Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –
On March 27, the State University of Management hosted the opening of the XV International Grushin Sociological Conference, held by the All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VTsIOM).
The main theme of the anniversary conference is “Human-centredness vs. socio-centredness: individualization and interaction in the modern world.”
The event is attended by representatives of leading research organizations, universities, government bodies and business structures. In total, more than 1,500 people have registered for the three days of the event.
The meeting was opened by the General Director of VTsIOM, Valery Fedorov.
“Our conference has been held regularly since 2010, even the pandemic did not stop us from meeting, albeit online. This year, more than 1,500 people will participate both in person and remotely – this is the core of our community. The Grushin Conference is one of the key events in the field of sociology, we are supported by many opinion leaders and universities. This year, we are at the GUU for the first time and we sincerely thank the university team for the excellent organization,” said Valery Fedorov.
The rector of the State University of Management, Vladimir Stroev, gave a welcoming speech.
“It is a great honor for our university to host the anniversary sociological conference. We train young specialists in various fields, including sociologists, and attach great importance to this science. The State University of Management has its own sociological center, where employees and students conduct various studies related to internal and external processes. Also, the Center for Sociological Research “14-35″ operates on the basis of our university. By the way, our active participation in sociological research began with the suggestion of VTsIOM, when we began working on a joint study of student life, interests and moods of young people. Since then, we have been closely interacting in the field of sociology,” Vladimir Vitalyevich noted.
Also taking part in the plenary session were futurologist, transhumanist, representative of the Russian transhumanist movement, the NeuroCode project Danila Medvedev, expert in creative industries, designer of the social environment, strategist-urbanist of the Artemy Lebedev Studio Oleg Pitetsky, director of the School of Anthropology of the Future of the Presidential Academy of RANEPA, scientific director of the Academy for the Development of Human Potential of SberUniversity Alexander Asmolov, first vice-rector of the National Research University Higher School of Economics Vadim Radaev, scientific director of the ZIRCON Research Group Igor Zadorin and head of the department of the Presidential Administration of the Russian Federation for monitoring and analysis of social processes Andrei Demin.
The experts discussed the development of approaches to the role of man in society, the formation of social design, the historical influence of different eras on the attitude towards man and development priorities, as well as the adoption of human-centrism as a standard of behavior for business and the state.
After the plenary session, the work continued in thematic sections, which examined a wide range of topics, from integration processes among young people and training personnel for the research industry to the impact of neural networks on all spheres of life and the possibilities of using artificial intelligence.
The conference’s general information partner TASS held a section, the participants of which discussed the directions of media development in the modern world and whether the media will be able to once again unite society, form a cultural code and the civil identity of Russians.
Let us recall that the XV International Grushinskaya Sociological Conference is being held from March 27 to 28 on the territory of the State University of Management, and on March 29 the event will continue online. You can register for the third day of the conference and find out more about the program on its official website.
Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 03/27/2025
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.
Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –
On March 25, 2025, a delegation from the State Construction Supervision and Expertise Service of St. Petersburg visited the Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade. The event was held as part of the development of cooperation between the university and the city administration.
Vladimir Boldyrev, Head of the State Construction Supervision and Expertise Service of St. Petersburg, and his First Deputy Vladislav Balsky gave a lecture for teachers and students. The experts covered in detail the features of the service’s functioning, its tasks and areas of activity, current legislative changes and their impact on control and supervisory activities in 2025.
Modern trends in public administration were of particular interest to students. The greatest attention was drawn to the practical aspects of implementing a client-centric approach and the introduction of digital technologies. After the lecture, the speakers answered questions from the audience.
The meeting with representatives of the State Construction Supervision Authority left a strong impression on me due to their professionalism and openness. The heads of the structure spoke in detail about the legislation concerning building codes and regulations. I especially liked that they actively answered questions and provided useful recommendations for improving the quality of construction projects. Overall, the meeting was productive and contributed to a better understanding of the requirements of the supervisory authorities, – shared 4th-year student in the direction of “State and Municipal Administration” Vali Guliyev.
Before the lecture, the guests were shown the educational building of the IPMEiT. The tour was conducted by the director of the Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade Vladimir Shchepinin and his deputy Arkady Evgrafov.
A working meeting of the service representatives with the Director of IPMEiT Vladimir Shchepinin, the Director of the Higher School of Industrial Management Olga Kalinina, the Acting Director of the Higher School of Public Administration Olga Nadezhina and the Deputy Director of IPMEiT for educational and organizational work Maxim Ivanov was also held.
Key topics of discussion: opening of joint educational programs, development of topics for final qualification works and projects commissioned by the service, holding regular lectures for students (from open lectures to highly specialized events), participation of representatives of the service in state examination committees, teaching disciplines and organizing internships. Particular attention was paid to the professional development of teachers through internships and participation in certification committees of the service, as well as employment of graduates of the Polytechnic University.
The modern construction industry requires not only theoretical knowledge, but also practical skills. Our cooperation will allow students to immerse themselves in real professional tasks and learn from current specialists during their studies, Vladimir Boldyrev noted.
The visit of representatives of the State Construction Supervision and Expertise Service of St. Petersburg is an important step in the development of our strategic partnership. It is especially valuable that students had the opportunity to learn first-hand about modern approaches to control and supervision activities, including digital technologies and a client-centric approach. I am convinced that such meetings not only contribute to the deepening of the educational process, but also open up new opportunities for the employment of our graduates, – emphasized the Director of IPMEiT Vladimir Shchepinin.
The event became an important step in the development of partnership between IPMET and the State Construction Supervision and Expertise Service of St. Petersburg, opening up new opportunities for students and teachers.
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.
Source: The Conversation – USA – By Frederick Scholl, Associate Teaching Professor of Cybersecurity, Quinnipiac University
Signal is in the news because of a security failure, but the app itself is quite secure.AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato
When top White House defense and national security leaders discussed plans for an attack on targets in Yemen over the messaging app Signal, it raised many questions about operational security and recordkeeping and national security laws. It also puts Signal in the spotlight.
Why do so many government officials, activists and journalists use Signal for secure messaging? The short answer is that it uses end-to-end encryption, meaning no one in position to eavesdrop on the communication – including Signal itself – can read messages they intercept.
But Signal isn’t the only messaging app that uses end-to-end encryption, and end-to-end encryption isn’t the only consideration in choosing a secure messaging app. In addition, secure messaging apps are only part of the picture when it comes to keeping your communications private, and there is no such thing as perfect security.
The most common messaging protocol, SMS, is built into every smartphone and is easy to use, but does not encrypt messages. Since there is no encryption, carriers or government agents with a warrant, which are typically submitted by law enforcement and issued by a judge, can read the message content. They can also view the message metadata, which includes information about you and your recipient, like an internet address, name or both.
Truly secure messaging is based on cryptography, a mathematical method to scramble data and make it unreadable. Most secure messaging apps handle the scrambling and unscrambling process for you. The gold standard for secure messaging is end-to-end encryption. End-to-end encryption means your message is fully encrypted while in transit, including while transiting the communications provider’s networks. Only the recipient can see the message. The communication provider does not have any encryption key.
How end-to-end encryption works.
Apple iMessage and Google Messages use end-to-end encryption, and both are widely used, so many of your contacts are likely already using one of them. The downsides are the end-to-end encryption is only iPhone to iPhone and Android to Android, respectively, and Apple and Google can access your metadata – who you communicated with and when. If a company has access to your metadata, it can be compelled to share it with a government entity.
WhatsApp, owned by Meta, is another widely used messaging app. Its end-to-end encryption works across iOS and Android. But Meta has access to your metadata.
There are a number of independent secure messaging apps to choose from, including Briar, Session, Signal, SimpleX, Telegram, Threema, Viber and Wire. You can use more than one to adapt to your individual needs.
Default end-to-end encryption is only the first factor to consider when thinking about message security. Depending on your needs, you should also consider whether the app includes group chats and calls, self-destructing messages, cross-device data syncing, and photo and video editing tools. Ease of use is another factor.
You can also consider whether the app uses an open-source encryption protocol, open-source code and a decentralized server network. And you can weigh whether the app company collects user data, what personal information is required on sign-up, and generally how transparent the company is.
Human factors
Beyond the messaging app, it’s important to practice safe security hygiene, like using two-factor authentication and a password manager. There’s no point in sending and receiving messages securely and then leaking the information via another vulnerability, including having your phone itself compromised.
People can be lured into compromising their apps and devices by unintentionally giving access to an attacker. For example, Russian operatives reportedly tricked Ukrainian troops into giving access to their Signal accounts.
Also, if you use Signal, you should probably use its nicknames feature to avoid adding the wrong person to a group chat – like National Security Adviser Michael Waltz apparently did in the Signalgate scandal.
Frederick Scholl does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Russia’s new Ambassador to the United States Alexander Darchiev arrived in Washington D.C. on Wednesday.
Darchiev will informally present his credentials to the Trump administration on Thursday, according to the U.S. State Department.
U.S. Senior Bureau Official for the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Louis L. Bono will attend the informal credential presentation in Washington, D.C. at 2:15 p.m. Eastern Time (1815 GMT) Thursday, according to schedule posted on the U.S. State Department website.
Russian President Vladimir Putin appointed Darchiev as the new ambassador to the United States on March 6. The position had been vacant since last October, when the previous envoy, Anatoly Antonov, left his post.
The United States exported 11.9 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in 2024, remaining the world’s largest LNG exporter. LNG exports from Australia and Qatar—the world’s two next-largest LNG exporters—have remained relatively stable over the last five years (2020–24); their exports have ranged from 10.2 Bcf/d to 10.7 Bcf/d annually, according to data from Cedigaz. Russia and Malaysia have been the fourth- and fifth-largest LNG exporters globally since 2019. In 2024, LNG exports from Russia averaged 4.4 Bcf/d, and exports from Malaysia averaged 3.7 Bcf/d.
U.S. LNG exports remained essentially flat compared with 2023 mainly because of several unplanned outages at existing LNG export facilities, lower natural gas consumption in Europe, and very limited new LNG export capacity additions since 2022. In December 2024, Plaquemines LNG Phase 1 shipped its first export cargo, becoming the eighth U.S. LNG export facility in service. We estimate that utilization of LNG export capacity across the other seven U.S. LNG terminals operating in 2024 averaged 104% of nominal capacity and 86% of peak capacity, unchanged from the previous year. While Europe (including Türkiye) remained the primary destination for U.S. LNG exports in 2024, accounting for 53% (6.3 Bcf/d) of the total exports, the share of U.S. LNG exports to Asia increased from 26% (3.1 Bcf/d) in 2023 to 33% (4.0 Bcf/d) in 2024. U.S. LNG exports to other regions, including the Middle East, North Africa, and Latin America, also increased last year and accounted for 14% (1.6 Bcf/d) of total exports, compared with 8% (0.9 Bcf/d) in 2023.
