pedersen and Under-Secretary General Fletcher for your briefings.

    Thank you also to Ms Seif for your briefing and for your tireless advocacy efforts. 

    We echo your calls for an inclusive political transition that prioritises the participation and leadership of women in Syria.

    President, I would like to make three points today.

    First, this month Syrians marked the 14th anniversary of the start of the uprising against the Assad regime. 

    At last, they can see the prospect of a more stable and hopeful future.

    But horrific events this month demonstrate too that this remains a fragile and critical moment in Syria. 

    We welcome the Interim Authorities’ announcement establishing a fact-finding committee to investigate and prosecute individuals who committed crimes during the clashes in Syria’s coastal areas.  

    A peaceful and secure country is in the interests of all Syrians and the wider region.  

    Diplomacy and dialogue are the best way of achieving this and we urge all parties to refrain from further violence and to exercise restraint at this critical moment.  

    We are concerned by Defence Minister Katz’s declaration that the Israeli presence in the Area of Separation and the Golan Heights could be for an unlimited period. 

    This is unacceptable and Israel must present clear and reasonable timelines for their withdrawal in line with international law.

    Second, we note the progress made in Syria’s political transition. 

    We welcome the Constitutional Declaration’s provisions on freedom of expression, religion and women’s rights alongside the commitment to establish a Transitional Justice Commission.

    We call for swift implementation of these actions and hope the Declaration will provide a solid foundation for a transition that guarantees the rights of all Syrians. 

    A clear approach on accountability and transitional justice is essential for national reconciliation and to prevent a recurrence of the violence we saw this month. 

    Progress on this cannot wait. 

    As the Interim Authorities take these next steps, we call for a consultative and inclusive process and for appointments to the Transitional Government to reflect Syria’s rich diversity.

    Finally, we recognise the immense challenges of rebuilding Syria and that this cannot be done without economic recovery and the international community’s coordinated support. 

    The UK is committed to Syria’s recovery, underlined by our pledge at last week’s Brussels conference of up to $207 million in critical humanitarian assistance. 

    This will alleviate some of the suffering in Syria, as well as helping Syrians in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey, who generously host so many refugees.

    In parallel, the UK has relaxed some sanctions on Syria and revoked the asset freezes of 24 entities and institutions in the energy, transport and finance sectors. 

    We have also issued a General Licence to support transactions for humanitarian activities in Syria.

    In conclusion, President, the UK stands with the Syrian people in building a more stable, free and prosperous future.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: IAM Union, NFFE-IAM Coalition Win Injunction to Stop DOGE From Accessing Member, Military Veteran Private Data

    Source: US GOIAM Union

    After a suit filed by the IAM Union, the National Federation of Federal Employees (NFFE-IAM) and other allies, the United States District Court for the District of Maryland issued a preliminary injunction prohibiting the Department of Education (ED), the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), and the Treasury Department from disclosing the sensitive personal information to employees affiliated with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

    “Today’s ruling continues to solidify that our members, our nation’s veterans and every American has a sacred right to privacy,” said International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM Union) International President Brian Bryant. “The IAM Union will always stand with our allies to protect and defend our members’ rights.”

    The Court ruled that the claims from the plaintiffs — including military veterans and unions representing millions of veterans, teachers, scientists, engineers, federal employees — would likely be successful. The plaintiffs argue that ED, OPM, and Treasury violated the Privacy Act by granting DOGE affiliates unauthorized access to systems containing sensitive personal information including Social Security numbers, bank account information, health records, and other private data.

    “Once again, the courts have ruled that Elon Musk and DOGE should not have access to highly sensitive data belonging to American individuals and federal employees,” said National Federation of Federal Employees (NFFE) National President Randy Erwin. “Everyone in this country has the right to privacy. NFFE and our allies are committed to protecting that right, especially when our members are at risk of having their information compromised by those who wish to do them harm.”

    In the 68-page ruling, Judge Deborah L. Boardman wrote that “[t]he administrative records [provided by the government] indicate that Education, OPM, and Treasury disclosed records with the plaintiffs’ PII to DOGE affiliates. They also indicate that the DOGE affiliates do not need to know this information to perform their job duties.”  

