Category: Politics

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Impact of the closure of USAID on Latin America, in particular on the seven million Venezuelan refugees – E-000576/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-000576/2025/rev.1
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Francisco Assis (S&D)

    The freezing of aid provided by the US Agency for International Development will harm vulnerable populations around the world. Having been a priority for USAID, Latin America will be one of the most affected regions with the end of humanitarian assistance and civil society support programmes on various fronts.

    One of the most worrying consequences of the announced dismantling of USAID concerns the seven million Venezuelans who, fleeing poverty and authoritarianism in their country, have sought refuge in neighbouring countries, such as Colombia (the biggest beneficiary of this agency in the region), or who are living precariously in refugee camps, such as on the border with Brazil.

    Recently, the EU has demonstrated a geopolitical commitment to South America and its development with the conclusion of a historic agreement with Mercosur.

    In light of the above:

    • 1.How does the Commission intend to mitigate the impact of the end of USAID on the humanitarian situation of Venezuelan refugees?
    • 2.Is the Commission prepared to move forward with alternative sources of funding to maintain the aforesaid programmes in the region thereby sending a powerful political message to the world with this gesture?

    Submitted: 7.2.2025

    Last updated: 5 March 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Commission funding of Mercosur countries – E-000586/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-000586/2025/rev.1
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Piotr Müller (ECR)

    On 6 December 2024, the EU and Mercosur countries (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay) concluded negotiations on a partnership agreement, which had been ongoing intermittently since 2000. The agreement covers three main areas: trade, political dialogue and sectoral cooperation, including migration, the digital economy and human rights.

    The Commission has announced that it will provide EUR 1.8 billion to support the green and digital transitions in Mercosur countries. These funds are to come from the EU budget as part of the Global Gateway initiative. This decision has caused controversy because some observers believe it may be a form of incentive or pressure to finalise the trade agreement.

    In this context, I would welcome answers to the following questions:

    • 1.Is the allocation of EUR 1.8 billion to Mercosur countries in any way dependent on the eventual signing and ratification of the EU-Mercosur trade agreement?
    • 2.Do these funds form part of the political conditions attached to the negotiation of the trade agreement? If so, who made this decision and how was it made?
    • 3.Did the Commission consult the Member States on the decision to allocate funds to the Mercosur countries before it was taken? If so, what procedure was followed and which countries were consulted?

    Please provide precise answers to these questions.

    Submitted: 9.2.2025

    Last updated: 5 March 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – TikTok campaign in Romania – E-000026/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    Free and fair elections are at the core of democracy. The conduct and the organisation of elections is a competence of the Member States, in accordance with their national constitutional rules and legislation, as well as their international obligations and EU law. National authorities and courts are primarily responsible for ensuring compliance with the applicable rules.

    The Commission supports Member States on electoral matters, mainly through the European cooperation network on elections[1]. This brings together authorities with competence in elections to exchange information and best practices. In 2023, the Commission also issued a recommendation on inclusive and resilient elections[2].

    The Digital Services Act (DSA)[3] sets rules for online intermediaries and platforms. In 2024, the Commission issued Guidelines for providers of Very Large Online Platforms and Search Engines to mitigate systemic risks linked to electoral processes[4].

    In the context of the Romanian presidential elections, on 5 December 2024, the Commission issued a retention order to TikTok[5] and, on 17 December 2024, opened formal proceedings[6] against the provider of TikTok for suspected DSA breach.

    The proceedings focus on management of risks to elections or civic discourse linked to TikTok’s recommender systems and policies on political advertisements and paid-for political content.

    The regulation on political advertising[7], entering into full application in October 2025 , will strengthen the transparency and accountability in the use of political advertising.

    The Commission’s forthcoming Democracy Shield will aim to strengthen free and fair elections and the integrity of electoral processes in the EU.

    • [1] https://commission.europa.eu/strategy-and-policy/policies/justice-and-fundamental-rights/democracy-eu-citizenship-anti-corruption/democracy-and-electoral-rights/european-cooperation-network-elections_en
    • [2] Commission Recommendation (EU) 2023/2829 on inclusive and resilient electoral processes in the Union and enhancing the European nature and efficient conduct of the elections to the European Parliament, OJ L, 2023/2829, 20.12.2023.
    • [3] Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 October 2022 on a Single Market For Digital Services and amending Directive 2000/31/EC (Digital Services Act), OJ L 277, 27.10.2022, p. 1-102.
    • [4] Communication from the Commission — Commission Guidelines for providers of Very Large Online Platforms and Very Large Online Search Engines on the mitigation of systemic risks for electoral processes pursuant to Article 35(3) of Regulation (EU) 2022/2065, https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/C/2024/3014/oj/eng
    • [5] https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_24_6243
    • [6] https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_24_6487
    • [7] Regulation (EU) 2024/900 on the transparency and targeting of political advertising, OJ L, 2024/900, 20.3.2024.
    Last updated: 5 March 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Actual or foreseeable negative effects of Elon Musk’s statements on civic discourse, electoral processes and freedom and pluralism of the media under the DSA – E-000191/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Digital Services Act (DSA)[1] does not regulate what is legal or illegal content, or individual expressions or statements online which are protected by the right to freedom of expression, as enshrined in Article 11 of the EU Charter, within the boundaries defined in applicable EU or national laws.

    The Commission has opened ten proceedings against designated very large online platforms under the DSA, including against X for suspected breaches of the DSA, regarding a suspected lack of compliance with, amongst others, Articles 34(1) and (2) and 35(1) DSA.

    These provisions oblige providers of designated very large online platforms and online search engines to diligently identify, analyse and assess systemic risks, and put in place effective mitigation measures.

    The current investigations against X comprise risks linked to civic discourse and elections in the EU, including risks stemming from the design and functioning of its algorithmic systems[2].

    On 17 January 2025, the Commission ordered the provider of X[3] to preserve internal documents and information regarding the future design and functioning of its recommender algorithms while also requesting internal documentation on its recommender system relating to past changes, and to grant access to certain technical interfaces (APIs) to allow direct fact-finding on content moderation and virality of accounts.

    These measures will allow the Commission to take all relevant facts into account when assessing X’s compliance with the DSA . All actions related to ongoing investigations are confidential until publicly communicated.

    • [1] Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 October 2022 on a Single Market For Digital Services and amending Directive 2000/31/EC (Digital Services Act), OJ L 277, 27.10.2022, p. 1-102.
    • [2] https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/list-designated-vlops-and-vloses
    • [3] https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/commission-addresses-additional-investigatory-measures-x-ongoing-proceedings-under-digital-services
    Last updated: 5 March 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: REPORT on the proposal for the appointment of the Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board – A10-0026/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION

    on the proposal for the appointment of the Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board

    (N10-0006/2025 – C10‑0032/2025 – 2025/0903(NLE))

    (Approval)

    The European Parliament,

     having regard to the proposal of the Commission of 19 February 2025 for the appointment of Miguel Carcaño Saenz Cenzano as Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board (C10‑0032/2025),

     having regard to Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 July 2014 establishing uniform rules and a uniform procedure for the resolution of credit institutions and certain investment firms in the framework of a Single Resolution Mechanism and a Single Resolution Fund and amending Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010[1],

     having regard to its resolution of 14 March 2019 on gender balance in EU economic and monetary affairs nominations[2],

     having regard to its resolution of 16 January 2020 on institutions and bodies of the Economic and Monetary Union: preventing post-public employment conflicts of interest[3],

     having regard to Rule 135 of its Rules of Procedure,

     having regard to the report of the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (A10-0026/2025),

    A. whereas Article 56(4) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014 provides that the Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board referred to in Article 56(3) of that Regulation is to be appointed on the basis of merit, skills, knowledge of banking and financial matters, and of experience relevant to financial supervision, regulation and bank resolution;

    B. whereas Parliament is committed to ensuring gender balance in top positions in the field of banking and financial services; whereas all Union and national institutions and bodies should implement concrete measures to ensure gender balance;

    C. whereas in accordance with Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, on 15 January 2025 the Commission adopted a shortlist for the position of a Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board;

    D. whereas in accordance with Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, the Commission provided the shortlist to Parliament;

    E. whereas on 19 February 2025, the Commission adopted a proposal to appoint Miguel Carcaño Saenz Cenzano as Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board and transmitted that proposal to Parliament;

    F. whereas the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs then proceeded to evaluate the credentials of the proposed candidate for the functions of Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board, in particular in view of the requirements laid down in Article 56(4) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014;

    G. whereas on 3 March 2025, the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs held a hearing with Miguel Carcaño Saenz Cenzano, at which he made an opening statement and then answered questions put by members of the Committee;

    1. Approves the appointment of Miguel Carcaño Saenz Cenzano as Vice-Chair of the Single Resolution Board for a period of five years;

    2. Instructs its President to forward this decision to the European Council, the Council, the Commission and the governments of the Member States.

    EXPLANATORY STATEMENT

    This report has been drawn up following the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs’ exercise of the powers granted to Parliament under Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, in particular Article 56 thereof, and following the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs’ established procedures in the matter of appointments to regulatory and supervisory bodies in the economic and financial domain.

    ANNEX: ENTITIES OR PERSONS FROM WHOM THE RAPPORTEUR HAS RECEIVED INPUT

    The rapporteur declares under her exclusive responsibility that she did not receive input from any entity or person to be mentioned in this Annex pursuant to Article 8 of Annex I to the Rules of Procedure.

    INFORMATION ON ADOPTION IN COMMITTEE RESPONSIBLE

    Date adopted

    3.3.2025

     

     

     

    Result of final vote

    +:

    –:

    0:

    41

    2

    1

    Members present for the final vote

    Georgios Aftias, Francisco Assis, Fabio De Masi, Engin Eroglu, Marco Falcone, Jonás Fernández, Dirk Gotink, Enikő Győri, Eero Heinäluoma, Kinga Kollár, Tomáš Kubín, Marlena Maląg, Siegfried Mureşan, Fernando Navarrete Rojas, Denis Nesci, Luděk Niedermayer, Nikos Papandreou, Gaetano Pedulla’, Lídia Pereira, Sirpa Pietikäinen, Pierre Pimpie, Jaroslava Pokorná Jermanová, Paulius Saudargas, Pasquale Tridico, Stéphanie Yon-Courtin, Auke Zijlstra

    Substitutes present for the final vote

    Regina Doherty, Niels Fuglsang, Michael Gahler, Alexander Jungbluth, Fernand Kartheiser, Camilla Laureti, Morten Løkkegaard, Eva Maydell, Maria Ohisalo

    Members under Rule 216(7) present for the final vote

    Nikola Bartůšek, Jaroslav Bžoch, Veronika Cifrová Ostrihoňová, Jens Geier, Borja Giménez Larraz, Elisabeth Grossmann, Villy Søvndal, Anna Strolenberg, Lara Wolters

     

     

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: REPORT on the proposal for the appointment of a member of the Single Resolution Board – A10-0024/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION

    on the proposal for the appointment of a member of the Single Resolution Board

    (N10-0004/2025 – C10‑0030/2025 – 2025/0901(NLE))

    (Approval)