In 2024, U.S. natural gas exports to Europe decreased by 19% (1.5 Bcf/d), mostly to countries in the EU and the UK. U.S. LNG exports increased only to Türkiye and Greece in 2024—by 0.2 Bcf/d and 0.1 Bcf/d, respectively, compared with 2023. Türkiye imported more U.S. LNG compared with the prior year mainly to offset a decline in imports from other countries, such as Egypt and Russia. U.S. LNG exports to other EU countries and the UK decreased by 24% (1.7 Bcf/d) compared with 2023, primarily because of lower natural gas consumption and high storage inventories following the mild 2023–24 winter. At the same time, LNG import capacity in the EU and the UK expanded by more than 40% between 2021 and 2024 and will continue to grow in 2025 once new and expanded regasification facilities in Croatia, Cyprus, and Italy come online.
As in 2023, the Netherlands, France, and the UK imported the most U.S. LNG among countries in Europe, accounting for a combined 46% (2.9 Bcf/d) of the regional total. Since Germany started LNG imports in December 2022, U.S. LNG exports to Germany have grown and averaged 0.6 Bcf/d in both 2023 and 2024. However, in early 2025, Germany reduced its regasification capacity by terminating a charter for one of its floating storage and regasification units, citing high operational costs.
In 2024, countries in Asia imported 33% (4.0 Bcf/d) of total U.S. LNG exports. Among countries in Asia, Japan, South Korea, India, and China imported the most U.S. LNG—a combined 76% (3.0 Bcf/d). U.S. LNG imports increased the most in India—by 0.2 Bcf/d. Other countries in Asia imported 24% (1.0 Bcf/d) of U.S LNG.
In other regions, Egypt—a natural gas producer and LNG exporter—imported 0.3 Bcf/d of LNG from the United States, its first U.S. LNG imports since 2018. In recent years, Egypt’s domestic natural gas consumption, particularly in summer months, exceeded available supply and turned Egypt from an exporter to an importer of natural gas during several months of the year. In Brazil and Colombia, imports of U.S. LNG increased last year because drought reduced hydropower electricity generation and increased demand for generation from natural gas-fired power plants.
Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News
BOAO, Hainan, March 27 — Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang on Thursday met separately with Bangladeshi interim government’s Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus and Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Overchuk, who are in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, for the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2025.
During his meeting with Yunus, Ding, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, said that China and Bangladesh are good neighbors, good friends and good partners, and the two countries are celebrating the 50th anniversary of the establishment of their diplomatic relations this year.
Ding said China is willing to work together with Bangladesh to implement the important consensus reached by the leaders of both countries, enhance political mutual trust, strengthen practical cooperation, and foster closer cultural and people-to-people exchanges to deepen and consolidate the China-Bangladesh comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership.
Yunus said that Bangladesh firmly adheres to the one-China principle and is willing to take the 50th anniversary of diplomatic ties as an opportunity to continuously strengthen bilateral relations with China and deepen cooperation in various fields within the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative.
When meeting with Overchuk, Ding said that since the beginning of this year, the two heads of state have had two rounds of communication, setting the direction for the development of China-Russia relations.
Ding noted that both sides should follow the strategic guidance of head-of-state diplomacy, continuously deepen strategic coordination and practical cooperation, and provide strong certainty to global peace and stability.
Overchuk said that Russia is willing to work together with China to implement the important consensus reached by the two heads of state and push the Russia-China comprehensive strategic partnership of coordination for a new era to new heights.
Source: Rosneft – Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.
Employees of the Novokuibyshevsk Oil Refinery (part of Rosneft) organized literary readings dedicated to the 80th anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War. Schoolchildren and students of city technical schools, activists of the “Movement of the First”, teachers and veteran oil workers took part in the patriotic event. The initiative took place within the framework of the international campaign “Reading to Children about the War”. Over 15 years, more than 8 million children and teenagers in Russia and abroad took part in it.
Thanks to the support of the Novokuibyshevsk Oil Refinery, a collection of works entitled “A Feat Forever Written in History” was published especially for the readings, which included the memories of factory workers who fought at the front. Volunteers of the plant and employees of the enterprise museum collected material in family and museum archives. The unique publication is illustrated with photographs from the war, award documents and materials that have not been published before.
Young people read excerpts from the collection – excerpts from the diaries of participants in the Great Patriotic War, poems that the plant veterans dedicated to the exploits of their fellow countrymen. Schoolchildren and teachers also watched the documentary film “War of Motors”, created with the support of Rosneft and dedicated to the contribution of the domestic oil industry to bringing Victory closer. At the end of the readings, the enterprise volunteers presented the veterans with memorable gifts.
More than 200 copies of the unique collection “Feat, forever inscribed in history” were given to city schools and technical schools, city libraries. The cycle of literary readings “Reading to children about the war” based on the book published by the plant workers will continue in educational institutions of the city of Novokuibyshevsk with the participation of activists of the “Movement of the First”.
Reference:
The Novokuibyshevsk Oil Refinery is actively developing the volunteer movement “Platform of Good Deeds”, within the framework of which employees take an active part in historical, cultural and social-humanitarian initiatives.
Earlier, volunteers and veterans of the enterprise, employees of the plant museum carried out a large-scale search to restore more than 2.5 thousand names and information about the exploits of veterans of the enterprise – participants in the Great Patriotic War. As a result of this work, the “Book of Memory” was published for the 75th anniversary of the Victory and a memorial complex was erected to perpetuate the names of the front-line soldiers. In 2023, with the support of the plant, a monument to home front workers was erected in the city.
Today, under the patronage of the Novokuibyshevsk Oil Refinery there are 2 veterans of the Great Patriotic War and 40 home front workers.
In the year of the 80th anniversary of the Victory, the plant workers are holding a marathon of commemorative events and lessons aimed at developing spiritual and patriotic values in the younger generation.
The campaign “Reading to Children about the War” has been held by the Samara Regional Children’s Library since 2010. The initiative is aimed at creating conditions for the formation of citizenship and patriotism as the most important spiritual, moral and social values in children and adolescents using the best examples of children’s literature about the Great Patriotic War as an example.
Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft March 27, 2025
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.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
Speech
It is time for Russia to agree the US proposal of an immediate and unconditional ceasefire: UK statement to the OSCE
Ambassador Holland commends Ukraine’s agreement to an immediate and unconditional ceasefire and urges Russia to show that it is serious about peace by agreeing to one without further delay.
Thank you, Mister Chair. We all want to see an end to the fighting and an enduring peace in Ukraine. We thank the United States for their efforts to deliver this, including during talks this week in Riyadh.
Under President Zelenskyy’s leadership, Ukraine has shown that it is the party of peace. They have proposed a full, immediate and unconditional ceasefire. The only condition that Ukraine attached to this was that Russia should agree to it too. To date, Russia has not done so. We hope that President Putin will agree to this without further delay.
The ball remains in Russia’s court to demonstrate that the words we have heard about Russia wanting peace are sincere.
It can do so by removing conditions designed to hamper and delay US-led efforts to end the fighting. It can do so by ceasing the attacks which continue to kill and injure innocent civilians at a pace which has not changed despite the altered context. And it can do so by showing that it is able to honour, in good faith, past agreements it has signed, starting with the Geneva Conventions, which include rules on the targeting of healthcare and minimising civilian casualties. The Russian State has shown little regard for these laws since it launched its full-scale invasion, an attitude that continues to this day.
We will not lose sight of the fact that this remains an illegal and unprovoked war against an independent, sovereign nation. It is a violation of the UN Charter and the Helsinki Final Act. And the longer it takes President Putin to agree to end the fighting, the more innocent lives will be lost.
Mister Chair, I would also like to say a few words about the Special Monitoring Mission (SMM) in Ukraine. As you know, the SMM was in place between 2014 and 2022. The men and women of the SMM performed their functions with integrity and professionalism. They did so despite a risk to their safety, a risk underlined by the tragic deaths of two of its members and the arbitrary arrest and continued detention by Russia of three of its staff: Vadym Golda, Maxim Petrov and Dmytro Shabanov.
The SMM’s task – to provide independent and objective reporting on the security situation in Ukraine – was made impossible by Russia and its proxies restricting its movements and mandate. Blaming the OSCE for these flaws is disinformation and distraction. This organisation and its staff deserve better. Thank you, Mister Chair.
Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –
Scientific consultant International Bioinformatics Laboratory HSE University’s Alan Herbert has proposed a new explanation for one of the unsolved mysteries of biology – the origin of the genetic code. According to a study published in the journalBiology Letters, the modern genetic code could have emerged thanks to self-organizing molecular complexes – tinkers. The author put forward a new hypothesis based on the analysis of secondary DNA structures using the AlphaFold3 neural network.
The genetic code is the “alphabet” that underlies the functioning of any living system on Earth. It determines what is written in the “instructions” for the organism and how it should be read. The modern genetic code consists of codons, each of which contains three nucleotides. These triplets code for amino acids, which then participate in the synthesis of proteins. Scientists have been studying the genetic code for over 70 years, but one of the most important questions – how exactly it arose – has not yet received a clear answer.
Scientific consultant of the International Laboratory of Bioinformatics of the National Research University Higher School of Economics, Professor Alan Herbert, proposed a new explanation for the origin of the code. In his opinion, during the course of evolution, flipons — special sections of DNA capable of forming secondary structures — played a key role in the formation of the modern genetic code.
The classic DNA molecule, described by Francis Crick and James Watson, is a double helix twisted to the right. But scientists have discovered that there are alternative DNA structures: Z-DNA twisted to the left; three-stranded and four-stranded sequences; and DNA with a cross-shaped structure – i-motifs. These unusual structures arise under certain physiological conditions, and their type depends on the set and order of nucleotides in the flipon itself. The simplest flipons are formed from simple nucleotide repeats, so it is assumed that there were enough of them in the so-called primordial soup.
Using a neural network Alfafold3 DeepMind’s Alan Herbert analyzed the nature of the bonds between flipons and amino acids. “It turned out that flipons formed from two-letter repeats bind very well to simple peptides consisting of two-letter amino acid repeats. And this is exactly the kind of correspondence that is present in the modern genetic code,” comments Maria Poptsova, head of the International Bioinformatics Laboratory at the National Research University Higher School of Economics.
For example, the cytosine-guanine repeat CGCGCG forms Z-DNA. A peptide with an arginine-alanine repeat RARARA binds very well to such a sequence. In the modern code, arginine corresponds to the codon CGC, and alanine to GCG. If we examine the structure of spatial interactions in detail, the best connection is obtained from non-overlapping triplets: CGCGCG binds to RA.
In the publication, Alan Herbert reviews dozens of examples of interactions between short repeat flipons and amino acid repeat peptides. It turns out that reactions leading to mutual chain elongation can also occur, especially in the presence of magnesium and zinc. These metals serve as catalysts for such reactions.