    The Court found that the plaintiffs would suffer irreparable harm without injunctive relief, noting that, “the plaintiffs have shown that DOGE affiliates have been granted access to systems of records that contain some of the plaintiffs’ most sensitive data – such as Social Security numbers, dates of birth, home addresses, bank information, income and assets, and citizenship status.” The Court further found that “without an injunction, the DOGE affiliates’ access to this trove of personal information will continue,” and that the damage incurred by these ongoing disclosures cannot be rectified by damages.

    The preliminary injunction prohibits:

    • The Department of Education from disclosing Plaintiffs’ personally identifiable information to any DOGE affiliates.
    • The Office of Personnel Management from disclosing Plaintiffs’ personally identifiable information to any OPM employee working principally on the DOGE agenda (with the exception of OPM Acting Director Charles Ezell, OPM Chief Information Officer Greg Hogan, and OPM Chief of Staff Amanda Scales).
    • The Treasury Department from disclosing Plaintiffs’ personally identifiable information to DOGE affiliates.

    The Department of Justice has filed a notice of its intent to appeal Judge Boardman’s decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.

    The complete ruling is available here, and the opinion can be found here.

    Read more about this case.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Celebrating the return of Costa Rica’s 2023 to 2024 Chevening scholars

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    Celebrating the return of Costa Rica’s 2023 to 2024 Chevening scholars

    Returning scholars share their enriching experiences and the impact of their Chevening journey at the Ambassador’s residence in San Jose.

    British Ambassador and Chevening scholars 2023-2024

    On March 6, the British Ambassador in San Jose, Ben Lyster-Binns, hosted a special welcome home event to celebrate the return of the Costa Rican Chevening scholars who had recently completed their Master’s degrees in the United Kingdom.

    The gathering offered a unique opportunity for the scholars to share their transformative experiences and reflect on how their time in the UK has shaped their academic and professional aspirations. The stories of these scholars were truly inspiring and showcased the immense value of international collaboration and the importance of further strengthening the ties between Costa Rica and the United Kingdom.

    The event was a testament to the success of the Chevening Scholarship in fostering long-term partnerships and facilitating the growth of leaders who will continue to contribute to Costa Rica’s social, economic, and environmental progress.

    The Chevening community in Costa Rica continues to grow, with the returning scholars now joining a network of Chevening alumni who are making a difference both locally and globally. Their journey is a shining example of the lasting impact of educational exchange and international collaboration.

    The Chevening Scholarship is the UK government’s global scholarship programme that provides outstanding individuals from around the world the opportunity to pursue postgraduate study at universities in the UK. The programme is fully funded, covering tuition fees, travel expenses, and living costs, and is aimed at fostering international leadership by equipping future leaders with the knowledge and skills to make a positive impact in their home countries. Since its inception in 1983, over 50,000 professionals have benefited from the Chevening programme.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Falkland Islands cricket team returns to Costa Rica after 14 years

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    World news story

    Falkland Islands cricket team returns to Costa Rica after 14 years

    British Embassy in San Jose celebrates the role of sport in fostering bilateral ties.

    British Ambassador, Ben Lyster-Binns, and Falklands Islands Cricket team

    The recently concluded visit of the Falkland Islands cricket team to Costa Rica marked a historic occasion, as the team returned after a 14-year absence to participate in a tournament from 10-14 March.

    The visit, organised by the Costa Rica Cricket Federation, was not only an exciting sporting event but also a chance for the British Embassy in San Jose to highlight the important role of sport in creating lasting social and cultural connections.

    British Ambassador, Ben Lyster-Binns, at cricket prize-giving

    The Embassy hosted a reception for both teams, which was a unique opportunity for the Falkland Islands team and their Costa Rican counterparts to bond over their shared passion for cricket and deepen their understanding of each other’s cultures. This occasion also provided an ideal platform to highlight the growing role of women in cricket, both in Costa Rica and globally, particularly as the Embassy welcomed the winners of the 2024 women’s cricket tournament, the Siquirres Tigresses.

    The Embassy’s involvement in this event reinforced the significance of cricket, a sport with deep roots in British history, as a powerful tool for social change and international connection. In his speech at the reception, the British Ambassador to Costa Rica, Ben Lyster-Binns, spoke about the importance of inclusion in sport:

    Sport belongs to everyone, and every time women step onto the pitch, they are helping to build a future where opportunities in sport are equal. Cricket has a long and proud history, but its future will be even brighter with greater inclusion, diversity, and participation from all.

    British Ambassador, Ben Lyster-Binns, and Siquirres Tigresses

    The Ambassador also took the opportunity to highlight the games intrinsic values:

    Cricket, in particular, is a game of respect, teamwork, and resilience – values that go far beyond the pitch.