    The European Parliament,

     having regard to the proposal of the Commission of 19 February 2025 for the appointment of Radek Urban as Member of the Single Resolution Board (C10‑0030/2025),

     having regard to Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 July 2014 establishing uniform rules and a uniform procedure for the resolution of credit institutions and certain investment firms in the framework of a Single Resolution Mechanism and a Single Resolution Fund and amending Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010[1],

     having regard to its resolution of 14 March 2019 on gender balance in EU economic and monetary affairs nominations[2],

     having regard to its resolution of 16 January 2020 on institutions and bodies of the Economic and Monetary Union: preventing post-public employment conflicts of interest[3],

      having regard to Rule 135 of its Rules of Procedure,

     having regard to the report of the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (A10-0024/2025),

    A. whereas Article 56(4) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014 provides that the members of the Single Resolution Board referred to in Article 43(1), point (b), of that Regulation are to be appointed on the basis of merit, skills, knowledge of banking and financial matters, and of experience relevant to financial supervision, regulation and bank resolution;

    B. whereas Parliament is committed to ensuring gender balance in top positions in the field of banking and financial services; whereas all Union and national institutions and bodies should implement concrete measures to ensure gender balance;

    C. whereas in accordance with Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, on 15 January 2025 the Commission adopted a shortlist for the position of Member of the Single Resolution Board;

    D. whereas in accordance with Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, the Commission provided the shortlist to Parliament;

    E. whereas on 19 February 2025, the Commission adopted a proposal to appoint Radek Urban as Member of the Single Resolution Board and transmitted that proposal to Parliament;

    F. whereas the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs then proceeded to evaluate the credentials of the proposed candidate for the functions of Member of the Single Resolution Board, in particular in view of the requirements laid down in Article 56(4) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014;

    G. whereas on 3 March 2025, the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs held a hearing with Radek Urban, at which he made an opening statement and then answered questions put by members of the Committee;

    1. Approves the appointment of Radek Urban as Member of the Single Resolution Board for a period of five years;

    2. Instructs its President to forward this decision to the European Council, the Council, the Commission and the governments of the Member States.

    EXPLANATORY STATEMENT

    This report has been drawn up following the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs’ exercise of the powers granted to Parliament under Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, in particular Article 56 thereof, and following the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs’ established procedures in the matter of appointments to regulatory and supervisory bodies in the economic and financial domain.

    ANNEX: ENTITIES OR PERSONS FROM WHOM THE RAPPORTEUR HAS RECEIVED INPUT

    The rapporteur declares under her exclusive responsibility that she did not receive input from any entity or person to be mentioned in this Annex pursuant to Article 8 of Annex I to the Rules of Procedure.

    INFORMATION ON ADOPTION IN COMMITTEE RESPONSIBLE

    Date adopted

    3.3.2025

     

     

     

    Result of final vote

    +:

    –:

    0:

    41

    1

    2

    Members present for the final vote

    Georgios Aftias, Francisco Assis, Fabio De Masi, Engin Eroglu, Marco Falcone, Jonás Fernández, Dirk Gotink, Enikő Győri, Eero Heinäluoma, Kinga Kollár, Tomáš Kubín, Marlena Maląg, Siegfried Mureşan, Fernando Navarrete Rojas, Denis Nesci, Luděk Niedermayer, Nikos Papandreou, Gaetano Pedulla’, Lídia Pereira, Sirpa Pietikäinen, Pierre Pimpie, Jaroslava Pokorná Jermanová, Paulius Saudargas, Pasquale Tridico, Stéphanie Yon-Courtin, Auke Zijlstra

    Substitutes present for the final vote

    Regina Doherty, Niels Fuglsang, Michael Gahler, Alexander Jungbluth, Fernand Kartheiser, Camilla Laureti, Morten Løkkegaard, Eva Maydell, Maria Ohisalo

    Members under Rule 216(7) present for the final vote

    Nikola Bartůšek, Jaroslav Bžoch, Veronika Cifrová Ostrihoňová, Jens Geier, Borja Giménez Larraz, Elisabeth Grossmann, Villy Søvndal, Anna Strolenberg, Lara Wolters

     

     

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: REPORT on the proposal for the appointment of a member of the Single Resolution Board – A10-0025/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION

    on the proposal for the appointment of a member of the Single Resolution Board

    (N10-0005/2025 – C10‑0031/2025 – 2025/0902(NLE))

    (Approval)

    The European Parliament,

     having regard to the proposal of the Commission of 19 February 2025 for the appointment of Slavka Eley as Member of the Single Resolution Board (C10‑0031/2025),

     having regard to Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 July 2014 establishing uniform rules and a uniform procedure for the resolution of credit institutions and certain investment firms in the framework of a Single Resolution Mechanism and a Single Resolution Fund and amending Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010[1],

     having regard to its resolution of 14 March 2019 on gender balance in EU economic and monetary affairs nominations[2],

     having regard to its resolution of 16 January 2020 on institutions and bodies of the Economic and Monetary Union: preventing post-public employment conflicts of interest[3],

     having regard to Rule 135 of its Rules of Procedure,

     having regard to the report of the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (A10-0025/2025),

    A. whereas Article 56(4) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014 provides that the members of the Single Resolution Board referred to in Article 43(1), point (b), of that Regulation are to be appointed on the basis of merit, skills, knowledge of banking and financial matters, and of experience relevant to financial supervision, regulation and bank resolution;

    B. whereas Parliament is committed to ensuring gender balance in top positions in the field of banking and financial services; whereas all Union and national institutions and bodies should implement concrete measures to ensure gender balance;

    C. whereas in accordance with Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, on 15 January 2025 the Commission adopted a shortlist for the position of Member of the Single Resolution Board;

    D. whereas in accordance with Article 56(6) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, the Commission provided the shortlist to Parliament;

    E. whereas on 19 February 2025, the Commission adopted a proposal to appoint Slavka Eley as Member of the Single Resolution Board and transmitted that proposal to Parliament;

    F. whereas the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs then proceeded to evaluate the credentials of the proposed candidate for the functions of Member of the Single Resolution Board, in particular in view of the requirements laid down in Article 56(4) of Regulation (EU) No 806/2014;

    G. whereas on 3 March 2025, the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs held a hearing with Slavka Eley, at which she made an opening statement and then answered questions put by members of the Committee;

    1. Approves the appointment of Slavka Eley as Member of the Single Resolution Board for a period of five years;

    2. Instructs its President to forward this decision to the European Council, the Council, the Commission and the governments of the Member States.

    EXPLANATORY STATEMENT

    This report has been drawn up following the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs’ exercise of the powers granted to Parliament under Regulation (EU) No 806/2014, in particular Article 56 thereof, and following the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs’ established procedures in the matter of appointments to regulatory and supervisory bodies in the economic and financial domain.

    ANNEX: ENTITIES OR PERSONS FROM WHOM THE RAPPORTEUR HAS RECEIVED INPUT

    The rapporteur declares under her exclusive responsibility that she did not receive input from any entity or person to be mentioned in this Annex pursuant to Article 8 of Annex I to the Rules of Procedure.

     

    INFORMATION ON ADOPTION IN COMMITTEE RESPONSIBLE

    Date adopted

    3.3.2025

     

     

     

    Result of final vote

    +:

    –:

    0:

    41

    1

    2

    Members present for the final vote

    Georgios Aftias, Francisco Assis, Fabio De Masi, Engin Eroglu, Marco Falcone, Jonás Fernández, Dirk Gotink, Enikő Győri, Eero Heinäluoma, Kinga Kollár, Tomáš Kubín, Marlena Maląg, Siegfried Mureşan, Fernando Navarrete Rojas, Denis Nesci, Luděk Niedermayer, Nikos Papandreou, Gaetano Pedulla’, Lídia Pereira, Sirpa Pietikäinen, Pierre Pimpie, Jaroslava Pokorná Jermanová, Paulius Saudargas, Pasquale Tridico, Stéphanie Yon-Courtin, Auke Zijlstra

    Substitutes present for the final vote

    Regina Doherty, Niels Fuglsang, Michael Gahler, Alexander Jungbluth, Fernand Kartheiser, Camilla Laureti, Morten Løkkegaard, Eva Maydell, Maria Ohisalo

    Members under Rule 216(7) present for the final vote

    Nikola Bartůšek, Jaroslav Bžoch, Veronika Cifrová Ostrihoňová, Jens Geier, Borja Giménez Larraz, Elisabeth Grossmann, Villy Søvndal, Anna Strolenberg, Lara Wolters

     

     

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Radware and CHT Security Join Forces to Deliver AI-Powered Application Security in Taiwan

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MAHWAH, N.J., March 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Radware® (NASDAQ: RDWR), a global leader in application security and delivery solutions for multi-cloud environments, today announced it signed a managed security service provider (MSSP) agreement with CHT Security (stock code: 7765). The new agreement represents an expansion of an existing relationship. CHT Security, one of Taiwan’s leading MSSPs, is a subsidiary and security arm of Chunghwa Telecom Co., Ltd., the largest telco in the country.

    CHT Security is leveraging Radware’s AI-powered Cloud Application Protection Services to further enhance its product portfolio and offer customers across Taiwan state-of-the-art application security. CHT Security also uses Radware’s on-prem DefensePro® DDoS Protection to defend its customers against cyber attacks.

    The agreement comes at a time when the frequency and intensity of cyber attacks is increasing in the region. According to a Radware threat advisory, Pro-Russian hacktivist groups, including NoName057(16), RipperSec, and the Cyber Army of Russia, launched a series of DDoS attacks against more than 50 targets in Taiwan, including government sites, airports, and financial services organizations. In addition, the rapid development of network technology and continuous software and hardware updates are creating security gaps for enterprise websites and applications, leaving them vulnerable to zero-day attacks and exposing them to the risk of hacker extortion and data leakage.

    To address organizations’ application security needs, Radware’s Cloud Application Protection Service offers a one-stop shop that includes an industry-leading web application firewall (WAF), bot detection and management, API protection, client-side protection, and application-layer DDoS protection. Combining end-to-end automation, AI-powered algorithms, behavioral-based detection, and 24/7 managed services, the solution defends against 150+ known attack vectors. This includes the OWASP’s Top 10 Web Application Security Risks, Top 10 API Security Vulnerabilities, and Top 21 Automated Threats to Web Applications.

    “We are looking forward to partnering with Radware to expand our product offering and engage with customers at an even higher level of service,” said Jeff Hung, general manager from CHT Security. “Combined with CHT Security’s rich practical experience and 24X7 expert SOC team, we can provide our customers with multi-layered defense services against today’s most sophisticated threats.”

    Today, CHT Security offers cybersecurity services to more than 300 large-sized enterprises, more than 40,000 small and medium-sized enterprises, and a million individual and household clients. The company’s clientele includes government agencies, financial institutions, high-tech companies, healthcare, retail, and critical infrastructure sectors.

    “We are excited to expand our long-standing relationship with CHT Security,” said Yaniv Hoffman, Radware’s vice president of sales in APAC. “It is becoming increasingly difficult for already short-staffed security teams to defend against a threat landscape that is constantly evolving with more frequent and complex attacks. Through our joint efforts, we can not only help organizations solve these challenges and increase the security around their critical assets, but also create a win-win for the Taiwan market.”

    Radware has received numerous awards for its solutions. Industry analysts such as Aite-Novarica Group, Forrester Research, Gartner, GigaOm, IDC, KuppingerCole, and Quadrant Knowledge Solutions continue to recognize Radware as a market leader in cyber security.

    About Radware
    Radware® (NASDAQ: RDWR) is a global leader in application security and delivery solutions for multi-cloud environments. The company’s cloud application, infrastructure, and API security solutions use AI-driven algorithms for precise, hands-free, real-time protection from the most sophisticated web, application, and DDoS attacks, API abuse, and bad bots. Enterprises and carriers worldwide rely on Radware’s solutions to address evolving cybersecurity challenges and protect their brands and business operations while reducing costs. For more information, please visit the Radware website.

    Radware encourages you to join our community and follow us on: Facebook, LinkedIn, Radware Blog, X, and YouTube.

    ©2025 Radware Ltd. All rights reserved. Any Radware products and solutions mentioned in this press release are protected by trademarks, patents, and pending patent applications of Radware in the U.S. and other countries. For more details, please see: https://www.radware.com/LegalNotice/. All other trademarks and names are property of their respective owners.

    Radware believes the information in this document is accurate in all material respects as of its publication date. However, the information is provided without any express, statutory, or implied warranties and is subject to change without notice.

    The contents of any website or hyperlinks mentioned in this press release are for informational purposes and the contents thereof are not part of this press release.

    Safe Harbor Statement
    This press release includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any statements made herein that are not statements of historical fact, including statements about Radware’s plans, outlook, beliefs, or opinions, are forward-looking statements. Generally, forward-looking statements may be identified by words such as “believes,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “estimates,” “plans,” and similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “should,” “would,” “may,” and “could.” For example, when we say in this press release that through our joint efforts, we can not only help organizations solve these challenges and increase the security around their critical assets, but also create a win-win for the Taiwan market, we are using forward-looking statements. Because such statements deal with future events, they are subject to various risks and uncertainties, and actual results, expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements, could differ materially from Radware’s current forecasts and estimates. Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include, but are not limited to: the impact of global economic conditions, including as a result of the state of war declared in Israel in October 2023 and instability in the Middle East, the war in Ukraine, and the tensions between China and Taiwan; our dependence on independent distributors to sell our products; our ability to manage our anticipated growth effectively; a shortage of components or manufacturing capacity could cause a delay in our ability to fulfill orders or increase our manufacturing costs; our business may be affected by sanctions, export controls, and similar measures, targeting Russia and other countries and territories, as well as other responses to Russia’s military conflict in Ukraine, including indefinite suspension of operations in Russia and dealings with Russian entities by many multi-national businesses across a variety of industries; the ability of vendors to provide our hardware platforms and components for the manufacture of our products; our ability to attract, train, and retain highly qualified personnel; intense competition in the market for cyber security and application delivery solutions and in our industry in general, and changes in the competitive landscape; our ability to develop new solutions and enhance existing solutions; the impact to our reputation and business in the event of real or perceived shortcomings, defects, or vulnerabilities in our solutions, if our end-users experience security breaches, if our information technology systems and data, or those of our service providers and other contractors, are compromised by cyber-attackers or other malicious actors or by a critical system failure; outages, interruptions, or delays in hosting services; the risks associated with our global operations, such as difficulties and costs of staffing and managing foreign operations, compliance costs arising from host country laws or regulations, partial or total expropriation, export duties and quotas, local tax exposure, economic or political instability, including as a result of insurrection, war, natural disasters, and major environmental, climate, or public health concerns, such as the COVID-19 pandemic; our net losses in the past two years and possibility we may incur losses in the future; a slowdown in the growth of the cyber security and application delivery solutions market or in the development of the market for our cloud-based solutions; long sales cycles for our solutions; risks and uncertainties relating to acquisitions or other investments; risks associated with doing business in countries with a history of corruption or with foreign governments; changes in foreign currency exchange rates; risks associated with undetected defects or errors in our products; our ability to protect our proprietary technology; intellectual property infringement claims made by third parties; laws, regulations, and industry standards affecting our business; compliance with open source and third-party licenses; and other factors and risks over which we may have little or no control. This list is intended to identify only certain of the principal factors that could cause actual results to differ. For a more detailed description of the risks and uncertainties affecting Radware, refer to Radware’s Annual Report on Form 20-F, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the other risk factors discussed from time to time by Radware in reports filed with, or furnished to, the SEC. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are made and, except as required by applicable law, Radware undertakes no commitment to revise or update any forward-looking statement in order to reflect events or circumstances after the date any such statement is made. Radware’s public filings are available from the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov or may be obtained on Radware’s website at www.radware.com.

    Media Contact:
    Gerri Dyrek
    Radware
    Gerri.Dyrek@radware.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Video: Gaza: To remain an integral part of Palestinian State – Un Chief at Arab Summit | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Remarks by Secretary-General of the United Nations, António Guterres, to the Extraordinary Arab League Summit on the situation in the Middle East/Gaza.

    ———————

    Secretary-General António Guterres said Gaza “must remain an integral part of an independent, democratic and sovereign Palestinian State — with no reductions in its territory or forced transfer of its population.”

    Speaking at the emergency summit of Arab nations on the situation in the Middle East and Gaza reconstruction in Cairo, Guterres welcomed Arab-led efforts to mobilize support for Gaza’s recovery.

    He said, “Palestinians in Gaza have suffered beyond measure. And the risk of even greater devastation looms. This Summit is an important signal that the world has a collective responsibility to support efforts to end this war, relieve profound human suffering and secure lasting peace.”

    The Secretary-General stressed that “we must avoid at all costs the resumption of hostilities that would plunge the millions back into an abyss of suffering and further destabilize the region.” The territorial integrity and the sovereignty of Lebanon and Syria, he added, “must be respected.”

    He stressed that rebuilding the war-ravaged territory must be guided by principles that respect international law and prevent further cycles of violence.

    Guterres said, “ending the immediate crisis is not enough. We need a clear political framework that lays the foundation for Gaza’s recovery, reconstruction and lasting stability. That framework must be based on principles and respect for international law.”

    He emphasized that “Israel’s legitimate security concerns must be addressed, but that should not be through long-term Israeli military presence in Gaza.”

    The Secretary-General said, “reconstruction requires governance and security arrangements that can help guarantee a brighter, more stable future for Palestinians and Israelis alike,” and highlighted “the critical role” of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) “that continues to deliver in the most difficult circumstances.”

    Beyond Gaza, he said, “we see an alarming situation unfolding in the West Bank” and added that “Israeli security forces have launched large-scale operations, including airstrikes and also the deployment of tanks for the first time in over two decades.”

    Guterres said, “over 40,000 Palestinians have been forcibly displaced in the last month — the largest displacement in the West Bank in decades. Meanwhile, demolitions, evictions and settlement expansions continue, while settler violence is on the rise. All of this is further weakening the Palestinian Authority at a time when its role is more crucial than ever. I call for urgent de-escalation. Unilateral actions, including settlement expansion and threats of annexation, must stop.”

    He said, “the Palestinian people must have the right to govern themselves, to chart their own future, and to live on their land in freedom and security. There must be irreversible steps now toward the realization of the two-State solution — before it’s too late. The only path to lasting peace is one where two states — Israel and Palestine — live side-by-side in peace and security, in line with international law and relevant UN resolutions, with Jerusalem as the capital of both states.”

    The war in Gaza has left an unprecedented level of destruction, with an estimated 51 million tons of rubble blanketing the landscape where bustling neighborhoods once thrived.

    According to a new UN damage and needs assessment report, over 60 percent of homes – amounting to some 292,000 – and 65 percent of roads have been destroyed, across the approximately 360 square kilometer enclave.

    UN agencies along with partners, including the World Bank, estimate that $53 billion will be needed for recovery and reconstruction.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=URq17EMBJUo

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Europe: AFRICA/DR CONGO – Killings, kidnappings and forced labor are taking place in the areas occupied by the M23

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Kinshasa (Agenzia Fides) – Killings, kidnappings and forced labor are taking place in Kamanyola, the village in the Ruzizi Plain (in the province of South Kivu in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo) that is on the front line between the pro-Rwandan M23 rebel movement that controls the area and the pro-government “Wazalendo” militiamen (or Bazalendo, see Fides, 4/3/2025). According to a new report sent to Fides by the local civil society association ACMEJ (Association against Evil and for the Supervision of Youth and Human Rights), on March 1, a young man suspected of belonging to the “Wazalendo” militia was killed by M23 soldiers with a targeted shot in the Busama district of Kamanyola. The body of another young man, kidnapped on March 1 in the Rubimba district, was found in a canal on March 3. Also on March 3, the M23 forced young people from Kamanyola to do forced labor to clean the national road no. 5. Those who refused were flogged. There are also reports of severe intimidation of politicians and civil society in the village of Katogota, where patrols of M23 militiamen are stationed near their homes. “This disturbing phenomenon shows that the militiamen have a list of people they want to terrorize or kill because of their opinions,” the report says.On the other side of the front, on March 3, the “Wazalendo” militia carried out attacks against M23 soldiers stationed in the city of Bukavu, the capital of the Congolese province of South Kivu, which was captured by the M23 on February 16 (see Fides, 17/2/2025).Finally, the human rights organization points out that “the Congolese refugees from some villages in the Ruzizi plain, in particular the villages of Katogota, Kamanyola and Luvungi, who have found refuge in the province of Cibitoke in Burundi, are in a difficult situation”. “Although they were well received by the Burundian authorities and the population, they fled empty-handed due to the surprise attack by the M23 on their villages,” the statement says.According to the ACMEJ, the pretext for the Rwandan intervention in the Congolese provinces of North and South Kivu, where it is supposedly intended to protect the Banyamulenge community (Congolese of Rwandan origin), is false. “In reality, the Banyamulenge are part of a community recognized as Congolese and accepted by the other Congolese communities; “among the Congolese Banyamulenge sons and daughters, there are Banyamulenge political leaders, including MPs, ministers, senior military commanders of the armed forces and senior executives of Congolese public companies,” it is emphasized. (L.M.) (Agenzia Fides, 5/3/2025)
    Share:

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK consultancy company highlights 2025 risks for businesses

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    UK consultancy company highlights 2025 risks for businesses

    In 2025, global risks to business will be driven by power vacuums and polarisation, conflict, and the double-edged sword of technological advancement.

    UK based consultancy company Control Risks presented the RiskMap2025 in Guatemala City on 4 March. The event took place at the British Residence with attendance of the British Ambassador, Juliana Correa; government contacts, businesspeople and decision makers.

    According to the RiskMap2025 events will be dominated by the change of administration in the US, ongoing conflicts such as the Ukraine war, increased trade barriers, more political violence and digital concentration of leading technologies, amongst other topics. Marina Pera, Control Risks analyst gave the presentation.

    The British Embassy is committed to support our economic ties with Guatemala with tools such as the RiskMap2025, to encourage better informed decisions and drive prosperity.

    To see the full RiskMap2025, please visit https://www.controlrisks.com/riskmap.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Moor Park and Waverly Park get the green light for improvements

    Source: City of Preston

    Two Preston city parks have been given the green light for a multi-million pound revamp by the city’s Planning Committee this week.