According to the author of the study, such complexes were once formed thanks to special components – tinkers, the so-called artisans of nature, as Francois Jacob called them. In the work of Professor Herbert, such self-reproducing artisans are structures consisting of flipons and peptides. Tinkers used DNA as a matrix for protein synthesis, and proteins, in turn, contributed to the elongation of the DNA helix. As a result, a triplet non-overlapping code arose: an odd number of bases allows encoding sequences of different amino acids, and the nature of the connections between flipons and amino acids requires that each codon correspond to only one amino acid.
“The role of flipons as tinkers in the initial biological evolution is a fundamentally new view of the origin of life. It is no exaggeration to say that if the theory is confirmed experimentally, our colleague Dr. Herbert deserves the Nobel Prize,” says Maria Poptsova. “The discovery of the interactions of flipons with amino acids in accordance with the table of the modern genetic code proves that the emergence of the genetic code is not an accident, but a natural result of evolution. Nature does not invent anything from scratch, it comes up with new mechanisms from what is available. Nature acts like a careless craftsman who, when he needs to quickly make something that works, not necessarily reliable and durable, grabs whatever comes to hand. This is the property behind the concept of “tinker.”
“In general, the proposed scheme does not require DNA, RNA, or the peptide world to explain the origin of life,” writes Alan Herbert in his paper. “Instead, the tinkers described are the agents that facilitate this possibility. They arise from a simple match between low-complexity nucleotides and simple peptide polymers, using metals to catalyze their initial replication. By feeding the prebiotic soup copies of themselves, these tinkers quite naturally evolved a non-overlapping, triplet genetic code.”
Beyond understanding the origins of life, studying tinkers could lead to new technologies, including artificial self-organizing systems and self-healing materials. The ability of tinkers to combine different chemical elements could be used to direct the evolution of new biomolecules.
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.
The US Trump administration has set its sights on Ukraine’s vast mineral resources, and proposed a deal: to secure a portion of Ukraine’s rare earths in exchange for US support in the war against the Russian aggressor. Ukraine is a candidate for EU membership, and an earlier 2021 strategic partnership means the EU also has a stake in the future of Ukraine’s mineral sector. This briefing analyses the US and EU positions, to shed light on the potential future of rare earth mining in Ukraine.
Source: United Kingdom – Prime Minister’s Office 10 Downing Street
Press release
Prime Minister meets Coalition of the Willing in Paris following UK military planning meetings
The Prime Minister will co-host the next meeting of the Coalition of the Willing alongside President Macron in Paris today (Thursday 27 March).
Prime Minister will underscore that all must back Ukraine to remain in the fight against Russia
Military planning to cover air, sea and land forces to support a lasting and durable peace and deter future Russian aggression
Prime Minister expected to say “Europe is stepping up to play its part to defend Ukraine’s future. Now Putin needs to show he’s willing to play ball”
The Prime Minister will co-host the next meeting of the Coalition of the Willing alongside President Macron in Paris today (Thursday 27 March).
At the meeting, he will present the outcomes of this week’s planning meetings in support of Ukraine, which took place at the UK military operational headquarters in Northwood over the last three days.
The intensive sessions, which convened over 200 military planners from countries across the globe, considered in detail the structure of any future force to ensure Ukraine can defend itself from future Russian aggression.
The Prime Minister will underline that all must come together to support Ukraine to remain in the fight and back US efforts to make real progress despite continued Russian obfuscation.
Planning so far has looked across the full range of European military capabilities including aircraft, tanks, troops, intelligence and logistics capabilities – and discussions have centred on how European nations can contribute their own capabilities to support any future force.
Discussions will continue around military planning of air, sea and land forces that would be required to support a just and lasting peace in Ukraine.
As the Prime Minister has repeatedly stated, a lasting peace in Ukraine can only be provided if we step up and give real and credible security assurances to deter Putin from coming back in future.
The Prime Minister will say that excellent progress has been made, and Europe is mobilising together in pursuit of peace, but now we must continue to keep up the momentum.
The Prime Minister will add that Putin has clearly shown his lack of commitment to the peace process, following ceasefire talks convened by the United States in Saudi Arabia this week.
Published readouts from both sides confirmed a naval ceasefire and prevention of use of commercial vessels for military purposes in the Black Sea but Russia immediately backtracked and placed conditions on the agreements – despite good faith participation from Ukraine.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer will say:
Unlike President Zelenskyy, Putin has shown he’s not a serious player in these peace talks. Playing games with the agreed naval ceasefire in the Black Sea despite good faith participation from all sides – all while continuing to inflict devastating attacks on the Ukrainian people. His promises are hollow.
The US is playing a leading role by convening the ceasefire talks, President Zelenskyy has demonstrated his commitment repeatedly, and Europe is stepping up to play its part to defend Ukraine’s future. Now Putin needs to show he’s willing to play ball.
Source: Rosneft – Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.
Employees of the Rosneft Scientific Institute in Ufa have discovered a clay mineral, sepiolite, which is extremely rare for oil reservoirs, in core samples taken at the Arlanskoye field. This discovery opens up new areas of research, the results of which increase the efficiency of oil production processes.
The mineral has a fibrous structure, due to which it has high porosity and the ability to absorb process liquids used in the development of deposits. Evaluation of the sepiolite content and a detailed study of their properties will allow the development of the most effective strategy for hydrocarbon extraction.
Sepiolites were formed in the northwestern part of Bashkortostan millions of years ago in drying up highly alkaline reservoirs. There are no analogues of such reservoirs in modern nature. The shape and thickness of the mineral threads depend on the chemical composition of the water, temperature, alkalinity of the environment and other geological factors, which makes each sepiolite rock unique.
The Arlanskoye field is the largest in Bashkortostan in terms of reserves and one of the most complex in terms of geological structure. In total, 862 oil deposits have been identified at the field, the main share of which falls on carbonate deposits located at a depth of 800-1000 meters, where sepiolites were discovered.
Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft March 27, 2025
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.
Spacesuits were an important consideration that Nasa had to factor into its plans to bring the astronauts back home. Wilmore and Williams had travelled to the ISS in Boeing’s experimental Starliner spacecraft, so they arrived wearing Boeing “Blue” spacesuits.
Following helium leaks and thruster (engine) issues with Starliner, Nasa decided it was safer not to send them back to Earth on that vehicle. The astronauts had to wait to return on one of the other spacecraft that ferry crew members to the ISS, the SpaceX Crew Dragon.
This meant they needed a different type of spacesuit, made by SpaceX for use in its vehicle only. Boeing’s suits cannot be used in Crew Dragon in part because the umbilicals (the flexible “pipes” that supply air and cooling to the suit) have connections and standards that don’t work with the ports inside a Crew Dragon.
This highlights a general problem for the growing number of space agencies and companies sending people into orbit, and for planned missions to the Moon and beyond. Ensuring that different spacesuits are compatible, or “interoperable”, with spacecraft they weren’t designed to be used in is vital if we are to protect astronauts’ lives during an emergency in space, especially in joint missions.
The spacesuits worn during a return from space are called “launch, entry and abort” (LEA) suits. These are airtight and provide life support to the astronauts in case there is a decompression, when air is lost from the cabin.
Unfortunately, a decompression has already caused loss of life in space. During the Soyuz 11 mission in 1971, three Soviet cosmonauts visited the world’s first space station, Salyut 1. But during preparations for re-entry, the crew cabin lost its air, killing cosmonauts Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov and Viktor Patsayev, who were not wearing LEA suits. All cosmonauts wore them after this incident.
As well as the connections for life support, the Boeing and SpaceX suits also have restraints and connections for communications that are specific to each vehicle. For their return home from the ISS in a SpaceX capsule, Williams was able into use a spare SpaceX suit that was already aboard the space station and the company sent up an additional suit on a cargo delivery for Wilmore to wear.
Two spacecraft are usually docked at the ISS as “lifeboats” to evacuate the astronauts in the event of an emergency. These are generally a SpaceX Crew Dragon and a Russian Soyuz capsule.
If an emergency evacuation were to occur and there weren’t enough of the right spacesuits available – for either the Crew Dragon or Soyuz – it could endanger astronauts during the fiery re-entry through Earth’s atmosphere. Interoperability between spacesuits has therefore become a matter of survival.
The Outer Space Treaty, which provides the basic framework for international space law, recognises astronauts as “envoys of humankind” and grants them specific legal protections. These were expanded on in subsequent UN treaties – notably the Rescue Agreement, which imposes a range of duties on states to render assistance to each others’ astronauts in cases of emergency, accident or distress.
For the ISS, a collaborative space programme with international flight crews, protocols include terms that set forth how this obligation is to be met. However, these protocols do not contain terms relating to spacesuit interoperability.
Risks to astronauts in space
A major potential cause of an emergency evacuation is space debris. The ISS has regularly had to manoeuvre to avoid collisions with debris – including entire defunct satellites.
In his memoir, Endurance, Nasa astronaut Scott Kelly describes being commanded to enter the Soyuz vehicle with two other crew members and prepare to detach from the ISS because of a close approach by a large defunct satellite. Luckily, the spacecraft passed by harmlessly.
As orbits become increasingly congested, with an exponential increase in the number of space objects being launched, the risk of collisions will also increase.
Ever more companies and governments are entering the human spaceflight arena. The Tiangong space station, China’s orbiting laboratory, has been fully operational since 2022, and there are plans to open it to space tourism, just like the ISS.
India is planning to join the community of nations with the capability to launch humans into space, under a programme called Gaganyaan. And while most space travellers remain government-funded astronauts, the number of private space-farers is increasing.
Billionaire Jared Isaacman (who is President Trump’s nominee to run Nasa) has commanded two private missions into orbit using Crew Dragon. On the second of these, he participated in the first spacewalk by privately funded astronauts. The ISS is set to be retired in 2030 – but one company, Houston-based Axiom Space, is already building a private space station.
Against this complex and part-unregulated backdrop, ensuring the interoperability of different spacecraft systems, including spacesuits, will increase levels of safety in this inherently risky activity.
While the safety and practicality of spacesuits has always been the top priority, compatibility between different suits and vehicles should also be high on the list. This requires space agencies and private spaceflight companies to engage with each other in a process to agree on standard interfaces and connections for life support and communications, across all their suits and space vehicles.
Amid this period of increased commercialisation and competition between the organisations and companies involved in orbital spaceflight, a move toward greater collaboration can only be a good thing.
Berna Akcali Gur 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.
Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –
Since March of this year, the collection of the Museum of History of the St. Petersburg Polytechnic University has become available onthe official portal of the State Catalogue of the Museum Fund Russian Federation. This significant event opens up new horizons for researchers, students and anyone interested in the history of the university.
The State Catalogue is a regularly updated electronic database, the only one in Russia. It contains key information about each museum item and each museum collection included in the Museum Fund of the Russian Federation. This fund unites all state museums of the country, which makes access to cultural values more convenient and transparent.
To date, about 100 items from the museum’s collection have been uploaded to the portal. Among them, you can find unique documents, old photographs, magazines and other valuable artifacts reflecting the rich history of SPbPU. Thanks to this step, data on the collection has become available to the general public, which contributes to the popularization of scientific research and educational initiatives.
Thus, the SPbPU History Museum not only preserves the memory of its past, but also actively shares it with society. This is an important step towards openness and accessibility of museum resources, which will allow everyone to learn more about the significance of the university in the history of science and education in Russia.
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.
Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –
Scientists from Novosibirsk State University, as a result of a study conducted jointly with colleagues from the Meshalkin National Medical Research Center, have identified metabolic markers that warn of a high risk of developing certain complications in patients in the postoperative period.
Statistics show that approximately 30% of patients after open-heart surgery develop delirium (“postoperative psychosis”) as a reaction to drug anesthesia. Such patients require special postoperative care, and the ability to predict the risk of developing such a condition in advance would be of significant help to doctors in this.
As the researchers note, this reaction does not occur due to the drug, but rather due to the presence of certain prerequisites for the possibility of developing delirium in a person. And anesthesia in this case acts only as a “trigger”. Therefore, the solution to the problem was sought in the field of metabolomic research, which makes it possible to understand how metabolism occurs in the body and study the interrelations of biochemical reactions.
— Metabolomics is part of omics technologies, which have been rapidly developing in the last couple of decades, largely due to the opportunities that processing large biological data gives us. With their help, it is possible to reconstruct biochemical networks through several “omics” layers (genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics). And this is very important, since living organisms are integral systems and they need to be studied in a comprehensive manner, — explained the head of the Department of Fundamental Medicine Faculty of Medicine and Psychology, NSU Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences Andrey Pokrovsky.
Metabolomics makes it possible to understand how metabolism occurs in the body, to study the interrelations of biochemical reactions. As a result, it is possible to obtain a metabolic profile of a number of compounds in the body, to understand their role in physiological processes.
And here the level of detail of the patient’s metabolic profile plays a major role. A conventional biochemical analysis covers about 10-20 different metabolites, but the method used by NSU researchers allows increasing their number to several hundred.
“Within the framework of this project, we were able to examine about one hundred and fifty patients and, using our approach, identified certain molecules that can be used to predict the occurrence of delirium with a fairly high degree of accuracy,” said Andrey Pokrovsky.
Using a biochemical blood test, doctors can already identify patients who are at risk of developing this postoperative complication before surgery and adjust their treatment strategy accordingly.
In the future, scientists are considering the possibility of using the same approach to try to find similar markers of the risk of developing delirium not only after heart surgery – studies have already been published abroad indicating the presence of similar risks developing after other operations, also accompanied by long-term drug anesthesia.
The study itself became part of a large-scale project carried out by NSU scientists to study the metabolic profiles of patients with various diseases in order to find new markers for their better diagnosis and prediction of the risks of various complications.
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.
Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –
The 48th Universiade among students of higher educational institutions of the Novosibirsk Region is in full swing – 2-3 types of the program are held every week. And the table tennis team brought another prize place to the NSU piggy bank. It is especially pleasant that this time our athletes rose to the second step of the podium, the last two years they were also in the prizes, but third.
The team included:
Maxim Bagin, FIT
Alexander Dushenin, EF
Polina Alekseeva, MMF
Maria Tokareva, FEN
Olesya Davydova, IMPZ
Dmitry Filippenko, FF
Prize winners in the team competition:
1st place – SSUPS
2nd place – NSU
3rd place – NSTU
Congratulations to our tennis players and their coach Dmitry Trotsenko on their Universiade medals!
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.
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
The full launch of the Nekrasovskaya metro line has become one of the most anticipated events of the last decade for Muscovites. Sergei Sobyanin spoke about this in his telegram channel.
“In 2011, the transport situation in the southeast of the city was difficult. The districts were being built up quickly, and the Tagansko-Krasnopresnenskaya line was already poorly coping with the load. Getting into the carriage of the purple line during rush hour became a difficult task. The problem was solved by launching the Nekrasovskaya line,” the Moscow Mayor noted.
Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @Mos_Sobyanin
Later, a transfer to the Big Circle Line appeared, and the third Moscow Central Diameter (MCD-3) was put into operation.
Over the past five years, the pink line has been used more than 200 million times. It passes through the districts of Nekrasovka, Kosino-Ukhtomsky, Vykhino-Zhulebino, Ryazansky and Nizhegorodsky.
This is the first line in the Moscow metro, during the construction of which a 10-meter tunnel boring machine was used. It is also unique in that all stations were equipped with elevators, and the color of the line was chosen for the first time by Muscovites themselves.
“To service the Nekrasovskaya line, we built
Electric depot “Rudnevo”with a repair building and a train washing chamber. The Nizhegorodskaya city station has become one of the largest in Moscow. It connects the Nekrasovskaya and Bolshaya Koltsevaya lines, the Moscow Central Circle (MCC) and MCD-4,” wrote Sergei Sobyanin.
In addition, public spaces were created near the new stations. For example, a park was created on the site of a vacant lot in the Nekrasovka district.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
The number of children’s and youth theaters in Moscow has grown by almost 10 percent compared to the previous academic year. Currently, more than 780 groups work in the capital’s schools, colleges, and centers for additional education. This was reported on World Theater Day Anastasia Rakova, Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Social Development.
“We try to create as many ways as possible for the comprehensive development of children, paying special attention to the creative direction. Theater is not only art, but also an opportunity to develop flexibility of thinking, concentration, imagination and communication skills. Therefore, theater workshops are organized on the basis of the capital’s schools, colleges and centers of additional education, where children, under the guidance of famous directors and actors, participate in master classes and master stage professions. Two years ago, we launched a large-scale project “Commonwealth of School Theaters”, which has already united more than 22 thousand young artists. In the 2023/2024 academic year, the children staged 745 performances and held 1.5 thousand shows,” said Anastasia Rakova.
According to her, within the framework of the festival “Live Stage” young Muscovites performed at prestigious professional venues. These are the stages of the Boris Shchukin Theatre Institute, the Children’s Musical Theatre of the Young Actor, the Moscow New Drama Theatre, the theatre and concert hall “Palace on the Yauza” and the culture and arts centre “Shchukino”.
The repertoire of children’s and youth theaters includes both modern original productions adapted for teenagers and classical works. It is important that the capital’s schoolchildren and college students have a unique opportunity to study with recognized masters, including Vladimir Mashkov, Evgeny Knyazev and others.
At the same time, children not only master acting skills, but also try to create scenery, work with different types of puppets and plastic arts. There are more than 20 puppet theaters in Moscow educational institutions.
In addition, children’s and youth theaters stage performances in foreign languages. They can be organized both in schools with a special language focus and in regular schools.
A landmark event for young artists of the Commonwealth is the Moscow Theatre Festival-Competition of School Theatres “Live Stage”. In the 2023/2024 academic year, more than 500 creative groups took part in it. Schoolchildren and college students presented 30 dramatic and musical productions, which were watched by about seven thousand spectators.
The project “Theatre Backstage” is popular among students. More than 700 children and 100 teachers have already visited the backstage of the Moscow Oleg Tabakov Theatre School, the Museum of the Moscow Art Academic Theatre named after Maxim Gorky and the Puppet Theatre named after S.V. Obraztsov, where they got acquainted with the work of makeup artists, costume designers, sound engineers and other theatre specialists.
Special conditions have also been created for the professional growth of teachers. The Moscow Workshop of Theatre Pedagogy club was organized for the heads of school theatres. At meetings with cultural figures, they discuss the repertoire, methods of working with young actors and the specifics of the staging process. In 2024, the first enrollment was opened for the master’s program at the Moscow City Pedagogical University in the specialty of “school theatre teacher”. Students study the psychology of creativity, acting, directing and other disciplines under the guidance of experienced practitioners.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
The capital’s tourist information centres were visited by about 178 thousand people over the winter. Among them were guests from different regions of Russia and other countries, including China, Morocco, the United Arab Emirates and Vietnam. This was reported by Natalia Sergunina, Deputy Mayor of Moscow.
“The list of the most popular queries included Red Square, VDNKh, Moskino Cinema Park and Gorky Park. Travelers were also attracted by festivals and fairs, bus and river excursions, unusual master classes and skating rinks,” noted Natalia Sergunina.
Visitors were often interested in events dedicated to Maslenitsa and Chinese New Year. They were told where they could buy handmade souvenirs, try delicious tea and pancakes with meat, fish and sweet fillings, watch a drum show and other street performances.
Adults and children were invited to take part in creative activities and old games, attend film screenings and costumed performances.
Information centre staff share useful tips, introduce Moscow’s sights and help plan your own walking route. Travellers are also offered the opportunity to use convenient digital services such as Rosspas, where there is useful information about all the events in the city.
There are several tourist information centres in the capital, including on Tverskaya Square and on the territory of the Dream Island amusement park, in the buildings of the Northern and Southern river terminals.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Since 2017, the capital has concluded 27 contracts for the purchase and sale of premises in cultural heritage sites based on the results of competitions. In 14 sites, investors have already completed restoration. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.
“Since 2017, based on the results of competitions with investors, 27 contracts for the purchase and sale of premises in historical buildings with a total area of more than four thousand square meters have been concluded. Work is still ongoing in 13 objects, and has already been completed in 14. In total, investors have put more than 2.4 thousand square meters in order. Last year alone, business representatives restored five premises in cultural heritage sites,” said Vladimir Efimov.
Purchasing real estate in cultural heritage sites allows entrepreneurs to conduct business in areas with high business, consumer and tourist activity. At the same time, new owners undertake to restore the objects if necessary, and also to use them in accordance with conservation regulations.
The obligations for restoration and the timeframes within which entrepreneurs must fulfill them are specified in the purchase and sale agreements. The new owners agree on all work withDepartment of Cultural Heritage of Moscow, and the fulfillment of obligations is monitored by a specialized commission, which also includes representatives Department of City Property AndMoscow City Heritage DepartmentIf the new owners do not properly comply with the terms of the competition for the sale of premises in cultural heritage sites, the city has the right to fine the violator or terminate the contract with him.
“Last year, the investor restored the premises in the 18th-19th century estate on Balchug Street, in the building where the editorial office of the Vpered newspaper was located in 1905 on Bolshaya Nikitskaya Street, as well as in three former apartment buildings built at the beginning of the last century. All of them are located in the historical center of Moscow, where there is a high demand for commercial real estate. At the same time, the restoration of the premises with an area of 182.2 square meters in the federal cultural heritage site “Service Buildings of the Old Golovinsky Palace” is ongoing,” said the Minister of the Government of Moscow, Head of the Department of City Property
Almost 610 square meters will be restored in a historic building on Maroseika Street — a residential building built in the late 18th century. The cultural heritage sites will retain their historical appearance, but after the work is completed, they will be adapted for modern use.
Previously Sergei Sobyanin said, how valuable elements of architectural monuments are preserved in Moscow. According to on behalf of the Mayor of Moscow, at least 150 cultural heritage sites need to be restored in the city every year.
The development of electronic services for entrepreneurs is being implemented within the framework of the national project “Data Economy”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
The Unified Automated Information System of Moscow City Trades (EAIST) has turned 20 years old. During its existence, customers have concluded more than 5.5 million contracts. This was reported by Maria Bagreeva, Deputy Mayor of Moscow, Head of the Moscow Department of Economic Policy and Development.
“In March 2005, the Moscow Government launched a unified automated information system for tenders to convert the capital’s state procurement into electronic form. Today, the system provides a full cycle of procurement procedures. With its help, schools, kindergartens, hospitals, utilities, and Moscow authorities plan purchases, prepare sets of documents, calculate initial prices, and agree and sign contracts. Using EAIST, Moscow customers conclude more than two thousand contracts daily, and over the 20 years of the system’s operation, their number has exceeded 5.5 million,” said Maria Bagreeva.
EAIST is connected to almost 50 external systems. Among them are the supplier portal, the Federal Treasury and Bank of Russia services, as well as the unified medical information and analytical system, electronic trading platforms and Moscow industry systems. Thanks to such integration, the systems can exchange data for concluding contracts, their execution and control. This simplifies the work of customers and suppliers, reducing deadlines and paperwork.
The specialists of the Main Control Department use EAIST to control the entire procurement process: from planning to contract execution. They pay special attention to control at the preliminary stage. For this purpose, 1.2 thousand control points are built into the system, said Evgeny Danchikov, Minister of the Moscow Government and Head of the Main Control Department of the City of Moscow. For example, every year before inclusion in the plan-schedule, the validity of more than 25 thousand purchases with an initial price from three million to 100 million rubles is assessed. At this stage, about seven thousand comments related to the establishment of inflated values of product characteristics and incorrect price calculations are eliminated. As a result, at the post-control stage, it was possible to reduce violations by 13.2 times. The system is constantly evolving and is an important tool for controllers.
“EAIST uses modern domestic software solutions and applies 472 sets of standard documentation. This not only makes the procurement process faster and more convenient, but also helps to minimize the likelihood of customer errors, ensure fair competition, uniform, clear and transparent rules for concluding a contract. In addition, the system allows the Moscow Government to quickly process and analyze a huge array of data. Ultimately, this leads to the optimization of the capital’s contract system,” added the head of the Moscow City Department for Competition Policy
Artificial intelligence has been implemented into the work of the EAIST technical support service. Thanks to the digital assistant, users can quickly get answers to frequently asked questions, and support specialists are connected to solve more specialized and non-standard tasks. Already now, artificial intelligence independently processes about 10 percent of requests. And in the future, it will be able to autonomously answer almost a third of the questions received by technical support. Currently, the neural network knowledge base contains almost 1.7 thousand answers to common questions related to the work of EAIST. Artificial intelligence continues to learn based on the answers of technical support operators to user questions.
According to the deputy head Department of Information Technology of the City of Moscow Roman Urnysheva, EAIST is the foundation of the capital’s procurement ecosystem. It helps ensure the transparency of procurement, control the execution of contracts, optimize the preparation and implementation of procurement for the needs of the capital, from the purchase of office supplies and water to the construction of hospitals, metro stations and the implementation of other significant projects for millions of city residents. Every day, more than 10 thousand users work in EAIST and about 200-250 million transactions are processed, and the system itself is constantly growing and developing.
The functional customers of EAIST on the part of the Moscow Government are the capital’s Department of Competition Policy, the Department of Economic Policy and Development, the Main Control Directorate and the Department of Information Technology, which is also the operator of the system.
The development of electronic services for business corresponds to the objectives of the national project “Data Economy and Digital Transformation of the State” and the regional project of the city of Moscow “Digital Public Administration”. More information about this and other national projects can be found by link.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
Press release
Prime Minster meets Coalition of the Willing in Paris following UK military planning meetings
The Prime Minister will co-host the next meeting of the Coalition of the Willing alongside President Macron in Paris today (Thursday 27 March).
Prime Minister will underscore that all must back Ukraine to remain in the fight against Russia
Military planning to cover air, sea and land forces to support a lasting and durable peace and deter future Russian aggression
Prime Minister expected to say “Europe is stepping up to play its part to defend Ukraine’s future. Now Putin needs to show he’s willing to play ball”
The Prime Minister will co-host the next meeting of the Coalition of the Willing alongside President Macron in Paris today (Thursday 27 March).
At the meeting, he will present the outcomes of this week’s planning meetings in support of Ukraine, which took place at the UK military operational headquarters in Northwood over the last three days.
The intensive sessions, which convened over 200 military planners from countries across the globe, considered in detail the structure of any future force to ensure Ukraine can defend itself from future Russian aggression.
The Prime Minister will underline that all must come together to support Ukraine to remain in the fight and back US efforts to make real progress despite continued Russian obfuscation.
Planning so far has looked across the full range of European military capabilities including aircraft, tanks, troops, intelligence and logistics capabilities – and discussions have centred on how European nations can contribute their own capabilities to support any future force.
Discussions will continue around military planning of air, sea and land forces that would be required to support a just and lasting peace in Ukraine.
As the Prime Minister has repeatedly stated, a lasting peace in Ukraine can only be provided if we step up and give real and credible security assurances to deter Putin from coming back in future.
The Prime Minister will say that excellent progress has been made, and Europe is mobilising together in pursuit of peace, but now we must continue to keep up the momentum.
The Prime Minister will add that Putin has clearly shown his lack of commitment to the peace process, following ceasefire talks convened by the United States in Saudi Arabia this week.
Published readouts from both sides confirmed a naval ceasefire and prevention of use of commercial vessels for military purposes in the Black Sea but Russia immediately backtracked and placed conditions on the agreements – despite good faith participation from Ukraine.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer will say:
Unlike President Zelenskyy, Putin has shown he’s not a serious player in these peace talks. Playing games with the agreed naval ceasefire in the Black Sea despite good faith participation from all sides – all while continuing to inflict devastating attacks on the Ukrainian people. His promises are hollow.
The US is playing a leading role by convening the ceasefire talks, President Zelenskyy has demonstrated his commitment repeatedly, and Europe is stepping up to play its part to defend Ukraine’s future. Now Putin needs to show he’s willing to play ball.
Since taking office in January, the Trump administration has adopted a heavy-handed approach to cutting any perceived wasteful spending in the US government.
One of the more recent institutions targeted by Trump’s team, Voice of America, holds a potentially staggering implication: the end of American soft power.
Soft power earned the US government a significant amount of goodwill over the course of the 20th century, with Voice of America one of the most effective conduits. Taking VOA off the airwaves could signify a new era in geopolitics.
A short history of Voice of America
The Voice of America (VOA) has been in operation for over 80 years and was one of the first major campaigns conducted by the American government to promote positive sentiments towards the US as a leader of the free world.
The government-funded radio station began as a method of keeping US troops informed during the Second World War and was administered by the Office of War Information.
After WWII, Congress passed the Smith-Mundt Act of 1948, which aimed to promote a “better understanding” of the US around the world and to “strengthen cooperative international relations”.
This act put the VOA under the domain of the United States Information Agency (USIA). It became one of the US government’s many assets in combating Soviet propaganda during the Cold War.
The VOA was essentially a method of generating soft power, an invaluable tool in international diplomacy made famous by the American political scientist, Joesph Nye.
As Nye believed, a nation can use military intervention (“hard power”) to achieve its foreign policy aims, or it can create familiarity with other nations by promoting its culture, educational institutions and ideology (“soft power”).
During the Cold War, VOA broadcasts were an invaluable method of cultivating soft power. People all over the world relied on them as a source of news and commentary, especially in countries where the media was state-controlled.
Additionally, Voice of America effectively became an advertisement for the American way of life. The Music USA program, for instance, took Western popular culture to a global audience. This was especially effective in the Eastern Bloc, where jazz, in particular, became incredibly popular.
Voice of America and the other US-funded radio stations operating during the Cold War, such as Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, had their share of critics. The majority came from the Eastern Bloc. Some, however, were American.
In the 1970s, Senator William J. Fulbright, for instance, maintained that radio broadcasts such as VOA hindered diplomacy with the Soviet Union by disseminating American propaganda. He called them “Cold War relics”.
They were not mere propaganda mouthpieces, though. Although these stations and many of the other radio outlets under the control of the United States Agency for Global Media (USAGM) were funded by the American government, they demonstrated a reliance on journalistic integrity.
The VOA has also not shied away from reporting on negative aspects of American society. This is likely one reason why Trump has been so critical of its mandate.
The end of US soft power?
The short-term implications of Voice of America’s potential demise are worrying. Many journalists are out of work and a respected institution promoting international diplomacy hangs in the balance.
The long-term geopolitical implications, however, could be far greater. First, Voice of America and other stations managed by USAGM have long provided an alternative to state-run media in countries such as Russia and China.
Outlets like Russia’s Sputnik news organisation, which was recently removed from the airwaves in Washington for promoting antisemitic content and misinformation about the war in Ukraine, will now face fewer challenges reaching a global audience.
Taking VOA off the air also signals the Trump administration is done with soft power as a diplomatic tool and has little regard for the harm this will cause America’s reputation on the global stage.
If the US abandons the principles of appealing to other governments through soft power, it could resort to other means to achieve its geopolitical aims. This includes hard power.
One soft power advocate, General James Mattis, told Congress in 2013 when he was overseeing US military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, “If you don’t fund the State Department fully, then I need to buy more ammunition ultimately.”
The Trump administration’s rejection of soft power as a diplomatic tool could also allow China, in particular, to take its place.
As Nye himself pointed out in a recent Washington Post essay, polling in 24 countries in 2023 found the US was viewed much more positively than China. Another survey showed the US had the advantage over China in 81 of 133 countries surveyed.
Nye concluded: “If Trump thinks he will easily beat China by completely forgoing soft power, he is likely to be disappointed. And so will we.”
Ben Hammond has received funding from the Harry S. Truman Foundation and the Dwight D. Eisenhower foundation.
Keith Rankin, trained as an economic historian, is a retired lecturer in Economics and Statistics. He lives in Auckland, New Zealand.
While World War Two (WW2) always was a set of intersecting conflicts – with Japan fighting a war of imperialism in East Asia and the Western Pacific – the war in Europe has been cast as the ultimate battle of ‘Good’ versus ‘Evil’. Hence the narrative of the Good War. Further, it has been personalised, with Adolf Hitler becoming the personalisation of Evil and Winston Churchill the personalisation of Good.
It always was nonsense. Wars are fought over territories and hegemony, between various peoples (nationalities), empires, religions, ideologies etc.; in the vast majority of cases between Bad and Bad, albeit various shades of bad (although the Hitler’s Nazis and Joseph Stalin’s Communists were close to having been equally Bad). The Bad versus Good narrative remains compelling to the human mind, however. Once you can find a compelling Evil – without or within, over there or over here – then our brains want to tell us that whoever opposes that ‘bad’ must be ‘good’. (In the old days, the ‘good’ said: ‘God was on our side’. Typically, their opponents thought something similar.)
Winston Churchill was neither a Good leader nor a competent leader. He didn’t start WW2, though there is an argument that the United Kingdom did. Nevertheless, Churchill, as a charismatic rhetorician and narcissist, had some sway over political discourse in Britain for half a century. (His important career began in 1904, when he became a party-hopping backbencher. He resigned from his second stint as Prime Minister in 1955; he was an MP for 61 years, and PM for 9 years.) That’s why there are so many more cited quotations from him than from any other British back-bench MP in the late 1930s.
Churchill, as a war-leader, was an ultra-imperialist who fought imperialist wars under the cover of World Wars One and Two. He was responsible for numerous atrocities, including appeasements of Stalin that were more problematic than Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement of Hitler in 1938. In his speeches in 1938 and 1939, Churchill may have been alluding to Eastern Europe, but he was thinking about Italy and its threat to British ‘assets’ in and around the Mediterranean Sea.
WW2: Germany versus Soviet Russia, with the United Kingdom as stoker and as kingmaker
World War Two was round two of the Germany versus Russia conflict; this time as ‘Nazi’ Germany against ‘Communist’ Russia, the Third Reich versus the Soviet Union. The centrality of the Germany versus Russia conflict – indeed a conflict between them for the territories of Ukraine and the oilfields to the southeast of Ukraine – becomes more apparent when WW1 and WW2 are seen as one. World War One clearly started as a conflict between Germany and Russia; albeit triggered as a conflict between proxies, Austria and Serbia. And World War Two ended with the defeat of Germany by Soviet Russia; and after the entry of Russia into the Pacific War (which henceforth became the Cold War between Soviet Russia and the United States of America).
Technically, WW2 became a world war (rather than a regional war) when the United Kingdom and France (and their empires) ‘declared war’ on Germany on 1 Sep 1939. The trigger issue was the possibility of Germany invading Poland. But what mischief was the United Kingdom upto with distant Poland? Why did a British ghost-war go horribly wrong? And why did open warfare between the two principal belligerents in Europe – Berlin and Moscow – not commence until June 1941?
My reading of British and French ‘diplomacy’ between March and August 1939 is that these notional allies, United Kingdom in particular, wanted there to be a major regional showdown between Berlin and Moscow; both powers would be substantially weakened as a result, thereby enhancing British and French control of the Mediterranean and the ‘Middle East’.
The British and the French ‘tried’ to do a deal with Stalin, in March 1939, with respect to protecting Poland from German aggression. (On 15 March 1939, Germany annexed the Czech part of Czechoslovakia.) They revealed their military weakness (especially Britain’s), or at least the paucity of the military contribution they were willing to make towards the security of Poland.
Britain and France subsequently went on to sign a treaty guarantee with Poland; a guarantee that both would declare war against Germany if Poland was attacked by Germany. Stalin already knew that the United Kingdom would not back-up such a declaration with any action to defend Poland.
The reason for the guarantee appears to have been to deter Poland from negotiating a peace deal with Germany. Further, Britain was maintaining diplomatic communication with Germany until August 1939. The inference would appear to be that Britain was trying to start a ‘nothing-war’ between itself and Germany, while stoking a ‘something war’ between Germany and Soviet Russia. Britain had no intention of doing anything in Poland, and was expecting that France would provide a substantial defensive barrier between Germany and Great Britain; this was all in the context that Britain and France would be helping their own security by nudging Germany into ‘pushing’ East (as was always Germany’s apparent plan) rather than ‘West’.
However, Britain and France were nonplussed by the non-aggression pact – the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact – signed between Moscow and Berlin in the last week of August 1939. Further, there was a secret sub-pact. Moscow and Berlin would carve up Poland, and which effectively – and subsequently – meant the Soviet annexation of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, activating that secret deal. Despite having nineteenth-century precedents for a pragmatic backing out from a signed-up deal, the United Kingdom and France – at least notionally – honoured their guarantee and declared war on Germany.
For France, this meant further shoring-up of its border with Germany, and – virtue signalling –making a small and brief incursion into Germany (the Saar Offensive). For Britain it meant further rearmament, but really to build up its navy to shore up its imperial interests, and building up its Air Force to defend itself from possible German attack. And it sent an army into France, as a show of support for France, more to be seen to be doing something than to actually be doing anything.
But the clear sense is that Britain still expected Germany to negotiate peace with Britain while consolidating its annexations of the Czech lands and Poland. The ‘phoney war’ proceeded, though it was far from phoney to the people of Poland and other Eastern European countries. The United Kingdom was launched into war proper in May 1940, with the lightning conquest of France by Germany, a conquest made possible by Germany’s temporary truce with the Soviet Union. (Though that was preceded, by a month, by Germany’s invasion of Norway; a matter for Britain’s navy rather than army.)
Adolf Hitler abandoned the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in June 1941, embarking Nazi Germany on a full-scale invasion of the Soviet Union, his main plan all along. He had secured his western border in 1940; though his plans were somewhat scuppered by a need to attend to the military failings of Mussolini’s Italian forces in the Eastern Mediterranean, hence the war in Greece which involved New Zealand.
The Bloodlands and their toll of political murder: 1932-1945
The atrocities of the Nazis took place during a world war; those of Stalin were mostly during peace-time. Timothy Snyder, in his 2010 book Bloodlands, “conservatively” estimates that fourteen million civilians and prisoners-of-war were politically murdered in a set of contiguous territories – between Germany and Russia-proper – by either the Moscow-based Soviet Communist regime or the Berlin-based National Socialist regime. This includes ‘The Holocaust’, or at least most of it.
As real estate, Snyder defines the Bloodlands as the pre-WW2 territories of Ukraine and Belarus (within the Soviet Union), Poland, the Baltic States (Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia), and the part of Russia close to Leningrad (now St Petersburg). The murders included in his tally were inflicted by deliberate starvation, guns, and gas. The cases of starvation were not due to famine in the conventional sense of that term. In the Ukrainian ‘famine’ of 1932/33, the food grown on Ukrainian farms – among the most productive lands in Europe – was confiscated and exported to Russian cities and to other countries in return for foreign currency. In the Siege of Leningrad – 1941 to 1944 – the German military prevented food from entering the city.
The worst-affected areas of the Bloodlands are today in western Ukraine and western Belarus. This land was in Eastern Poland before World War Two, and therefore in the Soviet-annexed territories of pre-war Poland. These lands were annexed or occupied by the Soviet Union in 1939, Germany in 1941, and the Soviet Union again in 1944. Each annexation saw its own round of political mass murder.
The murders of citizens of Poland and the Soviet Union took place on a vastly larger scale than any comparable atrocities committed on West Europeans; including the Holocaust, for which the vast majority of victims were Jews resident in Eastern Europe (not Germany; not the West). Snyder summarises the Bloodlands murder toll as:
3.3 million deliberately starved mostly in Ukraine in the 1932/33 Holodomor
0.7 million murdered in the Great Terror of 1937/38
0.2 million murdered in occupied Poland in 1939-1941 (disproportionately highly educated people; many killed by the notorious Einsatzgruppen, Nazi loyalists with PhD degrees)
4.2 million Soviet citizens starved by German occupiers in 1941-1944
5.4 million Jews (mostly Polish or Soviet citizens) shot or gassed by Germans in 1941-1944
0.7 million citizens (mostly Belarussians or Poles) shot by Germans in reprisals in 1941-1944
To what extent would have these (or equivalent numbers of) deaths have happened anyway, regardless of how the war actually started in Poland? Stalin’s victims, mostly already dead, represented about 40 percent of these fourteen million. The majority of Stalin’s victims were killed in the Ukrainian Holodomor which peaked in 1932 and 1933; or in the Great Terror of 1937 and 1938, which targeted the ‘kulak’ class of peasants and former peasants, ethnic Poles, and Russia’s political class (including many Bolshevik allies of the paranoid Stalin; communists who had come to be seen as potential threats to him).
Before September 1939, Hitler’s attempts at political murder were puny at best, when compared to Stalin’s ‘peace-time’ terror campaigns. Stalin murdered Soviet citizens. So, to a large extent did Hitler; Hitler killed comparatively few Germans, before or during the war.
Those who died in the Bloodlands after August 1939 might have experienced different fates had the war not been started then and there. Certainly, in 1940, a group of Hitler’s scientists – led by a leading agronomist – devised the ‘Hunger Plan’, which, if implemented in full, would have led to the murder of thirty of forty million Soviet citizens, to be replaced by German Aryan settlers. (While Hitler used ‘capitalist’ and ‘communist’ Jews as convenient scapegoats, Nazi racism should be understood as pro-Aryan rather than specifically anti-Jewish.) This was probably a racist and supremacist Nazi fantasy, unlikely to be able to be realised in full, and which was not prevented by the declaration of war by the United Kingdom against Germany in 1939.
It’s hard to see that the eventual victory of the Soviet Union over Germany in 1945 made the world a better, freer or more democratic place than it otherwise would have been; with fewer deaths and sufferings after 1939 than there actually were. Would a German victory over the Soviet Union have led to a less inhumane outcome for many millions of people, in the Bloodlands and elsewhere? We’ll never know, but it’s possible. It seems unlikely that the extremes of German National Socialism could have lasted for as long as the extremes of Soviet and Maoist Communism. And we know that most oppressive regimes do come to an end eventually; just as Hitler thought the Third Reich was forever (or for 1,000 years), so did Stalin and his successors believe of the Soviet Union.
World War Two morphed into the Cold War
Mostly, the Cold War – between the United States and the Soviet Union, and their proxies and alleged proxies – was ‘fought’ between the First World and the Second World; but its many victims were mostly in the ‘Third World’, now called the ‘Global South’. The way the Pacific War morphed into the Cold War is glaringly obvious, with the nuclear attack on Japan by the United States representing the end of the one war and the beginning of the next. (And note The bombing of Hamburg foreshadowed the horrors of Hiroshima.)
The Cold War began in Europe too, when the ‘victorious’ western ‘powers’, most particularly the United States, ‘suggested’ that the Russian ‘liberators’ of Eastern Europe were planning to overrun Western Europe as well (and turn the conquered into ‘communists’). The result was a tensely divided Europe until 1990, unnecessarily so; many European lives were blighted by politico-military suppression for 45 years. Further, that east-west divide has reappeared; just look at the results of the recent general election in Germany.
Finally, the costs ain’t over yet
Just as the World War came in two episodes, so too is the Cold War now in its second episode. (In the case of the World War, the second episode was explicitly ideological; communism versus fascism. In the Cold War, it was the first episode that was explicitly ideological; communism versus liberal capitalism.) Further, with signs that the United States might be withdrawing early, the second Cold War (CW2?) is looking like becoming, at its core, the Fourth Reich (aka the European Union) versus Russia (the new Russian Empire?), and with the territories of contention once again being Ukraine and the Black Sea.