    The growing popularity of cricket in Costa Rica, especially among women, was on full display during the reception as the Siquirres Tigres—winners of last year’s women’s cricket tournament—shared their journey and passion for the sport. Their success stands as a powerful example of how women in Costa Rica are finding their place in cricket and shaping the future of the game in the region.

    The tournament, which was part of the Costa Rican national cricket calendar, saw spirited matches and valuable exchanges between the teams, leaving a lasting impression on everyone involved. The event not only rekindled a long-standing sporting connection between the Falkland Islands and Costa Rica but also underscored the importance of inclusivity in sport, especially in empowering women and young people to pursue their athletic dreams.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: RELEASE: Senator Mullin Reaches Thousands of Oklahomans with Telephone Town Hall

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator MarkWayne Mullin (R-Oklahoma)
    Washington, D.C. – Monday evening, U.S. Senator Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) hosted a live telephone town hall event with thousands of Oklahomans across the state. During the call, Senator Mullin addressed the recent devastating wildfires and took questions on DOGE cuts, border security, returning education to the states, and tariffs, among other topics. Click here to listen and see below for highlights.

    On the devastating wildfires impacting Oklahoma: 
    “First, as we start this tele town hall meeting, we want to keep in mind that there’s a lot of families that are still hurting from the wildfires that took place and that are actually still taking place across Oklahoma. Christie’s, my wife, aunt and uncle who live in Stillwater, they lost their house and everything in it. And I know our family’s not any different than anybody else. All of us were impacted in some way. Our family is here to help personally, plus our office is here to help too. So, if there’s anything that comes up from the federal assistance side, we’ve been coordinating closely with Governor Stitt. Of course, you know, he lost his house out on the ranch, and had issues there too. But I can tell you him and I have talked on a regular basis. He is working with us on the federal side, in the coordination, making sure that it takes place. But if there’s a question that you have, someone that you that you know, or you may have been personally impacted, don’t hesitate to reach out to our office.”  
    On waste, fraud, and abuse in the federal government: 
    “The President was very clear. I mean, promises made, promises kept. I can’t repeat that enough. Promises made, promises kept by the President. When he came out there and he said he was going to hold the government accountable for the people again, and make the government work for the people again, and that’s exactly what he’s doing. And you see the left losing their loving mind over it, because he’s actually doing something that, truthfully, you can go back and find the video that Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi talked about it in a forum in 2010… where they literally talked about exactly what DOGE is doing, except the Democrats never did it, and President Trump is doing it.”  
    On returning education to the states: 
    “Keep in mind, there was 4,200 employees that worked for the Department of Education, and they set policy for teachers to teach, and none of them were teaching. They were never designed to be educators… They weren’t teaching the students, but yet, they were trying to tell our teachers in Bixby, Oklahoma, or in Choctaw, Oklahoma, or Chickasa… how to teach their students in their classroom. And what President Trump is saying is, let’s put it back in the hands of the teachers. Let’s take the money, let the school board, and allow the superintendent and allow the principal and allow the teachers to be involved in how to educate their kids.” 
    “Where we went wrong was, we took the Department of Education and started thinking a lot of people from Washington, DC knew best how to teach our kids… You’re just going to see a lot more involvement out of your local school boards and a lot more responsibility going to your superintendent, your principal and your teachers in the classrooms.”  
    On deporting criminal illegal aliens: 
    “The President’s well within his authority to do it, he should be able to do it. I mean, why is it bad to be deporting illegals that are here illegally? Obviously, they’re here illegally. These same judges didn’t do one single thing to stop the previous administration from allowing these criminals to come into our country, and now when we’re trying to deport them out of our country, now all of a sudden, these judges are speaking up? That’s a problem… They don’t want them in their neighborhood.”  
    On false rumors about cuts to benefits: 
    “The President has made it very clear, we’re not cutting benefits to anybody, not anyone on Social Security, not anybody on Medicare, Medicaid or VA benefits. That’s absolutely not happening. Now are we looking at making cuts because they’re bloated? Yes. Are we looking at shrinking the workforce in some of these places? Absolutely. The critical ones, no. But the government has absolutely impregnated itself since COVID… We’ve just seen a lot more employees coming in than we should have.”  
    On tariffs: 
    “That’s why you see a huge boost in manufacturing coming back to the United States. You’re seeing foreign companies that have been shipping their products into the United States, now they are saying that they’re going to invest in our manufacturing, which is exactly what the President wants. And at the same time, we’re not looking for a trade war for anybody. We’re just looking to be treated fairly, and fairly means the same. We want you to be treated just like we’re being treated.”  