    The plans, submitted by Preston-based S&L Planning Consultants, have been approved and the work will be carried out by Eric Wright Civil Engineering, which is due to start in the summer.

    Councillor Amber Afzal, Cabinet member for planning and regulation at Preston City Council for Planning Regulation and Chair of the Planning Committee said:

    “We are delighted that these plans have been passed and we can get started on the much needed improvements to our city’s treasured green spaces.

    “Given the special listed status that Moor Park enjoys, due respect has been given to the conservation areas and preserving and enhancing the historic park. Any new additions will make a positive contribution to the local character and distinctiveness of our parks.

    Councillor Freddie Bailey, Cabinet Member for Environment and Community Safety said:

    “We are looking forward to the improvements that will enhance our greenspaces that will also help to increase outdoor activity and greater leisure time, improving the health and wellbeing of our communities by delivering new, higher quality and more accessible sports and play facilities, better footpaths and landscaping to enjoy, in a safer environment.” 

    Gavin Hulme, Operations Director at Eric Wright Civil Engineering commented:

    “It’s great news that the planning applications have been passed for Waverley and Moor Parks. We have been working with Preston City Council, relevant stakeholders and our design teams over the last 12 months to ensure the works will bring lasting improvements to these two important parks. We are looking forward to starting works on site later this year and bringing benefits to the local communities.”

    Deborah Smith, Co-Founder of Smith and Love Planning Consultants said:

    “Preston is proud of its parks and we’re thrilled to have played a part in their improvement, providing important spaces for local residents and visitors to enjoy. The rejuvenated parks will also add to the ongoing regeneration of the city.”

    Improvements

    Moor Park

    Moor Park, which is the city’s oldest park and Grade II* listed, will undergo a £4m programme of improvements which include:

    • Extension and de-silting of Serpentine Lake and a new bridge across the lake
    • Improvements to the Loggia and surrounding area (the Loggia is an outdoor corridor with a fully covered roof and outer wall that is open to the elements)
    • Playground improvements
    • Additional tree and shrub planting
    • Improvements to the changing pavilion
    • Groundworks to create wildflower meadows
    • Improvements to the south-east entrance and car park

    Waverley Park

    Waverley Park, nearly £3.5m of improvements were approved at the previous February Planning Committee and include:

    • New Play area
    • Refurbishment of 3 football pitches
    • 1 x pump track
    • skate park improvements
    • Remodelling of car park with 27 x new car park spaces, creating 34 spaces in total
    • Widening footpaths and new landscaping
    • Demolition and rebuild of the football pavilion which already has planning permission
    • Both proposals will be funded by UK Government and are part of a £20m Levelling Up bid made to the previous government’s administration.

    More information

    Planning applications

    • 06/2024/1066 – Waverley Park, New Hall Lane
    • 06/2024/1121 – Moor Park, Moor Park Avenue

    Background of Moor Park

    Established in 1853 and later improved in the 1860s by leading Victorian landscaper Edward Milner, Moor Park was the first municipal park laid out by an industrial town. The design and ornamental character of the park has remained unrelatively unchanged since its inception.

    Preston City Council actively applies and prioritises the principles of Community Wealth Building wherever applicable and appropriate. Community Wealth Building is an approach which aims to ensure the economic system builds wealth and prosperity for everyone.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Open letter to Co-op about land agreements restricting competition

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Correspondence

    Open letter to Co-op about land agreements restricting competition

    The Competition and Market Authority (CMA) has published a letter to Co-operative Group Limited concerning 107 breaches of the Groceries Market Investigation (Controlled Land) Order 2010.

    Documents

    Open letter to Co-op

    List of affected locations

    Details

    At the CMA’s request, Co-operative Group Limited (Co-op) has reviewed all of its land agreements. The CMA has found that these agreements were not compliant with the Groceries Market Investigation (Controlled Land) Order 2010 on 107 occasions. 

    Co-op has taken, and continues to take, steps to correct these breaches and the CMA has published a letter sent to Co-op following its investigation of these breaches. The CMA has also published a list of the locations affected by these breaches. 

    For more information, visit Groceries Market Investigation (Controlled Land) Order 2010.

    Updates to this page

    Published 5 March 2025

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    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: IOM and IHP Expand Humanitarian Hub in Chad to Aid 220,000 Amid Sudan Crisis

    Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    Farchana/ Geneva, 5 March 2025 – The International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the International Humanitarian Partnership (IHP) completed this week the expansion of the humanitarian hub in Farchana, Chad, in a move that will enable as many as 220,000 more people impacted by the escalating crisis in Sudan to receive help.

    The expanded operational and accommodation capacity at the hub will strengthen cross-border interagency humanitarian operations for Sudan, the world’s worst displacement crisis. The expansion comes at a critical time, as the humanitarian crisis in Sudan continues to worsen, with the urgent need for food, shelter, healthcare, and protection at an all-time high. According to recent figures, nearly nine million people in the Darfur region alone require immediate assistance.

    “With the strengthened cross-border operations, IOM has already reached over 82,000 people in Darfur with critical humanitarian aid, and with the expansion of the Farchana hub, we are poised to provide life-saving assistance to an additional 220,000 people in the coming months,” said Pascal Reyntjens, IOM Chief of Mission in Chad. “The hub also enables greater collaboration between humanitarian actors, development agencies, and the government, which is essential for a comprehensive and sustainable response.”

    Since April 2023, more than 11.5 million people have been displaced within Sudan, and an additional 3.5 million have fled across borders, including an estimated 930,000 people who have crossed from Sudan into Chad. The crisis has created unprecedented humanitarian needs in Sudan and neighbouring countries, and the inter-agency humanitarian hub in Farchana, established jointly by IOM and IHP, plays a critical role in coordinating and supporting these cross-border efforts.

    The expansion includes office space, accommodations and other infrastructure that will help increase the operational capabilities of humanitarian organisations working in hard-to-reach field locations in Sudan. These enhancements enable international and national Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and UN agencies to further scale up cross-border operations from Chad into Darfur, where humanitarian needs are rapidly escalating.

    “Establishing a functional compound in eastern Chad was no small feat. The harsh climate, logistical constraints, and remote location pushed our team to its limits,” said Bram Krieps, IHP team leader during the 2024 operation. “But through the strength of IHP’s partnership and the determination of our experts, we turned a challenging environment into a secure and operational base that supports humanitarian cross-border efforts on the ground.”

    Note to editor

    The Farchana humanitarian hub, established in February 2024 with generous support from the governments of Luxembourg, Sweden and Germany through the IHP mechanism, serves as a vital coordination centre for 26 international and national NGOs and UN agencies facilitating cross-border aid delivery into the Darfur region of Sudan. Since its inception, the hub has supported 13 UN agencies, 31 international NGOs, one national NGO, and a government partner in their efforts to reach those most in need.

    Managed by IOM, the expanded humanitarian hub is part of a network of 17 inter-agency humanitarian hubs. These hubs, located across four countries, provide essential office, warehousing and accommodation space for over 1,660 humanitarian personnel, playing a crucial role in facilitating coordinated responses to humanitarian crises worldwide.

    For further information, please contact:

    From IOM:

    In Chad: Christina van Hooreweghe,  iomchadpublicinfo@iom.int

    In Sudan: Lisa George, lgeorge@iom.int

    In Cairo: Joe Lowry, jlowry@iom.int

    In Geneve: Kennedy Okoth, kokoth@iom.int

    From IHP:

    Max Steffen, max.steffen@cgdsi.lu

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI: MEXC Launches Roam (ROAM) with Spot and Futures Trading, Offering 76,000 ROAM & 66,000 USDT to Drive Decentralized Connectivity

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles , March 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — MEXC, the world’s leading cryptocurrency trading platform, announced the listing of the Roam (ROAM) on both spot and futures markets, scheduled for March 6, 2025, at 10:00 (UTC). The launch on MEXC will be accompanied by Airdrop+ rewards of 76,000 ROAM & 66,000 USDT.

    Unleashing Roam: MEXC Supports the Future of Decentralized Connectivity and Blockchain-Powered WiFi

    Roam is redefining internet connectivity by merging blockchain technology with decentralized networking. Designed as a global WiFi network, Roam enables seamless roaming across locations while prioritizing security, privacy, and user incentives. Every connection and check-in within the network earns users rewards, fostering an ecosystem of engaged participants. At its core, Roam leverages OpenRoaming protocols and enterprise-grade components to provide a secure, high-quality internet experience. With the introduction of Roam Miner, users can further benefit from crypto mining, while Roam Tokens facilitate staking and rewards, integrating financial incentives with real-world connectivity.

    By listing Roam, MEXC underscores the growing synergy between blockchain, decentralized infrastructure, and real-world applications. With deep liquidity, seamless market access, and dedicated trading support, MEXC provides the ideal platform for Roam to expand adoption and drive the future of decentralized internet access.

    Celebrate the ROAM Launch with a prize pool of 76,000 ROAM & 66,000 USDT

    MEXC continues its commitment to supporting innovative blockchain projects with the listing of Roam (ROAM). The ROAM/USDT spot trading market will go live in the Innovation Zone on March 6, 2025, at 10:00 (UTC), followed by the launch of ROAM USDT perpetual futures at 10:10 (UTC), offering up to 50x leverage in both cross and isolated margin modes.

    To celebrate the official listing of $ROAM on MEXC, a 76,000 ROAM & 66,000 USDT reward pool will be available through a series of exclusive activities starting March 5, 2025, at 10:00 (UTC). Participants, both new and experienced, will have the opportunity to engage with Roam, explore its potential, and win ROAM, USDT bonuses, and other exciting rewards while contributing to the future of blockchain-powered connectivity.

    These activities include:
    Event 1: Deposit to Share 64,000 ROAM & 16,000 USDT (New User Exclusive).
    Event 2: Futures Challenge — Trade to Share 50,000 USDT in Futures Bonuses.
    The top 2,000 users with trading volumes over 20,000 USDT will share the reward pool, with individual rewards of up to 5,000 USDT.
    Event 3: Invite New Users and Share 12,000 ROAM.
    Event 4: Spread the Word and Win 2,000 ROAM in Bonus.

    Your Easiest Way to Trending Tokens

    MEXC aims to become the go-to platform offering the widest range of valuable crypto assets. The platform has grown its user base to 32 million by offering a diverse selection of tokens, high-frequency airdrops, competitive fees, and comprehensive liquidity. In 2024, MEXC launched a total of 2,376 new tokens, including 1,716 initial listings and 605 memecoins, with total airdrop rewards exceeding $136 million.

    About MEXC

    Founded in 2018, MEXC is committed to being “Your Easiest Way to Crypto”. Serving over 32 million users across 170+ countries, MEXC is known for its broad selection of trending tokens, frequent airdrop opportunities, and low trading fees. Our user-friendly platform is designed to support both new traders and experienced investors, offering secure and efficient access to digital assets. MEXC prioritizes simplicity and innovation, making crypto trading more accessible and rewarding.
    MEXC Official WebsiteXTelegramHow to Sign Up on MEXC

    Contact:
    Lucia Hu
    PR Manager
    lucia.hu@mexc.com

    Disclaimer: This content is provided by MEXC. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. Investing in crypto and mining related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector–including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining–complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed. Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f7c5199a-8138-4512-92d3-f33f4979eced

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Aurora Mobile’s JPush Partners with Bandao News App to Innovate News Delivery Experience

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SHENZHEN, China, March 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Aurora Mobile Limited (NASDAQ: JG) (“Aurora Mobile” or the “Company”), a leading provider of customer engagement and marketing technology services in China, today announced that its push notification solution, JPush, has partnered with Shandong Dazhong Newspaper Group’s Bandao News App, a regional authoritative media platform, to create new news delivery experiences.

    In today’s era of exploding information, users have higher expectations for instant and personalized news content. Bandao News App has always been committed to driving content innovation through technology. By working closely with JPush, the Bandao News App has made the leap from one-way communication to intelligent interaction with users. With millisecond-level delivery, precise push notifications and full scenario coverage, it has redefined the way users connect with news and set a benchmark for the digital transformation of the media industry.

    With real-time news delivery in seconds, Aurora Mobile enables instant communication with zero-time lag.

    Timeliness is a key factor in the value of news. Leveraging JPush’s high concurrency, low latency technology, the Bandao News App can deliver breaking news and major events to users’ devices in real time. For example, during emergencies such as typhoon warnings or traffic control measures, JPush synchronously delivers critical information through multiple channels, including app pop-ups, lock screen notifications, and SMS. This ensures that critical information reaches users in milliseconds, helping them make quick decisions.

    To address the challenges of message stability in complex network environments, JPush fully supports various operating systems including Android, iOS, HarmonyOS, QuickApp, and Web. It is compatible with JPush channels, APNs (Apple Push Notification service), FCM (Firebase Cloud Messaging) and the system-level push messaging channels of various mobile brands such as Huawei, Xiaomi, OPPO, VIVO, Meizu, ASUS, NIO Phone, ensuring timely message delivery. In addition, through intelligent channel optimization strategies, the Bandao News App can maintain high push notification success rates of even under weak network conditions, enabling seamless message delivery.

    With personalized content recommendations, JPush delivers a tailored user experience.

    Bandao News App’s user base is diverse, covering audiences from various sectors such as government affairs, public welfare, finance, and culture. JPush’s user labeling system and AI algorithm provide robust support for precise content distribution. By analyzing users’ reading habits, geographical location, and interest preferences, the system automatically builds user profiles and delivers customized content to different user groups. For example, stock market updates are pushed to financial news readers, while local users receive priority recommendations for community news, significantly improving click-through rates and time spent reading.

    To increase user stickiness, the Bandao News App leverages JPush’s scenario-based messaging capabilities to create a closed-loop “news + service” experience. During major social events, the app embeds interactive features such as polls and topic discussions, with JPush sending real-time reminders to increase community engagement. In local public service scenarios, the app pushes public service information linked to news, such as social service policy interpretations, transforming news from mere reading to action.

    JPush enhances the Baodao News APP by revolutionizing the efficiency of content distribution to enable seamless integration of “content-user-scenario”, improving the user interaction experience. In the future, the Baodao News APP will further leverage JPush’s cross-device capabilities to expand more innovative user experiences.

    About Aurora Mobile Limited

    Founded in 2011, Aurora Mobile (NASDAQ: JG) is a leading provider of customer engagement and marketing technology services in China. Since its inception, Aurora Mobile has focused on providing stable and efficient messaging services to enterprises and has grown to be a leading mobile messaging service provider with its first-mover advantage. With the increasing demand for customer reach and marketing growth, Aurora Mobile has developed forward-looking solutions such as Cloud Messaging and Cloud Marketing to help enterprises achieve omnichannel customer reach and interaction, as well as artificial intelligence and big data-driven marketing technology solutions to help enterprises’ digital transformation.

    For more information, please visit https://ir.jiguang.cn/.

    Safe Harbor Statement

    This announcement contains forward-looking statements. These statements are made under the “safe harbor” provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements can be identified by terminology such as “will,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “future,” “intends,” “plans,” “believes,” “estimates,” “confident” and similar statements. Among other things, the Business Outlook and quotations from management in this announcement, as well as Aurora Mobile’s strategic and operational plans, contain forward-looking statements. Aurora Mobile may also make written or oral forward-looking statements in its reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, in its annual report to shareholders, in press releases and other written materials and in oral statements made by its officers, directors or employees to third parties. Statements that are not historical facts, including but not limited to statements about Aurora Mobile’s beliefs and expectations, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties. A number of factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement, including but not limited to the following: Aurora Mobile’s strategies; Aurora Mobile’s future business development, financial condition and results of operations; Aurora Mobile’s ability to attract and retain customers; its ability to develop and effectively market data solutions, and penetrate the existing market for developer services; its ability to transition to the new advertising-driven SAAS business model; its ability to maintain or enhance its brand; the competition with current or future competitors; its ability to continue to gain access to mobile data in the future; the laws and regulations relating to data privacy and protection; general economic and business conditions globally and in China and assumptions underlying or related to any of the foregoing. Further information regarding these and other risks is included in the Company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. All information provided in this press release and in the attachments is as of the date of the press release, and Aurora Mobile undertakes no duty to update such information, except as required under applicable law.

    For more information, please contact:

    Aurora Mobile Limited
    E-mail: ir@jiguang.cn

    Christensen

    In China
    Ms. Xiaoyan Su
    Phone: +86-10-5900-1548
    E-mail: Xiaoyan.Su@christensencomms.com

    In US
    Ms. Linda Bergkamp
    Phone: +1-480-614-3004
    Email: linda.bergkamp@christensencomms.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Andrew Hauser: Monetary policy in a VUCA World

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Introduction

    In the late 1980s, as the Iron Curtain fell, the US Army War College threw away its old Cold War playbook. In its place, trainee strategists were taught to see the world as Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous: or ‘VUCA’ for short. The implications were far-reaching. Out went the old certainties. And in came a new approach that stressed the importance of approaching problems from different angles, drawing on multiple perspectives and scenarios, learning from mistakes, making robust decisions, and communicating openly about the uncertainties.

    Where the military began, the business world followed: VUCA begat a million Harvard Business Review articles. Inevitably perhaps, it lost some of its shine in the decades that followed. But today it’s back – with a vengeance. The rules of global trade have been turned on their head. New geopolitical realities are dawning. Artificial intelligence, the energy transition, demographic change and the long shadow of COVID-19 are fundamentally changing our concepts of economic activity and work. And Australia, like elsewhere, is seeking new sources of productivity growth. With the world in flux, companies, households and governments must change how they think, act and plan – just like those army cadets of the 1980s.

    Monetary policy cannot affect these profound changes. But it does have one key job – and that is to ensure that, of all the things people do have to worry about, inflation is not one. High inflation hurts everyone. It hits living standards, particularly for those on low and fixed incomes. And it disrupts households and companies’ plans. The past few years have been a vivid reminder of that. Around the world, core inflation reached multi-decade highs (Graph 1).

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Jorgovanka Tabaković: Serbia 2027 – striving towards a high-income economy

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Slides accompanying the speech

    Honourable members of the Government, esteemed representatives of the diplomatic corps, respected business leaders, dear fellow economists, ladies and gentlemen,

    I would like to begin by saying, after the introductory remarks, that we should remember that the word “artificial intelligence” contains an essential falsehood in its name: artificial intelligence does not exist because creativity is inherently human. Artificial intelligence operates based on algorithms and the data input into the tools you have, such as your mobile phone. The trend of applying so-called artificial intelligence in all fields will ultimately have two consequences that are unacceptable for human civilisation – losing the truth and not knowing what is true versus what is a deep fake, and losing the human being, who is the only creative entity capable of making decisions and creating what is called “intelligence”. While artificial intelligence can perform many technical processes faster, easier, and more efficiently, it cannot think.

    Some say that one should not live in the past but always move forward. However, we have an obligation to respect the past to better understand where we are today and to have guidance for the future.

    And the past teaches us that nothing should be taken for granted, as there are no final victories! Neither peace nor stability should be assumed, as they are not a given! That is why I will reiterate my conclusions from the previous two forums – what distinguishes theory from practice is our responsibility towards people, growth and development, and social stability. We depend on the conditions of the times we live in, but also on the decisions which we make and for whose consequences we bear responsibility.

    Ladies and gentlemen,

    (Slide 2) In October 2024, Serbia officially received an investment-grade credit rating! Congratulations to everyone!

    I always emphasise, and I will do so again today, that on the economic front, no one can achieve much alone. No matter how brilliant they may be. This historic success is the result of teamwork by the President, the Government of the Republic of Serbia, and the National Bank of Serbia, and it belongs to all our citizens.

    By joining the ranks of the one-third of the world’s countries characterised by high business certainty, i.e. low investment risk, we have received yet another confirmation of the economic progress made over the past decade.

    Most of those present today surely remember the period when Serbia had one major portfolio investor who invested in the Republic of Serbia’s bonds. Just one. And that investor only invested in our country’s securities because the interest rates were exceptionally high, which brought them excellent returns.

    For many years now, the Republic of Serbia’s bonds have been recognised as comparable to those of countries with investment-grade ratings, sought after by a large number of the world’s largest global investors – those who have recognised our economic reform programme and all the results achieved over the past decade.

    And I will reiterate today that the credit rating is the result of good political and economic decisions in the country, as one cannot be separated from the other. The continuity of political stability is a necessary precondition for the substantial and by no means easy structural reforms that develop the society we are part of.

    We must preserve stability if we want a high-income economy – and I am sure that is the desire of everyone present at this forum today!

    We must preserve stability in this competitive world full of challenges, where changes in the global order are happening faster than ever, and where the economic gap between key economies is widening!

    This stability, along with sound policies, has enabled Serbia, even in the most complex conditions, to achieve numerous records last year!

    • Last year, we returned inflation within the target tolerance band of 3±1.5%, with growth that was among the highest in Europe!
    • We secured the country’s record-high FX reserves of EUR 29.3 bn, which is 120% higher than in the pre-pandemic period. Gold reserves also reached a record-high level, currently standing at 48.7 tonnes.
    • Dinar savings increased by nearly 40% last year.
    • We also saw record-high FDI worth EUR 5.2 bn.
    • Formal employment in the private sector is at a record high, with over 160,000 more people employed than in the pre-pandemic period.
    • The unemployment rate is at its lowest level.

    (Slide 3) The list of achievements is quite long, but the list of global risks is growing longer… That is why today, as we summarise the results and analyse the challenges, I will divide my presentation into four parts:

    1. I will start with inflation factors.
    2. I will continue with the measures of monetary and macroprudential policy.
    3. I will specifically discuss the indicators of our economy’s resilience to external risks.
    4. I will conclude with the National Bank of Serbia’s February projections, with a special focus on risks, various forms of risks, and their different effects on society and the economy.

    I will proceed in order.

    (Slide 4) Excellent news – in June last year, inflation was twice as low compared to end-2023, based on all key components – energy and food prices, as well as prices within core inflation.

    Amid unfavourable global and domestic weather conditions, inflation stabilised at around 4.3% in the second half of last year.

    • (Slide 5) It was precisely the unfavourable weather conditions that caused the prices of certain food commodities, such as cocoa and coffee, to rise sharply on global exchanges, which affected global food prices.
    • Additionally, the rise in prices of personal services remained elevated in many countries, which can be linked to the high growth in real wages, which constitute a significant part of the service sector’s costs.

    (Slide 6) When it comes to inflation factors, in the next few minutes, I will share the findings of our two studies.

    The first analysis provides additional quantitative evidence in support of lower inflationary pressures by comparing the distribution of y-o-y price increases for goods and services in the consumer basket, as seen in the charts. The data confirm that in 2024, there was a significant reduction in the share of goods and services that recorded double-digit growth. Around 25% of goods and services did not become more expensive, and 100 products and services in the consumer basket became cheaper in 2024.

    In the second analysis, we examined the phenomenon of faster price increases for cheaper brands compared to more expensive brands of the same products, creating an impression of higher inflation than the actual rate. This phenomenon has been colloquially termed cheapflation.

    The analysis shows that in Serbia, during the period from 2022 to 2024, which was marked by increased global pressures, the cumulative price increase for cheaper brands within the food and beverages category was 5 pp higher than for more expensive brands of the same products.

    • One of the reasons for this phenomenon is the low elasticity of demand for food, which is the lowest for the cheapest brands.
    • Also, more pronounced price increases often lead to the substitution of more expensive products with cheaper alternatives, thereby increasing demand for the cheapest brands and generating additional price pressures.
    • However, there is also the issue of an imperfect market structure, which makes it easier for increased costs of producers and merchants to be passed on to retail prices more than fully, a problem I have pointed out on several occasions.

    To conclude the first topic.

    Inflation has been curbed both domestically and globally. The good news is that in Serbia, we achieved this result in terms of inflation alongside high GDP growth!

    However, there is no room for complacency. Uncertain and dynamic developments in international commodity and financial markets call for caution, as evidenced by the rise in inflation late last year in many countries.

    (Slide 7) The second topic builds on the first – namely, the measures of monetary and macroprudential policy in 2024.

    With inflation returning within the target band in May last year, and with projections indicating movement around the midpoint by the end of the monetary policy horizon, conditions were created for the start of monetary easing.

    • Namely, we cut the key policy rate three times, by a total of 75 bp, to 5.75%.
    • Our measures were transmitted to money and credit market interest rates, with lending activity increasing by 8.2% and the dinarisation of receivables also going up.
    • Dinar savings recorded a record nominal increase of over RSD 53 bn, reaching over RSD 191 bn. This means that dinar savings are almost eleven times higher than in 2012! Let me remind you that the results of our latest analysis of the profitability of dinar and FX savings confirm that over the past twelve years, dinar savings have been more profitable than FX savings, both in the short and long term.
    • To protect the interests of financial service consumers, we also decided to temporarily cap interest rates on loan agreements concluded with citizens, which will be specifically regulated by law.
    • We also adopted regulations under our jurisdiction that will enable the implementation of the government programme for housing loans for young people.
    • In addition, and thanks to all of this, the share of NPLs in total loans fell to its lowest level of 2.5% in December.

    I conclude this topic by stating that our cautious approach is justified and that this is confirmed by the fact that we have achieved all three goals – low inflation in the medium term, high economic growth, and preserved financial stability of the country!

    (Slide 8) The third topic I will discuss is the resilience of the Serbian economy, which was confirmed even during 2024, amid continuous external shocks.

    • First, in 2024, we maintained relative stability of the dinar exchange rate against the euro, with the dinar gaining 0.1%.
    • Last year, we bought over EUR 2.7 bn net in the FX market, or EUR 11.2 bn since 2017, which has been an important factor behind the growth in FX reserves.
    • FX reserves stood at their record high of EUR 29.3 bn at end-2024, covering over seven months of imports of goods and services and 167% of money supply M1.
    • Gold reserves, which traditionally serve as a safe haven, rose to a record level of 48.7 tonnes, with their value being over seven times higher than in July 2012. The adequacy of our decisions is also confirmed by the fact that the price of gold in the global market increased by around 30% last year, and the rise continues this year.
    • GDP growth of 3.9% in 2024 was among the highest in Europe, driven by fixed investment and private consumption. The investment growth was supported by record-high profitability of the corporate sector, high FDI inflows, and government capital investment. At the same time, the growth in private consumption was driven by further increases in employment and real disposable income of the population.
    • The value of exports of goods and services in 2024 reached EUR 43 bn, which is nearly 85% higher than in the pre-pandemic year of 2019. Within the goods sector, manufacturing exports grew by nearly 3%, despite still weak external demand. The reason for this resilience is the strategic focus on production and geographical diversification of markets and investors. Exports of services are also growing on solid foundations, driven by exports of information and telecommunications services.
    • (Slide 9) FDI inflows were also record-high at over EUR 5.2 bn, despite all the uncertainties in the global market.
    • An important element of resilience is the responsible conduct of fiscal policy, with a fiscal deficit of 2% of GDP, despite strong government capital investment. Particularly important is the fact that the growth in fiscal revenues is based on solid foundations – increased profitability and positive factors in the labour market, while the application of special fiscal rules for pension and public sector wage growth continues.

    Esteemed participants of the Forum,

    All these results we are achieving, even in an environment characterised by low growth among our key trading partners, have secured us, for the first time in history, an investment-grade credit rating from Standard & Poor’s. Once again, congratulating all citizens on this success, I would like to say that we would certainly have received not only a positive outlook from Fitch but also the rating if political circumstances had not led to the agency’s caution.

    (Slide 9) The final topic concerns our expectations going forward and the challenges facing economic policymakers. However, before I move on to the projections, I would like to highlight the trends I have been discussing for years, often at this very place. However, it seems to me that it has never been more important to discuss this!

    “Say goodbye to the world you knew – today we live in a new era!” The conditions in which we operate economically are the most challenging, and technologically the most advanced! This is a time of enormous social divisions in all countries. In diplomatic terms, we define this as an unprecedented polarisation of society. “People always know about misfortune and evil, but good remains hidden”, said Meša Selimović.

    A particular challenge today is conducting policies in the era of fake news, and in an environment where individuals believe that policies can be pursued through social networks. I have been highlighting this phenomenon for several years as a major risk to society and democracy. And it has long been said that people can be divided into two groups: those who move forward and achieve something, and those who follow them and criticise. I will reiterate: healthy scientific and social scepticism that questions everything is always welcome, and that is why we are here. However, scepticism that questions growth and development has no social or economic basis. And any influence that leads to a slowdown in potential growth has a direct negative effect on people’s standard of living and prospects for progress!

    I will now move on to the projections.

    • Regarding inflation, we expect that in Q1, y-o-y inflation will move around the upper bound of the target tolerance band. For the rest of the year, we expect it to gradually slow down and approach the midpoint by the end of the year, which is the level around which it will move until the end of the projection horizon.
    • Such inflation dynamics will be supported by continued restrictive monetary policy conditions, lower imported inflation, an expected slowdown in real wage growth, an expected decline in petroleum product prices, in line with futures, and an expected decline in fruit and vegetable prices, assuming an average agricultural season this year.
    • In terms of economic activity, we expect a further acceleration in GDP growth to 4.5% this year. For the next two years, we project growth between 4% and 5%, i.e. closer to 5% in 2027, when the “Expo” will be held.Such GDP growth will be driven by domestic demand, with growth in private consumption supported by:
      • positive trends in the labour market and further increases in disposable income, as well as
      • more favourable monetary conditions.
        At the same time, we expect that wage growth in the medium term will be in line with productivity growth, contributing to medium-term price stability.
    • Fixed investment growth will be supported by:
      • increased profitability of the corporate sector in previous years,
      • planned high government capital investment in transport, energy, and utility infrastructure, as well as
      • more favourable financial conditions.
    • We also expect continued FDI inflows, which will, through new technologies and more modern equipment, as well as new knowledge, contribute to the growth in total factor productivity.
    • All of this together will contribute to further growth in both private and government investment, as well as its share in GDP of over 25% in the medium term.
    • Due to the acceleration of the investment cycle and growth in private consumption, we expect that this year and the next, imports of goods and services will grow slightly faster than exports, resulting in a negative contribution of net exports to economic growth. On the other hand, in 2027, when the “Expo” will be held, we expect the contribution of net exports to be positive.

    Of course, these, like all macroeconomic projections, are accompanied by numerous global risks, which I will present in a slightly different way than usual. I repeat, I will provide a global context.

    • First, long-standing geopolitical tensions have been further exacerbated by the rise of global protectionism. Along with disruptions related to climate change, they continue to influence the volatility of global energy and other primary commodity prices and may have negative effects on both global economic growth and inflation.
    • Furthermore, one of the growing structural problems, which the IMF particularly highlighted in October, is the widening income gap between Europe and the United States. The income gap reflects declining productivity growth in Europe, which extends to the level of individual enterprises. The response to such movements implies structural changes in the European economy, of which we are a part, with the aim of increasing productivity and competitiveness.
    • This is also supported by the accelerated development of the so-called artificial intelligence, which brings enormous transformative changes, creating both opportunities and challenges! According to the findings of the World Economic Forum, in the period from 2025 to 2030, structural changes driven by artificial intelligence in the labour market will create around 14% of new jobs, while around 7% of existing jobs will be eliminated. Thus, the net effect of these changes will be positive in terms of creating new jobs, but the distribution of these changes across regions and countries remains to be seen. For our region to have such an outcome, we must work together to ensure that the transformation, which is inevitable, proceeds in a way that the closure of some jobs opens doors to others, of higher quality.
    • This also requires a deeper analysis of demographic trends, namely the process of reducing the working-age population, which is a challenge for all countries. And that is why it is important to invest in people and activate that part of the population that is outside the active labour force.

    When it comes to new sources of growth, I first want to state that the current growth model in Serbia has proven to be good. Ten years ago, in 2014, the share of investment in GDP was around 16%, and in 2024 – around 24%. The share of government investment was only 2.2%, and in recent years, it has been over 7%. The unemployment rate has been reduced from over 20% to around 8%, while youth unemployment has more than halved, and the number of formally employed people has increased by almost 400,000! The coverage of the average consumer basket by the average wage is at its highest level, around 95%, and is 30 pp higher than ten years ago! Thus, the current growth model has proven to be good!

    When we talk about the coming period and new sources of growth, it is certainly best to have innovations and new technologies, where domestic companies should also play a significant role. Unfortunately, the key new technologies that will shape the world in the coming decades are in the hands of the United States and China, and the technological gap is widening. And it is precisely here, and for this reason, that there is room for greater cooperation and integration at the level of the entire European market.

    I will also recall the October analysis by the IMF, which highlights that a deeper and larger single European market would stimulate the necessary growth in productivity. It notes that the two previous waves of enlargement – in 1995 and 2004 – brought benefits not only to the countries joining the EU but also to the founding member states of the EU, which experienced significant income growth. Therefore, a joint response in terms of developing new technologies could have a multiplier effect on the growth and development of all European economies!

    Esteemed participants of the Business Forum,

    I have spoken about global risks and potential responses, particularly from policymakers in Europe, of which we are a part. Among domestic risks, I highlight the potentially missed opportunities for high growth and the time needed to return to the trajectory we have secured, which places us at the top of Europe in terms of growth.

    That is why today, as in previous forums, I will remind everyone that we have an obligation never to forget that stability is priceless, and there is no alternative to it. Without stability, any discussion about sustainable income growth and societal development loses its meaning!

    On behalf of the NBS, I can promise:

    • we will continue to work in the public interest,
    • relative exchange rate stability has no alternative,
    • there will be no negative interest rates in Serbia, as money must fulfil one of its fundamental roles – to earn through savings and the concept of interest. “Negative interest rates are a sign of central banks’ desperation, not a solution to economic problems.”

    In every decision we make, we have been and will continue to be guided by the stability of the system! I believe that in these uncertain times, this is the key to duration. We cannot influence the policies and decisions of major powers, but we can and must support our development opportunities.

    Finally, I congratulate the Serbian Association of Economists on their well-deserved selection as the host of the 21st World Congress of Economists, which will be held in June next year!

    And finally, I ask you all, not expecting an answer: how many phone numbers do you know if you were to lose your phone and the contacts stored in it? Do you know how to calculate a discount on prices when you’re out shopping? And how will your children, who rely on ChatGPT and mobile phones to do their homework, manage if, at some point, they can’t charge their phone or if someone, just for fun, takes away their phone and all these devices that represent progress and development? Never forget that, above all, we are human beings who must think for ourselves, make our own decisions, and not forget the most basic things – to use our own brains and our own hearts!

    Thank you all. I wish you a successful 32nd Kopaonik Business Forum.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-Evening Report: Seven decades on, Marshall Islands still reeling from nuclear testing legacy

    By Lydia Lewis, RNZ Pacific Bulletin editor/presenter

    The Marshall Islands marked 71 years since the most powerful nuclear weapons tests ever conducted were unleashed over the weekend.

    The Micronesian nation experienced 67 known atmospheric nuclear tests between 1946 and 1958, resulting in an ongoing legacy of death, illness, and contamination.

    The country’s President Hilda Heine says her people continue to face the impacts of US nuclear weapons testing seven decades after the last bomb was detonated.

    The Pacific Islands have a complex history of nuclear weapons testing, but the impacts are very much a present-day challenge, Heine said at the Pacific Islands Forum leaders’ meeting in Tonga last year.

    She said that the consequences of nuclear weapons testing “in our own home” are “expensive” and “cross-cutting”.

    “When I was just a young girl, our islands were turned into a big laboratory to test the capabilities of weapons of mass destruction, biological warfare agents, and unexploded ordinance,” she said.

    “The impacts are not just historical facts, but contemporary challenges,” she added, noting that “the health consequences for the Marshallese people are severe and persistent through generations.”

    “We are now working to reshape the narrative from that of being victims to one of active agencies in helping to shape our own future and that of the world around us,” she told Pacific leaders, where the United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres was a special guest.

    President Hilda Heine and UN Secretary-General António Guterres at the Pacific Islands Forum leaders meeting in Nuku’alofa, Tonga, in August 2024 Image: RNZ Pacific/Lydia Lewis

    She said the displacement of communities from ancestral lands has resulted in grave cultural impacts, hindering traditional knowledge from being passed down to younger generations.

    “As well as certain traditional practices, customs, ceremonies and even a navigational school once defining our very identity and become a distant memory, memorialised through chance and storytelling,” President Heine said.

    “The environmental legacy is contamination and destruction: craters, radiation, toxic remnants, and a dome containing radioactive waste with a half-life of 24,000 years have rendered significant areas uninhabitable.

    “Key ecosystems, once full of life and providing sustenance to our people, are now compromised.”

    Heine said cancer and thyroid diseases were among a list of presumed radiation-induced medical conditions that were particularly prevalent in the Marshallese community.

    Displacement, loss of land, and psychological trauma were also contributing factors to high rates of non-communicable diseases, she said.

    Runit Dome, also known as “The Tomb”, in the Marshall Islands . . , controversial nuclear waste storage. Image: RNZ Pacific

    “Despite these immense challenges, the Marshallese people have shown remarkable resilience and strength. Our journey has been one of survival, advocacy, and an unyielding pursuit of justice.

    “We have fought tirelessly to have our voices heard on the international stage, seeking recognition.”

    In 2017, the Marshall Islands government created the National Nuclear Commission to coordinate efforts to address testing impacts.

    “We are a unique and important moral compass in the global movement for nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation,” Heine said.

    Kurt Campbell at the Pacific Islands Forum . . . “I think we understand that that history carries a heavy burden.” Image: RNZ Pacific/Lydia Lewis

    The US Deputy Secretary of State in the Biden-Harris administration Kurt Cambell said that Washington, over decades, had committed billions of dollars to the damage and the rebuilding of the Marshall Islands.

    “I think we understand that that history carries a heavy burden, and we are doing what we can to support the people in the [Compact of Free Association] states, including the Marshall Islands,” he said.

    “This is not a legacy that we seek to avoid. We have attempted to address it constructively with massive resources and a sustained commitment,” he told reporters in Nuku’alofa.

    A shared nuclear legacy
    The National Nuclear Commission chairperson Ariana Tibon-Kilma, a direct descendant of survivors of the nuclear weapons testing programme Project 4.1 — which was the top-secret medical lab study on the effects of radiation on human bodies — told RNZ Pacific that what occured in Marshall Islands should not happen to any country.

    “This programme was conducted without consent from any of the Marshallese people,” she said.

    “For a number of years, they were studied and monitored, and sometimes even flown out to the US and displayed as a showcase.

    “The history and trauma associated with what happened to my family, as well as many other families in the Marshall Islands, was barely spoken of.

    “What happened to the Marshallese people is something that we would not wish upon any other Pacific island country or any other person in humanity.”

    She said the nuclear legacy was a shared one.

    “We all share one Pacific Ocean and what happened to the Marshall Islands, I am, sure resonates throughout the Pacific,” Tibon-Kilma said.

    UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights for the Pacific head Heike Alefsen at the Pacific Islands Forum . . . “I think compensation for survivors is key.” Image: RNZ Pacific/Lydia Lewis

    Billions in compensation
    The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights for the Pacific head, Heike Alefsen, told RNZ Pacific in Nuku’alofa that “we understand that there are communities that have been displaced for a long time to other islands”.

    “I think compensation for survivors is key,” she said.

    “It is part of a transitional justice approach. I can’t really speak to the breadth and the depth of the compensation that would need to be provided, but it is certainly an ongoing issue for discussion.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM call with President Zelenskyy of Ukraine: 4 March 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    PM call with President Zelenskyy of Ukraine: 4 March 2025

    The Prime Minister spoke to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine this afternoon.

    The Prime Minister spoke to the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, this afternoon.

    The Prime Minister updated on his discussion with President Trump last night. It was vital that all parties worked towards a lasting and secure peace for Ukraine as soon as possible, the Prime Minister added.

    Turning to President Zelenskyy’s most recent calls for further diplomatic efforts to achieve the swiftest possible end to the war, the Prime Minister welcomed President Zelenskyy’s steadfast commitment to securing peace.

    Underscoring that any peace for Ukraine needed to be lasting and secure, the Prime Minister said no one wanted peace more than Ukraine.

    The leaders agreed to stay in close touch in the coming days.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: South Tyneside Council: Local Plan intervention letter

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Correspondence

    South Tyneside Council: Local Plan intervention letter

    Local Plan intervention: letter from the Minister of State for Housing and Planning, Matthew Pennycook MP, to South Tyneside Council.

    Applies to England

    Documents

    South Tyneside Council: Local Plan intervention letter

    Request an accessible format.
    If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email alternativeformats@communities.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Details

    The Minister of State for Housing and Planning, Matthew Pennycook MP, has written to South Tyneside Council directing them to submit their local plan for examination.

    Updates to this page

    Published 5 March 2025

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    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Russian Engineering Academy awarded SPbGASU two I.A. Grishmanov prizes

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Competition coordinator, member of the presidium (bureau) of the Russian Engineering Academy Vitaly Lozhkin, president of the academy Boris Gusev and Alexey Kharitonov

    On February 27, the Russian Engineering Academy hosted the I. A. Grishmanov Prize award ceremony. Among the laureates were Aleksey Kharitonov, Doctor of Engineering, Associate Professor, Professor of the Department of Construction Materials Technology and Metrology of our university, and the Publishing and Printing Department of SPbGASU.

    Alexey Kharitonov is known in the country and abroad as a scientist in the field of construction materials science. His specialization is the creation of effective materials for the restoration of cultural heritage sites – architectural monuments. The researcher makes a great contribution to the development of university science and construction education in the country, and has been engaged in scientific and pedagogical activities for 25 years.

    Alexey Kharitonov is a member of the dissertation council of SPbGASU and the scientific and technical council of the Housing Committee of the Government of St. Petersburg, a member of the editorial board of the journal “Cement and Its Applications”, included in the list of the Higher Attestation Commission of the Russian Federation. Author and co-author of more than 140 published scientific and educational-methodical works, including 130 scientific articles, 11 educational-methodical works, 4 inventions. The scientist’s merits have been noted by numerous letters of gratitude and certificates of honor.

    In 2019–2020, the scientist, as an organizer of materials science research, participated in the development of scientific and design documentation for the restoration of the Legislative Palace (parliament building) in the capital of Uruguay, Montevideo, and in 2022–2023 – the Triumphal Arch in Palmyra, Syria. The projects were highly praised by the UNESCO International Expert Council.

    The Publishing and Printing Department (IPD) is a structural division of SPbGASU, headed by Tatyana Razumova since 2007. The IPO has a full production cycle for publishing educational and scientific publications, from editorial preparation of manuscripts to layout and printing. Every year, the IPO publishes more than one hundred titles of educational and scientific publications. All of them are sent to the scientific and technical library in printed and electronic form. Electronic copies of publications are placed in the university’s full-text database.

    Books by SPbGASU teachers, published in IPO, have repeatedly become prize winners of prestigious festivals and competitions. The published editions arouse wide interest and receive recognition from the professional community.

    The I. A. Grishmanov Prize is awarded for scientific and technical developments that have been implemented in mass production, as well as for achievements in the organization of industry in the field of building materials and structures. It is named after the Minister of the Construction Materials Industry of the USSR Ivan Aleksandrovich Grishmanov (1906–1979), a graduate of the Leningrad Civil Engineering Institute (now SPbGASU).

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Changes in the Lufthansa Supervisory Board

    Source: Lufthansa Group

    At the forthcoming Annual General Meeting of Deutsche Lufthansa AG on 6 May 2025, Dr Astrid Stange, Angela Titzrath and Erich Clementi will be standing for re-election to the Supervisory Board for a further three-year term.

    Dr Thomas Enders will resign from the Supervisory Board at his own request at the end of the Annual General Meeting on 6 May 2025. 

    The Supervisory Board proposes to the Annual General Meeting on 6 May 2025 that Dr Alexis von Hoensbroech (54), CEO of the Canadian airline WestJet, be elected to the Supervisory Board for a term of three years to fill the vacant position.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Video: UK Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) – 5 March 2025

    Source: United Kingdom UK Parliament (video statements)

    Watch PMQs with British Sign Language (BSL) – https://youtube.com/live/EdzUODQFHoM

    Prime Minister’s Question Time, also referred to as PMQs, takes place every Wednesday the House of Commons sits. It gives MPs the chance to put questions to the Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer MP, or a nominated minister.

    In most cases, the session starts with a routine ‘open question’ from an MP about the Prime Minister’s engagements. MPs can then ask supplementary questions on any subject, often one of current political significance.

    The Leader of the Opposition, Kemi Badenoch MP, asks six questions and the leader of the second largest opposition party asks two. If another minister takes the place of the Prime Minister, opposition parties will usually nominate a shadow minister to ask the questions.

    Want to find out more about what’s happening in the House of Commons this week? Follow the House of Commons on:

    Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/HouseofCommons
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ukhouseofcommons
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ukhouseofcommons

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHZi-5LGJy4

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: UK Prime Minister’s Questions with British Sign Language (BSL) – 5 March 2025

    Source: United Kingdom UK Parliament (video statements)

    Prime Minister’s Question Time, also referred to as PMQs, takes place every Wednesday the House of Commons sits. It gives MPs the chance to put questions to the Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer MP, or a nominated minister.

    In most cases, the session starts with a routine ‘open question’ from an MP about the Prime Minister’s engagements. MPs can then ask supplementary questions on any subject, often one of current political significance.

    The Leader of the Opposition, Kemi Badenoch MP, asks six questions and the leader of the second largest opposition party asks two. If another minister takes the place of the Prime Minister, opposition parties will usually nominate a shadow minister to ask the questions.

    Want to find out more about what’s happening in the House of Commons this week? Follow the House of Commons on:

    Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/HouseofCommons
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ukhouseofcommons
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ukhouseofcommons

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

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: Statement From Energy Secretary Chris Wright on President Trump’s Joint Address to Congress

    Source: US Department of Energy

    WASHINGTON—U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright released the following statement after President Trump’s joint address to Congress:

    “Tonight, President Trump outlined a bold vision for America. Under his leadership, the Department of Energy is cutting red tape, dismantling Biden’s job-killing regulations, and putting consumers back in control. Common-sense energy policies are replacing burdensome government overreach, ensuring affordability, reliability, and efficiency remain top priorities. We’ve ended the LNG export freeze, halted burdensome appliance mandates, and identified hundreds of millions of dollars in government waste—lowering costs, strengthening America’s energy future, and restoring accountability to Washington.

    “Under President Trump’s leadership, America is ready to lead the world in energy, technology and innovation once again. A strong energy foundation, expanded energy infrastructure, more American ingenuity, and fewer barriers mean a stronger America. And we’re just getting started.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Government funding for rural communities set out

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Government funding for rural communities set out

    Rural communities are set to benefit from up to £38 million in funding.

    Up to £33 million will be directed to the Rural England Prosperity Fund (REPF), which is used to improve local infrastructure and essential services that benefit rural communities and help businesses in rural areas to expand, creating jobs and kickstarting the rural economy. 

    Examples of the types of projects that will be eligible for funding from the REPF include: 

    • Creation of rural business hubs providing shared workspace and networking opportunities for rural businesses. 

    • Development of new products, facilities or building conversions to help rural businesses diversify outside of agriculture. 

    • Community gardens and greenspaces.  

    • The creation of new footpaths and development of local visitor trails.  

    • Kitchens in community hubs and improvements to premises used by local volunteering groups, such as youth charities or carers groups. 

    In addition, Defra has also announced up to a further £5 million in funding to go towards the continuation of important services for rural communities. Part of this funding will go towards The Rural Community Assets Fund, which provides capital funding for the refurbishment and development of community-owned assets, such as village halls or community centres. 

    This funding will also support Rural Housing Enablers, who help to bring forward sites to provide affordable housing opportunities in rural areas with people who need them. This comes alongside a grant for Action with Communities in Rural England (ACRE) to provide advice and support to rural community and voluntary groups that offer social inclusion activities, affordable warmth advice, and community transport. 

    As part of the Plan for Change, the Government is working to promote economic growth across the country, including in rural areas. This funding will help to support local economies and sustain communities across the countryside 

    REPF allocations to individual local authorities will be made in line with the existing allocations methodology, with final confirmed allocations to be published in due course.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Statement to the 108th Session of the Executive Council of the OPCW

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Statement to the 108th Session of the Executive Council of the OPCW

    Statement to the 108th Session of the Executive Council of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, by Her Excellency Joanna Roper, Permanent Representative of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

    Mr Chairperson, Director General, Excellencies, Distinguished Delegates,

    Let me start by extending my thanks to His Excellency, Director General Fernando Arias, for his comprehensive report demonstrating the significant and increasing demands on this organisation and the progress he has made. I would also like to thank His Excellency, Ambassador Terán Parral for chairing this session and for his excellent leadership of the Executive Council since May 2023.

    Mr Chairperson,

    At long last, with the collapse of the Assad regime, Syria is now in a position to take a fresh approach to its engagement with the OPCW and finally close the file on the chemical weapons programme. This is an opportunity that few could have imagined 12 months ago.

    We welcome commitments made by Syria’s Interim Authorities to cooperate with the Technical Secretariat and international community to this end. We warmly welcome the DG’s report of his recent visit and note on the way forward. We look ahead to the rapid deployment of OPCW technical teams on the ground to help Syria deliver a full, complete and accurate declaration; and to start destruction. And I would like to thank the Permanent Representative of Qatar for representing Syria’s interests at the OPCW since December so effectively. 

    After more than a decade, we are urging Syria to turn the page on the horrific legacy of Assad’s chemical weapons programme and we must support it to do so. We call on States Parties to support the Technical Secretariat and the Syrian Arab Republic to complete the job of destroying the Assad Regime’s chemical weapons. The UK has recently announced additional funding for the OPCW’s Syria Missions – we have given a total of more than £1m to the OPCW’s Syria Trust Fund over the past year. And yesterday, Mr Chairperson, I sent a letter to the Director General, confirming that we will provide a comprehensive offer of practical support to him and his team later this month.

    Mr Chairperson,

    I wish that I could reflect positive progress on other states of concern. Russia continues to undermine the Chemical Weapons Convention. It is now three years since Russia started a war of aggression against Ukraine – a brutal attack on the sovereignty, political independence and territorial integrity of a democratic state. As my Prime Minister said last week: “For three years we have been united in opposition to Russia’s barbaric invasion. And for three years we have been full of admiration for the incredible response of the Ukrainian people.”

    Let there be no doubt, UK support to Ukraine will remain steadfast.

    Russia continues to use chemical weapons in Ukraine. We note the conclusions of the Technical Secretariat’s most recent Technical Assistance Visit report issued on 14 February. This report confirmed the presence of CS gas in samples taken from three separate incidents in Ukraine, establishing a pattern of violations of the CWC across a wide geographic area. There must now be attribution for such attacks, and the perpetrators must be held to account.

    We must not forget Russia has form in regularly violating international law concerning chemical weapons. Seven years ago today, on 4 March 2018, Russia deployed Novichok nerve agent on the streets of the United Kingdom. This attack resulted in the tragic death of Dawn Sturgess. Russia also used Novichok to poison Alexei Navalny in Russia in 2020. 

    Mr Chairperson,

    Russia has set a damaging example. We must defend the fundamental principles of the Chemical Weapons Convention. We are extremely concerned by reports which suggest that the Sudanese Armed Forces have used chemical weapons in Sudan. Sudan, like any other State Party to the Chemical Weapons Convention, must abide by its obligations.

    Mr Chairperson,

    We also welcome the Technical Secretariat’s response to the opportunities and risks of emerging technology. The excellent Morocco AI Conference in October, and the AI Research Challenge, co-funded by the UK, provide a sound foundation for our collective efforts to capture the benefits of new technologies, and to understand the security risks they will pose.

    Mr Chairperson,

    The Director General is critical to the success of this organisation. This body has important work to do over the coming months to find a worthy successor to Director General Arias.  As the British say, they will have big shoes to fill.

    Events in Syria and continuing Russian breaches demonstrate that the OPCW remains central to international security. This Council must provide its unwavering support for every aspect of the OPCW’s work at this critical juncture.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Sergei Sobyanin: Drinking water quality in Moscow monitored 24/7

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The number of indicators used to analyze the quality of drinking water in Moscow has increased to 200. Sergei Sobyanin spoke about this in his telegram channel.

    “Our metropolis consumes approximately three million cubic meters of clean water daily. Its quality is monitored around the clock. In the city

    four water treatment stations — Northern, Eastern, Western and Rublevskaya. Modern purification methods are used. This is ozonation with sorption on activated carbon and membrane filtration. Each station has a laboratory for monitoring water quality,” the Moscow Mayor wrote.

    Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @Mos_Sobyanin 

    There are more than 500 automatic control sensors on the water’s path from the source to the taps. They monitor turbidity, color, chemical composition, and temperature. In the event of any deviations, specialists immediately adjust the technological cleaning modes.

    In addition, water samples are taken from the city’s distribution network. Last year, specialists conducted over 3.2 million tests – seven percent more than in 2023.

    The results of the research can be seen on the website of JSC Mosvodokanal in the section “Water quality in Moscow districts”.

    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/12448050/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Tiger Races” and “Secrets of the Magic Forest”: a weekend program for children at the Moscow Zoo

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The Moscow Zoo is starting weekly free events for children. They will be held on weekends. Guests can expect active games and master classes on the territory of the children’s zoo. The first classes will take place on March 8 and 9.

    On Saturday, March 8, at 12:00, the active game “Tiger Races” will begin. Participants will have to solve puzzles, riddles and rebuses in the format of a fun relay race.

    At 1:30 p.m., children are invited to the master class “Flowers for Mom.” Participants will make a bouquet of airy plasticine, flowers, and other materials.

    From 2:30 pm to 4:00 pm, parents with children will be able to attend an art therapy session called “Mother and Flower Child”. Using various artistic techniques, young participants will talk about their associations with flowers and their correspondence to human qualities.

    Puzzle and challenge lovers will be interested in participating in the adventure game “Secrets of the Magic Forest”. Children will have to find a treasure hidden in the new territory of the zoo. Starts at 14:30.

    On Sunday, March 9, at 11:00, young guests will be treated to an active game called “Chasing the Mamant.” These are fun starts with puzzles and tasks for logic and intelligence.

    At 12:30 the creative master class “Portrait of a mother” will begin. Participants will be able to create an image of the person dearest to them using air plasticine. You can take your work home and give it to your mother.

    From 13:30 to 15:00 there will be an adventure game “Journey through the Land of Ice Floes”. Children will face exciting challenges, riddles and stories about the inhabitants of the Moscow Zoo.

    At 15:20 you can attend the interactive lesson “PROzoopark “Zoopsychologist”, where children will learn about professions related to animals in a playful way. Participants will be told about the work of zoopsychologists, veterinarians and other specialists who care for animals in zoos and nurseries.

    The number of participants in each lesson is 35 people. Children aged six to 13 are invited. You can sign up by link.

    Meeting with the host – on the territory of the Moscow Zoo at the entrance to the children’s zoo. Participants must purchase a ticket to the zoo, all benefits are retained.

    The activities are aimed at achieving the indicators and results of the national project “Family” in the city of Moscow.

    Sobyanin: Moscow Zoo takes first place in the world in species diversity

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

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

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/150927073/

    MIL OSI Russia News