The World War could have ended in 1918 or 1919 after the Great War (later known as World War One) – understood then to be the ‘War to End All Wars’ – if the ‘great powers’ had learned the appropriate lessons. Sadly, the ‘powers-that-were’ and the ‘powers-that-would-be’ learned, if anything, the wrong lessons. World War Two was not a Good War; it was grubbier and crueller than probably all its predecessors, and all sides – including the Anglo-side – contributed to that grubbiness and cruelty.
Imperialism was very much the problem, not the solution. The ‘rules-based-world-order’, devised in 1919 by the then-victorious powers – shonky new-nation national-borders and all – proved to be just another variation of great-power imperialism. We live in a world today of powers (some more ‘super’ than others), their proxies, and nations in the Global South saddled with borders which ensure forever conflicts.
We live in a world in which the Global West sees itself as morally and culturally superior, even though manifestly it isn’t. And we live in a world in which the Global East – in its various ethnic and cultural shades – rejects the supremacist assumptions and liberal presumptions of the West. And we live in a world in which those powers gamble with global war, just as the British gambled in 1939. And we live in a world in which the militaries contribute vastly to very real climate change, partly from military emissions of greenhouse gasses, partly because the immediate (eg 2020s) security concerns of the world outweigh concerns about the climate future (eg 2040s) concerns, and partly because we behave as if the goals to prevent or adapt to global warming are unwinnable.
There is a lot happening in the world at the moment, including tensions within Europe that would lead few people to be confident that – in 2050 – the present political architecture of Europe would still exist. Germany coveted Ukraine in the first half of the twentieth century. Indeed, Germany occupied Ukraine in 1918 and in the middle years of World War Two. Will the second quarter of the twenty-first century once again see German control of Ukraine? I wouldn’t bet against it. I see a stronger belligerence today in Germany towards having influence in Ukraine than I see in any other western country.
The biggest threat to peace is war; not Russia, not China, not Germany, not the United States of America, not Iran, not the hapless United Kingdom. Wars are a problem, not a solution.
The worst things happen during wars, or as a result of wars. There is one important exception. As we have seen, the Soviet Union – a Marxian ‘scientific utopia’ – destroyed many of its own people in the 1930s, in ‘peacetime’, and while the liberal world was looking the other way. Something similar, maybe worse, happened in China in the 1960s.
The lessons to learn are: avoid war, and the drum-beating that precedes it. And avoid technocratic utopian groupthink; avoid ideologies masquerading as science. The Nazi Hunger Plan was devised by an agronomist, Herbert Backe. War leads to such ideologies; and such ideologies lead to war.
*******
Keith Rankin (keith at rankin dot nz), trained as an economic historian, is a retired lecturer in Economics and Statistics. He lives in Auckland, New Zealand.
Source: Saint Petersburg State University – Saint Petersburg State University –
Such meetings, as noted by Kamilla Nigmatullina, Head of the Department of Digital Media Communications at St. Petersburg State University, create a unique space for strengthening ties within the university community. Here, former students can not only talk about their professional path and demonstrate their achievements, but also participate in planning future projects, enriching themselves with the experience of their colleagues.
The SPbU professor emphasized that maintaining close contact with graduates is a strategically important process. Two-way communication allows the academic environment to quickly respond to the challenges of the real sector, and university students to use the resources of the educational organization for professional development, achieving career heights and increasing competitiveness as specialists.
“One of the tasks of St. Petersburg University is to create a space for alumni networking, since each of them is an integral part of a huge community united by the common values of university culture,” said Kamilla Renatovna, adding that the event’s program is structured in such a way as to provide participants with both the theoretical foundation and the practical tools necessary for the successful realization of their professional potential.
St. Petersburg State University graduates can joinprofessional chat to exchange vacancies and experience in implementing their own projects.
During the conference, graduates of various educational programs shared the results of their analysis of practical cases. VK UX researcher Polina Vanevskaya explained the differences between marketing and product research, revealing the specifics of each area. She also highlighted the strengths and weaknesses of the approaches, allowing you to optimize the decision-making process when choosing a work methodology. “Research for business is trending today. However, the key is choosing a relevant approach that will best meet the goals set, including studying customer (CX) and user (UX) experience,” the graduate said.
Noting the practice-oriented format of the event, Tatyana Kolesnikova, Head of Marketing at Smartlight, shared recommendations for developing a personal brand in social networks. She argued for the growing importance of social capital for career growth and focused on the key features of creating an effective digital resume, noting that it is becoming not just an addition to a traditional portfolio, but a full-fledged alternative to it.
The trend towards using social networks as a means of self-presentation is driven by three factors: expanding a professional network of contacts, creating a unique personal image, and establishing a direct link between the level of personal brand development and income level.
Head of Marketing Department of Smartlight Tatyana Kolesnikova
Editor-in-chief of the content marketing agency Palindrom Ekaterina Bezruchko revealed the secrets of successful regulation of creative copywriting and SEO optimization, explaining the algorithms for creating headlines that attract both readers and search engines. As part of her presentation, she analyzed the existing project “Datebook”, highlighting the principles of forming key positions and methods for integrating original elements into SEO-oriented content, and also gave practical advice on implementing similar strategies in other brand media.
Anastasia Zubova, Product Marketing Manager (PMM) of ADAS at Atom, spoke about the role of a project management specialist in optimizing processes that link advanced technological solutions with the needs of the target audience. She presented an analysis of the mechanisms by which PMM ensures synergy between innovative technologies and market demand and accelerates the commercialization of products. According to the expert, in order to ensure the competitiveness of production, it is important to constantly interact with end users to identify their hidden needs.
Senior Blogger Manager Anna Grakhova, based on eight years of experience and cases of successful advertising campaigns, described adaptive strategies for cooperation with media people in the conditions of the modern advertising environment. She reported on the current state of the online content market, taking into account the impact of new legislation, and proposed long-term solutions for planning and evaluating the effectiveness of marketing projects. As a key argument, she put forward the assumption that the distribution of investments between several medium-sized bloggers is more profitable than concentrating on one popular one.
At the end of the event, the Head of the Alumni Relations Department of St. Petersburg University, Maria Edinova, noted the high level of involvement of the participants and expressed confidence that the conference would become a starting point for new partnerships and initiatives. “Creating a platform for communication between graduates of different years contributes to the formation of a strong professional community, where everyone can find support, advice and new opportunities for development. We strive to create an ecosystem where graduates feel their involvement in the University and actively participate in its life, benefiting themselves and their alma mater,” she emphasized.
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.
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Every day Muscovites help participants of the special military operation (SVO) and people living in new and border territories of Russia. They transfer patronage aid, as well as humanitarian aid collected at headquarters “Moscow helps”.
Many city residents create volunteer squads and their own organizations that send everything they need to those who need support. One of them is Oksana Chelmodeeva, director of the center for assistance and development “OkVeAn” and head of humanitarian missions. She began volunteering in 2006, helping to find missing people. In 2016, she joined social projects, and three years later, she opened her own center.
Training in resource center competency development programs “Mosvolonter” helped Oksana Chelmodeeva to competently build interaction with the team. In 2020, over 80 volunteers from the center took part in the mutual aid campaign “We are together”, delivering food and medicine to Muscovites forced to stay at home.
With the start of the special military operation, Oksana Chelmodeeva and her team continued to support people, but already within the framework of the humanitarian project “Moscow Helps”. Volunteers participated in the “Let’s Get a Child Ready for School” campaign, providing children living in new territories with the necessary school supplies. In addition, the center regularly sends the collected aid to one of the headquarters in TiNAO. Since 2022, volunteers have also been working in Donetsk. They distribute humanitarian supplies coming from the capital.
In total, since March 2022, the center has organized more than 60 aid shipments to SVO participants, hospitals, orphanages, shelters, rehabilitation centers and residents of new regions. In addition, more than 500 tons of sponsorship aid for fighters, special technical equipment, machinery and humanitarian aid for residents were transferred to the new territories. In Moscow, support was provided to more than 2.5 thousand displaced families. Many of them themselves joined the center’s volunteer headquarters to help those in need.
Big team
In 2024, Oksana Chelmodeeva created a humanitarian center “OkVeAn-Donbass”. It provides regular assistance to a specialized children’s home, the M.I. Kalinin Clinical Hospital and the Psychoneurological Hospital No. 2. Humanitarian aid is also delivered to guardianship and trusteeship authorities in nine districts of Donetsk: Budyonnovsky, Voroshilovsky, Kirovsky, Kalininsky, Kievsky, Kuibyshevsky, Leninsky, Petrovsky and Proletarsky. The center provides patronage assistance to more than 25 military units.
“It is my duty to my Motherland to help the participants of the SVO and residents of the new territories. I would like to volunteer in the SVO zone, but my disability did not allow it. My whole family helps with me. I have three children, and they have been actively involved in volunteering since childhood. My son participates in loading and unloading humanitarian aid. Together, we have made more than 40 trips to the new territories. Now he lives in Donetsk and helps at the OkVeAn-Donbass center. The youngest daughter is the commander of the Young Army detachment. She participates in social and patriotic projects,” said Oksana Chelmodeeva.
The Muscovite has a large team. Searchers send requests to factories, plants, production facilities and stores to collect the required amount of resources. At the warehouse, volunteers sort and form cargo into categories. Another team is responsible for transporting aid to the regions. Also among the volunteers are those who write posts about the work done, process citizens’ requests, and lawyers and psychologists provide support to the population and military personnel.
The center not only provides social assistance, but also conducts military-patriotic work, organizes search expeditions and supports veterans of the Great Patriotic War. The military-patriotic club “Bylina” and a search squad operate on its basis. Together with the Moscow sports and leisure center “Atlant”, a youth army association was created, which was joined by 67 teenagers.
“I first met caring helpers during a serious illness. People helped me and my family for free. When I recovered, I decided to devote myself to helping people. Now I actively involve children in the world of good. Such values as patriotism, historical memory and continuity of generations are eternal. They help to cultivate a sense of pride in the Motherland and its history, to awaken in them love for their native land, language, traditions and customs,” shared Oksana Chelmodeeva.
For her active assistance to SVO participants, residents of new territories and the development of the volunteer movement in the city, the Muscovite received many awards. For example, the state medal “For assistance and mercy”, the honorary badge “For contribution to the development of the region”, the medal “Parental valor”, the honorary diploma of the People’s Council of the DPR, as well as letters of gratitude for personal contribution to patriotic education and pre-conscription training of the younger generation, for active public work and for a significant contribution to the development of the volunteer movement in the capital.
You can find out more about the volunteer movement in the capital on the resource center website “Mosvolonter”, on his social network page “VKontakte” Andtelegram channel.
Organizing volunteer activities and involving young people in city events are in line with the objectives of the national project “Youth and Children” and the federal project “We are together”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
In three months, Muscovites got rid of more than 50 tons of clothes and books thanks to the service “Removal of unnecessary things” on the mos.ru portal. With its help, you can give away for free to good hands what others might still need: clothes, shoes, books, hats, haberdashery, magazines and postcards. According to statistics, about 95 percent of all received items are women’s and children’s clothing.