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Our research shows the harm the two-child limit on benefits is doing. Only scrapping it can end this

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Kate Andersen, Research Fellow, School for Business and Society, University of York

    Malysheva Liudmyla/Shutterstock

    Since the UK Labour government took office in summer 2024, calls have intensified to scrap both the “two-child limit” – which restricts support for children through universal credit to two children – and the overall benefit cap. With Chancellor Rachel Reeves resisting this pressure as she tries to manage deteriorating public finances, ways of tweaking the two-child limit policy have been proposed.

    But as researchers of child poverty, we have no doubt that the best place to start reducing the high and rising numbers of children growing up in poverty in Britain today is by fully abolishing the two-child limit and the benefit cap.

    We argue that both policies are astoundingly unfair. As our four-year research programme has documented, both are causing wide-ranging harm to children. They restrict children’s everyday experiences and damage their ability to thrive – which in the long run affects everyone in the UK.

    Children live in poverty because their families don’t have an adequate income. This is partly a simple question of maths: wages don’t adjust when there are more mouths to feed. It’s also partly because things happen unexpectedly for some families – job loss, disability, relationship breakdown – leaving them needing extra support for a period of time.

    Countries across Europe respond to these dual challenges by providing financial support that adjusts to family needs. Until recently, the UK did too. Indeed, the UK welfare state was one of the pioneers of “family allowances” in the post-war period.

    But since 2017, the UK has reformed the system so that in families with three or more children, the support on offer when things go wrong deliberately and explicitly falls far short of what is needed. The UK’s two-child limit, an approach that differs to other countries in Europe, restricts means-tested support to two children in a family only. It bakes child poverty into the fibre of the UK.

    Its sister policy, the benefit cap, limits the maximum benefit amount available to households without adults in work. This removes further help from some of the most vulnerable.


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    Struggling to get by

    The parents we spoke to frequently talked of difficulties in affording basic necessities for their children, including clothes and food. Many parents had resorted to using foodbanks or cut back on food spending.




    Read more:
    ‘When you’ve got nothing in your belly, you can’t concentrate’: teachers on the food banks they run in schools


    The material impacts also affected children’s education and their social and emotional wellbeing. Jessica is a single mum of four. Her business went under during the pandemic and her partner left the household, leaving her affected by both the two-child limit and the benefit cap.

    When a hole appeared in Jessica’s daughter’s school shoes, there was no money to replace them straight away. Her daughter went to school wearing trainers and was put in isolation for not adhering to the dress code. Jessica explained:

    I got the phone call to say she had to go into isolation and, and things and I just said, “I’m not the type of person that just has £20 sat in the bank” … it was kind of a bit public shaming her really, taking her away and putting her in isolation.

    Our interviews also showed that, despite parents’ best efforts to shield them, children are often aware of household financial hardship and in turn try to protect their parents. Christina, a mum of three affected by the two-child limit, said of her middle child:

    He won’t say he needs new clothes and he won’t say his shoes don’t fit anymore … I think he’s got it into his head now that we can’t go out and spend or he can’t ask, and I feel so bad for that.

    Our research also documents the importance of abolishing the benefit cap alongside the two-child limit. Otherwise, some families affected by the two-child limit won’t see much financial gain, while others will be newly pushed into the benefit cap.

    Complete removal

    Suggested alternatives to the full abolition of the two child limit include a “three-child limit”, or an exemption for children under five. These options would undoubtedly help some families, but would leave many of those in the greatest need still struggling.

    Families are struggling to get the food they need.
    Klemzy/Shutterstock

    Pound for pound, a three-child limit is less effective at reducing poverty than simple abolition, precisely because it is less well targeted on those in deepest poverty. An exemption for under fives would create a new cliff edge, removing significant support on a child’s fifth birthday, even though we know that the costs of children rise as children get older.

    Further, these approaches continue to enforce a separation between what a family needs and its entitlement to support, and therefore will continue to embed child poverty as an institutional feature of our social security system. Children’s life chances will continue to be circumscribed by the number of siblings they have. Given what we know about the long-term costs of child poverty for society, these are short-sighted ways to save money today.

    It is very encouraging that the government has committed to a child poverty strategy, and that the prime minister has said he will be “laser focused” on tackling child poverty.

    But, as we wait for the strategy to be published, the number of children harmed by the two-child limit rises daily. Nearly two-in-five larger families are now affected and this is predicted to rise to 61% of larger families by the time the two-child limit has full coverage.

    If the child poverty strategy is to have real impact, its starting point is straightforward: both the two-child limit and the benefit cap need to go, and urgently, before more damage is done to children’s lives.

    Kate Andersen received funding from the Nuffield Foundation and the Research England Policy Support Fund facilitated by The York Policy Engine for the research reported in this article.

    Kitty Stewart has received funding from the Nuffield Foundation for the research reported in this article.

    ref. Our research shows the harm the two-child limit on benefits is doing. Only scrapping it can end this – https://theconversation.com/our-research-shows-the-harm-the-two-child-limit-on-benefits-is-doing-only-scrapping-it-can-end-this-252250

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: National recognition for Sellafield’s young nuclear professionals

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    National recognition for Sellafield’s young nuclear professionals

    A double win for Sellafield Ltd at the UK Nuclear Skills Awards.

    Sellafield Ltd winners at the UK Nuclear Skills Awards 2025. Anouschka Van Mourik (left), Rachel Gleaves (right).

    There’s no shortage of talent at Sellafield Ltd, as highlighted at the recent UK Nuclear Skills Awards where Anouschka Van Mourik and Rachel Gleaves picked up the Graduate of the Year (Science, Technology and Engineering) and the Higher & Degree Apprentice of the Year award respectively.

    The UK Nuclear Skills Awards are organised by the National Skills Academy for Nuclear (NSAN) and Cogent Skills. The awards highlight the excellence that exists within the nuclear sector.

    Anouschka Van Mourik is a commissioning engineer who has recently completed the Sellafield Ltd graduate scheme.

    In winning the award, Anouschka was recognised for her exceptional contributions and rapid development as a graduate. In her drive to exceed expectations, she was praised for her technical intelligence, innovative problem-solving abilities and leadership skills. Anouschka was also recognised for her active promotion of STEM and diversity within the organisation.

    Anouschka said:

    I’m delighted to have won this award amongst an impressive shortlist of fellow nuclear professionals, and this has been a fantastic way to complete my two-year graduate scheme.

    During my time as a graduate, I’ve been able to contribute to many meaningful projects that have not only helped me to develop professionally but have also helped to enhance safety on the Sellafield site.

    I have been able to do my core role whilst promoting diversity at Sellafield as chair of the Gender Balance Network and as a Diversity Committee member. I look forward to continuing this work alongside my professional development at Sellafield.

    Rachel Gleaves, a control systems engineer at Sellafield Ltd who finished her apprenticeship in 2024, was recognised at the event for her exceptional work ethic, leadership, and dedication to both the profession and community.

    She was described as a true role model to the wider industry. and was praised for her contribution to key business targets in nuclear hazard reduction, and her commitment to diversity, inclusion and education.

    Rachel said:

    As an apprentice at Sellafield I have been privileged to be able to work alongside industry experts to contribute to solving world-first nuclear decommissioning challenges.

    I’ve been provided with endless opportunities to get involved with passions outside my usual day job. I am the founder and chair of the Sellafield Degree Apprentice Council, and also support our Women in Operational Technology Group by promoting engineering careers through STEM initiatives.

    I’m so proud to have been recognised alongside some of the most skilled professionals within the nuclear sector.

    Moneka Duffy, a mechanical designer at Sellafield Ltd, also received an acknowledgement in the Higher & Degree Apprentice of the Year award. She was shortlisted due to her exceptional contributions and rapid development within the challenging field of radioactive waste management.

    Lauren Lesiak, Education Manager at Sellafield Ltd said:

    We have always aimed to create a high calibre of budding nuclear professionals through our graduate and apprenticeship schemes.

    Having multiple nominations at these prestigious industry awards is credit to the quality of learning and development they receive with us, and the opportunities available within our wide range of programmes.

    We’re incredibly proud of all three of our nominees – they are a testament to Sellafield, the nuclear industry and their professions.

    As a committed member of NSAN, Sellafield Ltd sponsored the Best Employer & Training Provider Partnership Supporter award. This was won by BAE Systems Submarines & Blackpool and The Fylde College & the Fylde College.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom