Category: Politics

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Expressions of Interest called for Tonkin Highway interchanges

    Source: Australia Government Ministerial Statements

    The transformation of Tonkin Highway continues to progress, with an Expression of Interest released today for contractors to tender for upgrades planned south of Roe Highway.

    The project will see grade-separated interchanges constructed at Hale Road and Welshpool Road, and the highway widened to a six-lane dual carriageway between Roe Highway and north of Kelvin Road, improving safety and reducing delays along the heavily congested route.

    A Principal Shared Path will also be added to the eastern side of Tonkin Highway with shared path connections to adjacent communities.

    Tonkin Highway is a key transport corridor connecting the city’s industrial centres including international ports, airports, intermodal rail freight terminals and major industrial lands. More than 50,000 vehicles use this section of Tonkin Highway every day, of which 13 per cent are heavy vehicles. 

    Due to this travel demand, congestion is high and growing, with Tonkin Highway projected to have the fifth-highest ‘delay cost’ of all major road corridors across Western Australia by 2031.

    A Design and Construct Contract is expected to be awarded in mid-2025, with construction to start in late 2025.

    The project is expected to support around 2,500 direct and indirect jobs during the construction phase.

    The $366 million project is jointly funded by the Australian ($293 million) and State ($73 million) governments.

    Development work is also ongoing for an interchange at Kelvin Road to be delivered in the future, following environmental approvals.

    Quotes attributable to Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government Minister Catherine King:

    “Our Government is busy at work delivering on what WA needs for the future.

    “Right across the State we’re investing in roads and infrastructure which will improve travel times and safety, and Tonkin Highway will be an important addition to that suite of upgrades.

    “It will also create thousands of jobs in the local community and unlock training opportunities for Western Australians wanting to obtain new skills.”

    Quotes attributed to WA Transport Minister Rita Saffioti:

    “The Tonkin Highway Interchanges project forms part of our broader Tonkin Highway Transformation program, to support long-term transport and infrastructure planning along Perth’s eastern road corridor.

    “This stretch of Tonkin Highway is a notorious bottleneck, particularly the intersection with Welshpool Road which regularly rates as one of the worst for congestion.

    “Tonkin Highway is a major freight route in the Perth metropolitan region, but with significant congestion, our Government is taking action to make this road smoother, safer and more efficient.

    “This project will complement the Tonkin Gap Project, which recently reached completion, and is providing commuters with faster travel times and a safer journey.

    “This important upgrade project will improve safety and the movement of freight and people by creating free-flowing traffic conditions.”

    Quotes attributed to Federal Member for Burt Matt Keogh:

    “I’ve been advocating for years on behalf of our community to make Tonkin Highway faster and safer, and I’m glad the Albanese and Cook Labor Governments are working together on this important project for Perth’s South Eastern suburbs.

    “The congestion on Tonkin Highway has been increasing for years, these upgrades will make a massive difference for our growing community. I can’t wait to see works get underway.

    “Only Labor is making the infrastructure investments we need to build a better Burt.”

    Quotes attributed to State Member for Forrestfield Stephen Price:

    “People in my community are heavily impacted by the congestion build up along this section of Tonkin Highway, which is why it’s critical we take action to make travel on this road smoother and safer for all.

    “Whilst these changes will significantly improve this section of Tonkin Highway, they will cause some disruption from mid-2025, so we will be engaging closely with the community to inform them about likely impacts.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: APAC EV infrastructure market to expand at 13.5% CAGR over 2024-29, forecasts GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    APAC EV infrastructure market to expand at 13.5% CAGR over 2024-29, forecasts GlobalData

    Posted in Automotive

    Governments worldwide currently face the challenge of creating the strong infrastructure required to accelerate the shift toward electric vehicles (EVs). The Asia-Pacific (APAC) region is experiencing significant growth in this area, with China leading as a major EV market and boasting an extensive infrastructure. Government agencies and private entities in other nations in the region, such as South Korea, India, Japan, and Indonesia, are also actively participating and investing in the expansion of charging station networks. Against this backdrop, the APAC EV infrastructure market is expected to record a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.5% over 2024–29, according to GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    GlobalData’s latest report, “Global Sector Overview & Forecast: EV Infrastructure Q3 2024,” reveals that the automotive EV infrastructure market covering two types of charging stations, fast charging stations powered by direct current and slow charging stations powered by alternating current, is estimated at 3.3 million units in 2024 and is forecast to reach 6.2 million units by 2029 in the APAC region.

    Madhuchhanda Palit, Automotive Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “To facilitate the widespread adoption of EVs in the APAC region, it is critical to enhance the EV charging infrastructure. Considering that APAC is the most densely populated region in the world, the prospect of long wait times at charging stations may deter potential EV consumers. Therefore, to achieve the electrification goals set by the governments of APAC countries and to drive EV adoption, there is an urgent need to augment the quantity of EV charging stations, with a particular focus on fast charging stations.”

    Several initiatives are underway to address the need to expand EV infrastructure. For instance, Volt, an EV charging company within the infrastructure division of Singapore-based Keppel, announced in July 2024, the deployment of a new fast-charging hub in the country. This hub features ratings of 360 kilowatts and 120 kilowatts, enabling electric cars to be charged in as little as 10 minutes.

    Palit adds: “The expansion of fast-charging stations for EVs is essential, but there is also a pressing need to ensure equitable distribution across the nation. This distribution challenge has impeded EV adoption, even in countries like China, which is the world’s largest EV market. In China, the concentration of EV charging infrastructure in urban areas far exceeds that in rural areas. This disparity may discourage potential EV customers in rural areas and those planning longer journeys.”

    Additionally, the overabundance of chargers in urban areas can lead to underutilization, while those along highways and in rural areas may not meet peak demand during holidays, resulting in potential profit loss and job cuts for EV charging businesses in both urban and rural settings.

    A significant percentage of EV charging stations still rely on electrical power produced using fossil fuels, which can limit the environmental benefits of EVs. However, the landscape has changed significantly in recent years, with multiple initiatives by both the public and private sectors to transition the power source to renewable energy. For example, in India, The Climate Pledge, co-founded by Amazon and Global Optimism, announced in September 2024, an investment of $2.7 million in a new project, the Joint Operation Unifying Last-mile Electrification (JOULE), to build a network of shared EV charging stations powered by renewable energy in Bengaluru.

    Recognizing the concerns and needs for growth in the sector, multiple innovations are being introduced at various stages of implementation. For instance, crowdsourced EV charging, V2G power management, and bidirectional charging are some of the innovations in the early stages of development with steadily rising adoption rates. Meanwhile, EV inductive charging and dual-voltage charging stations are examples of innovations in the maturing stage, which have become well-established within the industry.

    Palit concludes: “Establishing adequate infrastructure is a time-sensitive matter, and the pace of progress varies among different nations. The increasing demand for EVs, coupled with substantial investments and research and development efforts, is expected to drive significant growth in the EV infrastructure sector in the near future.”

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-Evening Report: Australia has led the way regulating gene technology for over 20 years. Here’s how it should apply that to AI

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Julia Powles, Associate Professor of Law and Technology; Director, UWA Tech & Policy Lab, Law School, The University of Western Australia

    Since 2019, the Australian Department for Industry, Science and Resources has been striving to make the nation a leader in “safe and responsible” artificial intelligence (AI). Key to this is a voluntary framework based on eight AI ethics principles, including “human-centred values”, “fairness” and “transparency and explainability”.

    Every subsequent piece of national guidance on AI has spun off these eight principles, imploring business, government and schools to put them into practice. But these voluntary principles have no real hold on organisations that develop and deploy AI systems.

    Last month, the Australian government started consulting on a proposal that struck a different tone. Acknowledging “voluntary compliance […] is no longer enough”, it spoke of “mandatory guardrails for AI in high-risk settings”.

    But the core idea of self-regulation remains stubbornly baked in. For example, it’s up to AI developers to determine whether their AI system is high risk, by having regard to a set of risks that can only be described as endemic to large-scale AI systems.

    If this high hurdle is met, what mandatory guardrails kick in? For the most part, companies simply need to demonstrate they have internal processes gesturing at the AI ethics principles. The proposal is most notable, then, for what it does not include. There is no oversight, no consequences, no refusal, no redress.

    But there is a different, ready-to-hand model that Australia could adopt for AI. It comes from another critical technology in the national interest: gene technology.

    A different model

    Gene technology is what’s behind genetically modified organisms. Like AI, it raises concerns for more than 60% of the population.

    In Australia, it’s regulated by the Office of the Gene Technology Regulator. The regulator was established in 2001 to meet the biotech boom in agriculture and health. Since then, it’s become the exemplar of an expert-informed, highly transparent regulator focused on a specific technology with far-reaching consequences.

    Three features have ensured the gene technology regulator’s national and international success.

    First, it’s a single-mission body. It regulates dealings with genetically modified organisms:

    to protect the health and safety of people, and to protect the environment, by identifying risks posed by or as a result of gene technology.

    Second, it has a sophisticated decision-making structure. Thanks to it, the risk assessment of every application of gene technology in Australia is informed by sound expertise. It also insulates that assessment from political influence and corporate lobbying.

    The regulator is informed by two integrated expert bodies: a Technical Advisory Committee and an Ethics and Community Consultative Committee. These bodies are complemented by Institutional Biosafety Committees supporting ongoing risk management at more than 200 research and commercial institutions accredited to use gene technology in Australia. This parallels best practice in food safety and drug safety.

    The Gene Technology Regulator has a sophisticated decision-making structure.
    Office of The Gene Technology Regulator, CC BY

    Third, the regulator continuously integrates public input into its risk assessment process. It does so meaningfully and transparently. Every dealing with gene technology must be approved. Before a release into the wild, an exhaustive consultation process maximises review and oversight. This ensures a high threshold of public safety.

    Regulating high-risk technologies

    Together, these factors explain why Australia’s gene technology regulator has been so successful. They also highlight what’s missing in most emerging approaches to AI regulation.

    The mandate of AI regulation typically involves an impossible compromise between protecting the public and supporting industry. As with gene regulation, it seeks to safeguard against risks. In the case of AI, those risks would be to health, the environment and human rights. But it also seeks to “maximise the opportunities that AI presents for our economy and society”.

    Second, currently proposed AI regulation outsources risk assessment and management to commercial AI providers. Instead, it should develop a national evidence base, informed by cross-disciplinary scientific, socio-technical and civil society expertise.

    The argument goes that AI is “out of the bag”, with potential applications too numerous and too mundane to regulate. Yet molecular biology methods are also well out of the bag. The gene tech regulator still maintains oversight of all uses of the technology, while continually working to categorise certain dealings as “exempt” or “low-risk” to facilitate research and development.

    Third, the public has no meaningful opportunity to assent to dealings with AI. This is true regardless of whether it involves plundering the archives of our collective imaginations to build AI systems, or deploying them in ways that undercut dignity, autonomy and justice.

    The lesson of more than two decades of gene regulation is that it doesn’t stop innovation to regulate a promising new technology until it can demonstrate a history of non-damaging use to people and the environment. In fact, it saves it.

    The UWA Tech & Policy Lab receives funding from nationally competitive research grants and philanthropic partners. The present research was supported by GA308883: Effective Ethical Frameworks for the State as an Enabler of Innovation, funded by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

    Julia Powles is the Director of the Lab and has served as an independent member of the National AI Centre’s Think Tank on Responsible AI, the Australian Government’s National Robotics Strategy Advisory Committee, and the Advisory Panel supporting the Australian Parliamentary Inquiry into the Use of Generative AI in the Australian Education System. Through each of these bodies, she has provided advice on comparative AI regulation.

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

    ref. Australia has led the way regulating gene technology for over 20 years. Here’s how it should apply that to AI – https://theconversation.com/australia-has-led-the-way-regulating-gene-technology-for-over-20-years-heres-how-it-should-apply-that-to-ai-240571

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Development Asia: Advancing Uzbekistan’s Sustainable Development via PPP Road Projects

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    PPP progress

    The PPP Development Department (PPPDD), established in 2018 under the Ministry of Economy and Finance (MOEF), monitors PPP progress in Uzbekistan. As of 5 August 2024, the government had signed 973 PPPs, totaling about $2.152 billion. These include 463 water management projects, 220 heating system projects, 91 education projects, 52 healthcare projects, and only 2 in transportation. Most PPP projects are small, averaging about $2.2 million each. The benefits of PPPs are more tangible for large projects, such as roads. Currently, no road PPPs have been signed, but two are in the pipeline: the Tashkent-Andijan Road (TAR), estimated at $5.35 billion, and the Tashkent-Samarkand Road (TSR), estimated at $1.4 billion.

    Road construction and rehabilitation typically require higher investment than other infrastructure sectors. The World Bank estimates Uzbekistan’s Road Development Plan faces a $1.5 billion annual funding gap. Mobilizing private sector and external financiers is crucial to bridge this gap.

    PPP projects generally progress through six phases: project identification, appraisal, structuring, tendering, delivery, and operation. Both the TAR and TSR are at the structuring stage. For TAR, the World Bank funded a pre-investment study in 2015 at a cost of $2.85 million, building on a pre-feasibility study completed in 2020. An investment teaser was prepared in December 2023, and the government invited expressions of interest by March 2024, with prequalification expected later in the year. The TSR feasibility study, funded by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), began in 2019 but remains incomplete.

    Besides TAR and TSR, other potential PPP road projects include the Kungrad-Daut-Ata A380 Highway (KDH) operations and maintenance, a nationwide electronic tolling system, real-time traffic monitoring, weigh-in-motion systems, the Takhtakaracha tunnel construction, and the development of a new road crash and vehicle operations and maintenance database.

    In December 2023, EBRD approved a €10 million loan to establish the Uzbekistan PPP Project Development Facility (UPDF), which will finance the preparation of priority PPP projects, including in the road sector.

    Uzbekistan’s PPP framework

    Uzbekistan’s PPP framework is built on the 2019 PPP Law (amended in 2021), Resolution 259 (2020), and a draft toll road law developed with World Bank support. The draft law aims to provide a foundation for tolling roads, complementing the existing PPP Law, and was expected to be submitted to Parliament by June 2024.

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recommended improving fiscal risk assessments, including for state-owned enterprises and PPPs, to better manage external borrowing and integrate investment planning into the medium-term budget. Uzbekistan’s public debt rose from 28% of GDP in 2019 to 36.8% in July 2023, reaching $31.5 billion. The Debt Law caps public debt at 60% of GDP, with policies tightening if debt reaches 50%. Attracting private sector financing for high-cost road projects is essential to avoid increasing the public debt burden.

    Tolling system for roads

    The government plans to introduce toll roads to ease budget constraints and improve road services. A draft toll law, prepared with World Bank assistance, aims to establish tolling mechanisms. Preliminary estimates suggest toll fees for the TAR route could be $5-7 for cars and $15 for trucks and buses. Tolling alone may not cover construction and operations and maintenance costs, requiring availability payments or co-funding from development partners.

    The ADB has supported road infrastructure in Uzbekistan with $1.3 billion from 2007 to 2022. The Ministry of Transport requested ADB’s assistance in introducing a tolling system, with the KDH project selected to pilot this system. The KDH could become the first ADB-supported PPP road project in Uzbekistan, with potential involvement in other PPP efforts, such as transforming State Unitary Entities (SUE) for road operations and maintenance and improving urban bus services in Karakalpakstan.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dmitry Chernyshenko congratulated MGIMO on its 80th anniversary

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko congratulated the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) on its 80th anniversary.

    The Deputy Prime Minister noted that over its rich history, MGIMO has become a symbol of the highest quality of diplomatic education. Graduates of the university form the basis of the Russian diplomatic service, demonstrating patriotism and loyalty to duty in their work.

    The university employs talented teachers, academics, and professors who pass on unique experience to future diplomats, teaching them to find the right solutions in difficult geopolitical conditions for the benefit of our country and in the interests of friendly countries.

    “It is gratifying that MGIMO attracts applicants from different countries: about a thousand foreign students from 81 countries study here. The university has established extensive international relations and interaction with leading universities in the world. This is evidence of MGIMO’s high authority and its achievements in the academic environment,” Dmitry Chernyshenko emphasized.

    Today, our country needs highly qualified specialists – diplomatic workers who are ready to defend Russia’s interests in the international arena. The Deputy Prime Minister expressed confidence that graduates of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations will continue to worthily fulfill the state tasks assigned to them, and MGIMO will maintain its reputation as one of the flagships of Russian education.

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

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://government.ru/nevs/52987/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: The government of New Caledonia launches a geographic information portal dedicated to natural hazards

    MIL OSI Translation. French Polynesian to English –

    Source: Government of New Caledonia

    In order to better inform the population about the natural risks to which New Caledonia is exposed, the government of New Caledonia is providing a new geographic information portal. In collaboration with the Digital and Modernization Department (DINUM), the Department of Industry, Mines and Energy of New Caledonia (DIMENC) has developed and put online the “Géorisque” portal: https://georisque.georep.nc/

    This portal provides simplified access to geographic data relating to natural hazards in the territory. To date, the information available concerns land movements, marine submersion, coastal erosion, and the presence of environmental asbestos. This data is regularly updated and enriched by the relevant services.

    As an extension of the Coastal Observatory (OBLIC), the Géorisque portal offers explanatory notices to facilitate the understanding and use of data. Users can explore interactive mapping, consult summary dashboards by municipality, and download or print maps according to their specific needs. Direct access to data layers is also available via the Géorep portal: https://dimenc.georep.nc.

    In a participatory approach, Géorisque also allows the population to contribute to enriching information by reporting new observations or events linked to natural risks.

    This project is part of the New Caledonian government’s desire to improve public awareness of environmental risks. In particular, it responds to a recommendation made in March 2024 by the Territorial Chamber of Auditors in its report on civil security policy in the area of major climate risks in New Caledonia.

    The data collected and disseminated on this portal aims to support local public policies, whether in the areas of housing, transport or risk prevention, and thus to strengthen coordination between the competent authorities.

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

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Yukon Electoral District Boundaries Commission 2024 final report tabled

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    On October 9, the Yukon Electoral District Boundaries Commission 2024 final report was tabled in the Yukon Legislative Assembly. This report outlines key recommendations on proposed boundaries to ensure effective representation in the Yukon Legislative Assembly.

    Proposed changes would result in an increase of electoral districts, from the current 19 to 21. These proposed changes are designed to improve representation across the Yukon, accounting for demographic shifts while maintaining the legal principle of voter parity.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: “The Chief Executive’s 2024 Policy Address” available to public on Wednesday

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Chief Executive, Mr John Lee, will release “The Chief Executive’s 2024 Policy Address” on Wednesday (October 16).
     
         The full text of the Policy Address will be released at http://www.policyaddress.gov.hk after the Chief Executive has completed his speech.
     
         Copies of the Policy Address and other related publications will be available for public collection from the time the Chief Executive has completed his speech at the 20 Home Affairs Enquiry Centres (HAECs) of the Home Affairs Department (HAD). Please browse the HAD website (www.had.gov.hk/en/public_services/public_enquiry_services/ctec.htm) for the opening hours of the HAECs.
     
         Leaflets containing the highlights of the Policy Address will also be available at the following places:
     
    * 16 government office buildings:
     
    Queensway Government Offices, Admiralty
    Immigration Tower, Wan Chai
    Revenue Tower, Wan Chai
    Wanchai Tower, Wan Chai
    North Point Government Offices
    Cheung Sha Wan Government Offices
    Ho Man Tin Government Offices
    Lai Chi Kok Government Offices
    Mongkok Government Offices
    Trade and Industry Tower, Kowloon City
    To Kwa Wan Government Offices
    West Kowloon Government Offices, Yau Ma Tei
    Sha Tin Government Offices
    Tai Hing Government Offices, Tuen Mun
    Tai Po Government Offices
    Tsuen Wan Government Offices
     
    * Seven public libraries:
     
    Hong Kong Central Library, Causeway Bay
    City Hall Public Library, Central
    Kowloon Public Library, Kowloon City
    Ping Shan Tin Shui Wai Public Library, Yuen Long
    Sha Tin Public Library
    Tsuen Wan Public Library
    Tuen Mun Public Library
     
    *Five museums:

    Hong Kong Museum of Art
    Hong Kong Heritage Museum
    Hong Kong Museum of History
    Hong Kong Science Museum
    Hong Kong Space Museum

    * 61 shopping centres in public housing estates:
     
    Hong Kong
    ———–
    Siu Sai Wan Plaza, Chai Wan
    Wan Tsui Shopping Centre, Chai Wan
    Oi Tung Shopping Centre, Shau Kei Wan
    Hing Tung Shopping Centre, Shau Kei Wan
    Stanley Plaza, Stanley
    Wah Fu (II) Commercial Complex, Aberdeen
    Shek Pai Wan Shopping Centre, Aberdeen
     
    Kowloon
    ———
    Lei Yue Mun Plaza, Yau Tong
    Yau Lai Shopping Centre, Yau Tong
    Kai Tin Shopping Centre, Lam Tin
    Tsui Ping North Shopping Circuit, Kwun Tong
    Shun Lee Commercial Centre, Kwun Tong
    On Kay Commercial Centre, Ngau Tau Kok
    Lok Wah Commercial Centre, Ngau Tau Kok
    Sau Mau Ping Shopping Centre, Sau Mau Ping
    Tsz Wan Shan Shopping Centre, Tsz Wan Shan
    Choi Wan Commercial Complex, Ngau Chi Wan
    Chuk Yuen Plaza, Wong Tai Sin
    Temple Mall South, Wong Tai Sin
    Fung Tak Shopping Centre, Diamond Hill
    Lok Fu Place, Wang Tau Hom
    Shek Kip Mei Shopping Centre, Sham Shui Po
    Hoi Fu Shopping Centre, Mong Kok
    Oi Man Plaza, Ho Man Tin
    Homantin Plaza, Ho Man Tin
     
    New Territories East
    ———————
    Choi Yuen Plaza, Sheung Shui
    Ching Ho Shopping Centre, Sheung Shui
    Fu Shin Shopping Centre, Tai Po
    Tai Wo Plaza, Tai Po
    Heng On Commercial Centre, Ma On Shan
    Yan On Shopping Centre, Ma On Shan
    Mei Tin Shopping Centre, Sha Tin
    Hin Keng Shopping Centre, Sha Tin
    Kwong Yuen Shopping Centre, Sha Tin
    Sha Kok Commercial Centre, Sha Tin
    Mei Lam Commercial Centre, Sha Tin
    Wo Che Plaza, Sha Tin
    Pok Hong Shopping Centre, Sha Tin
    Yue Tin Court Commercial Centre, Sha Tin
    Shui Chuen O Plaza, Sha Tin
    Shek Mun Shopping Centre, Sha Tin
    Queens Hill Shopping Centre, Fanling
    TKO Gateway, Tseung Kwan O
    Po Lam Shopping Centre, Tseung Kwan O
    TKO Spot, Tseung Kwan O
     
    New Territories West and Islands
    ———————————-
    T Town, Tin Shui Wai
    Tin Shui Shopping Centre, Tin Shui Wai
    Tin Yan Shopping Centre, Tin Shui Wai
    Tin Ching Shopping Centre, Tin Shui Wai
    Long Ping Commercial Centre, Yuen Long
    Long Shin Shopping Centre, Yuen Long
    Butterfly Plaza, Tuen Mun
    Leung King Plaza, Tuen Mun
    Tai Hing Commercial Centre, Tuen Mun
    Siu Hong Commercial Centre, Tuen Mun
    Yan Tin Shopping Centre, Tuen Mun
    Hung Fuk Shopping Centre, Hung Shui Kiu
    Cheung Fat Plaza, Tsing Yi
    Lei Muk Shue Shopping Centre, Tsuen Wan
    Kwai Chung Shopping Centre, Kwai Chung
    Fu Tung Plaza, Tung Chung
     
         The public can watch the live broadcast of the delivery of the speech by the Chief Executive in the Legislative Council and the press conference with a simple click into the Policy Address webpage (www.policyaddress.gov.hk).
     
         They can also access “The Chief Executive’s 2024 Policy Address” webpage through the e-Stations located at the 20 HAECs in the 18 Districts.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: Mavenir’s Cloud-Native Automation Wins Network X Award for Most Innovative Cloud Product

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    PARIS, Oct. 14, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Mavenir, a pioneer in cloud-native network infrastructure, has been recognized as a global leader in telecom innovation, winning the esteemed 2024 Network X Award for Most Innovative Cloud Product. This accolade reaffirms Mavenir’s excellence in delivering cutting-edge Cloud-Native Automation solutions to mobile network operators (MNOs). Building on its momentum, Mavenir adds this award to its impressive track record, having previously received the 2023 Network X Award for Outstanding Automation Solution in Open RAN.

    The award honors the network cloud-based product that has delivered the biggest change in network performance for MNOs. The Network X Award judges evaluated Mavenir’s cloud-native 5G automation solution based on five key criteria. The judges assessed Mavenir’s solution for its level of innovation, impact of cloud technology on network performance, time and cost-efficiency of deployment, operational efficiency, and relevance and effectiveness demonstrated through real-world case studies. This recognition solidifies Mavenir’s leadership in automating cloud-native 5G network deployments, empowering MNOs to accelerate time-to-market and reduce total cost of ownership (TCO).

    Mavenir’s Cloud-Native Automation empowers MNOs to accelerate their 5G transition. The solution provides end-to-end automation and orchestration of network functions software deployment and lifecycle management, enabling faster network deployment, enhanced flexibility, and seamless scaling. Mavenir’s comprehensive automation capabilities include infrastructure automation, cloud platform automation, network functions automation, and CI/CD pipeline automation. The solution streamlines both day-1 initial deployment of cloud-native network functions (CNFs) and day-2 lifecycle management operations, including upgrades and rollbacks.

    Bejoy Pankajakshan, Chief Technology and Strategy Officer, at Mavenir, “Our solution simplifies and accelerates network and services deployment, providing a cost-effective path to 5G. By reducing time, cost, and resource requirements, our customers can quickly implement new innovations and features, staying ahead in a rapidly evolving market.”

    The Network X awards showcase the advancements and leadership across the global telecommunications industry with projects and initiatives that celebrate innovation, collaboration, and sustainability.

    Notes to the Editor:

    Cloud-Native Automation – Mavenir

    2024 Network X Award Winners

    Network X Awards 2023: Mavenir’s Cloud-Native Network Automation and Open RAN Intelligent Controller (O-RIC) Win Outstanding Automation Solution in Open RAN Award at Network X 2023 – Mavenir

    Network X Awards 2022: Mavenir Wins Outstanding CORE Network Solution and Outstanding Open RAN Solution at Network X Awards – Mavenir

    About Network X:

    Network X, taking place on 8-10 October 2024 at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, is the only event that brings the fixed and mobile markets together to connect and build business models, frameworks and approaches to monetise B2B and consumer segments with AI and cloud-enabled fibre and 5G networks.

    Network X attracts a global audience of 5,000+ senior network infrastructure and service professionals from telcos, leading vendors, industry bodies, governments, analysts and media, including 1,500+ operators. The 2024 event will address current industry challenges and changes through five key themes: Fibre, Wi-Fi Networks and Services, Optical Transport, Mobile Networks and Mobile Services.

    About Mavenir

    Mavenir is building the future of networks today with cloud-native, AI-enabled solutions which are green by design, empowering operators to realize the benefits of 5G and achieve intelligent, automated, programmable networks. As the pioneer of Open RAN and a proven industry disruptor, Mavenir’s award-winning solutions are delivering automation and monetization across mobile networks globally, accelerating software network transformation for 300+ Communications Service Providers in over 120 countries, which serve more than 50% of the world’s subscribers. For more information, please visit http://www.mavenir.com

    Mavenir PR Contacts:

    Emmanuela Spiteri
    PR@mavenir.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/27577da1-f134-4ab5-be3f-76c08e051304

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Video: Global Trade Outlook revision

    Source: World Trade Organization – WTO (video statements)

    Global goods trade is projected to post a 2.7% increase in 2024, up slightly from the previous estimate of 2.6%, WTO economists said in an updated forecast on 10 October. The volume of world merchandise trade is likely to increase by 3.0% in 2025; however, rising geopolitical tensions and increased economic policy uncertainty continue to pose substantial downside risks to the forecast. Services trade have a more favourable outlook compared to goods according to leading indicators.

    More info:
    https://www.wto.org/english/news_e/news24_e/stat_10oct24_e.htm

    Download this video from the WTO website:
    https://www.wto.org/english/res_e/webcas_e/webcas_e.htm

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ys5obTRp6tQ

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-Evening Report: This beautiful peacock spider was only found two years ago. Now it could be dancing its last dance

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lizzy Lowe, Vice Chancellor’s Research Fellow in Ecology and Entomology, Edith Cowan University

    If you notice a tiny, strikingly coloured spider performing an elaborate courtship dance, you may have seen your first peacock spider.

    New species of peacock spider are discovered every year; the tally is now 113. One newly discovered species, Maratus yanchep, is only known to exist in a small area of coastal dunes near Yanchep, north of Perth.

    As Perth’s suburbs sprawl ever further north and south, it means one problem – the housing crisis – is worsening another, the extinction crisis.

    The dunes which are home to Maratus yanchep are just 20 metres from land being cleared for large new estates.

    If the species was formally listed as threatened, it could be protected. But the spider was only described in 2022 and has not been listed on state or federal threatened species lists. That means Maratus yanchep has no protection, according to the state government.

    What’s so special about a spider?

    Peacock spiders are tiny. Many have bodies just 4–5 mm across. The males only put on their mating displays during short periods of the year, typically August to September. Their size and habits also make it hard to learn about their populations and preferred habitats. This is partly why we’re only now realising how many peacock spider species there are.

    Concerted effort by enthusiasts such as Jurgen Otto has greatly expanded our knowledge. Of the 113 described species, each has distinctive colouring and its own dances (males have the colour and the moves). But we know there are more species of peacock spider waiting to be recognised by western science.

    Many species of peacock spider are only known from within a very small area of suitable habitat.

    This puts the species at high risk of extinction because a single threat such as a large bushfire or a suburban development can destroy all their habitat at once.

    Peacock spiders such as this Maratus tasmanicus are tiny but pack a lot of personality.
    Kristian Bell/Shutterstock

    How can this be allowed?

    Before any native bushland is cleared in Australia, developers have to undertake an environmental impact survey to look for threatened species and assess what damage the development would do. If a threatened species is found, the development can be scaled back or denied.

    The problem is, these surveys only look for species known to be in danger. If a species isn’t listed on Australia’s growing list of threatened species, it won’t be looked for.

    But Maratus yanchep has not been assessed to see if it is threatened. This means it has no protection from development.

    This points to a wider problem. Large, well-known Australian vertebrates such as koalas and platypuses tend to get more attention – and conservation efforts – than humble invertebrates. We face an uphill battle to conserve our wealth of invertebrates.

    Worldwide, many invertebrates are in real danger of disappearing. Australia is home to at least 300,000 invertebrate species, dwarfing the 8,000-odd vertebrates – but only 101 are currently listed under the federal government’s laws protecting threatened species, the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Act. The problem here is we don’t have enough data to assess most invertebrate species for formal conservation listing and protection.

    Data takes money

    Listing a species as threatened requires a large amount of data on where the species is and isn’t found. This takes time and specialist knowledge. But funding is scarce.

    As a result, our efforts to gather data on invertebrates often relies on passionate volunteers and enthusiasts, who may often pick one genus – say peacock spiders – and set out to expand our knowledge.

    When clear and immediate threats do appear – such as clearing coastal dunes in Yanchep – we are again reliant on the unpaid work of volunteers to gather information.

    The problem of sprawl

    Perth is one of the longest cities in the world. Its suburbs sprawl for 150 kilometres, running from Two Rocks in the north to Dawesville in the south.

    Many Perth residents want to live by the coast, driving demand for new housing on the city outskirts. This drives destruction of native bushland and pushes species towards extinction. Some species tolerate the change from bushland to suburbia, but these are a minority – less than 25%. Small, localised species are at highest risk of extinction.

    Perth’s sprawl shows no sign of slowing. Land clearing for housing has contributed to the worsening plight of the Carnaby’s cockatoo. Fifty years ago, the iconic cockatoo flew over the city in flocks as large as 7,000. There’s nothing like that now.

    Perth’s urban sprawl now stretches beyond Yanchep. Pictured: Yanchep’s beach. The bush area in the background is where maratus yanchep lives.
    Kok Kin Meng/Shutterstock

    What can we do?

    Efforts are underway to protect Maratus yanchep. The not-for-profit charity Invertebrates Australia is working to nominate it for the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species. Greens MP Brad Pettitt raised the issue in Parliament in August.

    The one thing peacock spiders have going for them is their looks. They are spectacularly beautiful. They’re also easily identified by the distinct patterns on the males – for most species you don’t need expert training to tell them apart, just decent eyesight.

    As a result, peacock spiders have drawn attention from dozens of amateur arachnologists and photographers who collect and share information on where they can be found. This citizen science data is often able to be used as evidence in listing a species as threatened – and unlocking vital protection.

    Images of these spiders also boosts their public profile and support for their protection.

    Despite the recent groundswell of interest in saving this tiny spider, it may be too late. To avoid the mass extinction of iconic Australian species, we must find better ways of building without large-scale habitat clearing.




    Read more:
    Photos from the field: zooming in on Australia’s hidden world of exquisite mites, snails and beetles


    Lizzy Lowe is affiliated with Invertebrates Australia

    Jess Marsh is affiliated with Invertebrates Australia.

    Dr Leanda Denise Mason is affiliated with Centre for People, Place, and Planet.

    ref. This beautiful peacock spider was only found two years ago. Now it could be dancing its last dance – https://theconversation.com/this-beautiful-peacock-spider-was-only-found-two-years-ago-now-it-could-be-dancing-its-last-dance-238437

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Over £1 million extra support secured for York residents

    Source: City of York

    Financial support to help residents cope with the cost of living crisis is being extended until the end of end of March 2025.

    The council has been allocated £1,037,906 for the next 6 months and residents are urged to make sure they claim all benefits that they are eligible for.

    This Household Support Funding (HSF) from the government will be used in York to provide a variety of financial assistance to help residents meet essential expenses. These include:

    • £500,000 – a direct payment will be made before Christmas to working aged people who receive Council Tax Support
    • £180,000 – a discretionary application scheme will be available to support any other residents struggling to meet their bills, including pensioners
    • £70,000 – support for the council’s food and fuel voucher scheme
    • £80,000 – advice and support to maximise residents’ income and promote take-up of unclaimed benefits
    • £80,000 – community food and support to run Warm Places this winter
    • £60,000 – administration and delivery of 2 Talk Money information and support campaigns
    • £10,000 – York Energy Advice funding for offering advice and energy-saving measures for households
    • £30,000 – support to identify, contact and support financially-vulnerable residents to claim.

    Councillor Katie Lomas, joint Executive Member for Finance, Performance, Major Projects, Human Rights, Equality and Inclusion, said:

    Nearly half of the £1,037,906.47 we’ve been allocated through the Household Support Fund (HSF), will be issued as direct payments for working-age residents who are receiving Council Tax support. This translates to a cash payment of around £115 for every qualifying resident and we’re contacting those who are eligible, to make sure they receive this vital support.

    “Of the remaining funds, £180,000 will be allocated to a discretionary support scheme, which will be open to applications to anyone struggling with their finances. We’ll also be allocating money from the HSF to continue supporting Warm Places and energy advice services to support people with the effects of rising energy costs this winter, as well as community food support and support to take up unclaimed benefits.”

    Councillor Bob Webb, with joint responsibility for financial inclusion, said:

    We reckon as many as 1,600 people in York are missing out on Pension Credit. It’s really important that they know about it and claim the extra £100s as well as unlocking other benefits like the Winter Fuel Payment.

    “We know that between April and June 2024, an extra 31 residents claimed Pension Credit who are benefiting from a total extra £134,825 to help them through these uncertain financial times.

    “We’re writing to over 450 residents who we know are eligible for Pension Credit because they already claim Council Tax Support and Housing Benefit. Information on the 1,150 or so other eligible people is held by the Government’s Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and can’t be shared for data protection reasons. So, we’ve been reaching out to them through other council services and voluntary sector organisations, to help people check their eligibility and to support them to apply.”

    Anyone who needs help to claim Pension Credit can click here, or contact these local support services:

    Anyone who needs help to claim Council Tax Support can call the City of York Council Benefits Advisors on telephone: 01904 552044 or contact these local support services:

    Find more information for residents on other benefits.

    The next Talk Money campaign to encourage residents to claim all they can, spend less and get good advice, will run from Monday 4 November to Friday 15 November 2024.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI China: World sci-tech forum builds consensus on sustainable development

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    The 2024 World Science and Technology Development Forum (WSTDF) will convene in Beijing from Oct. 22 to 24. As a major event in the global science community, the forum will gather scientists, educators, entrepreneurs, and other leading figures from around the world to share insights and technological solutions for sustainable development.
    The China Association for Science and Technology (CAST) initiated the forum in 2019 and has held five successful sessions to date. Chinese President Xi Jinping sent a congratulatory letter to the inaugural WSTDF, highlighting the forum’s role in building consensus and deepening cooperation.
    Since its inception, the forum has explored new approaches and fostered innovation, establishing itself as a world-class hub for pioneering ideas. It has created an international platform for scientific exchange and collaboration, a venue for bringing together leading talents, and a driving force for global sustainable development. These efforts have significantly contributed to advancing the Global Development Initiative and promoting the vision of building a community with a shared future for mankind.
    Sci-tech innovation: The way to sustainable development
    In his congratulatory letter to the first forum, President Xi stressed the role of scientific and technological innovation in addressing global challenges. He noted that the ongoing revolution in science and technology and industrial transformation significantly impacts human civilization and global governance.
    “Promoting sustainable development with sci-tech innovation has become the way that we must take to solve some important global issues of common concern,” Xi said.
    The past five sessions of the forum have always focused on advancing sustainable development through technological innovation, covering crucial topics from basic science to climate change, the digital economy and green innovation. The forum has invited global scientific leaders to present their latest research and propose solutions to pressing challenges.
    Each year, the forum releases a list of the top 10 scientific issues concerning the development of human society, evaluating major global challenges and promoting the achievement of the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals. The second forum introduced the World Journal Clout Index of Scientific and Technological Periodicals and included the results on the “Innovation China” platform. The third, fourth and fifth forums released the annual IUPAC Top 10 Emerging Technologies in Chemistry.
    The research findings released by the forum represent the collective wisdom of the scientific community, showcasing advancements in science and technology while offering practical solutions for global challenges and sustainable development goals.
    Building consensus: A platform for global exchange
    Beyond technological discussions, the forum serves as a vital space for building international consensus and fostering cooperation. President Xi has highlighted China’s commitment to openness and collaboration, expressing hope that the forum will help scientists, educators and entrepreneurs from different countries build consensus, exchange ideas, and deepen cooperation to contribute wisdom and strength to building a community with a shared future for mankind.
    The WSTDF serves as more than just a platform for scientific discussion; it is a vital opportunity for building global consensus and fostering international cooperation. Since its inception in 2019, the forum has consistently brought together Nobel laureates, leading scientists, educators, economists and entrepreneurs. Each year, it attracts about 200 distinguished participants from over 20 countries and regions, including academicians, experts, heads of major scientific organizations, prominent entrepreneurs and university presidents.
    The forum facilitates communication through high-level dialogues, keynote speeches and roundtable discussions, creating valuable connections among scientists, entrepreneurs and policymakers. These exchanges encourage in-depth reflection and foster consensus on critical scientific issues. Over the past five years, the forum has drawn thousands of scientific leaders globally, publishing reports and generating influential scientific policy initiatives.
    A notable example is the “Openness, Trust, and Cooperation” initiative introduced at the third forum by 260 scientific organizations, emphasizing the international scientific community’s commitment to unity and collaboration. The initiative outlined concrete measures such as maintaining the legitimate boundaries of scientific openness, fostering mutual trust and respect among collaborators, and finding common ground for cooperation.
    At the fourth forum, the organizers partnered with globally recognized scientific organizations to launch the initiative of Basic Sciences for Sustainable Development and Discipline Development Report. It called for a renewed global focus on fundamental scientific research, deepening practical cooperation, promoting science popularization, and advancing sustainable development.
    In this era of profound transformation, forming a broad consensus is crucial for leading global scientific development. The WSTDF provides a foundation for uniting global wisdom and building a better future.
    Building bridges for global collaboration
    The WSTDF aims to foster deeper cooperation among governments, industry, and academia, which aligns with President Xi’s vision. It promotes an open, collaborative ecosystem to address global challenges.
    Each forum focuses on international cooperation, promoting the sharing of global scientific resources through initiatives like establishing international scientific issues and talent databases for global cooperation.
    The inaugural forum introduced an innovative model for organizing the event through a collaborative approach involving CAST, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the Chinese Academy of Engineering and internationally renowned scientific organizations. This partnership established a flagship platform facilitating cooperation between China’s scientific community and the global science community.
    The second forum emphasized collaboration, introducing the Innovation and Cooperation Forum of Open Science and Open Source as a parallel session. The third forum promoted discussions on global cooperation in scientific and technological innovation.
    The fourth forum continued with the theme of “Openness, Trust, and Cooperation,” establishing a sub-forum for collaboration between academicians and multinational companies. This initiative aimed to deepen international cooperation in fundamental research, industry partnerships and technological innovation. The fifth forum, based in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, focused on international regional cooperation, resulting in a series of high-quality recommendation reports.
    After five years of progress, the WSTDF has become a key platform for global innovation and scientific collaboration. The 2024 forum, themed “Science and Technology for the Future,” will focus on six key ideas: intelligence, interdisciplinary, infrastructures, innovation, interaction, and integration. It will continue gathering global wisdom to empower high-quality development and promote international scientific cooperation and innovation.
    Guided by the principles of President Xi’s congratulatory letter, the WSTDF remains committed to building a community with a shared future for mankind. By deepening international cooperation, building global consensus and advancing the three global initiatives — the Global Development Initiative, the Global Security Initiative and the Global Civilization Initiative — the forum aims to continue providing strong momentum for global scientific innovation, illuminating the path toward a better, more sustainable future.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: ‘Stories of CPC’ briefing to highlight NE China’s achievements

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    A press conference was held Sunday in Changchun, Northeast China’s Jilin province, to introduce the upcoming “Stories of the Communist Party of China (CPC) — Achievements of Northeast China in Practicing Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era” briefing.
    Hu Zhaoming, spokesperson for the International Department of the CPC Central Committee (IDCPC), presented details of the briefing scheduled for Monday.
    The briefing, themed “Striving for New Breakthroughs in the Full Revitalization of Northeast China,” will be jointly hosted by the IDCPC and Party committees of Inner Mongolia autonomous region and Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces.
    This 18th edition of the “Stories of CPC” briefings will include bilateral meetings, a main briefing, economic and trade promotion meetings, and field visits for foreign guests. It aims to introduce Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era to the international community, especially CPC Central Committee General Secretary Xi Jinping’s important ideas on regional coordinated development, with the full revitalization of Northeast China as an example.
    More than 200 leaders of political parties from over 50 countries, foreign envoys in China and foreign business representatives are expected to attend.
    China’s northeastern region comprises Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces and part of Inner Mongolia autonomous region.
    The IDCPC initiated the “Stories of CPC” briefings in 2017 to share China’s development in the new era and the Party’s governance.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: EU statement on recent attacks against UNIFIL

    Source: Government of Sweden

    EU statement on recent attacks against UNIFIL – Government.se

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    Published

    Statement by the High Representative on behalf of the European Union on recent attacks against UNIFIL.

    The European Union expresses its grave concern about the recent escalation along the Blue Line. The EU condemns all attacks against UN missions. It expresses particularly grave concern regarding the attacks by the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) against the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), which left several peacekeepers wounded. Such attacks against UN peacekeepers constitute a grave violation of international law and are totally unacceptable. These attacks must stop immediately.

    All actors have an obligation to take necessary measures to ensure the safety and security of UN personnel and property and to respect the inviolability of UN premises at all times. We urgently await explanations and a thorough investigation from the Israeli authorities about the attacks against UNIFIL, which plays a fundamental role in the stability of South Lebanon.

    We urge all parties to fully uphold their obligations to guarantee the safety and security of UNIFIL personnel at all times, and to allow UNIFIL to continue to implement its mandate.

    The troops and other personnel of UNIFIL, to which sixteen EU Member States currently contribute, are working under difficult conditions in the defence of international peace and security. The EU pays tribute to their professionalism and renews its unwavering support to UNIFIL’s role.

    We are also deeply concerned by Hezbollah’s continued launch of rockets into Israel that has to stop, and by IDF strikes in densely populated areas of Lebanon, causing a heavy toll on civilians and the displacement of many. We urge all parties to respect International Humanitarian Law, in all circumstances.

    The EU reiterates its call for an immediate ceasefire in Lebanon, and for all parties to commit and work towards the full implementation of Security Council Resolution 1701.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Funding Scheme on Promotion of Family Education 2024-25 opens for application from today

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Home and Youth Affairs Bureau and the Family Council have launched a new five-year Funding Scheme on the Promotion of Family Education today (October 14) and invite a 2024-25 round of applications. The deadline for applications is November 22.
          
         The Scheme seeks to subsidise non-profit-making community family education projects to raise public awareness of family education and its importance, and further promote family values to enhance family well-being and social harmony.
                                         
         The Scheme covers various family-related themes such as education for new parents, parent-child education, maintenance of family relationships, strengthening of family cohesion and solidarity, inheritance of good family values and traditional virtues, and other marriage-related subjects, etc to meet the needs of different families. Apart from the above-mentioned themes, applicant organisations may apply for funding to organise suitable projects with other family-related themes having regard to the concern or needs of the community. A proposed project may feature more than one theme provided that they are family-related. The funding cap for each 12-month and 18-month project is $800,000 and $1,200,000 respectively.
          
         Details of the Scheme, including the application guide and application form, are available on the website of the Scheme (www.pfe.gov.hk). Interested eligible bodies and non-governmental organisations may submit applications.
     

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Swedish and Belgian Prime Ministers to attend memorial on anniversary of 2023 Brussels terrorist attack

    Source: Government of Sweden

    Swedish and Belgian Prime Ministers to attend memorial on anniversary of 2023 Brussels terrorist attack – Government.se

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    Press release from Prime Minister’s Office

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    Wednesday, 16 October marks the one-year anniversary of the terrorist attack in Brussels, in which two Swedish football fans were killed and a third injured. Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson and Belgium’s Prime Minister Alexander de Croo will take part in a joint wreath-laying ceremony at the site where the attack took place.

    Photo media interested in covering the ceremony are invited to contact Press Secretary Tom Samuelsson for more information.

    Press contact

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government Appointments – PSA looks forward to working with new Public Service Commissioner

    Source: PSA

    The PSA hopes the new Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche will be a good advocate for the value of the public service in supporting the health and wellbeing of New Zealanders.
    The PSA congratulates Sir Brian on his appointment. He has taken on this role at a very challenging time when the public service has been eroded by the Government through spending cuts and job losses.
    The PSA looks forward to having a constructive relationship with Sir Brian to ensure the public service is recognised for the great work it does.
    Through his long and distinguished service in many roles, he knows the value public service workers bring to issues. He has worked with governments in the past which have continued to build the public service so it can meet our challenges as a nation.
    We hope he brings to the role the courage to remind Ministers of the critical role that the public service plays.
    Te Kawa Mataaho, the Public Service Commission, has provided valuable leadership in recent years in building a public service that has provided rewarding career paths and one that has driven a consistent reduction in gender pay gaps, well ahead of the private sector.
    The PSA urges Sir Brian to weigh the progress that has been made when he takes on the role next month so he can provide quality advice to the Government that helps it better understand how the public service is helping us progress as a nation. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Fall of Khrushchev: 60 years since the ‘most democratic coup’ in Soviet history, how Comrade Nikita was toppled

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Tomas Sniegon, Associate Professor, Department of European Studies, Lund University

    The overthrow of Nikita Khrushchev from the posts of first secretary of the Soviet Communist Party and the leader of the Soviet state in October 1964 was an unprecedented event in the history of the Soviet Union.

    The old leader was deposed by the opposition without violence. He was not imprisoned or killed after losing power. While his predecessors Lenin and Stalin and successors Brezhnev, Andropov and Chernenko all died in power, Khrushchev was sent into retirement, where he lived under supervision for another seven years.

    Unlike the era of the last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet Union did not disintegrate when its leader had to relinquish power. Six decades have now passed since what has become known as the “most democratic coup” in Soviet history – sometimes referred to as the “little October revolution”.

    Khrushchev, who rose to power on the death of Josef Stalin in 1953, actually came close to being overthrown as early as 1957. At that time, Stalin’s former collaborators and close comrades, including Georgy Malenkov and Vyacheslav Molotov, opposed him. They even gained an upper hand in the party’s highest body, the presidium. But Khrushchev was saved by the support of the army leadership, the KGB political police and the wider party leadership, the central committee.

    Seven years later, however, he was brought down by politicians from the next generation – men who largely owed their powerful positions to him.

    Strongest among them was Leonid Brezhnev, who duly took Khrushchev’s place as first secretary (shortly afterwards renaming his position general secretary, the same title as Stalin). Next in line was Alexander Shelepin, the powerful secretary of the party’s central committee who had run the KGB from 1958 to 1961.

    The role of the KGB, which in October 1964 was headed by Shelepin’s successor Vladimir Semichastny, was crucial in ensuring Khrushchev’s downfall, as its ninth directorate – which was responsible for the protection of state officials – not only protected but also constantly monitored them.

    Semichastny not only knew about the revolt against Khrushchev but was actively involved in it. Had he informed the leader about the plotting, pretty much what he was in the job to do, Khrushchev would more than likely have averted the palace coup this time as well.

    In his memoirs, Semichastny even mentioned the fact that Brezhnev raised the possibility of Khrushchev’s assassination during one conversation with him. But this plan was never put into action. In the event the plot to remove the Soviet leader was completed by non-violent means.

    Reforming leader

    Khrushchev has gone down in history as a reformer who wanted to make Soviet communism less brutal. He strongly criticised Stalin for his abuse of power but, at the same time, he gradually increased his own powers.

    His efforts at political and economic reforms stopped when they posed a threat to maintaining the monopoly of communist power. Despite paying lip service to the idea of less heavy-handed domination of the Soviet bloc from Moscow, he became known for his bloody suppression of the Hungarian revolt in 1956. During the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, he then brought the world to the brink of nuclear war.

    New kind of leadership: Kruschev meeting US president John F Kennedy in Vienna in 1961.

    His initially positive reforms improved the living standards) of the people in his country, but later became chaotic and led to social unrest, including the massacre of workers in Novocherkassk in 1962 and the need to buy grain from the west, which he had previously wanted to ideologically “bury”.

    Also, the rift between the Soviet Union and China at the turn of the 1950s and 1960s caused a certain resentment in Moscow. Khrushchev’s moves towards liberalisation had not caused the rift, which was more due to China’s increased authoritarianism under Mao Zedong during that era. This was exacerbated by border disputes between the two countries as well as disagreements over international relations. But Khrushchev’s critics felt he could – and should – have handled relations more skilfully.

    Fall and legacy

    Having faced down a coup attempt in 1957, by October 1964 Khrushchev found himself politically isolated and without support in either the presidium or in the central committee. His opponents forced him to return prematurely from his vacation in the Georgian report town of Pitsunda to Moscow where he was confronted by his political opponents, led by Brezhnev with the support of other powerful politicians, including Shelepin, Alexei Kosygin and Mikhail Suslov.

    Realising his supporters in the presidium were in the minority and that to retain power would mean involving the army or KGB, which he was not confident would back him, Khruschev resigned.

    Reflecting on how his leadership had rejected Stalinism, he is reported to have said: “I am glad that, finally, the party has matured and can control any individual.”

    But Brezhnev, who manoeuvred himself into power in Khrushchev’s stead, learned from the fall of his predecessor and tightened his grip on the levers of power. Yet the Soviet Union – thanks in large part to Khrushchev – never returned the state terror and mass murder of Stalinism.

    The Soviet Union was to experience another coup attempt against a leader in 1991, when conservative opponents tried to overthrow another reformer, Mikhail Gorbachev. But this attempt, much less prepared and elaborate and lacking the necessary wider support, failed. The Soviet Union collapsed and was formally disbanded just a few months later.

    But for many people, it’s Khrushchev whose reforms and governing style began the gradual disintegration of the Soviet Union as far back as the 1950s, partly thanks to his efforts to impose more democratisation. It is not surprising that the current Russian president, Vladimir Putin, disdains him – especially since Khrushchev, according to Putin, “senselessly donated” Crimea to Ukraine in 1954.

    At least Khrushchev himself was able to live to focus on the positives. He would recall in his memoir how he freed his country from the suffocating fear of Stalinism and was able to raise a generation of younger politicians who were finally not afraid to stand up to him. Sadly, this is no longer a hallmark under the current leadership.

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

    ref. Fall of Khrushchev: 60 years since the ‘most democratic coup’ in Soviet history, how Comrade Nikita was toppled – https://theconversation.com/fall-of-khrushchev-60-years-since-the-most-democratic-coup-in-soviet-history-how-comrade-nikita-was-toppled-241053

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Whispers from the Dark Web Cave. Cyberthreats in the Middle East

    Source: Securelist – Kaspersky

    Headline: Whispers from the Dark Web Cave. Cyberthreats in the Middle East

    The Kaspersky Digital Footprint Intelligence team analyzed cybersecurity threats coming from dark web cybercriminals who targeted businesses and governments in the Middle East in H1 2024. Our research highlights the most severe and pervasive threats, and identifies potential risks and consequences as well as defensive strategies.

    The report covers threats that targeted entities in the following countries and territories:

    • Bahrain;
    • Egypt;
    • Iraq;
    • Jordan;
    • Kuwait;
    • Lebanon;
    • Oman;
    • Palestine;
    • Qatar;
    • Saudi Arabia;
    • Syria;
    • United Arab Emirates.

    The five prevalent cybersecurity threats in the Middle East covered in the report are related to:

    • The activities of ideological pirates, or hacktivists. The region has seen exponential growth in these due to the current geopolitical situation, and they are getting ever more destructive.
    • The shadow jewelry fair, or the initial access broker market. Initial access brokers deal in attack entry points for corporate networks, which attract hackers and cybercrime gangs.
    • Deadly sandworms, or ransomware gangs. At least 19 gangs were active in the Middle East in H1 2024, conducting multiple ransomware attacks that typically led to devastating consequences.
    • The ubiquity of malicious whistleblowers, or information stealers. They provide adversaries with up-to-date data for future attacks, especially valid credentials for corporate systems. Almost 10 million lines of stolen credentials belonging to Middle Eastern entities were published on the dark web in H1 2024 alone. The figure includes 4.4 million lines of access information stolen from key government agencies.
    • Cave raiders who steal sensitive data from corporations and other targets and distribute it among cybercriminals. A quarter of all data breaches affect various government organizations.

    Staying aware of all possible risks coming from the dark web helps organizations and governments to be one step ahead of cybercriminals and thus, to prevent attacks or fraud that could compromise their network infrastructure or operational integrity.

    Out report will be beneficial for:

    • C-level managers;
    • Corporate security employees;
    • Risk management professionals;
    • Cyberthreat Intelligence (CTI) and SOC analysts;
    • Incident response professionals;
    • OSINT and darknet researchers.

    The full version of the report is available on Kaspersky Digital Footprint Intelligence website.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Africa – ATIDI Announces Election of New Board Leadership

    Source: African Trade & Investment Development Insurance

    ·       At its recently concluded Board Meeting, Professor Kelly Mua Kingsley was elected as the new Chair of the Board and Ms. Christina Westholm- Schröder was elected as the new Vice Chair of the Board.

    ·       ATIDI was recently upgraded by Moody’s from A3/Positive to A2/Stable – while S&P affirmed its A/Stable rating, reflecting the organization’s strong financial management and strategic direction.

    Nairobi, 14 October 2024 — At its 101st meeting held on 5 October 2024, the Board of Directors of African Trade & Investment Development Insurance – ATIDI (commonly known as the African Trade Insurance Agency), announced the election of Professor Kelly Mua Kingsly as the new Chair of the Board. He is deputized by Ms. Christina Westholm- Schröder.

    The election of the new Board leadership follows the appointment of new Board Members by ATIDI’s Annual General Meeting in line with ATIDI’s continued commitment to strong corporate governance.

    The new Board, which includes ATIDI’s first Independent Director, will play a critical role in steering the organization’s strategic direction and governance, further enhancing the organization’s efforts to foster sustainable growth across the continent.

    Professor Kelly is the Director of Finance Operations at the Ministry of Finance’s Directorate General of Treasury in Cameroon. In this capacity, he has been instrumental in designing and implementing strategies for monitoring public revenue and expenditure, preparing comprehensive financial reviews and spearheading public finance reforms.

    In addition to his role at the Ministry of Finance, Professor Kelly serves as the Censor at the Central Bank of Central African States (BEAC) and represents Cameroon at the Regional Advisory Commission on Financial Markets (COSUMAF). His recent appointment as Cameroon’s designated representative with the United Nations Development Program and the European Investment Bank for GEF projects underscores his commitment to managing climate finance and enhancing regional debt resilience.

    Accepting his appointment, Prof. Kelly said his vision is to support best corporate governance practices within ATIDI and drive economic growth that benefits the continent by working closely with ATIDI’s leadership.

    “I aim to expand ATIDI’s outreach and visibility across Africa. I encourage all the Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC) countries to consider applying for membership in ATIDI, as this will further strengthen regional cooperation and open new avenues for economic collaboration,” prof. Kelly said.

    Prof. Kelly’s election as the first Cameroonian Board Chair has a significant impact on fostering relationships and networks within the CEMAC and the broader West African region. His role is set to facilitate collaboration among member states, enhance trade relations and promote regional integration. For more information on the membership process, visit  

    https://www.atidi.africa/investorrelations/membership-process/  

    Prof. Kelly succeeds Dr. Yohannes Ayalew Birru who has diligently served for two consecutive terms of three years. He was deputised by Ms. Hope Murera, the Managing Director of Zep-Re. During their leadership, ATIDI’s member states increased from 14 to 24 (current member states include Kenya, Cameroon, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, South Sudan, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Zambia, Rwanda, Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire, Benin, Mali, Democratic Republic of Congo, Chad, Senegal, Togo, Madagascar, Niger, Burkina Faso, and Angola).  Similarly, gross exposure increased from USD 4.8 million to USD9.6 billion, profits from USD12 million to USD69.1 million and assets from USD419 million to USD837 million.

    “I take this opportunity to express my deep appreciation to the outgoing Board Chairman and his team for their outstanding leadership in bringing ATIDI to such a level of performance,” prof. Kelly said.

    The new Vice Chairperson, Ms. Westholm-Schröder is Sovereign’s Chief Underwriter and Senior Vice President, with more than 35 years of experience in the political risk insurance industry. She is responsible for all aspects of Sovereign’s transactional underwriting and also leads Sovereign’s successful cooperation with multilaterals and export credit agencies.

    Welcoming the new Board of Directors, ATIDI CEO Manuel Moses the new board’s vision and leadership would be instrumental in guiding ATIDI’s future.

    “With the Board’s diverse expertise, we expect that we will drive impactful initiatives that foster sustainable trade and investment across Africa. This new leadership team will further enhance our outreach efforts and engage our stakeholders more effectively, creating a stronger and more connected community. Together, we are poised to make a significant difference in the economic landscape of the continent,” Mr. Manuel said.  

    Rating upgrade

    ATIDI was recently upgraded by Moody’s from A3/Positive to A2/Stable – while S&P affirmed its A/Stable rating, reflecting the organization’s strong financial management and strategic direction. This positive assessment positions ATIDI well as it implements its 2024-2027 strategy, which aims to expand its footprint and strengthen its impact across the region. The Board’s support will be crucial in navigating this ambitious strategy, ensuring that ATIDI leverages its strengths and address challenges effectively. Their insights and networks will be vital ATIDI seeks to build new partnerships and enhance its investment initiatives.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Whispers from the Dark Web Cave. Cyberthreats in the Middle East

    Source: Securelist – Kaspersky

    Headline: Whispers from the Dark Web Cave. Cyberthreats in the Middle East

    The Kaspersky Digital Footprint Intelligence team analyzed cybersecurity threats coming from dark web cybercriminals who targeted businesses and governments in the Middle East in H1 2024. Our research highlights the most severe and pervasive threats, and identifies potential risks and consequences as well as defensive strategies.

    The report covers threats that targeted entities in the following countries and territories:

    • Bahrain;
    • Egypt;
    • Iraq;
    • Jordan;
    • Kuwait;
    • Lebanon;
    • Oman;
    • Palestine;
    • Qatar;
    • Saudi Arabia;
    • Syria;
    • United Arab Emirates.

    The five prevalent cybersecurity threats in the Middle East covered in the report are related to:

    • The activities of ideological pirates, or hacktivists. The region has seen exponential growth in these due to the current geopolitical situation, and they are getting ever more destructive.
    • The shadow jewelry fair, or the initial access broker market. Initial access brokers deal in attack entry points for corporate networks, which attract hackers and cybercrime gangs.
    • Deadly sandworms, or ransomware gangs. At least 19 gangs were active in the Middle East in H1 2024, conducting multiple ransomware attacks that typically led to devastating consequences.
    • The ubiquity of malicious whistleblowers, or information stealers. They provide adversaries with up-to-date data for future attacks, especially valid credentials for corporate systems. Almost 10 million lines of stolen credentials belonging to Middle Eastern entities were published on the dark web in H1 2024 alone. The figure includes 4.4 million lines of access information stolen from key government agencies.
    • Cave raiders who steal sensitive data from corporations and other targets and distribute it among cybercriminals. A quarter of all data breaches affect various government organizations.

    Staying aware of all possible risks coming from the dark web helps organizations and governments to be one step ahead of cybercriminals and thus, to prevent attacks or fraud that could compromise their network infrastructure or operational integrity.

    Out report will be beneficial for:

    • C-level managers;
    • Corporate security employees;
    • Risk management professionals;
    • Cyberthreat Intelligence (CTI) and SOC analysts;
    • Incident response professionals;
    • OSINT and darknet researchers.

    The full version of the report is available on Kaspersky Digital Footprint Intelligence website.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI China: Remains of late Chinese leader Wu Bangguo cremated in Beijing

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

    BEIJING, Oct. 14 — The remains of Wu Bangguo, former chairman of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, China’s top legislature, were cremated in Beijing on Monday.

    Xi Jinping, Zhao Leji, Wang Huning, Cai Qi, Ding Xuexiang, Li Xi, Han Zheng and other leaders paid their final respects to Wu at the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery. Hu Jintao sent a wreath to express his condolences over Wu’s passing.

    Wu died of illness in Beijing on Oct. 8 at the age of 84.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Remarks to launch of Sean Turnell’s Lowy Institute paper, ‘Best Laid Plans’

    Source: Australian Government – Minister of Foreign Affairs

    Even with my highest hopes, when I became Foreign Minister I would not have imagined in little more than two years I would be here with Sean, at his book launch.

    One of the very first tasks on my desk when I first became Foreign Minister was to get Sean out of prison in Myanmar.

    It was perfectly clear how difficult this would be. We all know how brutal and oppressive the regime in Myanmar is.

    We know the escalating conflict and worsening humanitarian crisis in Myanmar.

    We are all appalled by the reports of widespread human rights abuses and atrocities.

    According to a recent report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on the situation in Myanmar, at least 5,350 civilians have been killed.

    And half of the population is living below the poverty line, primarily due to the military violence since the 2021 coup.

    And of course Sean had spent years working to improve the lives of the people of Myanmar.

    Working as an adviser to Aung San Suu Kyi, at the invitation of the elected government of the day, to serve the people of Myanmar, and help them realise their hopes for their country.

    His work reinforcing the catastrophic failure of the junta.

    And so there was not a lot of cause for optimism about Sean’s release.

    Sean’s return was an extraordinary moment of relief for all of his family, friends and supporters, as well as the Australian Government, our regional partners and ASEAN members. Each of whom played important roles in securing Sean’s release.

    The multifaceted nature of the work behind Sean’s release was one factor in my decision to ask my department to review its approach to supporting Australians detained in complex circumstances overseas.

    That review included consulting with partners, stakeholders, and former detainees to ensure our methods are fit for purpose.

    We have deeply appreciated our engagement with Sean as part of these efforts.

    We are now better equipped to manage these complex and often highly distressing cases, which we handle on a case-by-case basis to ensure the safety and protection of the individual.

    We don’t ever want to jeopardise the welfare or safety of an Australian overseas.

    We also recognise that a level of public understanding and in some cases, public pressure, can contribute to better outcomes.

    In my position, I have to make a judgment about the best way to balance these options, always with their welfare front of mind.

    Always considering the best way to deploy the full range of resources at Australia’s disposal when pushing to secure their release, and to support families back home.

    And always seeking ways to refine and improve on this work.

    I look to the Senate’s Inquiry into the wrongful detention of Australian citizens overseas to provide suggestions that are both constructive and principled.

    I note we are also joined tonight by Cheng Lei and Kylie Moore-Gilbert, who went through their own terrible experiences.

    And while there are certainly aspects in common, the approach in each case is different, uniquely tailored to the circumstances and the country in which they were detained.

    Sean, we are so grateful to have you back in the country and with us tonight, and of course to see you resume your work as a world-leading expert on Myanmar’s economy.

    Which brings me to this important book.

    ‘Best Laid Plans’ documents Sean’s work in Myanmar, and his efforts to help reform Myanmar’s economy in that brief period of democracy between 2015 and 2021.

    It illustrates the sheer scale and ambition of Sean’s work with so many dedicated reformers in Myanmar.

    And it reinforces the tragedy of the country’s trajectory since the military coup in 2021.

    That coup was the latest setback for Myanmar and its people, who had seen their hopes for their country supressed yet again, following attempts before 1962 and again in 1988 to forge a more democratic and inclusive future.

    The regime’s actions in 2021 reversed years of political, economic and development gains.

    It has created the largest and most complex crisis in the Indo-Pacific; with humanitarian, economic, political and security dimensions.

    And it has caused enormous suffering for the people of Myanmar.

    The UN estimates approximately a third of the population – some 18.6 million people – are in need of humanitarian assistance and more than 3.4 million are internally displaced.

    Today, I announce Australia will provide a further $9 million through the Australian Humanitarian Partnership, to support communities and conflict affected populations in Myanmar.

    This will aid the delivery of life-saving food, water and shelter, as well as essential protection, education and health services for those most in need, including women, girls and people with disabilities.

    In his book, Sean also reflects on the atrocities in Rakhine state, which precipitated so much of the continuing violence against and the ongoing targeting of Rohingyas who live there, by the regime and other actors.

    The plight of the Rohingya people deserves greater focus in our region – which is why I visited Cox’s Bazar in May this year to talk with community leaders and humanitarian workers who have experienced the consequences of the regime’s actions.

    The Rohingya crisis is Australia’s largest humanitarian response.

    With my announcement today, successive governments–both Labor and Coalition–will have contributed some $880 million in assistance for Rohingya, their host communities in Bangladesh and people across Myanmar since 2017.

    We support the rights of Rohingyas to live safely as citizens in Myanmar.

    We want to see conditions put in place that would allow Rohingyas to return in a voluntary, safe, dignified and sustainable way.

    And until such time as a safe and dignified return is possible, Australia will continue to support displaced Rohingyas in Bangladesh. 

    The Australian people are decent and want to help.

    We are generous with our humanitarian aid – but it is not a long-term answer.

    Reform is desperately needed to drive growth.

    As Sean shows us in this book, Myanmar’s economy continues to face a range of constraints.

    The World Bank forecasts GDP growth of one per cent in 2024-25 financial year, a revision from 2023 projection of 2 percent growth.

    Businesses face operational difficulties as a result of foreign currency, labour and electricity shortages and rapidly rising prices.

    And conflict has enabled illicit economic activities to thrive, including narcotics production, scam centres and human trafficking.

    The regime is losing ground, but there is no sign its position is softening.

    Despite territorial losses and a bleak economic outlook, the regime has not changed its approach.

    And opposition groups are divided.

    As a result, Myanmar is at risk of further fragmentation.

    The current trajectory is not sustainable for the regime or for the region.

    We want the regime to take a different path–to fulfil its commitment under ASEAN’s Five Point Consensus, and engage meaningfully and positively with ASEAN representatives.

    There must be much more safe access for humanitarian assistance across the country, so that all those who are in need can receive support.

    There must be an end to the violence, including the targeting of civilians.

    The regime’s violent repression of its people is why the Albanese Government has applied sanctions on key members of the regime responsible for atrocities, as well as on commercial entities with direct links to the Myanmar military regime and why we will continue to keep our targeted sanctions towards Myanmar under review.

    But sanctions can only achieve so much.

    Genuine, inclusive dialogue is vital to any political resolution – as out of reach as that seems now.

    Ultimately, a political resolution in Myanmar will require dialogue between all the actors, including the regime, and a genuine willingness for a legitimate return to civilian-led democratic government.

    I have said before that we can’t only deal with those who share our views if we are to effect change.

    That was our approach in engaging with the Myanmar regime to secure Sean’s release.

    Which is why in 2022, ahead of Sean’s release, I spoke twice directly with the regime’s then-Foreign Minister, U Wunna Maung Lwin.

    Not just to argue for a positive outcome for Sean, but so I could directly register Australia’s objections to the regime’s actions.

    I also met earlier this year with the National Unity Government’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Madam Zin Mar Aung.

    Peace requires dialogue, which is why Australia will continue to engage with and listen to the many groups and voices working for democracy in Myanmar, including but not limited to the NUG. And why we will continue to support inclusive dialogues that lay the groundwork for future political transitions.

    Australia stands ready to work with ASEAN and other partners to find pathways that may encourage dialogue between all players, to lend our voice to messages to the regime to take a different path, and to bring to the table any support that will help make a difference. 

    We are also supporting efforts to strengthen civil society and build resilience, along with local-level governance initiatives for communities in areas outside regime control.

    We do all this because as Sean so powerfully reminds us, the people of Myanmar have not lost hope for their country – so we must not lose hope in them.

    We must remain resolute in our support for the people of Myanmar. They have demonstrated their courage and commitment to democracy in decades’ long struggles, with determined resilience in the face of the most horrific adversity.

    Tonight we celebrate not just Sean’s contribution, but all those in Myanmar who continue to work for change.

    We stand with them, and share their ambitions for a better future.

    Sean, congratulations on this achievement.

    We admire your dedication and ongoing commitment to the people of Myanmar.

    It is my pleasure to officially launch your book.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Mongolia: Concluding Statement of the 2024 IMF Staff Visit

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    October 14, 2024

    A Concluding Statement describes the preliminary findings of IMF staff at the end of an official staff visit (or ‘mission’), in most cases to a member country. Missions are undertaken as part of regular (usually annual) consultations under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, in the context of a request to use IMF resources (borrow from the IMF), as part of discussions of staff monitored programs, or as part of other staff monitoring of economic developments.

    The authorities have consented to the publication of this statement. The views expressed in this statement are those of the IMF staff and do not necessarily represent the views of the IMF’s Executive Board. Based on the preliminary findings of this mission, staff will prepare a report that, subject to management approval, will be presented to the IMF Executive Board for discussion and decision.

    • A critical priority for the new coalition government is to manage the current commodity boom prudently to effectively implement its ambitious reform and investment agenda.
    • Building external and fiscal buffers will help create the necessary policy space to implement the ambitious investment program and other reforms in line with the economy’s absorptive capacity while maintaining external and internal balance. In the current situation, achieving these goals requires fiscal policy tightening, adherence to fiscal rules, tight monetary and macroprudential policies, and enhanced financial supervision.
    • Progress on soft infrastructure related to legislative, regulatory, and institutional frameworks is just as important as building hard infrastructure, to strengthen the business climate and governance. Priorities include upgrading important regulations, ensuring regulatory coherence, and boosting central bank operational independence. The introduction of a nominal debt ceiling with strong deterrence is a major and welcome step forward. So will be the planned and overdue energy tariff reforms, which will be essential to ensure reliable national energy supply. Infrastructure projects should be well prioritized and effectively implemented with proper feasibility studies, strengthened medium-term fiscal planning and sound public investment management.

    The economy: A commodity boom

    A booming mining sector, record high coal exports, and strong household and government spending have led to buoyant economic activity despite a large contraction in agriculture due to the severe winter. The large and permanent wage and pension increases in the 2023−2024 budgets, large dividend payouts by Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi, government support programs, and a minimum wage hike helped raise household incomes and salary‑backed consumer credit, boosting consumption and imports. Strong revenue collection and backloaded capex registration have contributed to a budget surplus despite significant public spending increases. Public debt declined to 47 percent of GDP at end-2023, consistent with IMF staff estimates of the appropriate debt anchor for Mongolia.

    Headline inflation has eased and lies within the BOM’s 6±2 target band. The decline is largely due to softer import prices, supported by a small exchange rate (ER) appreciation, and has led to policy rate cuts. However, core inflation remains sticky and has ticked up to the upper limit of the target band in August. Moreover, credit growth in the bank and non-bank financial (NBFI) sectors, especially consumer loans, has been rapid, exceeding long-term trends and has prompted the BOM to tighten reserve requirements and debt service to income (DSTI) limits for consumer loans. Household debt is rising rapidly, especially for some segments of borrowers.

    External vulnerabilities declined despite a marked deterioration in the current account deficit due to strong imports and softer coal export prices. FDI and other financing inflows have helped support gross international reserves (GIR) which remains broadly at end-2023 levels (US$4.7 billion at end-August, 3.3 months of imports or 96 percent of the ARA metric). Well-executed external debt refinancing and the BOM’s repayment of half of the outstanding PBOC swap line have reduced external debt risks, resulting in a sovereign credit ratings upgrade.

    Outlook: Continuing commodity boom, robust growth, but rising imbalances

    Growth is expected to remain robust in 2024−25 reflecting strong mining sector growth, bolstered by the increased production of higher‑grade copper and stronger coal exports to China, and the expansionary, and procyclical 2024 supplementary and draft 2025 budgets. Assuming the government’s spending plans on mega projects[1] is gradually phased in in line with external financing, fiscal deficits are expected to rise through 2029, raising gross financing needs, public debt, and fiscal risks. The output gap is estimated to remain positive through 2028.

    Expansionary fiscal policies are likely to widen Mongolia’s external and internal imbalances. Inflation is expected to continue to rise in 2024H2 and remain above target till 2026 due to the lagged effects of the substantial fiscal stimulus in the pipeline, additional stimulus from the 2024 supplementary and 2025 budgets, energy tariff increases, and strong credit growth. Current account deficits are expected to persist due to the high import intensity of investment projects, reducing GIR buffers, despite FDI and new external borrowing. 

    The forecasts are subject to considerable uncertainty related to the implementation pace, financing, and private sector participation in mega projects, which is still under discussion. The greater the reliance on domestic financing, the larger the impact on GIR, ER, and inflation given the high import intensity of capex. However, procuring external financing to the tune of 67 percent of 2024 GDP within 4−5 years will be difficult. Realistically, therefore, investments are likely to proceed gradually, as implementation runs into capacity and financing constraints, thereby improving macroeconomic outcomes relative to current forecasts.

    The outlook is also subject to downside risks stemming from commodity price volatility, uncertainty related to Chinese demand for coal, disruptions in fuel imports from Russia, and delays at China’s Tianjin port, a major transit point for Mongolia’s imports. Potential production and export delays in copper due to regulatory and procedural barriers pose risks. Natural disasters and geopolitical developments add uncertainty. On the upside, commodity prices or exports to China could be stronger than expected, especially in the near term. Moreover, new mining production could come onstream over the medium-term, boosting exports.

    Policies: Prudent commodity boom management to sustain growth momentum

    A. Fiscal tightening and adherence to fiscal rules: the top policy priority

    Fiscal policy tightening is necessary to ensure external and internal balance, build buffers during the current boom and to reduce the burden on monetary policy in confronting inflationary risks. To achieve fiscal consolidation while boosting investment, additional measures are needed to reduce current spending and boost non-mining revenues, such as containing the wage bill, targeting social assistance, increasing progressivity in personal income taxes, reducing tax exemptions, and tax and customs administration reforms (IMF 2023 Report).

    Reorienting spending toward infrastructure investment could enhance productivity, provided it is well managed and aligned with the economy’s absorptive capacity. The government should proceed cautiously given Mongolia’s external vulnerabilities, import dependence, limited domestic financing capacity, tighter global financing conditions, and weaknesses in public investment management (PIM). Building buffers during the boom helps create the fiscal space for a gradual, more effective implementation of critical public investment priorities. A more effective Medium-Term Fiscal Framework (MTFF) including capital expenditures is needed to guide capital spending and anchor fiscal and external risks. Investments should be well-prioritized based on proper feasibility studies, with sound implementation of PIM and PPP legislative frameworks to avoid corruption and unproductive projects.

    The adoption of a nominal debt ceiling of 60 percent of GDP is a major step forward in strengthening Mongolia’s fiscal rules, as it boosts transparency and accountability, and includes strong deterrence measures. Retaining the structural deficit ceiling helps contain excessive deteriorations in fiscal balances. Nevertheless, neither rule will be able to constrain spending sufficiently in the near term since the debt limit is not binding at present. The procyclicality of the new expenditure rules helps support spending when the economy is booming, and requires spending cuts when it is not, thereby aggravating economic cycles. The rules will need to place some constraints on total spending, which would also preempt potential spending misclassifications (IMF staff stand ready to assist the government in developing appropriate total spending constraints that could allow the government to undertake spending related to its reform and investment plans). Frequent changes in fiscal rules should be avoided as they undermine the effectiveness of the rules as a policy anchor.

    B. Ensuring tighter domestic financial conditions

    Monetary and macroprudential policies should continue to ensure that domestic financial conditions remain tight. Given the expected rise in inflation in the absence of fiscal consolidation, the BOM should ensure real policy rates remain high until there is greater certainty regarding the stabilization of inflation within the target band. In this regard, maintaining an unchanged monetary policy stance in September 2024 would have been better aligned with the BOM’s assessment of the inflationary outlook. The tightening of DSTI limits and reserve requirements to slow excessive credit growth in the banking sector, on the other hand, were timely and appropriate measures, though more maybe needed (below). The government’s plans to resume domestic debt issuances to establish a yield curve should help improve monetary policy transmission.

    C. Building external buffers to strengthen resilience, increase policy space for reforms

    External buffers should be increased to strengthen resilience to external shocks and create the room for an effective implementation of the government’s reform priorities. The BOM should allow greater ER flexibility to help absorb external shocks. The government should use its ability to monitor export contracts to better enforce SOE repatriation and the currency settlement law and undertake reforms to attract new FDI and external private financing (below). The newly established BOM-MOF-MOED working group to align the pace of investments with external stability considerations, is an excellent initiative and should help inform the government’s investment plans and the MTFF.

    D. Ensuring a sound financial sector

    Financial sector supervision should remain vigilant about emerging risks, notably credit risk, given the exceptionally strong credit growth across the financial sector. Enhanced financial soundness indicators during periods of strong economic and rapid credit growth can mask underlying vulnerabilities. It would be important to align the planned reduction in DSTI limits for NBFIs with the lower bank DSTI limits rapidly to prevent regulatory arbitrage to contain explosive consumer credit growth. Supervisors should ensure that DSTI limits are being effectively enforced, accelerate the use of FICO credit scoring, and discourage over‑leveraged consumers from additional borrowing by improving financial literacy. Adherence to NBFI regulations and a rapid approval of the upgraded NBFI regulatory framework would help reduce risks. BOM and FRC supervisors should identify and reduce interlinkages between banks and NBFIs to pre-emptively reduce financial sector vulnerabilities and systemic risks including through targeted onsite supervisions and special provisioning requirements, if necessary. The BOM Governor should be allowed to exercise powers granted by the Central Bank Law to nominate key personnel responsible for financial sector supervisory oversight immediately to facilitate financial sector risk management and reforms.

    The financial sector’s ability to lend to credit worthy entities should be strengthened through broader reforms. Insolvency and creditor rights must be improved to assist financial sector institutions address poor asset quality expeditiously. To keep banking sector reforms on track to meet the new end-2026 deadline, the BOM should continue to monitor the development of time-bound plans for shareholder diversification. Shareholder limits should be increased to ensure the effective management and operation of banks, including by allowing selected IFIs to invest in multiple banks.

    E. Strengthening soft infrastructure is just as important for sustainable growth

    Improving Mongolia’s business climate and governance is critical for strong and sustainable growth. Key priorities for soft infrastructure reform are—a strengthened Investment Law to cut red tape; accelerated overhaul of the Minerals Law; and approval of amendments to the SOE, Insolvency and the draft Whistleblower Laws. Effective enforcement of SOE governance reforms, and a strong judiciary is also necessary, as is ensuring the operational independence of BOM. The planned energy tariff reform is long overdue and necessary to secure energy supply to households and businesses while boosting long-term growth. Tariff increases should be well communicated, appropriately paced, and supported by targeted but temporary assistance to poor households to alleviate transition costs. Ensuring regulatory coherence with tax laws and effective tax dispute resolution processes would facilitate the operation of existing FDI projects and attract new FDI. The new Sovereign Wealth Fund is welcome but a strong governance framework for its sub-funds should be quickly established.

    An IMF team visited Ulaanbaatar to conduct the discussions during September 25–October 1, 2024. The IMF mission would like to thank the Mongolian authorities for frank and constructive discussions and their kind hospitality.

    Table 1. Mongolia: Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2021−29

     

    2021

    2022

    2023

     

    2024

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    Actual

    Projections

           

    (In percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated)

     

    National Accounts

           

       Nominal GDP (in USD million)

    15,286

    17,146

    20,315

    23,669

    27,242

    29,120

    31,569

    34,024

    36,400

       Real GDP growth (percent change)

    1.6

    5.0

    7.4

    5.5

    7.0

    6.0

    5.5

    5.5

    5.0

       Contributions to Real GDP (ppts)

           

          Domestic Demand

    17.6

    11.4

    5.6

     

    20.2

    8.3

    7.6

    10.0

    8.8

    7.2

             Exports of G&S

    -7.5

    13.9

    17.9

     

    1.6

    7.3

    6.5

    0.9

    2.8

    4.5

             Imports of G&S

    -8.5

    -20.3

    -16.2

     

    -16.4

    -8.6

    -8.2

    -5.4

    -6.1

    -6.6

             

       Consumption

    67.9

    65.8

    57.5

     

    61.5

    60.4

    61.5

    63.0

    63.6

    63.2

    Private

    53.0

    51.9

    44.5

     

    46.7

    45.8

    47.1

    48.7

    49.4

    48.9

    Public

    14.9

    13.9

    13.0

     

    14.7

    14.6

    14.4

    14.3

    14.2

    14.2

       Gross Capital Formation

    36.7

    42.3

    33.9

     

    35.9

    35.4

    35.3

    35.5

    35.8

    36.0

     Gross Fixed Capital Formation

    26.8

    29.8

    25.3

     

    26.6

    28.4

    29.3

    29.3

    29.6

    29.8

    Public

    6.8

    7.1

    7.4

     

    9.9

    10.3

    10.0

    10.0

    10.0

    10.0

    FDI

    13.5

    14.2

    10.7

     

    8.6

    9.3

    10.3

    9.9

    9.4

    9.1

    Domestic Private (including SOEs)

    6.5

    8.6

    7.3

     

    8.1

    8.8

    9.0

    9.4

    10.2

    10.6

       Gross national saving

    22.9

    28.9

    34.5

     

    29.0

    27.7

    27.0

    26.3

    26.2

    26.7

                         

    Prices

                       

       Consumer Prices (Avg; percent change) 1/

    7.4

    15.2

    10.3

     

    6.5

    9.0

    8.3

    7.6

    7.2

    6.7

       Consumer Prices (EoP; percent change) 1/

    13.9

    13.2

    7.9

     

    7.5

    9.5

    7.6

    7.5

    6.8

    6.5

       Copper prices (US$ per ton)

    9317

    8829

    8491

     

    9298

    9450

    9550

    9584

    9584

    9584

       Coal prices (US$ per ton)

    150

    123

    131

     

    115

    105

    105

    105

    105

    105

       GDP deflator (percent change)

    14.4

    17.7

    21.8

    10.0

    8.9

    6.7

    8.1

    7.1

    6.6

    General government accounts

       Primary balance (IMF definition)

    9.7

    2.2

    4.3

    1.8

    0.3

    0.3

    -0.3

    -0.4

    -0.1

       Total revenue and grants

    32.8

    34.4

    34.6

    37.6

    36.5

    35.6

    34.7

    34.4

    34.8

       Primary expenditure and net lending

    23.2

    32.2

    30.3

    35.9

    36.2

    35.4

    35.0

    34.9

    34.9

       Interest

    1.9

    1.5

    1.6

    1.4

    1.3

    1.3

    1.5

    1.5

    1.6

       Overall balance (IMF definition)

    7.8

    0.7

    2.7

    0.4

    -1.0

    -1.1

    -1.8

    -2.0

    -1.7

    Non-mineral primary balance (in percent of GDP)

    2.0

    -6.3

    -5.7

    -10.3

    -11.1

    -10.6

    -10.4

    -10.2

    -9.9

       Gross financing needs

    2.5

    3.8

    15.3

    5.2

    4.1

    10.1

    7.1

    7.8

    7.0

       General government debt 2/

    67.7

    64.5

    46.8

    42.4

    40.0

    40.7

    42.4

    44.8

    47.3

          Domestic

    3.2

    4.4

    3.4

    3.6

    3.0

    3.3

    3.5

    3.8

    4.0

          External

    64.6

    60.1

    43.4

    38.7

    37.0

    37.5

    38.9

    41.0

    43.3

    Monetary sector

    Broad money growth (percent change)

    13.8

    6.5

    26.8

    20.0

    15.9

    11.9

    12.3

    11.8

    14.2

    Reserve money growth (percent change)

    6.5

    39.9

    7.4

    20.1

    13.7

    11.9

    12.3

    11.8

    12.1

    Credit growth (percent change)

    18.1

    8.6

    22.0

    24.0

    16.0

    14.2

    13.5

    13.5

    13.5

    Balance of payments

    Current account balance

    -13.8

    -13.4

    0.6

    -6.9

    -7.7

    -8.3

    -9.2

    -9.5

    -9.3

    Exports of goods 3/

    53.2

    57.5

    68.5

    62.7

    60.0

    58.9

    55.1

    53.1

    53.3

    Imports of goods

    44.3

    50.3

    46.1

    48.8

    45.4

    45.4

    43.7

    43.7

    43.7

    Gross official reserves (in USD million) 4/

    4366

    3400

    4921

    5027

    5140

    5828

    6736

    7159

    7580

          (In months of imports)

    4.3

    3.0

    3.7

     

    3.6

    3.4

    3.7

    4.0

    4.0

    4.0

    Net International Reserves (NIR) 7/

    779.1

    -796.6

    570.3

     

    (net of bank’s FX deposits held at the BOM)

    3612

    1949

    3612

     

    Net international reserves (NIR) 5/

    779

    -797

    720

                 

    Exchange rate

                       

    Togrog per U.S. dollar (eop)

    2849

    3445

    3411

     

                         

    Sources: Mongolian authorities; and IMF staff projections.                                                                                                                                      

       

    1/ Will be revised to reflect planned energy subsidy removal.

    2/ Excludes BOM liabilities to PBOC. Domestic debt includes government’s liabilities to BOM related to the TDB settlement with regard to Erdenet as well as DBM’s domestic FX borrowing and DBM’s borrowing from BOM.

    3/ The projections assume coal export volumes for 2024 and 2025 in line with the 2025 medium-term fiscal framework (75 and 80 million tons, respectively), gradually rising to 95 million tons by 2029, reflecting higher coal demand from China and better coal transportation services; Oyu Tolgoi’s revised medium-term copper production and FDI plans; and updated information on SOE off-take contracts.

    4/ Gross official reserves includes drawings from the PBOC swap line and IMF SDR allocation in 2021.

    5/ NIR is defined as GIR excl. commercial banks’ and government’s US$ deposits held at the BOM, the PBOC swap line, and liabilities to the IMF.

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    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2024/10/14/mcs-mongolia-concluding-statement-of-the-2024-imf-staff-visit

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  • MIL-OSI Video: UK Watch live: Science Minister Lord Vallance of Balham speaks to the Science and Technology Committee

    Source: United Kingdom UK House of Lords (video statements)

    The House of Lords Science and Technology Committee questions Sir Patrick Vallance, now Lord Vallance of Balham, on his general responsibilities as Minister for Science and issues related to its ongoing inquiry into engineering biology. Watch live from 10:15am on Tuesday 15 October.

    Find out more about the inquiry https://committees.parliament.uk/event/21940/formal-meeting-oral-evidence-session/

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  • MIL-OSI Australia: Humanitarian assistance to Myanmar

    Source: Australian Government – Minister of Foreign Affairs

    Australia will provide $9 million to Myanmar through the Australian Humanitarian Partnership to support communities and conflict-affected populations. 

    Australia remains deeply concerned by the worsening political, security and humanitarian situation in Myanmar, which has serious implications for regional peace and security. 

    This brings Australia’s total humanitarian commitment to the crises in Myanmar and Bangladesh since 2017 to $880 million. 

    Over 3.4 million people are internally displaced within Myanmar, and 18.6 million people need humanitarian assistance. Our assistance will support community organisations and target vulnerable people and communities that need it most.  

    Australia does not provide any direct funding to the military regime and takes proactive steps to ensure our assistance does not legitimise the military regime in Myanmar. 

    In addition to today’s announcement, Australia welcomes the release of $17.8 million (US$12 million) to respond to the crisis in Myanmar from the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF). Australia is a longstanding donor to the CERF, contributing $11 million each year. 

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon Penny Wong: 

    “Australia is deeply concerned by the conflict in Myanmar.  

    “The people of Myanmar continue to demonstrate great resolve in the face of unspeakable violence and human rights abuses, and Australia remains resolute in our support for them. 

    “Australia reiterates our call for the regime to cease violence against civilians, release those unjustly detained, allow access for aid and return Myanmar to the path of inclusive democracy.” 

    Quotes attributable to Minister for International Development and The Pacific, the Hon Pat Conroy MP: 

    “Australia’s support will help the most vulnerable in Myanmar including women, children and persons with disabilities access lifesaving humanitarian assistance.” 

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: President Amherd visits Poland in the run-up to Polish presidency of the Council of the EU

    Source: Switzerland – Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport

    Bern, 14.10.2024 – President Viola Amherd will travel to Warsaw this week. During her visit, she will meet with Polish President Andrzej Duda on 17 October and also hold talks with the heads of Poland’s parliamentary chambers, Marshall of the Sejm Szymon Hołownia and Marshall of the Senate Małgorzata Kidawa-Błońska. Poland will assume the rotating presidency of the Council of the EU in the first half of 2025.

    With a view to Poland assuming the presidency of the Council of the EU at the beginning of 2025, talks during Ms Amherd’s visit will focus on bilateral relations between Switzerland and Poland, the security situation in Europe and the ongoing negotiations between Switzerland and the European Union. Other topics will include bilateral cooperation on the second Swiss contribution to selected EU member states. With overall funding of CHF 320.1 million, Poland will be the largest beneficiary of the 15 countries receiving funding from the second Swiss contribution. This cooperation programme aims to reach socially disadvantaged regions while also supporting research and innovation at Polish universities.

    Switzerland and Poland maintain close political, economic and cultural ties. Poland is Switzerland’s most important Central European partner, with a trade volume of CHF 6 billion (2023, excluding gold) and Swiss direct investment of around CHF 6.4 billion (2022). Talks on education, research, innovation and migration have intensified between the two countries as well. Switzerland and Poland also work closely in multilateral contexts such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).


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  • MIL-OSI Video: UK “It humanises politics” hear what members had to say about Learn with the Lords Day | House of Lords

    Source: United Kingdom UK House of Lords (video statements)

    Members help students engage with the work of the House of Lords through our Learn with the Lords programme.

    Hear from Baroness Finlay of Llandaff, Lord Haskel, Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle and Baroness Fookes about why they take part in the programme and why they feel it’s important for young people to get involved with @UKParliament and democracy.

    Find out more about Learn with the Lords https://learning.parliament.uk/en/learn-with-the-lords/

    #HouseOfLords #UKParliament #LearnWithTheLords #Education #Schools

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