As noted in the capital Department of Information TechnologyTo use the service, you need to log in to mos.ru, go to to page service and fill out application, in which you need to select a category of things, specify the address, the desired date and time of arrival of specialists. This can be done by residents of all administrative districts of Moscow – registered adult users of the portal with a standard or full accountAfter submitting the application, the operator will call the user to confirm and clarify the information.
The service allows you to donate clothes and books that are suitable for further use, with a total volume of at least four large bags or boxes or eight standard bags. The items should be tidied up: clothes should be washed, dried and checked for damage, books should be cleaned of dust and the pages should be checked for torn pages. It is also important that the items do not have any foreign odors.
At the agreed time, employees of the partner organization will come and pick up the prepared items free of charge. They will then be delivered to the warehouse for sorting, disinfection and further distribution to social sites.
If there are not many things, you can take them to recycling centers yourself. Last year, the capital started operating “Eco-points of Moscow” project — more than 200 collection points for clothes, textiles and accessories for recycling have opened in the city. Their addresses can be found on the website. The plans include increasing the number of eco-points and expanding the list of things that can be given a second life.
The creation, development and operation of the e-government infrastructure, including the provision of mass socially significant services, as well as other services in electronic form, correspond to the objectives of the national project “Data Economy” and the regional project of the city of Moscow “Digital Public Administration”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Moscow parks will host excursions, master classes, lectures, games, health training and walks on March 29 and 30. The events and conditions for visiting them were reported in the capital’s Department of Culture.
Saturday, March 29
The race will take place in Angarskiye Prudy Park at 09:00. The morning will begin with a warm-up at 08:45 at the boat station of the Bolshoy Angarskiy Pond. The start is at 09:00. Each participant will be able to feel the adrenaline and joy of running in the fresh air. The preferred age of athletes is 12 years and older. The event is free.
From 13:00 to 15:00, a historical excursion “History of Voroshilovsky Park” will be held on the territory of Filevsky Park. It will tell about the history of the previous owners of these places: Solodovnikovs, Soldatenkovs, Shelaputins. It will be interesting for guests aged six and older. Registration is not required.
And at 20:15 in Filevsky Park there will be a parkrun for a distance of five kilometers. It is timed to coincide with the beginning of the running season in Moscow and will be the first evening parkrun in 2025. Athletes will gather near the main entrance. Registration is not required. Age category – from 18 years and older.
From 13:00 to 14:00, the Babushkinsky Park Center for Creativity and Leisure will host a musical and educational lesson called “There Will Be a Song.” It is designed for children aged five to eight. A teacher from the Tertsia Center for Contemporary Art will immerse children in the world of music in an interactive way. Participants will learn what musical signs and notes look like, explore cartoon characters through melodies, learn songs by Russian composers, take part in logorhythmic games, solve musical riddles, and complete tasks for creative development. Admission is free.
A lesson in courage will be held in the Severnoye Tushino Park by a military unit of the Russian National Guard. This event is aimed at patriotic education of children and teenagers, familiarization with the exploits of the people, outstanding figures of Russia and the formation of respect for the history of their country. Participants over 12 years old will learn about the military and labor achievements of their ancestors, understand the importance of protecting the Motherland and develop personal responsibility. The event starts at 1:30 p.m. in the Severnoye Siyaniye center, admission is free.
The “Mezen Cube” master class will be held in the “Development and Creativity Club” pavilion at the southern entrance to the park. Participants will get acquainted with one of the northernmost types of Russian folk painting, learn to create patterns in traditional white, black and red colors, and then decorate their own cube. The event starts at 2:00 p.m. Children from six years old can participate. Admission is free.
The master class “Spring Park” from the series “Drawing Basics for Everyone” will be held in the gazebo near the amphitheater of the Friendship Park. Visitors over six years old will learn techniques for depicting trees and foliage, create a spring landscape, and learn how to convey the depth of space in a drawing. Starts at 14:00. Registration is not required.
At 18:00, a lecture entitled “Qigong. Traditional Chinese Medicine” will be held in one of the outbuildings of the Vorontsovo estate. It will be given by the president of the All-Russian Society of Traditional Chinese Medicine Doctors, a reflexologist, a qigong and taijiquan instructor, and a doctor for the Russian national gymnastics team. Guests will be immersed in the basics of traditional Chinese medicine and have a practical lesson in health qigong. The venue will be held at 8 Vorontsovsky Park from 18:00 to 19:30. Residents of the capital aged 12 and over are invited. The event is paid, tickets can be purchased by link.
Sunday, March 30
At 11:00 on the wooden podium behind the main stage of the Severnoye Tushino Park, there will be an open training session in joint gymnastics by the Bodrost hardening club. At 13:00 near the Bodrost pavilion on the park embankment, hardening exercises will begin. Experienced athletes of the club will tell about hardening methods, help participants take the first steps towards strengthening their immunity. Dousing, air baths and breathing exercises will charge you with energy and a good mood. Those wishing to participate are advised to bring towels, slippers and bathing suits. There are no age restrictions. Admission is free.
At 2:00 p.m., adults and young park guests will be able to take part in a walk-talk called “Bird Day.” They will learn about migratory birds, their characteristics and migration routes, and will also go on a short excursion around the park with binoculars to observe the birds in their natural environment. Anyone aged six and over is invited. Admission is free.
At 12:00, everyone is invited to a walking tour of the Hermitage Garden. An experienced guide will take you around the most theatrical garden in Moscow, tell you what was on the site of the Hermitage before it appeared, thanks to whom it was opened, and also share interesting facts about the cultural life of the garden with a 130-year history. Visitors will hear a story about how the pearl of the garden and park ensemble became the center of attraction for opera, ballet, and dramatic art. The meeting place is the main entrance (from Karetny Ryad Street), near the white fountain. Required registration.
An English conversation club will open in the Bauman Garden on March 30. Students will watch films and TV series together, and listen to songs in the original language to learn to understand spoken English and communicate. After each lesson, a discussion of ideas and an exchange of opinions is planned. Meetings will be held every Sunday from 12:00 to 14:00 in the chess club. Participants over six years old are welcome. Participation is free, the number of places is limited, a registration.
From 2:00 PM to 6:00 PM, the Babushkinsky Park Center for Creativity and Leisure will host the “Game Library for Everyone.” Fans and experts of board games, as well as those who are interested in and want to try something new, are invited to the event. Participants will enjoy a cozy company and a pleasant, friendly atmosphere. Here, everyone will be able to find a game to their taste. The Game Library is live communication, interesting board games, people who will teach them the rules, and a pleasant pastime. Admission is free. Organizers: the SoBytie Foundation for the Support of Social Integration of Teenagers and the regional children’s public organization Soyuz Zvezdny.
A master class on painting “Street in a Southern Town” from the “Magic Colors” series will be held in the gazebo near the amphitheater in Druzhby Park. At 2:00 p.m., participants will analyze the features of depicting white buildings, the rules for placing accents, and learn how perspective and reflexes work. Admission is free.
The exhibition “Melnikov’s Moscow” has opened in the Maxim Gorky Central Park of Culture and Leisure behind the main entrance arch. The joint project with the A.V. Shchusev State Research Museum of Architecture is dedicated to the work of the famous avant-garde architect Konstantin Melnikov, one of the most controversial masters of the 1920s and 1930s, whose ideas combine both traditional approaches and those that were decades ahead of their time. Among his most famous works are the Rusakov Union of Communal Workers Club, the Kauchuk Plant Club, the Bakhmetevsky Garage, the garage on Novorizhanskaya Street, and the architect’s own house on Krivoarbatsky Lane. The exhibition will also tell about the architect’s projects for buildings in the capital that were not implemented. These are competition projects for the People’s Commissariat of Heavy Industry and the Palace of Soviets, urban development projects for the reconstruction of Luzhniki and Gorky Park. Admission is free.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
On Saturday, March 29, there will be an exhibition and adoption of animals from the city shelter “Zelenograd”. More than 20 of its inhabitants are waiting to meet their future owners. This was reported by the Moscow city economy complex.
The event will take place from 11:00 to 17:00 in the foyer of the Zelenograd cultural center (Zelenograd, Central Square, Building 1).
Guests will be greeted by a calm and cheerful puppy Barbados, an active and brave dog Yumi, who is interested in learning everything new. You can also meet cats – affectionate Chushka, fluffy beauty Delta and other purring pets. In total, there will be 20 cats and three dogs at the exhibition. All of them are healthy, vaccinated, friendly and socialized.
Visitors will be told about their features and will be given care tips for future owners. Those who are not yet ready to get a four-legged friend, but really want to help animals, will be offered to become shelter volunteers. You can bring dry food, canned food, leashes, collars, bowls and toys for the pets.
Printed catalogues, which contain their profiles, shelter addresses and phone numbers, allow you to get to know the pets in absentia. Detailed information, stories and photos of animals can be found on the website State Budgetary Institution “Dorinvest”, subordinate to the Department of Housing and Public Utilities of the capital, in its telegram channel, as well as on the institution’s page in social network “VKontakte”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
The Moscow Electronic School (MES) now has computer science assignments with automatic checking for students in grades 5-11. Teachers have access to them in the electronic journal. Teachers can use the materials as homework. This will help assess the children’s knowledge level and, if necessary, adjust the curriculum.
“Moscow Electronic School cooperates with many domestic developers of educational materials. This allows us to regularly update the collection of educational content and make the learning process more exciting and diverse. For example, recently MES has introduced computer science assignments with automatic checking, which were developed by specialists from the educational platform Yandex Textbook. The materials will save teachers’ time on checking homework and help them identify topics that students have difficulty studying,” the press service of the capital noted.
Students are given three attempts to complete the task. If all answers are incorrect, the correct one will be displayed. You can find out how to complete tasks with automatic checking in a special instructions.
“My students and I have already started using the new materials as homework. After completing the test, the results are immediately available to the children. This helps them understand their problem areas and improve their academic performance,” said Dmitry Levitsky, a computer science teacher at School No. 1000.
Yandex Textbook is an educational platform that offers more than 100 thousand educational materials. They are developed by experienced methodologists taking into account federal educational standards. The service is used by more than 1.3 million students and about 101 thousand teachers from all over Russia. About 800 thousand schoolchildren and over 8.5 thousand teachers regularly access the computer science materials. In the 2024/2025 academic year, they were included in the federal list of electronic educational resources of the Ministry of Education of Russia.
“Moscow Electronic School” — a joint project of the capital’s Department of Education and Science AndDepartment of Information Technology. It was created in 2016. The unified digital educational platform is available to Moscow teachers, students and their parents. Among the main services of “MESh” are a library of educational materials, an electronic diary and journal, “Moskvenok”, “Student Portfolio” and “Olympiads”.
Providing Moscow schoolchildren with modern digital services increases the efficiency of the educational process, helps young Muscovites plan their time wisely and is in line with the objectives of the “All the Best for Children” national project “Youth and Children”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect