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Category: Russian Federation

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The government will help regions with major repairs of children’s theaters

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Order dated October 8, 2024 No. 2782-r

    Document

    Order dated October 8, 2024 No. 2782-r

    A number of regions will receive funding to ensure major repairs of youth theaters. The order to this effect was signed by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin. The decision taken is part of the work to support regional cultural institutions and update their infrastructure.

    The funds will be used to carry out repairs at the Volgograd Youth Theatre and the Yaroslavl Youth Theatre named after V.S. Rozov.

    The funding will help to renovate children’s theatres and equip them with new equipment, which will allow theatres to show performances at a qualitatively new professional level and attract more young spectators.

    In total, more than 1.4 billion rubles have been allocated in the federal budget for the modernization of youth theaters and puppet theaters in 2024. The work is being carried out within the framework of the national project “Culture”.

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

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

    http://government.ru/nevs/52938/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Architectural and artistic lighting will decorate the Church of St. Sergius of Radonezh

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Specialists from the city services complex will decorate the Church of St. Sergius of Radonezh with architectural and artistic lighting. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow in the Moscow Government for Housing and Public Utilities and Improvement Petr Biryukov.

    “A special project has been developed for organizing the lighting of the Church of St. Sergius of Radonezh on Izhorskaya Street, and the work will be carried out this year. The main task is to emphasize the beauty and architectural features of the building, which was built in the mid-19th century and is a cultural heritage site of regional significance,” said Pyotr Biryukov.

    Architectural and artistic lighting will highlight the details and elements of the temple. In accordance with the city lighting concept, it will have a warm or neutral shade of white. 74 devices with energy-efficient lamps will be installed on the upper and lower parts of the facade. They will illuminate the bell tower, tents and domes, highlight the mosaic icons.

    Over the past 13 years, the level of illumination in the capital has doubled, and the number of buildings with architectural and artistic illumination has increased fourfold. Today, Moscow is illuminated by more than one million lamps, while electricity consumption does not increase due to the use of energy-efficient equipment.

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

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

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145026073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Jobs and Investment: How the Capital Is Implementing a Program to Stimulate the Creation of Places of Employment

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    More than 210 billion rubles in investments will be attracted to develop the capital’s industrial potential as part of the program to stimulate the creation of employment sites (EPS). This was announced by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Transport and Industry Maxim Liksutov.

    “Implementation of industrial construction projects within the framework of the program for stimulating the creation of industrial construction facilities, which was approved by Sergei Sobyanin, contributes to the development of the scientific and technical potential of the city and gives businesses the opportunity to find modern sites equipped with all the necessary infrastructure for localizing production. In total, under this program, investors will build over 820 thousand square meters of industrial real estate in different areas of the city, investments in the creation of new places of employment will exceed 210 billion rubles,” said Maxim Liksutov.

    By 2029, in exchange for a benefit from the city, investors will build 16 new industrial infrastructure facilities in the capital. More than 12 thousand jobs will appear there. About half of these facilities will be commissioned next year.

    “In 2025, under the program to stimulate the creation of MPT, we will commission seven industrial facilities. For example, in Zelenograd, the construction of four construction industry plants will be completed. The enterprises will produce aerated concrete blocks, facade structures, building materials and mobile homes. In Pokhodny Proezd in the northwest of the capital, we will commission a plant for the production of architectural concrete. An enterprise for the production of facade systems and translucent structures will appear in TiNAO. And in the west of Moscow, a technological industrial park will open for the localization of food production. In total, the city will receive more than a thousand new jobs,” clarified the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of Investment and Industrial Policy

    Anatoly Garbuzov.

    In 2026, it is planned to complete the construction of the second stage of the industrial technopark “Alabushevo” in the special economic zone “Technopolis Moscow”. This complex will include five buildings and an office building. In addition to the production area, each building will have space for laboratories and design offices. The technological industrial park “Senkino” in the Krasnopakhorsky district (TiNAO), as well as an industrial complex as part of the creative industries technopark “Gustav” in Maryina Roshcha (SVAO), an industrial production facility in the Molzhaninovsky district (SAO) and a large-modular housing construction plant in the Vnukovo district (TiNAO) will also be completed. The implementation of these projects will create about 8.5 thousand new jobs.

    In 2027, it is planned to complete the construction of an industrial and production complex in Zelenograd Administrative Okrug, which will be able to accommodate several enterprises of various industries and a plant for the production of building materials. A factory for the production of frame elements and finishing will appear in TiNAO. More than 700 people will be able to find employment at the new enterprises.

    Another industrial complex will be commissioned in 2028. It will localize food and light industry enterprises, where two thousand new jobs will be created.

    The first five industrial facilities under the program to stimulate the creation of industrial enterprises have already been built. The new production facilities can employ about 5.4 thousand Muscovites.

    Since 2020, the program to stimulate the creation of MPT covers almost all districts of the capital. The Moscow government has concluded 130 agreements with investors, which provide for the construction of commercial facilities with an area of more than six million square meters. These are industrial enterprises, logistics complexes, office and retail facilities, educational, cultural and sports institutions. This will create more than 290 thousand new jobs in almost all sectors of the city’s economy. The total investment in the development of the capital will exceed two trillion rubles.

    Developers can submit an application to participate in the program through the online service at Moscow investment portal.

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

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

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145017073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Scientists work to make this world a better place”

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    Federico Gallo – Research Fellow Center for Neuroeconomics and Cognitive Research Institute of Cognitive Neurosciences, National Research University Higher School of EconomicsIn 2023, he received the award “For special achievements in career and public life among foreign graduates of the National Research University Higher School of Economics.” In an interview, Federico talked about how he came to science and why he stayed in it, and also revealed the secret of an effective remedy against old age.

    The Beginning of the Journey: From Ancient Greek to Neuroscience

    Since childhood, I loved books, especially books about science, history, and the English language. I studied in a classical school, that is, I studied ancient Greek and Latin, antiquity. I was a very inquisitive child, and I was lucky that my family and friends always supported this inquisitive research nature in me. Then I realized that I wanted to connect my life with science, but I did not know which field exactly.

    At first, I decided that I wanted to become an astrophysicist and entered the physics department. But soon I realized that I was more attracted to mathematics and thought about changing my specialty. Then my mother, a high school teacher, advised me to pay attention to neuroscience. At that time, it was a completely new field of research. I was attracted by the fact that it combined several fields of knowledge, including the exact sciences, psychology, and linguistics. Even now, it seems to me that interdisciplinarity is the most remarkable and strong side of neuroscience.

    In 2011, I entered the University of Milan. Our first class was taught by Professor Andrea Moro. Incidentally, he was a student of Noam Chomsky himself, one of the most important intellectuals of the 20th century, who influenced the development of cognitive sciences in the world. I was fascinated not so much by the subject that Andrea taught, but by his approach to science. When it came time to write my thesis, I really wanted him to be my supervisor. But it so happened that Andrea received a new important position, and he did not have enough time to deal with scientific supervision. Then he recommended that I contact his wonderful colleague Professor Jubin Aboutalebi.

    Jubin was working on the topic of bilingualism. Even before we officially met, we accidentally bumped into him in the university corridors. He already knew that I was going to write my thesis with him, and immediately asked what age group I would like to work with. To be honest, I was a little confused, since I hadn’t had time to think about it yet. But I answered that I was interested in the elderly, because the whole world was gradually getting older. At that time, scientists had just begun to study the connection between bilingualism and aging.

    The next morning I was already in Jubin’s lab. Our friendship and close collaboration continues to this day, and the topic of bilingualism and aging has become the main focus of my research.

    Of course, all the knowledge I received both at school and at the university helped me a lot, but it was not decisive in my development as a scientist. The main thing is the people with whom life brings you together. I was very lucky: my scientific supervisors, family, friends, my fiancée Lisa always accepted and supported me.

    On working in Russia: “At HSE, you do science and don’t notice whether you’re in Russia, Italy, or the Philippines”

    Dzhubin has a friend and colleague, Andrey Myachikov, a leading research fellow at the HSE Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. Together with another colleague from HSE, Yuri Shtyrov, they offered me to become a link in the collaboration between Milan and Moscow. Andrey won me over by the fact that he specially flew to Milan to meet me long before the competition for a postgraduate position opened. As a result, I received a scholarship from the government and HSE and moved to Moscow for postgraduate study.cognitive science program. At the same time, when I was already getting ready to go to Russia, I received an invitation to Barcelona, I received a prestigious scholarship named after Marie Curie. However, I was so inspired by the collaboration with my future scientific supervisors that I did not even have the thought to consider a new offer and change my decision.

    I remember my postgraduate years with great warmth and gratitude. I conducted research at the Center for Neuroeconomics and Cognitive Research, now part of the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. I was inspired by the trust that my senior colleagues placed in me, although I was only a young postgraduate student. I felt free and independent as a researcher, but at the same time I could always count on the attention and support of my “seniors.” This allowed me to become a truly mature, independent researcher. Many thanks to my scientific supervisors and staff at the center Andrey Myachikov, Yuri Shtyrov, Victoria Moiseyeva, Anna Shestakova for always believing in me.

    The Institute of Cognitive Neurosciences became my home, and I didn’t feel like a foreigner who found himself in a Russian academic environment. Thanks to the opportunities that HSE provides, you do science and don’t notice whether you are in Russia, Italy or the Philippines.

    After my PhD, I entered the postdoc program. Now I am probably one of the oldest employees of the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. I recently received a very prestigious Marie Curie fellowship and left Russia for a while. But I continue to work on my projects remotely, supervising several master’s and PhD students. I have seen for myself how people’s attitudes change if they see that you are confident and passionate about what you do. This evokes respect and even admiration. Therefore, one of the important tasks for me is to support young researchers, I try to give them confidence, give them the opportunity to be proud of themselves.

    On modern neuroscience, bilingualism and aging: “I may say something unpleasant, but the brain begins to age at 20–25 years old!”

    The main topic of my research is cognitive aging. I study how a person’s lifestyle affects the aging process, what factors can slow it down. I may say something unpleasant now, but the brain begins to age at 20-25, so it is very important to know where to invest in order to ensure a successful old age.

    One of the powerful factors that slow down cognitive aging is bilingualism. Bilingualism is not necessarily fluency in two languages from birth. The modern approach interprets it as knowledge of a second language at least at some level. Even if you start learning a foreign language as an adult, you will become bilingual and replenish your cognitive reserve.

    The cognitive reserve is the savings account of our brain, we replenish it throughout life when we get an education, new skills, play sports. In old age, when the brain requires additional resources to continue its usual activity, it begins to gradually use the funds in this account. If you have managed to accumulate a lot of funds during your life, the brain will be able to spend them for a long time and function normally, despite age-related changes.

    Our recent studies have shown that not only the fact of learning a second language, but also its choice can affect the functioning of the brain in old age. It turns out that close languages, that is, similar to each other, such as Spanish and Portuguese, are more useful for the brain in the long term than distant languages, with radically different grammatical and lexical-semantic structure. When we begin to learn a new language, we certainly train our brain, it learns to switch between language systems and not mix them. If the languages are distant, it is more difficult for a person to learn at first, but at the same time he can easily separate his native and foreign languages and not confuse them. If the languages are close, a person learns a new language much easier, but in order not to mix the two systems, the brain has to be constantly tense. That is, when learning Chinese, for example, the brain of Russians is very tense at the beginning, but then relaxes and becomes lazy, but in the case of Belarusian, it is constantly in good shape. So, as a cure for old age, it is more useful to learn related languages.

    About the future and dedication of scientists

    My colleagues and I are currently working on a large-scale project: a meta-analysis comparing all protective factors in terms of their positive impact on successful aging. I may be biased, but I think one of the most important areas of science is finding solutions to combat neurodegenerative diseases, such as dementia caused by Alzheimer’s disease. The number of diagnoses increases every year. We must study the causes and mechanism of the disease well, and then look for appropriate treatment. In this sense, bilingualism is one of the important and, most importantly, economically beneficial tools for the state to combat cognitive impairment in old age.

    In research work, it is important for me to feel that with our discoveries and results we make this world a better place. In my opinion, it is the desire to improve the world that should be the goal of a scientist. It is a pity that many people forget about this today.

    In a sense, I am an idealist. Science should not pursue selfish commercial goals. The most important part of it is dedication. I hope that I will leave a better world than the one I came into.

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

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

    http://vvv.hse.ru/nevs/scene/971833712.html

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Elizabeth McCaul: Beyond the spotlight – using peripheral vision for better supervision

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Introduction

    Thank you very much for inviting me to today’s conference, it is a pleasure to be here.

    The former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt used to say “People with visions should go to the doctor”. This sounds concerning to a supervisor. After all, the word “supervision” is made up of the prefix “super”, which means “over” or “above”, and “vision”. But what exactly is vision? To find out, I followed Helmut Schmidt’s advice and went to the doctor.

    What I learnt is that eye doctors distinguish between central vision, fringe vision and peripheral vision.

    Central vision is the very centre of the visual field. It delivers sharp, detailed pictures, allowing us to focus on objects straight ahead. In the banking world, these are the issues directly in front of us: capital, asset quality, profitability and key risk categories including climate-and environmental risks or cyber risk etc.

    Fringe vision refers to the area right outside the central vision, around 30 to 60 degrees of the visual field, where visual clarity and detail recognition start to decrease. Fringe vision helps us to absorb information faster when we read as our brains anticipate the next words and letters, making the process faster and smoother. Translating this to banking, this would be like noticing changes in the macroeconomic environment, rising geopolitical tensions, and their impact on banks’ business models and risk profiles.

    Finally, peripheral vision is everything that occurs outside the very centre of our gaze, beyond 60 degrees. It encompasses everything that can be seen to the sides, providing spatial awareness which helps with navigation and balance. Improving peripheral vision is crucial for athletes as it increases reaction speed, improves anticipation and reduces the risk of injury. In banking, beyond the centre of our gaze are the structural transformations of our societies and economies: the acceleration of technological progress, including the rise of generative artificial intelligence or the impact of social media on depositor behaviour; the reconfiguration of the financial value chain; new entrants in the competitive landscape or the growing share of non-bank financial institutions.

    Good supervision and good risk management in banks require central, fringe and peripheral vision. Good peripheral vision sets apart decent athletes from great ones, allowing them to anticipate movements and respond swiftly to changes on the field. And the same holds true for banking supervisors: while central vision and fringe vision are crucial in focusing on immediate risks, it is the ability to maintain a broad, strategic view – our “peripheral vision” – that ensures truly effective supervision. This broader perspective enables us to detect emerging risks in the wider financial system, anticipate potential disruptions and respond proactively.

    In my remarks today, I will share our assessment of the current risk landscape, describing what we see in our central, fringe and peripheral vision.

    Central vision

    Let me start with the central vision of the state of the European banking system.

    In recent years, Europe’s banking sector has shown resilience in the face of unforeseen challenges: the pandemic, the energy supply shock following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and a period of high inflation.

    This resilience is reflected in the numbers: in 2015, the average ratio of non-performing loans (NPLs) for significant banks in the banking union was 7.5%, at a time when some banking systems had ratios close to 50%. At the end of the second quarter of this year, this ratio had decreased to 2.3%, driven mainly by the reduction of NPLs in high-NPL banks. Similarly, the Common Equity Tier 1 ratio for significant banks has risen from 12.7% in 2015 to 15.8% today. Bank profitability has considerably increased in recent quarters, benefiting from higher interest rates, and return on equity now stands at 10.1%.

    On the one hand, this resilience is a result of the strengthened supervisory and regulatory framework put in place after the global financial crisis and the related improvements in banks’ risk management. On the other hand, looking particularly at recent years, banks have also benefited from policy support which has helped shield the real economy from adverse shocks. For example, during the pandemic, comprehensive fiscal support measures contained corporate insolvencies and the associated loan losses. While bank profitability and valuations have recently improved due to higher interest rates, the effects of this supporting factor are gradually diminishing.

    Turning to liquidity, banks continue to show strong positions despite an ongoing reduction in excess liquidity. Access to both retail and wholesale funding remains robust, and the higher-than-expected stickiness of deposits has contributed to a stable funding environment. Nevertheless, banks should remain cautious and ensure that their liquidity and funding strategies are resilient to potential market disruptions. They need to maintain robust asset and liability management frameworks to enhance their resilience to both liquidity and funding risks as well as interest rate risk in the banking book. I will return to this topic later again.

    Finally, our supervisory priorities also include banks’ capabilities to manage climate- and environmental risks and cyber risk. Climate change can no longer be regarded only as a long-term or emerging risk, which is why banks need to address the challenges and grasp the opportunities of climate transition and adaptation. With regard to cyber risk, we have recently concluded a cyber resilience stress test to assess how banks would respond to and recover from a severe but plausible cybersecurity incident. While cyber risk has become a key risk for the banking sector, geopolitical tensions have further increased the threat of cyber-attacks.

    So, we may ask: how much of this resilience is structural, how much is cyclical? To get a more accurate picture of the current risk landscape, we need to slightly widen our gaze.

    Fringe vision

    This brings me to the fringe vision, looking at the broader macroeconomic environment.

    While the macro-financial environment has recently been improving as inflation decreases, near-term growth remains weak and subject to high uncertainty. Recent data indicate a gradual recovery in real GDP growth, primarily driven by the services sector, while industrial activity continues to face headwinds.

    Credit risk has only partially materialised so far, supported by strong fundamentals of households and corporates. Still, NPLs are slowly increasing, particularly in the commercial real estate (CRE) and small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) sectors. While the macroeconomic outlook signals a lower immediate risk of recession, asset quality in riskier segments is slowly deteriorating as the higher interest rate environment experienced over the last two years after a decade of ‘low for long’ weighs and may affect the debt servicing capacity of borrowers. In this context, we are conducting targeted reviews on banks’ portfolios that demonstrate more sensitivity to the current macro-financial environment. This includes targeted reviews of SME portfolios and following up on the findings from residential real estate and CRE portfolio reviews as well as from deep dives on forbearance and unlikely-to-pay policies. Banks also need to remediate persistent shortcomings in their IFRS 9 frameworks and maintain an adequate level of provisions. In this context, we are continuing IFRS 9 targeted reviews focusing on, among other things, the use of overlays and coverage of novel risks.

    The current market risk environment is characterised by high risk appetite and benign risk pricing, which has prevailed in financial markets over the past year. This environment is susceptible to sudden shifts in market sentiment and episodes of high volatility, as seen in the recent global financial market sell-off. Although markets showed substantial resilience during the spike in volatility in August, banks should be ready for and able to cope with further episodes of sharp repricing and high volatility. The implementation of the recently postponed market risk part of the Basel III reform, the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book, will strengthen capital requirements for banks and help boost their resilience.

    Rising geopolitical tensions

    Also within the broader macro-environment, the evolving geopolitical risk landscape has been on our radar for some time, considering the events of the past two and a half years, namely Russia’s war in Ukraine and the conflict in the Middle East.

    While the direct impact of recent geopolitical events on the banking sector has been contained so far and the immediate threats are limited, we need to remain attentive and systematically assess the possible ramifications for banks. Geopolitical shocks are cross-cutting and could have direct and indirect effects on banks’ financial and non-financial risks.

    For example, geopolitical shocks can exacerbate governance, operational and business model risks they lead to more sanctions or increased cyberattacks. We have seen a clear increase in the number of significant cyber incidents in 2023 and 2024, driven by attacks on service providers (typically ransomware) and by distributed denial-of-service attacks on banks. There can also be material consequences for banks’ credit, market, liquidity, funding and profitability risks, especially in cases where banks have large-scale direct or indirect balance sheet exposures to the countries, sectors, supply chains or firms and households that may be adversely affected by a geopolitical shock.

    Moreover, geopolitical events can also have wider second-round effects that could have negative knock-on consequences for the banking sector. For instance, downside risks to growth from slower economic activity or worsened sentiment as well as upward pressure on inflation related to supply or price shocks in energy or broader commodity markets can disrupt banks’ operating environment. Escalating geopolitical tensions might also result in heightened financial market volatility, triggering further episodes of asset price corrections.

    The recent increase in geopolitical tensions calls for heightened scrutiny and robust risk management frameworks in banks, so that supervisors and banks can properly assess potential risks in the evolving geopolitical environment and proactively mitigate them. As Supervisory Board Chair Claudia Buch said recently1, strengthening resilience to geopolitical shocks is a key priority for ECB Banking Supervision, and we will focus on a range of risk factors, from governance and risk management to capital planning, credit risk and operational resilience.

    Peripheral vision

    And now, let us exercise our athletic capabilities, and use our peripheral vision to look at the wider risk landscape.

    Structural trends, such as the reconfiguration of the financial value chain, the impact of digitalisation and social media on liquidity, and the rise of non-bank financial institutions, are reshaping the environment in which banks operate.

    Reconfiguration of the financial value chain

    The emergence of big tech companies and other non-banking firms offering financial services is leading to a major restructuring in the market, changing the risk landscape, blurring traditional industry lines and challenging conventional regulatory boundaries.

    Companies whose primary business is technology are entering the financial sector through e-commerce and payment platforms and subsequently expanding into retail credit, mortgage lending or crypto services. These firms may explore alternative, less regulated lending forms like crypto lending using peer-to-peer platforms, ultimately mimicking the economic functions of banks without being subject to the same comprehensive oversight.

    We need to expand our tools and surveillance to prevent gaps in oversight and ensure they are robust and versatile enough to oversee disintermediated, increasingly interconnected and possibly distributed-ledger-based business models. We must adapt the regulation and oversight of such firms, especially for entities that are mainly active in non-financial services, to gain a thorough understanding of the financial activities of large non-bank groups across jurisdictions and sectors. Let me underscore that we should avoid a regulatory “race to the bottom” driven by a narrow mission of prioritising innovation and attracting large firms, which may not contribute to the good of society.

    Liquidity risk supervision post-March 2023

    Earlier, I asked how much of banks’ resilience is structural and how much is cyclical. Let us look at the banking turmoil of March 2023 to better understand how banks weathered this crisis and identify what lessons we have learnt with regard to liquidity and funding.

    First, the events were a reminder to banks of the changing and increasingly volatile nature of depositor behaviour. Social media can play a pivotal role in encouraging large numbers of customers to withdraw deposits. In the case of Silicon Valley Bank, this behaviour was exacerbated by a highly networked and concentrated depositor base. Moreover, the advent of online banking, digitalisation, and the influence of non-bank competitors may also have a significant impact on depositor behaviour, affecting the stability of liquidity and funding sources. Therefore, banks must adapt their approaches so that they can monitor these risks more closely and understand the channels through which deposits are collected.

    We recently conducted a targeted review on the diversification of funding sources and the adequacy of funding plans. Our findings indicate a concerning heterogeneity in the adverse scenarios considered by significant banks. Often, these scenarios are only described at a high level, are not conservative, or only “stress” individual balance sheet items. The absence of comprehensive and credible underlying assumptions in these adverse scenarios reduces the reliability of funding plans and increases execution risk.

    The events of March 2023 also underscored the importance of banks’ readiness to swiftly implement contingency and recovery measures. Another recent targeted review focused on collateral mobilisation. It found that banks have the operational capacity to tap central bank liquidity facilities. However, banks’ assumptions about the time needed to monetise the assets appear rather optimistic in some cases, especially under stressed conditions. This optimism could hinder banks’ ability to cover any unexpected outflows in a timely and sufficient manner.

    Furthermore, banks need to adopt a more holistic and comprehensive cross-risk analysis of potential vulnerabilities. The turmoil demonstrated how quickly deficiencies in business models and shortcomings in the management of interest rate risk in the banking book (IRRBB) can escalate into liquidity issues. It is essential to assess spillover effects and understand how shortcomings in one area can amplify risks in another.

    From a regulatory perspective, the events of spring 2023, along with past crises, have shown that compliance with the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) and the net stable funding ratio (NSFR) may not provide sufficient assurance about a bank’s liquidity and funding situation. For instance, an LCR above 100% might still hide significant cliff risks just beyond the 30-day horizon. Two banks with identical LCRs might have vastly different liquidity profiles owing to concentration risks not captured by the ratio.

    However, it is important to remember that the LCR and the NSFR do not – and are not intended to – prevent all liquidity crises. They are not designed to address every residual risk, which should be managed on a case-by-case basis under Pillar 2. So while we support a review of specific aspects of the current calibration of these metrics, we are cautious about drastic changes.

    Instead, I would focus on the supervisory follow-up. And I can draw four main lessons with regard to the supervision of liquidity risk.

    First, supervisors, like banks, need to carry out holistic cross-risk analysis. Instead of looking at risks in isolation, we need to broaden our gaze and also focus on the interplay between IRRBB, liquidity risk management and governance arrangements.

    Second, we need increased supervisory scrutiny of banks’ modelling of non-maturity deposits, as these models are sometimes not based on proper economic evidence.

    Third, it is essential that supervisors consider supplementary liquidity and funding risk indicators, such as survival period or concentration metrics, to capture residual risks not addressed by the LCR or the NSFR. In European banking supervision we have successfully used maturity ladder reporting to calculate survival periods, which provides a more comprehensive analysis beyond the fixed calibration of the LCR and the NSFR.

    Finally, the March 2023 turmoil demonstrated the need for timely and up-to-date information on liquidity and funding. We therefore introduced weekly data collections for liquidity risks in September 2023. This has been instrumental in identifying changes and detecting structural shifts across the banking system.

    Growth of non-bank financial institutions

    Another issue we detect in our peripheral vision is the staggering growth of the non-bank financial institution (NBFI) sector. In the euro area, the sector has more than doubled in size, from €15 trillion in 2008 to €32 trillion in 2024. Globally, the numbers are even more worrying, with the sector growing from €87 trillion in 2008 to €200 trillion in 2022.

    The private credit market is of particular concern. It accounts for €1.6 trillion of the global market and has also seen significant growth recently. The European private credit market has grown by 29% in the last three years but is still much smaller than the market in the United States, which is where investors and asset managers are often based. The end investors are pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and insurance firms, but banks play a significant role in leveraging and providing bridge loans at various levels to credit funds. We have recently completed a deep dive on the topic and found that banks are not able to properly identify the detailed nature and levels of their full exposure to private credit funds. Therefore, concentration risk could be significant.

    We know that risk from the NBFI sector can materialise through various channels. One of them is through the correlation of exposures, especially given the growth in private credit and equity markets. We supervisors do not have a full picture of the level of exposure and correlations between NBFI balance sheets and bank lending arrangements, lines of credit or derivatives to and from NBFIs.

    To make the market less opaque and more visible within even our fringe and central line of sight, we should further harmonise, enhance and expand reporting requirements. We need to make information sharing between authorities easier at global level to provide the visibility we need to play with more agility on the field.

    Conclusion

    Earlier, I asked how much of the banking system’s resilience is cyclical and how much is structural. I think it is safe to say that the European banking system is in better shape today than it was ten years ago. This won’t surprise anyone in this room. Stronger capital and liquidity positions and healthier balance sheets are objective factors contributing to the resilience of the system.

    Still, I am a supervisor, so I am paid to worry. If my career has taught me anything, it’s that accidents are more likely to happen when people get complacent. This is why I am calling on you to use your full vision – not only your central and fringe vision, but your peripheral vision too. Crises often emerge from the shadows, and it’s the overlooked risks that pose the greatest danger.

    Let me conclude with another lesson that I have learnt during my career. It’s a quote from Mark Twain: “There is no education in the second kick of a mule”. We have seen too many crises caused by hidden risks lurking beneath the surface – the ones we fail to see until it’s too late – which is precisely why we must get ahead of these risks this time around.

    Thank you very much for your attention.


    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Bank “ROSSIYA” acted as a partner of the X All-Russian Conference “Priorities of Market Electric Power Industry in Russia”

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Bank “RUSSIA” Russia Bank – 09.10.2024

    Bank “ROSSIYA” acted as a partner of the X All-Russian Conference “Priorities of Market Electric Power Industry in Russia”

    Bank “ROSSIYA” took part in and became a partner of the jubilee 10th All-Russian conference “Priorities of the market electric power industry in Russia: (un)limited possibilities”, which was held on October 2-4 in Sochi.

    At the initiative of Bank “ROSSIYA”, a business breakfast was held as part of the conference, dedicated to the problems of developing digital services and financial infrastructure for “green” electric power industry.

    It was attended by the Chairman of the Board of the Association “NP Market Council” M.S. Bystrov and the Director of the Department of Competition, Energy Efficiency and Ecology of the Ministry of Economic Development of Russia I.A. Petrunina. The Bank was represented at the event by Deputy Chairman of the Board A.V. Shalenkov, Senior Vice President E.V. Svitova, Vice President – Head of the Department for Work with Electric Power Enterprises R.I. Tugushev and other managers.

    A.V. Shalenkov addressed the event participants with a welcoming speech. In his speech, he noted the importance of supporting initiatives aimed at preserving the climate: “In our country, as in the rest of the world, there is a growing demand for financial instruments that ensure the “greening” of business and confirm its commitment to ESG principles. Bank “ROSSIYA” has experience working with projects related to “green” energy – they are valuable to us not only because of their economic efficiency, but also in terms of the climate goals that our country and society face. We have the necessary infrastructure to implement new services in this area and are confident that our numerous clients will respond to such initiatives.”

    The prospects of new instruments were outlined by M.S. Bystrov: “The interests of the state in the sphere of “green” electric power coincide with the goals of business and ordinary consumers. The “green” agenda remains among the priorities of petrochemical, metallurgical and other industrial companies. Ordinary people, mainly young people, also want to make their consumption more responsible and environmentally friendly. The certification system allows both to move in this direction, opening up new “green” opportunities.”

    I.A. Petrunina in her speech emphasized the importance of the climate agenda in the country’s economic development: “The Ministry of Economic Development is working in two key areas – low-carbon regulation and energy efficiency. Over the past two years, noticeable shifts have been observed in this area, the necessary regulatory and legal architecture of public administration is being created. We are also creating infrastructure for the implementation of climate projects by businesses. Carbon units, like “green” certificates, are already actively used by market participants.”

    Member of the Board of the Association “NP Market Council”, General Director of the Center for Energy Certification LLC O.G. Barkin told the participants about the development of the “green” certification system in Russia. With the help of certificates, consumers can confirm the use of energy obtained from clean sources. Given the growing awareness of society and the overall growth in demand for products with a low carbon footprint, energy certification can also be considered a promising area.

    The Director of Energy and Resource Provision of PJSC SIBUR V.V. Tupikin, the Director of Work with Natural Monopolies of JSC RUSAL Management M.G. Balashov, the Managing Director of JSC Energosbyt Plus Yu.B. Chernyavskaya and other participants of the event also presented their vision of the problems of “green” electric power industry.

    The Bank’s retail employees took an active part in the conference. Participants and guests were given consultations on mortgages in the primary market, refinancing, consumer lending, and applications for credit cards were accepted. Agreements were also reached on holding retail events on the premises of enterprises in the electric power sector.

    For ten years, Bank “ROSSIYA” has been an authorized credit organization of the Wholesale Electricity and Capacity Market (WECM). During this time, the Bank managed to create an effective technological structure for settlements between enterprises in the electric power industry.

    Participation in the conference contributed to the development of mutually beneficial cooperation and strengthening the image of Bank “ROSSIYA” among players in the electric power market.

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

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

    http://abr.ru/about/nevs/13713/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Education at the intersection of disciplines: Polytechnic University hosts youth pedagogical council

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The city youth pedagogical council called “Beyond the disciplines” was held at the Polytechnic. It brought together young specialists from various educational institutions of St. Petersburg.

    School is one of the first steps in the formation of highly qualified specialists. A modern person must have versatile skills and knowledge to adapt to constantly changing realities. Therefore, the leitmotif of the meeting was an interdisciplinary approach to education.

    The participants were addressed with welcoming speeches by the Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Education of St. Petersburg Pavel Rozov, the Rector of the St. Petersburg Academy of Postgraduate Pedagogical Education Andrey Bogdantsev, the Vice-Rector for Youth Policy and Communication Technologies of SPbPU Maxim Pasholikov, and the Head of the Press Service of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia for St. Petersburg Andrey Litovka.

    The Polytechnic University is the best place to hold a pedagogical council dedicated to the implementation of an interdisciplinary approach. Our scientists and teachers constantly work at the intersection of various sciences and industries, which allows them to find original solutions to current economic problems, ensuring a synergistic effect, – noted Maxim Pasholikov.

    The panel discussion was chaired by Ekaterina Kalinina, Vice-Rector for Project Development at SPb APPO, and Irina Mushtavinskaya, Head of the Department of Primary, Basic and Secondary General Education at SPb APPO. The participants discussed current issues of implementing an interdisciplinary approach in the educational process, as well as its impact on the development of a student’s personality. Particular attention was paid to issues of professional development and support for young teachers. The experts also presented programs and projects aimed at improving qualifications and developing meta-subject competencies.

    Thematic workshops were organized for the participants, dedicated to the issues of applying an interdisciplinary approach in education. Teachers were able to discuss and demonstrate how seemingly unrelated subjects can be combined.

    The Polytechnic University’s Centre for Work with Applicants held a tour for teachers and introduced them to the career guidance work that is carried out for schoolchildren and in which schools can participate.

    The City Youth Pedagogical Council “Beyond Disciplines” allowed young specialists to exchange experiences, gain new knowledge and ideas, and establish contacts with colleagues.

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

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

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/education/education-at-the-junction-of-disciplines-polytechnic-adopted-youth-teaching-council/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Time of Science” at the “Knowledge Day” of the Rosatom Corporation

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The regional part of the career guidance event “Knowledge Day” of the Fuel Division of the Rosatom State Corporation was held at the Advanced Engineering School of Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University “Digital Engineering” (AES SPbPU).

    The main goal of the event is to develop and strengthen the human resources potential of the nuclear industry, provide regional enterprises with the necessary personnel and timely career guidance work with young people to prepare a new generation of nuclear workers as part of the implementation of the Rosatom-2030 strategy. More than 700 representatives of enterprises of the Fuel Division of the Rosatom State Corporation, educational organizations, students and schoolchildren from Moscow, St. Petersburg, Novosibirsk, Kaliningrad, Elektrostal, Glazov, Seversk, Zelenogorsk, Vladimir, Novouralsk, Angarsk and other cities took part in the large-scale Knowledge Day in person and remotely.

    The Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU “Digital Engineering” and Centrotech-Engineering LLC acted as co-organizers of the regional stage of the event in St. Petersburg. Let us recall that Rosatom, consisting of seven divisions, including the Fuel Division, actively supported the program of the Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU “Digital Engineering” with letters of guarantee for co-financing for the development of joint scientific and technological project activities and the development of common educational programs, as well as the expansion of educational infrastructure.

    Thus, in the SPbPU PISh “Digital Engineering” training of master’s students is conducted according to the educational program “System digital engineering in nuclear engineering” (direction “Applied Mechanics”), developed jointly with OOO “Tsentrotekh-Engineering” (part of the management circuit of the Fuel Company of JSC “TVEL” of “Rosatom”). Also for the organization of effective training of “engineers of the future” in the interests of the nuclear industry PISh SPbPU and the Fuel Division of “Rosatom” opened joint Scientific and Technological Educational Space “TVEL – SPbPU” in 2023.

    The program of the “Day of Knowledge” included a presentation by the management of the Fuel Division of Rosatom, representatives of schools, colleges and universities to exchange experiences and combine best practices in attracting young people to choose engineering professions in the nuclear industry and developing the potential of young engineering personnel, as well as an exciting game “Time of Science” for students and schoolchildren.

    Natalia Sobakinskaya, Vice President for Human Resources Management at TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom State Corporation, greeted the participants of the Knowledge Day and spoke about their professional path in the nuclear industry. She noted a wide range of Rosatom events and initiatives aimed at developing a personnel reserve, including expanding the network of specialized schools and colleges, creating thematic communities for young people and their parents, where they can learn more about growth opportunities in the corporation in four vectors: Science, Technology, Production, Projects.

    One of our tasks is to create new science-intensive technologies that no one in the world will be able to repeat. This is exactly what Rosatom’s competitive advantage is based on. Therefore, everyone who works in our science is the creator of the future, namely new materials, designs, products that the world has never seen before. Technologists at our enterprises are actively involved in digitalization. This role combines the knowledge of an engineer, technologist and programmer. Thus, several areas of development are opening up for young specialists at once, – concluded Natalia Sobakinskaya.

    On behalf of the Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation, Deputy Director of the Department of State Policy in the Sphere of Secondary Vocational Education and Training Marina Safronova spoke, highlighting the training of qualified personnel in the SPO system in the context of technological leadership and national sovereignty.

    It is necessary to think about choosing a future profession already at school. Within the framework of the federal project “Professionality”, which has been successfully implemented for three years, we tried to form a student’s career map so that each young person has a clear understanding of the goals he wants to achieve, as well as the necessary steps and knowledge on the way to them. Consistency in choosing a career path is the value that is in the focus of the development of the entire system of secondary vocational education, – explained Marina Innokentyevna.

    Deputy General Director for Digital Engineering of Centrotech-Engineering LLC Viktor Duranichev shared his experience of cooperation with PISh SPbPU.

    We are working on solving urgent frontier tasks of the nuclear industry, which require multidisciplinary knowledge from us. In this regard, the established partnership with the Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU “Digital Engineering” helps us a lot. Even during their studies, master’s students of the Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU have the opportunity to join those science-intensive projects that we conduct jointly with the Advanced Engineering School of the Polytechnic University, and continue working on them after graduation, but already in the team of OOO “Centrotech-Engineering”. We already have examples when a graduate of the Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU heads his own project in our company, which, without exaggeration, is aimed at the technological leadership of the country at the present time. I thank the team of the Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU “Digital Engineering” and invite all the guys to join our innovative projects in due time, – said Viktor Duranichev.

    Deputy Head of the Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU “Digital Engineering” Oleg Rozhdestvensky spoke about admission to the school’s master’s program, cooperation with industrial partners and invited everyone to attend career days at the Polytechnic University.

    When admitting to the Master’s program, we start from the fact that we are looking not just for students, but for potential colleagues — highly qualified engineers who will ensure the development of industries, take part in the digital transformation of production and conduct breakthrough research in the next five years. During the admission campaign to the Master’s program, we focus on assessing the portfolio, which reflects not only the student’s formalized knowledge, but also applied research, during which he gained real experience in project activities, calculations and modeling. After admission to the SPbPU PISh, we actively develop these skills and competencies of the student together with industrial partners as part of common project activities. Most often, our graduates continue this truly complex and important research, but already full-time in the partner’s company, — Oleg Igorevich summed up.

    The participants of the educational game “Time of Science” from Polytechnic University were 3rd-5th year students of the Physics and Mechanics Institute, the Institute of Power Engineering of SPbPU and the Advanced Engineering School of SPbPU “Digital Engineering” in four mixed teams. The game process was divided into three rounds with ten tasks in each. The guys demonstrated their knowledge and erudition, logic and attentiveness, answered questions on physics, chemistry, mathematics, geometry. Read more about this here.

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

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

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/partnership/time-of-science-at-the-day-of-knowledge-of-rosatom-corporation/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Polytechnic History Museum has won a prestigious national award

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The final stage of the VI national award “Corporate Museum” was held in Nizhny Novgorod. It was attended by more than 250 delegates from all over Russia and neighboring countries. The participants of the competition competed in the following nominations: “New Exposition”, “Exhibition of the Year”, “Museum for All”, “Corporate Social Responsibility”, “Development of Territories”, “Best Educational Projects of a Corporate Museum”, “Discovery of the Year”, “Best Industrial Route of a Museum”, “Best Museum Event”.

    The Polytechnic History Museum was nominated as the “Best Educational Project”. This is a joint project of museum laboratories, implemented with the support of the St. Petersburg Initiatives Fund. As a result, the Polytechnicians received a third-degree diploma.

    The laboratories, designed for students of both the humanities and technical specialties, made it possible to create popular content on the topic of the national history of science and technology using modern digital tools. This project united art, science, education and cultural heritage. It received well-deserved attention both among colleagues and in the expert community.

    It was nice to be at such a large-scale event, where museums of large enterprises not only from Russia but also from other countries present their projects. This is an invaluable experience that allows us to exchange knowledge, share our developments and learn more about the achievements of our colleagues, – shared her impressions the deputy director of the SPbPU History Museum Tatyana Novitskaya.

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

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

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/achivments/museum-of-history-politekna-became-a-diploma-recipient-of-the-prestigious-national-award/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: An exhibition dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the birth of Doctor of Philological Sciences, Professor Maya Ivanovna Cheremisina has opened at NSU

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –

    The hall in front of auditorium 2322 of the NSU Academic Building No. 1 (Pirogov, 1) was filled to capacity with students, teachers, guests and participants conference “Languages of the peoples of Siberia and adjacent regions”, which began work today. They all came to the opening of the exhibition about the life and work of the outstanding linguist, doctor of philological sciences, professor Maya Ivanovna Cheremisina.

    Maya Ivanovna’s career spans several decades and many aspects of scientific activity. From 1950 to 1951, she began her teaching career at Tomsk State Pedagogical University, and then continued it at Tula Pedagogical Institute until 1965. Since 1965, she became a professor in the Department of General Linguistics at Novosibirsk State University, where she made a significant contribution to the development of linguistic science. One of her achievements was the founding of the Department of Languages and Folklore of the Peoples of Siberia, which contributed to the study and preservation of the unique linguistic traditions of the region.

    — Maya Ivanovna has done a lot for NSU, for the Humanities Institute, for training personnel, for the indigenous peoples of Siberia. Today I congratulate you all on the opening of the conference and the opening of such a wonderful exhibition, I wish you successful work and productive exchange of knowledge. It seems to me that such an open format of the exhibition will be very useful and interesting for our students, for teachers. This is a great era in the life of the Humanities Institute and our university, — the rector of NSU, academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences Mikhail Petrovich Fedoruk opened the exhibition.

    Maya Ivanovna was actively involved in training personnel, and many dissertations were defended under her supervision, including about half of the PhD theses of native speakers of Siberian languages. Her scientific research covers such areas as vocabulary, syntax, and typology of languages. She developed a theory of syntax for various language systems, which became an important contribution to linguistics.

    For her achievements, Maya Ivanovna has been awarded numerous prizes, including honorary diplomas from the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation, as well as medals for her contribution to friendship between the USSR and China. Her work has been recognized with the titles of “Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation” and other republics, which underlines her importance in the scientific community. Maya Ivanovna has left a bright mark in the field of linguistics and continues to inspire new researchers to study languages and cultures.

    — This is our second exhibition. We held the first one 5 years ago at the same time in the Exhibition Center of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. It was called “The Karpov Sisters: Maya Cheremisina and Tatyana Zaslavskaya” because two conferences dedicated to the memory of each of them were held at the same time. This time the occasion is even more significant — a centenary! We started preparing for the exhibition in the spring, and in the last two months we have been working on the final touches. The institutes of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences have provided us with great support, for which we are very grateful, — said one of the organizers of the exhibition, leading translator at the Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the eldest granddaughter of the Cheremisin family, Ekaterina Vladimirovna Shiplyuk.

    According to her, people are interested in history and stories, first of all, stories of people, when there is something to cling to and compare with it something more personal.

    — The purpose of the exhibition is to show a living person, not a textbook in which complex ideas are expressed and discussed. A living woman with women’s problems, warm family stories, with her experiences, worries, fears went and did. Work, labor — this is what Maya Ivanovna always had. She looked for salvation from worries in her work, she also looked for and received inspiration there and, as paradoxical as it may sound, she relaxed in her work. Any work, respect for any work, I saw it and still remember it, — Ekaterina Vladimirovna emphasized.

    From October 8 to 12 Humanitarian Institute of NSU jointly with the Institute of Philology of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences All-Russian scientific conference with international participation “Languages of the peoples of Siberia and adjacent regions“, dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the birth of Maya Ivanovna Cheremisina.

    In October, students and university staff will be able to visit an exhibition dedicated to the life and work of Maya Ivanovna. Information stands and exhibits are located in the light window opposite auditorium 2322 (NSU academic building, ul. Pirogova, 1).

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

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

    http://vvv.nsu.ru/n/media/nevs/science/an-exhibition-dedicated-to-the-100th-anniversary-of-the-birth-of-the-doctor-of-philological-sciences/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: EU introduces new sanctions regime against Russian hybrid activity

    Source: Government of Sweden

    EU introduces new sanctions regime against Russian hybrid activity – Government.se

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    Press release from Ministry for Foreign Affairs

    Published 09 October 2024

    The EU decided on 8 October to introduce a new sanctions regime in response to Russia’s destabilising activities. The sanctions aim to counter Russia’s hybrid activity against the EU, its Member States and international partners.

    “Sweden has been a driving force in establishing a new sanctions regime in connection with Russia’s destabilising activities. This is a concrete step the EU is now taking in response to Russian hybrid activity. This means establishing a sanctions regime directed at those who are responsible for, support or benefit from Russian’s hybrid activity in the EU and globally,” says Minister for Foreign Affairs Maria Malmer Stenergard.

    Russian hybrid activity has intensified and is high on the agenda for the EU, as it is for NATO. Within the framework of the EU Strategic Compass for Security and Defence, tools have been developed to detect and respond to various hybrid threats. These threats include sabotage, disruptive actions, foreign information manipulation, disinformation, malicious cyberactivity and the instrumentalisation of migration. Tools to counter these threats are being developed continuously, with the aim of making the most of all available instruments to strengthen EU resilience and prevent, deter and respond to Russia’s hybrid activity. The restrictive measures now being adopted are part of these efforts. 

    New EU sanctions regime against Russia’s destabilising activity

    In response to Russia’s intensified hybrid activities, the EU is introducing a new sanctions regime. The sanctions regime was adopted in light of the European Council’s conclusions of 27 June, which condemned all types of Russian hybrid activity.
    The new restrictive measures are aimed at natural or legal persons, entities or bodies that are responsible for carrying out or supporting policies or actions by the Russian Government that undermine or threaten:

    – the EU’s fundamental values and its security, independence and integrity;
    – the Member States’ and international organisations’ or third countries’ stability, security or independence; or
    – the sovereignty of Member States and third countries.

    These restrictive measures are targeted and include the freezing of assets and prohibition to make funds available, including travel bans for individuals entering or through the European Union’s territory.

    Press contact

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The documentary film “I went to war” was screened at the State University of Management

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On October 8, 2024, the State University of Management’s Information Technology Center hosted a screening of the film “I Went to War” from the All-Russian educational project “Knowledge.Cinema”.

    The film is a series of interviews with women who participate in the SVO on an equal basis with men. The heroines are not afraid to look death in the eye, because they put the price of Victory above their lives, so that their children and grandchildren live in the peaceful cities of Donbass and do not know what fascism is. The defenders of the Motherland tell us why they went to the front, how everyday combat goes, and what helps them maintain a fighting spirit.

    After the screening, students of the State University of Management discussed the film in an open dialogue with military journalist, special correspondent of RT Ilya Vasyunin and journalist, historian, executive director of the newspaper “Donetsky Kryazh” Artem Olkhin.

    Film screenings of the All-Russian educational project “Knowledge.Cinema” are a unique opportunity to share knowledge from the world of cinema, culture, creativity and other areas at various venues in our country. Listeners can not only broaden their horizons, but also find new friends and like-minded people, communicate with experts in an informal atmosphere. Speakers not only get another chance to speak to a large audience, tell young people about their experience, but also make their own contribution to the education of our country.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 10/9/2024

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

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

    The documentary film “I went to war” was screened at the State University of Management

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The number of participants in the Made in Moscow program has exceeded six thousand

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    About 500 new brands joined the Made in Moscow project in the third quarter of 2024. Now more than six thousand Moscow entrepreneurs are participating in the program. They can use a range of offline and online tools for business development. This was reported by Natalia Sergunina, Deputy Mayor of Moscow.

    “Since the beginning of the year, entrepreneurs have sold about 100 thousand goods worth 325 million rubles. From July to September alone, this figure reached 170 million rubles, which is three times more than for the whole of 2023,” said Natalia Sergunina.

    60 percent of the products this year were sold at major city events, exhibitions, and in brand stores. For example, about 400 Moscow brands presented the goods at the market on Bolotnaya Square as part of the forum-festival “Territory of the Future. Moscow 2030”. The total turnover following the event exceeded 50 million rubles.

    Another 40 percent of revenue was generated through online trading. Since January, the project’s branded showcases have appeared on Russia’s largest marketplaces. Enterprises are helped not only to register their pages in online stores, but also to promote the brand through promotions and advertising campaigns.

    Another channel for distributing products was the website “Made in Moscow”, which has already been visited by four million users. The site presents more than 29 thousand items of goods – from clothes and shoes to children’s toys and interior items.

    In August, as part of the City of Ideas project, residents of the capital discussed development “Made in Moscow” program. In total, over 1.6 thousand initiatives were received from users. 62 of them were selected for implementation as the most promising.

    So, online showroom Muscovites suggested to supplementinterviews with company founders, video content, reviews of capital cosmetics, as well as advice from industry experts.

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

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

    https://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145003073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rehabilitation of two Krasnoyarsk ponds completed in Golyanovo

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Specialists from the city economy complex have completed the rehabilitation of two Krasnoyarsk ponds in the Golyanovo district in the east of the capital. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Housing and Public Utilities and Improvement Petr Biryukov.

    “These reservoirs were in an unsatisfactory condition: large volumes of silt deposits had accumulated on the bottom, the end sections of the water area were overgrown with aquatic vegetation, and erosion of the shoreline was observed. In connection with this, a comprehensive rehabilitation of the ponds was carried out, and now they are again a modern and comfortable place for city residents to relax,” noted Petr Biryukov.

    Reservoirs with a total area of 0.6 hectares were cleared of silt: during the work, specialists removed more than 1.6 thousand cubic meters of silt deposits. Thanks to this, the average depth of the Krasnoyarsk ponds increased. The coastal strip with a length of 491 meters was repaired: the bank slopes were reinforced with crushed stone, and in some areas, crib structures were installed. At the final stage, specialists created nine bioplateau zones with a total area of 565 square meters. More than 12 thousand aquatic plants were planted here.

    In Moscow, city water bodies are regularly inspected, and if problems are identified, a decision is made on rehabilitation. The list of water bodies is compiled annually, taking into account the wishes of Muscovites.

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

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

    https://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145033073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Historical authenticity and the magic of immersion: what filming locations does the Moskino cinema park offer?

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The Moskino Cinema Park amazes visitors and professionals with its recreated historical atmosphere of different eras and cultures. Experts have assessed the accuracy and authenticity of its thematic sites, which replicate the streets of Berlin, the Cathedral Square of the Moscow Kremlin, depict a remote village, an ancient Russian city and many other places.

    “Each location in the cinema park is a carefully recreated picture of the past. The streets of Berlin, or more precisely the checkpoint between the western and eastern parts of the German capital, convey the atmosphere of the 1960s and 1970s. Elements of architecture and decoration create the impression that you really found yourself in that time. For example, the Cathedral Square attracts with its scope and scale of design. It includes the Assumption and Annunciation Cathedrals, the Lobnoye Mesto, the Ivan the Great Bell Tower, the Terem Palace, the Faceted Chamber and the Kremlin wall with the Taynitskaya Tower. This site serves as a powerful tool for presenting historical and cultural events. The cinema park is not just a place for filming, it is a space where history becomes real,” said Sergei Fevralev, chief artist of the Moskino cinema park.

    The creators of the natural sites use special visual techniques to convey the idea necessary for the film. The unique set “Far Eastern City” deserves high praise. It recreates the historical sites of Vladivostok of the late 19th – early 20th centuries with the legendary Millionka quarter, a fishing port with piers and a specially dug bay.

    The film “At the Call of the Heart” was shot on the set of the “Uyezdny Gorod” cinema park. Here, a complex of buildings typical of the suburbs of the early 1940s has been recreated. The viewer sees streets with wooden and stone houses, barns and warehouses, palisades and the first electric poles. With their help, one can feel the atmosphere in which people lived who faced the most terrible world war in history.

    “We are proud that our film “At the Call of the Heart” was the first project completed in the Moskino Cinema Park. Unique sets in the suburbs of Vyazma were built especially for the filming – a hospital, army headquarters and warehouses. Everything was done very authentically and accurately, taking into account all the professional subtleties – and we are grateful to the creators of the cinema park for this. Currently, the VoenFilm studio, together with the Moskino Cinema Park, is building a large-scale facility “Line of Defense” for filming films about the First and Second World Wars, as well as about the events of a special military operation. In the future, we plan to create a set “Destroyed Reichstag” for filming the film “Banner of Victory”, – said the producer and director of the film “At the Call of the Heart” Igor Ugolnikov.

    Thanks to the versatility and authenticity of its venues, the Moskino cinema park is becoming an important cultural phenomenon, where history and art are combined into a unique synthesis.

    The cinema park is part of the Moscow Cinema Cluster, which unites infrastructure facilities, services and facilities for filmmakers, which are being developed by the Moscow Government as part of Sergei Sobyanin’s “Moscow — City of Cinema” project. The structure of the cinema cluster also includes the Maxim Gorky Film Studio (sites on Ryazansky Prospekt, Sergei Eisenstein Street andin Valdai passage), the Moskino cinema chain, the Moskino film commission and film platform.

    From a cowboy town to the Far East: what makes the Moskino cinema park uniqueThe President of Russia and the Mayor of Moscow ceremoniously opened the Moskino cinema park

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

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

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145007073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Top 5 in Russia: St. Petersburg Polytechnic University in THE WUR 2025 ranking

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The British agency Times Higher Education has published the results of the World University Ranking 2025. This year, the number of higher education institutions represented in the ranking has increased by almost 10%. St. Petersburg Polytechnic University took 5th place in the ranking among all Russian universities. The university showed significant growth in such criteria as the number of scientific publications in relation to the number of research and teaching staff, income from research and development work, and the number of registered patents for unique developments.

    Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University took 5th place in the national ranking of Russian universities, and in the overall ranking of world universities it was in the 501–600 group. The Polytechnic’s work on knowledge transfer turned out to be especially effective: the university received twice as many points for the number of registered patents for inventions as the year before.

    In addition, SPbPU received a high score for international activities. Also, compared to the indicators of the similar rating last year, the income from research and development work in relation to the number of faculty members increased by 5%.

    Our focus on applied research and development is already beginning to be reflected in international rankings. Today, partnership with industry and technology transfer are our strengths, due to which we gain an advantage in the competitive struggle. However, publication activity, especially in terms of high-quartile articles, where applied knowledge is in high demand, can also be one of our development areas, – comments SPbPU Rector Andrey Rudskoy.

    At the same time, Vice-Rector for International Affairs Dmitry Arsenyev notes: “In the current conditions, it may be difficult to work on the international market, but we are fully successful in this. We maintain our leading positions in the share of foreign students due to a well-thought-out cluster policy of interaction with promising world regions and a wide range of events that ensure the promotion of Russian engineering education as a brand.”

    Competition among global research universities is growing every year. We see recognition of the effectiveness of our policy of supporting the development of import-advanced technologies and the development of technological entrepreneurship. Due to this, the number of patents registered by our scientists has increased significantly. We plan to continue working in this direction, as well as pay special attention to strengthening ties with friendly countries to improve the Polytechnic’s position in the international arena, – noted Acting Vice-Rector for Prospective Projects of SPbPU Maria Vrublevskaya.

    The results of the World University Ranking 2025 can be found atlink.

    World University Ranking is one of the most prestigious university rankings in the world, compiled by the British agency Times Higher Education. When compiling the ranking, the educational activities of the university, scientific research, as well as knowledge transfer systems and international activities are taken into account – in total, experts evaluate 18 indicators of the effectiveness of universities. The ranking presents the world’s leading research universities.

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

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

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/achievements/top-5-in-Russia-Petersburg-Polytechnic-in-the-ranking-the-vor-2025/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Moscow Mayor Announces Completion of Kadashevskaya Embankment Improvement

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Sergei Sobyanin inspected the results of the comprehensive improvement work on Kadashevskaya Embankment.

    “One of the oldest embankments of the Moscow River is the Kadashevskaya Embankment, historical, and now it’s its turn. We connected the Ovchinnikovskaya Embankment, the Yakimanskaya Embankment, creating a single walking route. We widened the sidewalks, planted trees, installed new lamps, removed the wires. So you can really walk and enjoy the city,” said Sergei Sobyanin.

    In recent years, 50 embankments of the Moscow River have been improved or built in the city. Their total length is about 77 kilometers.

    Kadashevskaya Embankment, approximately 800 meters long, is located in Zamoskvorechye, on the bank of the Vodootvodny Canal between Yakimanskaya and Ovchinnikovskaya Embankments.

    Work on the comprehensive improvement of the embankment, as well as the nearby Staromonetny and Pyzhevsky lanes, was carried out in May – October 2024. The total area of the territory where the improvement was carried out is 3.9 hectares.

    As a result, the pedestrian sidewalks on Kadashevskaya Embankment became more convenient for walking – they were widened and paved with granite tiles. The total area of paving is 8.5 thousand square meters.

    As part of the Clean Sky program, overhead cable lines were moved to underground collectors. Thanks to this, a panorama of the embankment opened up, and the operation of power lines became more reliable and safer. To prevent flooding, more than 100 linear meters of drainage network were additionally laid.

    For the comfort and safety of pedestrians, 113 lanterns with energy-saving lamps, 114 lamps and 100 benches and urns were installed on the embankment and in the alleys. 35 parking lots were equipped for cycling enthusiasts.

    As part of the landscaping work, more than 1.6 thousand square meters of lawns were laid out, 41 trees and 15 lilac bushes were planted.

    Thus, another comfortable walking space near the water has been created in Moscow.

    “This year’s landmark improvement project has been completed — Kadashevskaya Embankment in Zamoskvorechye. This is one of the oldest embankments in the capital. It is located on the bank of the Vodootvodny Canal between the Yakimanskaya and Ovchinnikovskaya embankments. Another place for recreation and walks has appeared next to the new building of the Tretyakov Gallery. At the same time, the embankment has retained its transit function,” the Moscow Mayor wrote.

    in his telegram channel.

    Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @mos_sobyanin

    Bicycle parking and wide sidewalks: how Kadashevskaya embankment is being improved

    Improvement of the Moscow River embankments

    The total length of the Moscow River coastline within the Moscow Ring Road is about 200 kilometers.

    As of 2010, the capital’s embankments did not meet modern requirements for accessibility and comfort. The central granite embankments were used as highways and were inconvenient for pedestrians. Due to the deterioration of the infrastructure, the few pedestrian embankments remained inconvenient. A significant part of the coastal areas, especially in the lower reaches, were ordinary, unimproved river banks.

    Since 2011, the Moscow Government has been implementing a comprehensive improvement program for the embankments of the Moscow River. During this time, 50 embankments (including Kadashevskaya) with a total length of about 77 kilometers have been put in order, including almost all the historical granite embankments in the city center. Thus, today 40 percent of the Moscow River coastline meets modern standards of accessibility and comfort.

    The first to be improved was the Crimean embankment, which became one of the main promenades of the capital.

    A single comfortable pedestrian route has been created in the city center from Moscow-City to Taganskaya Square, including Krasnopresnenskaya, Novodevichya, Kremlevskaya, Moskvoretskaya and other embankments. In addition, a route has appeared from the House of Music to Vorobyovy Gory along Ozerkovskaya, Ovchinnikovskaya, Krymskaya, Pushkinskaya and Andreyevskaya embankments. The total length of these routes is more than 27 kilometers.

    In the upper reaches of the river, historical parks and beaches near the water have been landscaped – these are “Northern Tushino”, Northern River Terminal, Fili Park, Stroginskaya Poima and others.

    In the lower reaches, new landscaped parks have been created near the water, including the park in the Kapotnya district, the 850th Anniversary of Moscow Park, the Brateyevskaya Poima Park, and others.

    The plans include the improvement of 36 embankments with a total length of over 80 kilometers by 2030.

    In addition, Moscow has begun to build new embankments in areas previously inaccessible to city residents – mainly in reorganized industrial zones. They are built according to modern rules with a significant retreat of the roadway from the water, which allows for maximum use of the recreational potential of coastal areas.

    The largest new embankment in Moscow is the Marc Chagall Embankment on the territory of the former ZIL. In addition, construction work is underway on the Krutitskaya, Shelepikhinskaya, Simonovskaya, Karamyshevskaya embankments, as well as embankments in the southern part of ZIL and the Novinki backwater, on sections from the Fili Park to the Pyotr Fomenko Workshop Theatre and from the Kursk direction railway bridge of the Moscow Railway to the Brateevsky Cascade Park with a total length of about 21 kilometers.

    Improvement of city facilities in 2024

    In 2024, it is planned to improve more than 2.5 thousand objects. Among them are large city parks, including Gorky Park, Sokolniki and the Kolomenskoye Museum-Reserve. The first stage of work is ongoing in all of them. The embankments of the Yauza and more than 20 large public spaces in the center and other administrative districts of the capital will also be put in order, including the Kadashevskaya Embankment with Staromonetny and Pyzhevsky Lanes, the section of the embankment from the Moscow Ring Road to the Stroginsky Bridge, the territories of the Bolshoy and Maly Stroginsky Backwaters.

     

    In addition, two sections of the Yauza Park along Tenisty Proezd and Selskokhozyaistvennaya Street (the work is already in the second stage), the Lokomotiv Stadium, the Rosbiotech territory, the Aquarium Garden (Bolshaya Sadovaya Street, Building 14), the park near the Church of St. Euphrosyne (Nakhimovsky Prospekt, Building 8), the territory of the All-Russian Museum of Decorative Arts (Delegatskaya Street, Building 3), the park of the Bauman Moscow State Technical University in front of the Lefortovo Palace and other iconic sites will be improved. New tram lines will run along Sergiya Radonezhskogo Street and Akademika Sakharov Avenue.

    Improvements will also be made to around 700 streets, over 1,700 courtyards, the territories of over 120 educational facilities, over 20 water bodies, including the 2nd Nikolo-Khovansky Pond (TiNAO), Olenyi Ponds (VAO), the pond on Chernomorsky Boulevard (South Administrative District), and the Bykovo Boloto Pond (ZelAO).

    Attention will also be paid to the territories of about 41 transport facilities, including 10 Moscow Metro stations, 10 Moscow Central Diameters stations, five transport hubs and others.

    In addition, the implementation of the lighting improvement program continues. Within its framework, it is planned to install 15 thousand new lamps in courtyards, on children’s and sports grounds.

    Sobyanin: A green embankment without cars will appear in the area of the “Yuzhny Port”

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

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

    https://vvv.mos.ru/major/themes/11875050/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs

    October 9, 2024

    Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs

    October 9, 2024

    Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs

    October 9, 2024

    Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs

    October 9, 2024

    Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs. With the President of the RSPP Alexander Shokhin

    October 9, 2024

    Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs. With RSPP President Alexander Shokhin

    October 9, 2024

    Previous news Next news

    Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs

    Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak spoke at a meeting of the board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs.

    He told representatives of large businesses about the main parameters of the national project “Efficient and Competitive Economy” and outlined the opportunities for the participation of the business community in its implementation.

    The Deputy Prime Minister recalled the tasks set by the President to maintain high rates of economic growth and complete its structural restructuring. It is necessary to ensure that Russia’s GDP growth rates are higher than the world average and maintain fourth place in the world in terms of GDP at purchasing power parity.

    “In order to achieve the goals and objectives facing the country, it is necessary to ensure the formation of a new model of long-term economic growth. The basis of this growth is the supply economy, ensuring the satisfaction of growing domestic demand. The expansion of supply to meet the growing domestic demand will be ensured by supporting domestic production, increasing investment activity, where the driver will be private investment and the development of the financial market as one of the sources, increasing labor productivity, changing the structure and volume of exports and imports. It is also important to develop competition and develop effective measures to adapt our economy to the global energy transition. All this is aimed at ensuring the competitiveness of our goods and services, including on the international market. It is this new growth model, based on the supply economy, that formed the basis for the formation of the national project “Efficient and Competitive Economy”. The goal of the national project is to ensure sustainable economic development based on competition, entrepreneurship and private initiative,” emphasized Alexander Novak.

    Businessmen asked the Deputy Prime Minister current questions related to the development of industry projects, the reduction of administrative barriers and the improvement of legislation, the stimulation of investment and aspects of public-private partnership, as well as the participation of entrepreneurs in the implementation of the list of instructions of the President of Russia related to ensuring the growth and efficiency of the 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 accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://government.ru/nevs/52944/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The training program for the participants of the “Aerobatics” competition starts on October 10

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    Registration for the All-Russian competition of research and project works of schoolchildren is ongoing.Aerobatics“, which is being held for the tenth time this academic year. The number of people who have registered for the qualifying round of the competition in a remote format has already exceeded 11 thousand people. The organizing committee invites you to a series of educational webinars, which will begin on October 10.

    The “Top Aerobatics” competition is held for students in grades 8-11 who are taking their first steps in science and project activities and who want to receive a professional expert assessment of their work. It consists of two stages – a qualifying and a final one. As part of the qualifying stage, you can choose either a distance or regional track. Regional competitions will be held in person at the venues 30 basic schools University educational district of the National Research University Higher School of Economics.

    “Research and project activities require special skills and competencies from schoolchildren. Therefore, as part of the “Higher Aerobatics” competition, a free program of educational events will be implemented for its participants: university teachers and competition partners will tell you how research and a project differ, how to choose a topic for a competition entry, what points to pay attention to when preparing it, and how to avoid typical mistakes,” notes Tamara Protasevich, Director for Work with Gifted Students at HSE.

    How to prepare work for the “Top Aerobatics” will be available from October 10 to November 19 at webinars on all 25 directions competition.

    On October 10, the first webinar (“Aerobatics of biological research: from choosing a topic to presentation”) is expected for participants in the “Biology” direction, on October 15 — for the “Technical and engineering sciences” direction, on October 16 — for the “Law” and “Psychology” directions, on October 17 — for orientalists, etc. The full version of the schedule is available Here.

    This year, the support of the “Higher Aerobatics” participants will be expanded by mentors — students with experience in research and project activities, ready to share their experience and knowledge. Mentoring support will be provided in 13 areas (those that are not included in the school curriculum) compared to 6 last year. To receive a consultation, a participant should select from the list of mentors the one to whom he would like to address his questions and fill out the form. Registration is available from October 10, detailed information is posted Here.

    In the direction of “Development of the state and society,” you can, for example, contact Vladislava Verzunova, a second-year student in the bachelor’s program “State and municipal administration” Already in her first year, she became a research intern Institute of Social Policy HSE University, participates in various projects and grants, has published articles and a patent.

    Those who have chosen the Philosophy major will be advised by Olga Anasyeva, a second-year student of the Master’s program.Modern journalism“, a graduate of the bachelor’s program “Philosophy“Having a lot of experience in philosophical research behind me, I will be happy to share what I can do myself, and help to implement ideas in the most creative way that meets the requirements of the competition,” says Olga.

    To assist the participants, members of the expert commissions for the competition areas prepared and published methodological recommendations.

    You can register and upload your competition work until January 24, 2025; in the category “Satellite Construction and Geoinformation Technologies: Terra Notum” the deadline for submissions will be ten days earlier.

    Registration includes two steps. In the first step, the participant receives a login and password for the personal account, in the second step, he/she enters the personal account and selects the competition areas in which he/she wants to participate. Each participant can submit no more than three individual or group works in different areas.

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

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

    http://vvv.hse.ru/nevs/edu/972149090.html

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Minutes – Tuesday, 8 October 2024 – Strasbourg – Final edition

    Source: European Parliament

    PV-10-2024-10-08

    EN

    EN

    iPlPv_Sit

    Minutes
    Tuesday, 8 October 2024 – Strasbourg

     Abbreviations and symbols

    + adopted
    – rejected
    ↓ lapsed
    W withdrawn
    RCV roll-call votes
    EV electronic vote
    SEC secret ballot
    split split vote
    sep separate vote
    am amendment
    CA compromise amendment
    CP corresponding part
    D deleting amendment
    = identical amendments
    § paragraph

    IN THE CHAIR: Roberta METSOLA
    President

    1. Opening of the sitting

    The sitting opened at 9:01.


    2. Penalties

    Pursuant to Rules 10 and 183, and after taking into account the observations of the Member concerned, the President had decided to impose a penalty on Diana Iovanovici Şoşoacă for having disrupted the sitting of 18 July 2024 by behaving improperly during the debate on the statement by the candidate for President of the Commission (minutes of 18.7.2024, item 3).

    The penalty consisted of the forfeiture of the Member’s entitlement to the daily subsistence allowance for a period of seven days and of a temporary suspension from participation in Parliament’s plenary activities for a period of seven days on which Parliament meets, starting that day, 8 October 2024, without prejudice to the Member’s right to vote in plenary, and subject to strict compliance with the Members’ standards of conduct.

    The Member concerned had been notified of this decision and had lodged an internal appeal with the Bureau under Rule 184. At its meeting the previous day, the Bureau had upheld the penalty imposed, without prejudice to the external rights of appeal open to the Member concerned. The penalty was therefore final.


    IN THE CHAIR: Javi LÓPEZ
    Vice-President

    3. Preparation of the European Council of 17-18 October 2024 (debate)

    Council and Commission statements: Preparation of the European Council of 17-18 October 2024 (2024/2782(RSP))

    János Bóka (President-in-Office of the Council) and Maroš Šefčovič (Executive Vice-President of the Commission) made the statements.

    The following spoke: Siegfried Mureşan, on behalf of the PPE Group, Iratxe García Pérez, on behalf of the S&D Group, Anna Bryłka on behalf of the PfE Group, Carlo Fidanza, on behalf of the ECR Group, Valérie Hayer, on behalf of the Renew Group, Bas Eickhout, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group, Manon Aubry, on behalf of the The Left Group, Anja Arndt, on behalf of the ESN Group, Dolors Montserrat, Alex Agius Saliba, Enikő Győri, Charlie Weimers, Gerben-Jan Gerbrandy, Damian Boeselager, João Oliveira, Michael von der Schulenburg, Paulo Cunha, Nicola Zingaretti, Gilles Pennelle, Beata Szydło, Karlo Ressler, Javier Moreno Sánchez, Csaba Dömötör, Nicolas Bay, Luděk Niedermayer, Matjaž Nemec, Emmanouil Fragkos, Seán Kelly, Dan Nica, Kris Van Dijck, Wouter Beke and Jaak Madison.

    The following spoke under the catch-the-eye procedure: Maria Grapini, Tobiasz Bocheński, Lukas Sieper, Juan Fernando López Aguilar and Grzegorz Braun.

    The following spoke: Maroš Šefčovič and János Bóka.

    The debate closed.


    4. Escalation of violence in the Middle East and the situation in Lebanon (debate)

    Statement by the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy: Escalation of violence in the Middle East and the situation in Lebanon (2021/2850(RSP))

    Josep Borrell Fontelles (Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy) made the statement.

    The following spoke: Željana Zovko, on behalf of the PPE Group.

    IN THE CHAIR: Sabine VERHEYEN
    Vice-President

    The following spoke: Yannis Maniatis, on behalf of the S&D Group, Sebastiaan Stöteler, on behalf of the PfE Group, Alberico Gambino, on behalf of the ECR Group, Hilde Vautmans, on behalf of the Renew Group, Villy Søvndal, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group, Lynn Boylan, on behalf of The Left Group, Alexander Sell, on behalf of the ESN Group, Nicolás Pascual De La Parte, Nacho Sánchez Amor, António Tânger Corrêa, who also answered a blue-card question by Bruno Gonçalves, Assita Kanko, Christophe Grudler, Hannah Neumann, who also declined to take a blue-card question from Alexander Sell, Giorgos Georgiou, Hans Neuhoff, Kostas Papadakis, François-Xavier Bellamy, who also answered a blue-card question by Anthony Smith, Hana Jalloul Muro, Hermann Tertsch, Alexandr Vondra, who also answered a blue-card question by Ondřej Dostál, Bernard Guetta, Leoluca Orlando, Rima Hassan, who also answered a blue-card question by François-Xavier Bellamy, Tomasz Froelich, Kateřina Konečná, Loucas Fourlas, Evin Incir, Thierry Mariani, Rihards Kols, Barry Andrews, Ana Miranda Paz, Mimmo Lucano, Petar Volgin, Alice Teodorescu Måwe, who also answered a blue-card question by Evin Incir (the President reminded the House of the provisions of Rule 10), Matjaž Nemec, Raffaele Stancanelli, Abir Al-Sahlani, Mika Aaltola, Ana Catarina Mendes, Michael McNamara, Milan Zver, Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Elena Yoncheva, Seán Kelly, Thijs Reuten, Lukas Mandl, Chloé Ridel, Dimitris Tsiodras, Lucia Annunziata, Ingeborg Ter Laak, Maria Walsh and Sander Smit.

    The following spoke under the catch-the-eye procedure: Cecilia Strada, Jaume Asens Llodrà, Marc Botenga, Grzegorz Braun, Luke Ming Flanagan and Alvise Pérez.

    The following spoke: Josep Borrell Fontelles.

    The debate closed.

    (The sitting was suspended for a few moments.)


    IN THE CHAIR: Esteban GONZÁLEZ PONS
    Vice-President

    5. Resumption of the sitting

    The sitting resumed at 12:31.

    ⁂

    Jordan Bardella spoke.


    6. Voting time

    For detailed results, see also ‘Results of votes’ and ‘Results of roll-call votes’.


    6.1. Mobilisation of the European Union Solidarity Fund: assistance to Italy, Slovenia, Austria, Greece and France further to natural disasters that occurred in 2023 (vote)

    Report on the proposal for a decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on the mobilisation of the European Union Solidarity Fund to provide assistance to Italy, Slovenia, Austria, Greece and France relating to six natural disasters that occurred in 2023 [COM(2024)0325 – C10-0088/2024 – 2024/0212(BUD)] – Committee on Budgets. Rapporteur: Georgios Aftias (A10-0002/2024)

    (Majority of the votes cast)

    PROPOSAL FOR A DECISION

    Approved by single vote (P10_TA(2024)0015)

    Detailed voting results

    1

    (The sitting was suspended for a few moments.)


    7. Resumption of the sitting

    The sitting resumed at 12:36.


    8. Approval of the minutes of the previous sitting

    The minutes of the previous sitting were approved.


    9. The crisis facing the EU’s automotive industry, potential plant closures and the need to enhance competitiveness and maintain jobs in Europe (debate)

    Commission statement: The crisis facing the EU’s automotive industry, potential plant closures and the need to enhance competitiveness and maintain jobs in Europe (2024/2820(RSP))

    Valdis Dombrovskis (Executive Vice-President of the Commission) made the statement.

    The following spoke: Jens Gieseke, on behalf of the PPE Group, Mohammed Chahim, on behalf of the S&D Group, Paolo Borchia, on behalf of the PfE Group, Daniel Obajtek, on behalf of the ECR Group, Christophe Grudler, on behalf of the Renew Group, Sara Matthieu, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group, Rudi Kennes, on behalf of The Left Group, Milan Uhrík, on behalf of the ESN Group, and Peter Liese.

    IN THE CHAIR: Pina PICIERNO
    Vice-President

    The following spoke: Gabriele Bischoff, Philippe Olivier, Elena Donazzan, Jan-Christoph Oetjen, Anna Cavazzini, Li Andersson, who also answered a blue-card question by Ewa Zajączkowska-Hernik, Markus Buchheit, Diego Solier, who also answered a blue-card question by Jacek Ozdoba, Raúl de la Hoz Quintano, who also answered a blue-card question by Waldemar Buda, Dan Nica, András Gyürk, Alexandr Vondra, Marie-Pierre Vedrenne, Kai Tegethoff, Jonas Sjöstedt, Siegbert Frank Droese, Lukas Sieper, Dennis Radtke, Estelle Ceulemans, Barbara Bonte, Johan Van Overtveldt, Svenja Hahn, Majdouline Sbai, Marina Mesure, Arno Bausemer, Thomas Geisel, Massimiliano Salini, Bernd Lange, Filip Turek, Carlo Fidanza, Pascal Canfin, who also answered a blue-card question by Anne-Sophie Frigout, Benedetta Scuderi, Carola Rackete, Anja Arndt, Susana Solís Pérez, Johan Danielsson, Roman Haider, Nicolas Bay, Ľubica Karvašová, Virginijus Sinkevičius, Pasquale Tridico, Tom Berendsen, Antonio Decaro, Vilis Krištopans, Gheorghe Piperea, Sophie Wilmès, Saskia Bricmont, Jan Farský, Giorgio Gori, Klara Dostalova, Marlena Maląg, Eugen Tomac, Michael Bloss, François-Xavier Bellamy, François Kalfon, Anna Bryłka, Mariateresa Vivaldini, Engin Eroglu, Niels Flemming Hansen, Marit Maij, Mélanie Disdier, Beata Szydło, Gerben-Jan Gerbrandy, Dariusz Joński, Matthias Ecke, Jorge Buxadé Villalba and Giovanni Crosetto.

    IN THE CHAIR: Roberts ZĪLE
    Vice-President

    The following spoke: Oihane Agirregoitia Martínez, Paulius Saudargas, Rosa Serrano Sierra, Sebastian Kruis, Ondřej Krutílek, Yvan Verougstraete, Angelika Niebler, Christel Schaldemose, Marie Dauchy, Pietro Fiocchi, Michał Kobosko, Wouter Beke, Bruno Tobback, Julie Rechagneux, Stefano Cavedagna, Miriam Lexmann, Daniel Attard, Angéline Furet, Anna Zalewska, Eszter Lakos, Thomas Pellerin-Carlin, Anne-Sophie Frigout, Claudiu-Richard Târziu, who also answered a blue-card question by Nicolae Ştefănuță, Sophia Kircher, Annalisa Corrado, Jaak Madison, Juan Ignacio Zoido Álvarez, Andreas Schieder, Matej Tonin and Idoia Mendia Cueva.

    The following spoke under the catch-the-eye procedure: Sunčana Glavak, Maria Grapini, Silvia Sardone, Tobiasz Bocheński, Benoit Cassart, Marc Botenga, Marcin Sypniewski, Kateřina Konečná, Radan Kanev, Elena Sancho Murillo, Dario Tamburrano, Katarína Roth Neveďalová and Elżbieta Katarzyna Łukacijewska.

    The following spoke: Valdis Dombrovskis.

    Motions for resolutions to be tabled under Rule 136(2) would be announced at a later stage.

    The debate closed.

    Vote: at a later part-session.


    10. Strengthening Moldova’s resilience against Russian interference ahead of the upcoming presidential elections and a constitutional referendum on EU integration (debate)

    Statement by the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy: Strengthening Moldova’s resilience against Russian interference ahead of the upcoming presidential elections and a constitutional referendum on EU integration (2021/2821(RSP))

    Věra Jourová (Vice-President of the Commission) made the statement on behalf of the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.

    The following spoke: Siegfried Mureşan, on behalf of the PPE Group, Thijs Reuten, on behalf of the S&D Group, Pierre-Romain Thionnet, on behalf of the PfE Group, Tobiasz Bocheński, on behalf of the ECR Group, Dan Barna, on behalf of the Renew Group, Reinier Van Lanschot, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group, Jonas Sjöstedt, on behalf of The Left Group, Alexander Sell, on behalf of the ESN Group, Michael Gahler, Maria Grapini, Claudiu-Richard Târziu, Helmut Brandstätter, Virginijus Sinkevičius, David McAllister, Kristian Vigenin, Cristian Terheş, Petras Auštrevičius, Rasa Juknevičienė, Vasile Dîncu, Adam Bielan, Eugen Tomac, Sandra Kalniete, Pina Picierno, Adrian-George Axinia, Michał Szczerba, Tonino Picula, Małgorzata Gosiewska and Andrea Wechsler.

    IN THE CHAIR: Esteban GONZÁLEZ PONS
    Vice-President

    The following spoke: Victor Negrescu, Davor Ivo Stier, Francisco Assis, Krzysztof Brejza, Mika Aaltola, Sven Simon, Michał Wawrykiewicz and Jüri Ratas.

    The following spoke under the catch-the-eye procedure: Grzegorz Braun.

    The following spoke: Věra Jourová.

    Motions for resolutions tabled under Rule 136(2) to wind up the debate: minutes of 9.10.2024, item II.

    The debate closed.

    Vote: 9 October 2024.


    11. Composition of committees and delegations

    The Renew Group had notified the President of the following decisions changing the composition of delegations:

    Delegation to the EU-Russia Parliamentary Cooperation Committee: Jana Toom

    Delegation for relations with the countries of South Asia: Michael McNamara to replace Vlad Vasile-Voiculescu

    The decisions took effect as of that day.




    13. The democratic backsliding and threats to political pluralism in Georgia (debate)

    Statement by the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy: The democratic backsliding and threats to political pluralism in Georgia (2021/2822(RSP))

    Věra Jourová (Vice-President of the Commission) made the statement on behalf of the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.

    The following spoke: Rasa Juknevičienė, on behalf of the PPE Group, Sven Mikser, on behalf of the S&D Group, Thierry Mariani, on behalf of the PfE Group, Małgorzata Gosiewska, on behalf of the ECR Group, Urmas Paet, on behalf of the Renew Group, Reinier Van Lanschot, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group, Danilo Della Valle, on behalf of The Left Group, Hans Neuhoff, on behalf of the ESN Group, Michael Gahler, Nacho Sánchez Amor, Rihards Kols, who also answered a blue-card question by Alessandro Zan, Petras Auštrevičius, Markéta Gregorová, who also answered a blue-card question by Ondřej Dostál, Petar Volgin, who also answered a blue-card question by Tobiasz Bocheński, Ľuboš Blaha, Michał Szczerba, Pierfrancesco Maran, Adam Bielan, Helmut Brandstätter, Leoluca Orlando, Ondřej Dostál, Ondřej Kolář, Francisco Assis, Brigitte van den Berg, Riho Terras, Raphaël Glucksmann, Dainius Žalimas, Davor Ivo Stier, Tobias Cremer, Ivars Ijabs, Mika Aaltola, Robert Biedroń, Paulius Saudargas, Thijs Reuten and Jacek Protas.

    IN THE CHAIR: Ewa KOPACZ
    Vice-President

    The following spoke: Michał Wawrykiewicz.

    The following spoke under the catch-the-eye procedure:Alessandro Zan, Tobiasz Bocheński, Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis, Grzegorz Braun, Milan Mazurek and Lukas Sieper.

    The following spoke: Věra Jourová.

    Motions for resolutions tabled under Rule 136(2) to wind up the debate: minutes of 9.10.2024, item II.

    The debate closed.

    Vote: 9 October 2024.


    14. Outcome of the Summit of the Future: transforming global governance for building peace, promoting human rights and achieving the sustainable development goals (debate)

    Statement by the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy: Outcome of the Summit of the Future: transforming global governance for building peace, promoting human rights and achieving the sustainable development goals (2021/2823(RSP))

    Věra Jourová (Vice-President of the Commission) made the statement on behalf of the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.

    The following spoke: Lukas Mandl, on behalf of the PPE Group, Udo Bullmann, on behalf of the S&D Group, António Tânger Corrêa, on behalf of the PfE Group, Arkadiusz Mularczyk, on behalf of the ECR Group, Barry Andrews, on behalf of the Renew Group, Ignazio Roberto Marino, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group, Giorgos Georgiou, on behalf of The Left Group, Marc Jongen, on behalf of the ESN Group, Hildegard Bentele, Ana Catarina Mendes, Juan Carlos Girauta Vidal, Claudiu-Richard Târziu, Isabella Lövin, Merja Kyllönen, Rada Laykova, Milan Mazurek, Francisco José Millán Mon, Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis, Jorge Martín Frías, Dick Erixon, Vladimir Prebilič, Pernando Barrena Arza, Ivan David, Ruth Firmenich, Nicolás Pascual De La Parte, Leire Pajín, André Rougé, Gordan Bosanac, Carolina Morace, Katarína Roth Neveďalová, Brando Benifei, Tiago Moreira de Sá, Evin Incir, Carla Tavares and Hannes Heide.

    IN THE CHAIR: Younous OMARJEE
    Vice-President

    The following spoke under the catch-the-eye procedure: Juan Fernando López Aguilar, Lukas Sieper and Grzegorz Braun.

    The following spoke: Věra Jourová.

    The debate closed.


    15. Composition of committees and delegations

    The PPE Group and the non-attached Members had notified the President of the following decisions changing the composition of the committees and delegations:

    Committee on International Trade: Lukas Sieper

    Committee on Budgets: Lukas Sieper was no longer a member

    Delegation for relations with the Mashreq countries: Christophe Gomart to replace François-Xavier Bellamy

    Delegation for relations with Mercosur: Alma Ezcurra Almansa to replace Esther Herranz García

    Delegation to the Euro-Latin American Parliamentary Assembly: Juan Ignacio Zoido Álvarez to replace Dolors Montserrat

    The decisions took effect as of that day.


    16. Situation in Sudan (debate)

    Statement by the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy: Situation in Sudan (2021/2851(RSP))

    Věra Jourová (Vice-President of the Commission) made the statement on behalf of the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.

    The following spoke: Lukas Mandl, on behalf of the PPE Group, Francisco Assis, on behalf of the S&D Group, Barry Andrews, on behalf of the Renew Group, Ana Miranda Paz, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group, Per Clausen, on behalf of The Left Group, Tomasz Froelich, on behalf of the ESN Group, Ingeborg Ter Laak, Marit Maij, Hanna Gedin, Maria Walsh, Hannes Heide, Evin Incir and Cecilia Strada.

    The following spoke under the catch-the-eye procedure: Seán Kelly.

    The following spoke: Věra Jourová.

    The debate closed.


    17. Explanations of vote

    Written explanations of vote

    Explanations of vote submitted in writing under Rule 201 appear on the Members’ pages on Parliament’s website.

    Oral explanations of vote


    17.1. Mobilisation of the European Union Solidarity Fund: assistance to Italy, Slovenia, Austria, Greece and France further to natural disasters that occurred in 2023 (A10-0002/2024 – Georgios Aftias)

    The following spoke: Dick Erixon and Seán Kelly.


    18. Agenda of the next sitting

    The next sitting would be held the following day, 9 October 2024, starting at 09:00. The agenda was available on Parliament’s website.


    19. Approval of the minutes of the sitting

    In accordance with Rule 208(3), the minutes of the sitting would be put to the House for approval at the beginning of the afternoon of the next sitting.


    20. Closure of the sitting

    The sitting closed at 20:28.


    ATTENDANCE REGISTER

    Present:

    Aaltola Mika, Abadía Jover Maravillas, Adamowicz Magdalena, Aftias Georgios, Agirregoitia Martínez Oihane, Agius Peter, Agius Saliba Alex, Allione Grégory, Al-Sahlani Abir, Anadiotis Nikolaos, Anderson Christine, Andersson Li, Andresen Rasmus, Andrews Barry, Andriukaitis Vytenis Povilas, Androuët Mathilde, Angel Marc, Annunziata Lucia, Antoci Giuseppe, Arias Echeverría Pablo, Arimont Pascal, Arłukowicz Bartosz, Arnaoutoglou Sakis, Arndt Anja, Arvanitis Konstantinos, Asens Llodrà Jaume, Assis Francisco, Attard Daniel, Aubry Manon, Auštrevičius Petras, Axinia Adrian-George, Azmani Malik, Bajada Thomas, Baljeu Jeannette, Bardella Jordan, Barna Dan, Barrena Arza Pernando, Bartulica Stephen Nikola, Bartůšek Nikola, Bausemer Arno, Bay Nicolas, Bay Christophe, Beke Wouter, Bellamy François-Xavier, Benifei Brando, Benjumea Benjumea Isabel, Beňová Monika, Bentele Hildegard, Berendsen Tom, Berger Stefan, Berg Sibylle, Berlato Sergio, Bernhuber Alexander, Biedroń Robert, Bielan Adam, Bischoff Gabriele, Blaha Ľuboš, Blom Rachel, Bloss Michael, Bocheński Tobiasz, Boeselager Damian, Bogdan Ioan-Rareş, Bonaccini Stefano, Bonte Barbara, Borchia Paolo, Borrás Pabón Mireia, Borvendég Zsuzsanna, Borzan Biljana, Bosanac Gordan, Boßdorf Irmhild, Bosse Stine, Botenga Marc, Boyer Gilles, Boylan Lynn, Brandstätter Helmut, Brasier-Clain Marie-Luce, Braun Grzegorz, Brejza Krzysztof, Bricmont Saskia, Brnjac Nikolina, Bryłka Anna, Buchheit Markus, Buczek Tomasz, Buda Daniel, Buda Waldemar, Budka Borys, Bugalho Sebastião, Buła Andrzej, Bullmann Udo, Burkhardt Delara, Buxadé Villalba Jorge, Bystron Petr, Bžoch Jaroslav, Camara Mélissa, Canfin Pascal, Carberry Nina, Cârciu Gheorghe, Carême Damien, Casa David, Caspary Daniel, Cassart Benoit, Castillo Laurent, del Castillo Vera Pilar, Cavazzini Anna, Cavedagna Stefano, Ceccardi Susanna, Cepeda José, Ceulemans Estelle, Chaibi Leila, Chastel Olivier, Chinnici Caterina, Christensen Asger, Cifrová Ostrihoňová Veronika, Ciriani Alessandro, Cisint Anna Maria, Clausen Per, Clergeau Christophe, Cormand David, Corrado Annalisa, Costanzo Vivien, Cotrim De Figueiredo João, Cowen Barry, Cremer Tobias, Crespo Díaz Carmen, Crosetto Giovanni, Cunha Paulo, Dahl Henrik, Danielsson Johan, Dauchy Marie, Dávid Dóra, David Ivan, Decaro Antonio, de la Hoz Quintano Raúl, Della Valle Danilo, Deloge Valérie, De Masi Fabio, De Meo Salvatore, Deutsch Tamás, Devaux Valérie, Dibrani Adnan, Diepeveen Ton, Dieringer Elisabeth, Dîncu Vasile, Di Rupo Elio, Disdier Mélanie, Dobrev Klára, Doherty Regina, Doleschal Christian, Dömötör Csaba, Do Nascimento Cabral Paulo, Donazzan Elena, Dorfmann Herbert, Dostalova Klara, Dostál Ondřej, Droese Siegbert Frank, Düpont Lena, Dworczyk Michał, Ecke Matthias, Ehler Christian, Ehlers Marieke, Eriksson Sofie, Erixon Dick, Eroglu Engin, Estaràs Ferragut Rosa, Ezcurra Almansa Alma, Falcă Gheorghe, Falcone Marco, Farantouris Nikolas, Farreng Laurence, Farský Jan, Ferber Markus, Ferenc Viktória, Fernández Jonás, Fidanza Carlo, Fiocchi Pietro, Firea Gabriela, Firmenich Ruth, Fita Claire, Flanagan Luke Ming, Fourlas Loucas, Fourreau Emma, Fragkos Emmanouil, Freund Daniel, Frigout Anne-Sophie, Friis Sigrid, Fritzon Heléne, Froelich Tomasz, Fuglsang Niels, Funchion Kathleen, Furet Angéline, Furore Mario, Gahler Michael, Gál Kinga, Galán Estrella, Gálvez Lina, Gambino Alberico, García Hermida-Van Der Walle Raquel, Garraud Jean-Paul, Gasiuk-Pihowicz Kamila, Geadi Geadis, Gedin Hanna, Geese Alexandra, Geier Jens, Geisel Thomas, Gemma Chiara, Georgiou Giorgos, Gerbrandy Gerben-Jan, Germain Jean-Marc, Gerzsenyi Gabriella, Geuking Niels, Gieseke Jens, Giménez Larraz Borja, Girauta Vidal Juan Carlos, Glavak Sunčana, Glucksmann Raphaël, Gomes Isilda, Gonçalves Bruno, Gonçalves Sérgio, González Casares Nicolás, González Pons Esteban, Gori Giorgio, Gosiewska Małgorzata, Gotink Dirk, Gozi Sandro, Grapini Maria, Gregorová Markéta, Grims Branko, Griset Catherine, Groothuis Bart, Grossmann Elisabeth, Grudler Christophe, Gualmini Elisabetta, Guetta Bernard, Guzenina Maria, Győri Enikő, Gyürk András, Hadjipantela Michalis, Hahn Svenja, Haider Roman, Halicki Andrzej, Hansen Christophe, Hansen Niels Flemming, Hassan Rima, Hauser Gerald, Häusling Martin, Hava Mircea-Gheorghe, Hazekamp Anja, Heide Hannes, Heinäluoma Eero, Henriksson Anna-Maja, Herbst Niclas, Herranz García Esther, Hetman Krzysztof, Hojsík Martin, Holmgren Pär, Humberto Sérgio, Ijabs Ivars, Imart Céline, Incir Evin, Iovanovici Şoşoacă Diana, Jaki Patryk, Jalloul Muro Hana, Jamet France, Jarubas Adam, Jerković Romana, Jongen Marc, Joński Dariusz, Joron Virginie, Jouvet Pierre, Joveva Irena, Juknevičienė Rasa, Junco García Nora, Jungbluth Alexander, Kabilov Taner, Kalfon François, Kaliňák Erik, Kaljurand Marina, Kalniete Sandra, Kamiński Mariusz, Kanev Radan, Kanko Assita, Karlsbro Karin, Kartheiser Fernand, Karvašová Ľubica, Katainen Elsi, Kefalogiannis Emmanouil, Kelleher Billy, Keller Fabienne, Kelly Seán, Kennes Rudi, Khan Mary, Kircher Sophia, Knotek Ondřej, Kobosko Michał, Köhler Stefan, Kohut Łukasz, Kokalari Arba, Kolář Ondřej, Kollár Kinga, Kols Rihards, Konečná Kateřina, Kopacz Ewa, Körner Moritz, Kountoura Elena, Kovařík Ondřej, Kovatchev Andrey, Krah Maximilian, Krištopans Vilis, Kruis Sebastian, Krutílek Ondřej, Kubilius Andrius, Kubín Tomáš, Kuhnke Alice, Kulja András Tivadar, Kulmuni Katri, Kyllönen Merja, Kyuchyuk Ilhan, Lagodinsky Sergey, Lakos Eszter, Lange Bernd, Langensiepen Katrin, Laššáková Judita, László András, Latinopoulou Afroditi, Laurent Murielle, Laureti Camilla, Laykova Rada, Lazarov Ilia, Lazarus Luis-Vicențiu, Le Callennec Isabelle, Leggeri Fabrice, Lenaers Jeroen, Leonardelli Julien, Lewandowski Janusz, Lexmann Miriam, Liese Peter, Lins Norbert, Loiseau Nathalie, Løkkegaard Morten, López Aguilar Juan Fernando, Lövin Isabella, Lucano Mimmo, Luena César, Łukacijewska Elżbieta Katarzyna, Lupo Giuseppe, McAllister David, Madison Jaak, Maestre Cristina, Magyar Péter, Maij Marit, Maląg Marlena, Manda Claudiu, Mandl Lukas, Maniatis Yannis, Mantovani Mario, Maran Pierfrancesco, Marczułajtis-Walczak Jagna, Mariani Thierry, Marino Ignazio Roberto, Marquardt Erik, Martín Frías Jorge, Martins Catarina, Marzà Ibáñez Vicent, Mato Gabriel, Matthieu Sara, Mavrides Costas, Maydell Eva, Mayer Georg, Mazurek Milan, McNamara Michael, Mebarek Nora, Mehnert Alexandra, Meimarakis Vangelis, Meleti Eleonora, Mendes Ana Catarina, Mendia Idoia, Mertens Verena, Mesure Marina, Metsola Roberta, Metz Tilly, Mikser Sven, Milazzo Giuseppe, Millán Mon Francisco José, Minchev Nikola, Mînzatu Roxana, Miranda Paz Ana, Molnár Csaba, Montero Irene, Montserrat Dolors, Morace Carolina, Morano Nadine, Moreira de Sá Tiago, Moreno Sánchez Javier, Moretti Alessandra, Mularczyk Arkadiusz, Mullooly Ciaran, Mureşan Siegfried, Muşoiu Ştefan, Nagyová Jana, Nardella Dario, Navarrete Rojas Fernando, Negrescu Victor, Nemec Matjaž, Nerudová Danuše, Nesci Denis, Neuhoff Hans, Neumann Hannah, Nevado del Campo Elena, Nica Dan, Niebler Angelika, Niedermayer Luděk, Niinistö Ville, Nikolic Aleksandar, Ní Mhurchú Cynthia, Noichl Maria, Nordqvist Rasmus, Novakov Andrey, Nykiel Mirosława, Obajtek Daniel, Ódor Ľudovít, Oetjen Jan-Christoph, Ohisalo Maria, Oliveira João, Olivier Philippe, Omarjee Younous, Ó Ríordáin Aodhán, Orlando Leoluca, Ozdoba Jacek, Paet Urmas, Pajín Leire, Palmisano Valentina, Panayiotou Fidias, Papadakis Kostas, Papandreou Nikos, Pascual De La Parte Nicolás, Patriciello Aldo, Paulus Jutta, Pedro Ana Miguel, Pedulla’ Gaetano, Pellerin-Carlin Thomas, Peltier Guillaume, Penkova Tsvetelina, Pennelle Gilles, Pérez Alvise, Peter-Hansen Kira Marie, Petrov Hristo, Picaro Michele, Picierno Pina, Picula Tonino, Piera Pascale, Pimpie Pierre, Piperea Gheorghe, de la Pisa Carrión Margarita, Pokorná Jermanová Jaroslava, Polato Daniele, Polfjärd Jessica, Popescu Virgil-Daniel, Pozņaks Reinis, Prebilič Vladimir, Princi Giusi, Protas Jacek, Pürner Friedrich, Rackete Carola, Radtke Dennis, Rafowicz Emma, Ratas Jüri, Razza Ruggero, Rechagneux Julie, Regner Evelyn, Repasi René, Repp Sabrina, Ressler Karlo, Reuten Thijs, Ricci Matteo, Ridel Chloé, Riehl Nela, Ripa Manuela, Rodrigues André, Ros Sempere Marcos, Roth Neveďalová Katarína, Rougé André, Ruissen Bert-Jan, Ruotolo Sandro, Rzońca Bogdan, Saeidi Arash, Salini Massimiliano, Salis Ilaria, Salla Aura, Sánchez Amor Nacho, Sanchez Julien, Sancho Murillo Elena, Saramo Jussi, Sardone Silvia, Šarec Marjan, Sargiacomo Eric, Satouri Mounir, Saudargas Paulius, Sbai Majdouline, Sberna Antonella, Schaldemose Christel, Schaller-Baross Ernő, Schenk Oliver, Scheuring-Wielgus Joanna, Schieder Andreas, Schilling Lena, Schwab Andreas, Scuderi Benedetta, Seekatz Ralf, Sell Alexander, Serrano Sierra Rosa, Sidl Günther, Sienkiewicz Bartłomiej, Sieper Lukas, Simon Sven, Singer Christine, Sinkevičius Virginijus, Sjöstedt Jonas, Śmiszek Krzysztof, Smit Sander, Sokol Tomislav, Solier Diego, Solís Pérez Susana, Sommen Liesbet, Sonneborn Martin, Sorel Malika, Søvndal Villy, Squarta Marco, Staķis Mārtiņš, Stancanelli Raffaele, Ştefănuță Nicolae, Steger Petra, Stier Davor Ivo, Storm Kristoffer, Stöteler Sebastiaan, Stoyanov Stanislav, Strack-Zimmermann Marie-Agnes, Strada Cecilia, Streit Joachim, Strik Tineke, Strolenberg Anna, Sturdza Şerban-Dimitrie, Stürgkh Anna, Sypniewski Marcin, Szczerba Michał, Szekeres Pál, Szydło Beata, Tamburrano Dario, Tânger Corrêa António, Tarczyński Dominik, Tarquinio Marco, Tarr Zoltán, Târziu Claudiu-Richard, Tavares Carla, Tegethoff Kai, Teodorescu Georgiana, Teodorescu Måwe Alice, Terheş Cristian, Ter Laak Ingeborg, Terras Riho, Tertsch Hermann, Thionnet Pierre-Romain, Timgren Beatrice, Tinagli Irene, Tobback Bruno, Tobé Tomas, Tolassy Rody, Tomac Eugen, Tomašič Zala, Tomc Romana, Tonin Matej, Toom Jana, Topo Raffaele, Torselli Francesco, Tosi Flavio, Toussaint Marie, Toveri Pekka, Tridico Pasquale, Trochu Laurence, Tsiodras Dimitris, Tudose Mihai, Turek Filip, Uhrík Milan, Ušakovs Nils, Vaidere Inese, Valchev Ivaylo, Valet Matthieu, Van Brempt Kathleen, Van Brug Anouk, van den Berg Brigitte, Vandendriessche Tom, Van Dijck Kris, Van Lanschot Reinier, Van Leeuwen Jessika, Vannacci Roberto, Van Overtveldt Johan, Van Sparrentak Kim, Varaut Alexandre, Vasconcelos Ana, Vasile-Voiculescu Vlad, Vautmans Hilde, Vedrenne Marie-Pierre, Ventola Francesco, Verheyen Sabine, Verougstraete Yvan, Veryga Aurelijus, Vešligaj Marko, Vicsek Annamária, Vieira Catarina, Vigenin Kristian, Vilimsky Harald, Vincze Loránt, Virkkunen Henna, Vistisen Anders, Vivaldini Mariateresa, Volgin Petar, von der Schulenburg Michael, Vondra Alexandr, Voss Axel, Vozemberg-Vrionidi Elissavet, Vrecionová Veronika, Vázquez Lázara Adrián, Waitz Thomas, Walsh Maria, Walsmann Marion, Warborn Jörgen, Warnke Jan-Peter, Wąsik Maciej, Wawrykiewicz Michał, Wcisło Marta, Wechsler Andrea, Weimers Charlie, Wiesner Emma, Wiezik Michal, Wilmès Sophie, Winkler Iuliu, Winzig Angelika, Wiseler-Lima Isabel, Wiśniewska Jadwiga, Wolters Lara, Yar Lucia, Yon-Courtin Stéphanie, Yoncheva Elena, Zacharia Maria, Zajączkowska-Hernik Ewa, Zalewska Anna, Žalimas Dainius, Zan Alessandro, Zarzalejos Javier, Zdechovský Tomáš, Zdrojewski Bogdan Andrzej, Zijlstra Auke, Zīle Roberts, Zingaretti Nicola, Złotowski Kosma, Zoido Álvarez Juan Ignacio, Zovko Željana, Zver Milan

    Excused:

    Homs Ginel Alicia

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: We are waiting for everyone at the presentation of the International Friendship Club

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On October 14, 2024, the State University of Management will host a presentation of the SUM International Friendship Club.

    KID has been uniting students of our university for over 10 years, representing ten unique communities. The mission of the club is to immerse oneself in the richness of cultures of different nations, to cultivate patriotism and to form a respectful attitude towards the diversity of the world community.

    At the presentation you will see: – A bright fashion show in national costumes; – Fascinating stories from the chairmen of the regional associations about their activities, achievements and plans for the future; – Interactive quizzes and competitions with prizes; – A general dance circle, where everyone can express themselves.

    Don’t miss the chance to get acquainted with the cultures of the world: When: October 14 at 14:00 Where: foyer of the Assembly Hall of the State University of Management

    This event promises to be bright and memorable. We are waiting for you!

    Subscribe to the tg channel “Our State University” Announcement date: 10/9/2024

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

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

    https://guu.ru/waiting-for-everyone-at-the-presentation-of-the-club-intern/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Complete in 2024 – VTB accelerates merger with Pochta Bank

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Mainfin Bank –

    Why is VTB accelerating integration with Post Bank?

    Post Bank is jointly owned VTB and Russian Post, but after the deal, VTB will become the institution’s sole shareholder. The acceleration of integration into Post Bank is explained by several reasons:

    the merger of the two banks will be easier to implement if there is a single decision-making center; Russian Post is experiencing a financial deficit; last year the company suffered a loss of over 7 billion rubles; high key rate – the seller of Post Bank will be able to place the received capital with maximum benefit.

    The financial difficulties of Russian Post have been going on for a long time, for example, in 2022 the company suffered a loss of 27 billion rubles. In 2023, the organization developed a plan to overcome the crisis, among the possible measures is obtaining additional capital.

    What is known about the merger deal between Pochta Bank and VTB?

    VTB management plans to complete the buyout of shares in Pochta Bank in the coming months – the deal is currently undergoing preparation and approval by regulatory authorities (permission from the FAS and the Central Bank of the Russian Federation has not yet been received). The following is known about the merger:

    VTB is to buy out 49.99% of shares from Russian Post and two shares from the bank’s top manager; the deal is valued at an average of RUB 35 billion; the integration of the two banks will be carried out throughout 2025; the complete closure of the Post Bank brand will take place in 2026.

    “A decision on the integration processes has not yet been made; a separate sub-brand may appear on the basis of Pochta Bank – this issue will be discussed only after the completion of the deal,” VTB states.

    Pochta Bank enters the top 30 banks countries in terms of asset size and capital volume, the key area of work is serving individuals and providing consumer creditsThe key feature of the company is an extensive network of offices, represented both independently and in the branches of Russian Post.

    12:00 08.10.2024

    Source:

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

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

    http://mainfin.ru/news/completion-in-2024-VTB-accelerates-merger-with-post-bank

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: SECNAV Del Toro As-Written Remarks at the Forum at Newport

    Source: United States Navy

    Introduction

    Good afternoon, everyone!

    It is wonderful to be back here again in beautiful Newport, Rhode Island and a privilege to address this group of future-focused leaders from Salve Regina University and the Naval War College.

    I truly appreciate Salve Regina University’s partnership and commitment to providing educational opportunities for our Navy and Marine Corps Officers.

    And I am honored to be a part of this important conference centered on an issue which affects us all, and critically affects the national security of our great Nation.

    To the faculty and staff of Salve Regina University and the Naval War College, distinguished guests and visitors: welcome, and thank you for joining us today.

    World Today

    As I am certain you are all well aware, we face existential threats and challenges in every corner of the globe.

    Across the Atlantic, Russia is well into the third year of its full-scale and illegal invasion of Ukraine.

    The United States proudly stands by the Ukrainian people as they fight for their freedom and sovereignty, and defend democracy for all free nations.

    To the South of Ukraine, in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, we are working alongside our NATO allies and Middle East partners to protect innocent, civilian mariners and commercial shipping against Iranian-aligned Houthi attacks.

    Immediately following the October 7th attacks in Israel, our Navy and Marine Corps Team—represented by the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group and the Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group—was on station, the ready integrated force capable of responding to any threat.

    Today, our personnel onboard the Wasp ARG are on station in the Mediterranean Sea, while the Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group and Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group are operating in the Middle East.

    In addition to our surface presence, USS Georgia (SSGN 729) provides a powerful deterrence message from below the ocean’s waves.

    And for the first time since World War II, we face a comprehensive maritime power in the Indo-Pacific.

    The People’s Republic of China continues to exert its excessive maritime claims through their navy, coast guard, and maritime militia.

    From the Line of Actual Control high in the Himalayas, to disputed reefs barely peeking above the waves in the South China Sea, recent actions reveal the PRC’s willingness to execute “gray-zone tactics”—types of assault which are below the threshold of armed attack but beyond normal diplomatic actions.

    And the PRC is observing lessons from the ongoing conflicts in Europe and the Red Sea.

    And so, now, more than ever, it is imperative that we have a climate-ready force able to deter aggression and function decisively in every environment so that, if necessary, we will prevail in conflict.

    Three Enduring Priorities

    When I entered office as Secretary of the Navy, I laid out Three Enduring Priorities which are the foundation for all we do in the Department of the Navy.

    They are:

    Strengthening Maritime Dominance,

    Building a Culture of Warfighting Excellence, and

    Enhancing Strategic Partnerships.

    My priority of Strengthening Maritime Dominance centers on ensuring our Sailors and Marines have the best ships, aircraft, and technology available, so that if we are called, we may fight and decisively win our Nation’s wars.

    And to maintain our warfighting edge, we cannot rely simply on maintaining our seapower.

    External threats continue to mount and change.

    To remain the world’s dominant maritime force, the Department of the Navy must rapidly adapt and effectively counter existential threats such as climate change.

    Today, climate change is one of the most destabilizing forces of our time, exacerbating national security concerns and posing serious readiness challenges for our Fleet and Force.

    There exist numerous tangible examples of the impact of climate change on Navy and Marine Corps operations all over the world.

    And the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events has only increased as time has passed. 

    At sea and on shore, changing climate and rising sea levels crucially affect the day-to-day life of our Sailors and Marines.

    Rising temperatures, too, stress and impact the systems within our buildings and installations, greatly decreasing their overall durability.

    Along both our Pacific and Atlantic Coasts, sorties—or, deploying our ships due to threat of extreme weather in port—have become more commonplace.

    And extreme weather events caused by climate change have displaced millions of people, creating climate refugees.

    Our maritime forces have witnessed a substantial rise in the number and scope of humanitarian assistance and disaster relief missions.

    Simply put, weather impacts normal Navy and Marine Corps operations.

    Weather impacts where our ships can sail, where our amphibious craft can land, and when we can conduct flight operations.

    However, while our world today faces increasingly unpredictable and devasting weather phenomenon, the Department of the Navy is strengthening our climate resilience and reducing our climate impacts to remain the world’s most powerful maritime force.

    Building a Climate-Ready Force

    Computer scientist pioneer, mathematician, visionary, and United States Rear Admiral Grace Hopper once said, “The most dangerous phrase in the language is, ‘We’ve always done it this way.’”

    I implore all of you to assume Admiral Hopper’s mindset when approaching the challenge of climate change.

    The Department of the Navy is actively adapting and innovating for the changing landscape of the world and indeed of warfare.

    We refuse stagnation and have set out ambitious climate goals through the Department of the Navy Climate Action 2030 strategy, in line with Executive Order 14008, Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.

    To build a climate-ready force, we must meet two Performance Goals.

    The first goal is building climate resilience.

    We build climate resilience through installation resilience—by ensuring that our forces, systems, and facilities can continue to operate effectively and accomplish our mission in the face of changing climate conditions and worsening climate impacts.

    Many of our military bases, including our Navy’s largest, Naval Station Norfolk, are fighting a constant battle against rising sea levels, often flooding after even light rain.

    Less than two years ago, we broke ground on the first project to safeguard the Naval Academy from rising sea levels.

    And just last week, we held a ribbon-cutting to mark the end of our work on the Farragut Seawall project—the first of many projects to fortify and protect the institution from extreme weather events.

    Our goal, as outlined by our Naval Academy Installation Resiliency Plan, is for the institution to remain resilient through the 21st Century and beyond.

    We are also developing solutions to climate issues through the Center for Energy Security and Infrastructure Resilience, or “CESIR.”

    Established earlier this year, CESIR will equip our future Navy and Marine Corps Officers with the knowledge and skills to address complex climate challenges throughout their naval careers.

    What’s more, the Department of the Navy is investing in climate resiliency through our facilities, including the renovation of Bancroft Hall—the largest academic dormitory in the United States and home to the entire Brigade of forty-four hundred Midshipmen.

    Severe weather events have impacted the longevity of our buildings both inside and out, along with integral systems such as Bancroft Hall’s HVAC.

    Given the criticality of our facilities to the mission of the United States Navy and Marine Corps and in developing our future warfighters, we must continue to invest in maintenance and improvement of our infrastructure.

    And partnerships outside of the Department of the Navy are crucial to creating climate solutions.

    In 2022, the Naval Postgraduate School partnered with the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability to address the urgent challenges of climate change, energy security, and sustainability.

    Together, NPS and the Doerr School established an Education Partnership Agreement, combining the expertise of two globally recognized hubs of research and innovation to create practical solutions that our Navy and Nation can implement both now and in the future.

    And the Department of the Navy is preparing for extreme weather events through integrated tabletop exercises and training events.

    Two years ago, the Department of the Navy held our first Climate Action tabletop exercise at Marine Barracks Washington and have since held annual exercises dedicated to drive and share climate best practices.

    In June of this year, we conducted Climate Action III with our Caribbean partners in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

    This two-day event marked the third iteration in a series of exercises designed to validate our Climate Action 2030 strategy and highlight the value of partnerships to build shared resilience in a critical region.

    Our Department, together with the DOD, other federal agencies, non-governmental organizations, and our Caribbean partners, shared expertise and solutions to the destabilizing threats which know no borders.

    The second goal of our Climate Action strategy is reducing climate threat.

    This includes reducing greenhouse gas emissions and drawing greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere, stabilizing ecosystems, and achieving the Nation’s commitment to net-zero emissions.

    And throughout the country, the Department of the Navy is leading Department of Defense efforts in reducing climate threats.

    In 2022, Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany became an electrically “Net Zero” base, crucially becoming the first Department of Defense installation to attain this significant milestone.

    Achieving this “Net Zero” breakthrough not only combats climate change by alleviating energy security concerns, but it also improves the base’s overall resilience and saves taxpayer dollars.

    We cannot tackle the climate threat alone. The Department of the Navy has facilitated strategic partnerships to tackle energy resilience issues.

    Marine Corps Air Station Miramar partnered with the city of San Diego to use biogas generated from an on-base landfill as a renewable energy source.

    This initiative provided over three megawatts of energy to the installation, reducing reliance on the city’s electric grid by a whopping 45% and reducing overall emissions.

    The Department is also leveraging public and private innovation in the climate and energy resilience sectors through NavalX Tech Bridges and business accelerators.

    Tech Bridges attract small and medium businesses using innovation challenges, and recent challenges are supporting maritime supply chain and “blue tech” opportunities.

    These partnerships between the Department of the Navy and outside business foster innovation and encourage the development of new technologies for climate adaptation.

    To remain competitive in today’s age of conflict, we must leverage every advantage available to us—and that especially includes our partners in business and industry.

    Closing

    The future of climate resilience is here.

    We know the future impacts of climate change and it is both within our capabilities and incumbent upon us to act—and we have.

    Climate resilience is force resilience. We must look beyond normal operations and approach solutions to climate change through the lens of innovation.

    As Admiral Hopper said, “Our young people are the future. We must provide for them.”

    To do so, we must continue innovating and modernizing for the threats of today and of tomorrow.

    I thank all of you for being here today, to gather, discuss, and create solutions for a more climate resilient future.

    Although climate change is already impacting our world in significant ways, I am heartened by the discussions today, the important work all of you have begun, and the innovation that will come from our collaboration.

    Thank you for tackling this challenge—we need our best and brightest involved in the search for climate solutions.

    May God bless our service men and women and all who support them. Thank you.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: UN extends Kenyan policing mission in Haiti in futile attempt to tackle gangs

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Amalendu Misra, Professor of International Politics, Lancaster University

    Haiti is being choked to death by its 200 or so violent criminal gangs. The latest figures to be released by the UN suggest that more than 3,600 people have been killed in the country since January, including over 100 children, while more than 500,000 Haitians have been displaced.

    The situation prompted the country’s unelected prime minister, Ariel Henry, to resign in April. And, two months later, a Kenyan-led policing mission tasked with establishing order was deployed to the Caribbean nation. But the operation has so far struggled to rein in the gangs.

    So, the UN security council unanimously adopted a resolution on September 30 to extend the mandate of the mission for another year. There was consensus that the law-and-order situation in Haiti is still deteriorating by the day.

    The move to extend the mission is, in my opinion, hollow and fails to address the real challenges on the ground. It doesn’t tackle the rampant arms trafficking that is fuelling the violence in Haiti, nor does it secure the funding that will allow the mission to operate effectively.




    Read more:
    How Haiti became a failed state


    Haiti has no firearms or ammunition manufacturing capabilities. Yet the country’s gangs are brutalising the masses with all sorts of sophisticated small arms, including sniper rifles, pump-action shotguns and automatic weapons of every kind.

    All of these weapons originate outside of the island, primarily from the US, but also from neighbouring Dominican Republic and Jamaica. Experts say lax firearm laws in the US states of Arizona, Florida and Georgia have created a sophisticated arms peddling racket into Haiti.

    There is no exact number for how many trafficked firearms are currently in Haiti. But Haiti’s disarmament commission estimated in 2020 that there could be as many as 500,000 small arms in Haiti illegally – a number that is now likely to be even higher. This figure dwarfs the 38,000 registered firearms in the country.

    The effectiveness of the Kenyan operation is also being undermined by gross resource limitations. While the mission was approved by the UN security council, it is not a UN operation and relies on voluntary financial contributions. It was originally promised US$600 million (£458 million) by UN member nations, but it has received only a fraction of that fund.

    According to Human Rights Watch, the mission has so far received a mere US$85 million in contributions through a trust fund set up by the UN. Haiti’s former colonial master, France, and several other G7 countries have not been so forthcoming.

    Inadequate funding has hindered the procurement of advanced weaponry, delayed the payment of police officers’ salaries and has prevented the deployment of more forces on the ground.

    Just 400 Kenyan officers and two dozen policemen from Jamaica have arrived in Haiti so far. This is significantly less than the 2,500 officers pledged initially by various countries including Chad, Benin, Bangladesh and Barbados.

    This financial woe has had a negative impact not only on the morale of Kenyan police officers, but it has also made Haitians despondent. Haitians are increasingly expressing impatience and disappointment with the Kenyan force in the media and online.

    Some critics have accused the officers of being “tourists”, and have pointed out that the gangs have tightened their grip on large swathes of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, since the mission began.

    The pessimism within Haiti was eloquently highlighted by the country’s interim prime minister, Garry Conille, on September 25. Speaking on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meet in New York, he confessed: “We are nowhere near winning this, and the simple reality is that we won’t without your help.”

    Advantage gangs

    Finding the Kenyan-led operation a mere irritant, and not a worthy adversary, the gangs have only stepped up the ante. According to a spokesperson for Volker Türk, the UN’s human rights chief, the country’s armed gangs are now doing “everything they can” to maintain control. This has included using sexual assault to instil fear on local populations and expand their influence.

    Some UN member nations, such as the US and Ecuador, have requested that a formal UN peacekeeping mission takes place. And, despite previous peacekeeping operations in the country being marred in controversy, Haiti has asked the UN to consider turning the current operation into a peacekeeping mission.




    Read more:
    Haiti: first Kenyan police arrive to help tackle gang violence – but the prospects for success are slim


    This mission, which would probably include a larger contingent of troops, should not face the same financial constraints as the current operation. It would have greater visibility on the ground, and more fire power and authority to tackle the gangs.

    Past evidence also demonstrates that UN peackeeping missions significantly reduce civilian casualties, shorten conflicts and help make peace agreements stick.

    However, the recent push for a peacekeeping mission was thwarted because of opposition by China and Russia, two of the five permanent veto-wielding members of the UN security council.

    Beijing and Moscow have consistently argued that political conditions in Haiti are “not conducive” to a new UN peacekeeping operation. They have maintained that the current operation “should reach its full operational capacity before discussing such a transformation”.

    Meanwhile, the gangs continue tightening their vice-like grip on the country, with accounts emerging of rampant sexual violence against civilians, the closure of humanitarian corridors, the extension of their territorial control and – of course – even more killings.

    Amalendu Misra is a recipient of Nuffield Foundation and British Academy research grants.

    – ref. UN extends Kenyan policing mission in Haiti in futile attempt to tackle gangs – https://theconversation.com/un-extends-kenyan-policing-mission-in-haiti-in-futile-attempt-to-tackle-gangs-240234

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: European court ruling finds just cause to award soccer players greater freedom of movement

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Stefan Szymanski, Professor of Sport Management, University of Michigan

    A ruling that Harry Kane may be happy about? James Gill/Danehouse via Getty Images

    Many of us have quit a job at some point in our lives – but how many have wondered if they had “just cause” to do so? Were you acting on a whim? Did your departure make life difficult for your employer? And did your desire to move on really outweigh the loss this meant for your boss?

    Just cause can be a real problem for professional soccer players who want to change teams. Under the soccer transfer system created and operated by FIFA, the sport’s world governing body, players who quit without showing just cause – that is, who fail to show that their employer treated them in manner that is demonstrably unfair – can be subject to significant financial and disciplinary penalties.

    But that could soon change. On Oct. 4, 2024, the European Court of Justice took a major step toward dismantling an employment system that placed undue burden on employees and, thankfully, was dispensed with for the rest of us long ago.

    As a sports economist, I have written about this subject for several years now, and I know of no system outside of sports that restrains the rights of the employee to a comparable extent.

    An object lesson for FIFA

    The legal case is complicated, but the essence of it is that Lassana Diarra, a star player for Lokomotiv Moscow back in 2014, got into a dispute with the Russian club while under contract and quit. He then got a job offer from a Belgian club but was unable to take it because of the FIFA transfer regulations.

    Europe’s top court ruled in favor of former French international Lassana Diarra.
    Photo by Jean Catuffe/Getty Images

    Under the governing body’s rules, not only was Diarra expected to pay damages to Lokomotiv amounting to US$11.5 million plus interest, but he was unable to take a job with any club until the dispute was settled. A formal suspension was not enforced, because Diarra had already been unable to work for 11 months.

    But Diarra countersued, claiming the regulations of FIFA unreasonably restricted his employment rights. The case has passed through many stages, until the highest court in Europe finally delivered its decision.

    The court struck down two specific parts of FIFA’s regulations: the rule that an International Transfer Certificate, required by a player to move from one country to another, cannot be issued until the dispute is settled; and the stipulation that any new employer of the player is jointly and severally liable for any damages against the player due to the old club, regardless of whether that employer played a role in the dispute.

    The court, which has historically been deferential toward sports governing bodies and their regulations, was highly critical of FIFA’s transfer system. It declared the rules anti-competitive “by object” and not just “by effect.” In the view of the court, the rules were not merely aimed at ensuring an orderly market for soccer player services, but amounted to a “non-poaching agreement,” arguing that they were intended to restrain competition for players in order to benefit the clubs.

    An end to transfer fees?

    The decision means that FIFA will have to rewrite its transfer rules in a way that demonstrates that the system has a clear and legal purpose. The regulations will be deemed legitimate, the court said, for the purposes of guaranteeing “contractual stability” and ensuring that clubs have the right to receive compensation when there’s breach of contract.

    A player who quits while under contract will still need to demonstrate just cause – unfair treatment by the club – or else be liable to pay a fine or penalty. But the new system will look very different, and it is hard to see how the payment of transfer fees can survive.

    Last summer alone, clubs in the top five European leagues spent around $5 billion on player transfers. Frequently, there are moves between clubs in each direction, and so cash transfers are smaller than the big money moves that grab the headlines.

    The system deprives some star players of substantial potential earnings.

    Take England national team captain Harry Kane, for example. In 2023, German club Bayern Munich paid London-based Tottenham around $100 million to buy Kane out of the last year of his contract. Kane was being paid about $13 million a year at Tottenham, and he got a four-year contract at Bayern, paying him around $27 million a year.

    While his salary doubled, Kane received only half of what Bayern was prepared to pay to obtain his services, thanks to the FIFA regulations. The rest went to his former club.

    Here is what one might expect to happen from now on: Kane would unilaterally announce that he wanted to leave, and then a club like Bayern could make an offer. Tottenham would no longer have any enforceable claim over Bayern and so no transfer fee would be paid, and Bayern would offer to pay Kane something like $52 million a year.

    Kane would have to pay damages to Tottenham for breach of contract, and the court suggested that these damages might reasonably equal the wages that the club would have paid him for the remainder of the contract – so in the case of Kane, $13 million.

    Clearly Kane would have been much better off if the judgment had arrived a year or two ago.

    Don’t fall for the trickle-down myth

    Soccer fans will be worried that this means financial ruin for their club and increases inequality as the big clubs poach the big stars.

    But I see no reason to think that the sky will fall. As recent research has shown, the transfer system has a negligible effect on the distribution of resources among the clubs. Rather, transfer fee spending is more likely the source of financial instability than its remedy, as some clubs spend extravagantly with unrealistic expectations.

    It is true that club owners hoping to grow rich by developing young players and trading them in the market will believe that they now have fewer opportunities, but for most clubs, this has always been an illusion.

    Big clubs tend to tie up the potential stars in their teens, leaving few opportunities for small clubs to find diamonds in the rough.

    Major League Soccer, the U.S. professional league, for example, has ambitions to one day match the big European leagues and has committed significant resources to developing player talent.

    But recent figures suggest that the league is still a net importer of players – and not just superstars such as Lionel Messi.

    In fact, MLS might actually benefit from the end of the transfer system. There are plenty of talented players who might fancy a year or two in the U.S. if they are not unduly tied down by transfer regulations.

    Blowing the whistle on unfair practices

    But perhaps the biggest impact of the ruling will be on the mass of professional players who do not live in the spotlight.

    FIFA estimates there are around 130,000 professional players worldwide, and most of them earn little in comparison to the super-salaried stars of the world’s biggest clubs.

    Yet, these journeymen and -women players have been bound by the same restrictive system and are often denied the opportunity to change teams – not because they are being offered great riches, but because they want a change of scene, or to be closer to their families.

    FIFPro, the players’ union, has documented numerous cases of onerous employment conditions, which were possible under the repressive transfer system.

    Thanks to the European Court of Justice, those days may soon be over.

    In 2015 I wrote a report for FIFPro on the economic consequences of the transfer system

    – ref. European court ruling finds just cause to award soccer players greater freedom of movement – https://theconversation.com/european-court-ruling-finds-just-cause-to-award-soccer-players-greater-freedom-of-movement-240403

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Moscow Model” is seven years old: what the pavilion’s guests were able to see

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The Moscow Model Pavilion at VDNKh celebrated its seventh anniversary on the first weekend of October. More than 5.2 thousand people attended the festive events in honor of this event. This was reported by the Minister of the Moscow Government, the head of the capital’s Department of Urban Development Policy Vladislav Ovchinsky.

    “On the weekend of October 5 and 6, the Moscow Model pavilion was visited not only by residents of Moscow, St. Petersburg and various Russian cities, but also by tourists from Belarus, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan and other countries. The exhibition guests were able to look at a 400-fold reduced exact copy of the capital’s center and see 36 lighting shows dedicated to various topics: the history of Moscow, the development of the capital’s architecture, the change of seasons,” said Vladislav Ovchinsky.

    The karaoke show “Songs about Moscow” was of particular interest to visitors to the exhibition. The pavilion guests also took part in a special excursion program. There they learned how the model was created, how many years it took, how many people worked on the implementation of the idea, and how the “Moscow Model” differs from other similar projects in the Russian Federation.

    Over the two days of celebration, six interactive quizzes were held for all comers. 316 people took part in them, almost 60 of whom received memorable prizes for winning.

    An electronic guest book was installed at the exit of the pavilion. Guests shared their impressions using text, images or emoji. Over 100 people took advantage of this opportunity during the holiday weekend.

    The Moscow Model Pavilion is located on Sirenevaya Alley at VDNKh. It can be visited free of charge every day from 10:00 to 20:00, except Monday.

    “Based on the results of the summer season, the pavilion entered the top 3 most visited sites of the VDNKh Museum City,” noted VDNKh General Director Sergei Shogurov.

    The scale of the city model is one to 400, the area is 429 square meters. The idea of creating a copy of the capital arose in 2011. Work began a year later, and on October 3, 2017, the pavilion was opened to visitors. During this time, the model was changed and updated approximately every two to three years. The craftsmen added houses built under the renovation program, landscaped parks, new institutions, and business centers.

    The pavilion continues to host a free exhibition of tactile models of six iconic city landmarks: the Spasskaya Tower of the Moscow Kremlin, the Bolshoi Theatre, the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, the Triumphal Arch, one of Stalin’s seven skyscrapers and the State Historical Museum. For those with limited vision, all models have been supplemented with a description in Braille.

    You can find detailed information, view the schedule of light shows and VR attractions, and sign up for excursions on the website and through the mobile application “Moscow Model”.

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

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

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/144985073/

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The city allocated eight land plots for the implementation of large-scale investment projects in ZAO

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    As part of the implementation of large-scale investment projects (MaIP), the city has leased land plots with a total area of almost 17 hectares in the Western Administrative District of Moscow to investors and developers. This was reported by Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.

    “The implementation of large-scale investment projects allows us to develop urban infrastructure and create jobs. Since the beginning of 2024, investors have been provided with almost 17 hectares of land in the west of the capital for the construction of industrial, commercial, social and transport facilities within the framework of the MAIP. Thanks to this, new jobs will appear for city residents. The total area of real estate under construction will exceed 245 thousand square meters,” said Vladimir Efimov.

    Two plots of land with a total area of over 11 hectares were allocated for the creation of manufacturing enterprises.

    “The provision of land plots without tenders and at a preferential rate of one ruble per year is one of the key measures to support industrial construction, which we are implementing in accordance with the order of Sergei Sobyanin. As part of the MAIP, a food industry production and logistics complex and an enterprise for the production of components for cleaning equipment, small architectural forms and joinery will be built in the west of the capital. It will supply the city with products under an offset contract,” said the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Transport and Industry

    Maxim Liksutov.

    Land lease agreements were concluded with investors for five years. During this time, entrepreneurs must build and commission the facilities.

    Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of City Property Maxim Gaman noted that investors were provided with two plots in Solntsevo with an area of over 0.7 hectares and 1.2 hectares for the construction of educational facilities. Thus, a kindergarten for 350 children will be built on Matrosov Street, and a preschool institution for 200 children will be built on Rodnikovaya Street. The total area of the buildings will exceed 13 thousand square meters.

    In Ramenki, the city allocated 0.46 hectares of land for the construction of a supplementary education center. Here, students from family education assistance centers and special schools will receive help with their education and adaptation.

    In Novo-Peredelkino, 0.63 hectares were provided for the expansion of the Arctic sports cluster, on the territory of which there are ice arenas, football fields, gyms, a swimming pool, running tracks, a basketball court and other facilities.

    MAIP is a special status that investors can obtain for the construction of facilities necessary for the development of urban infrastructure and the creation of jobs. These can be production complexes, innovation centers, social institutions, transport, commercial and other enterprises. For their construction, the city provides land plots for lease for a period of five years.

    Earlier Sergei Sobyanin told, that since the beginning of the year, investors have been provided with about 220 hectares of land for the implementation of the MAIP. This is almost twice as much as for the same period in 2023.

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

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

    https://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/144952073/

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Three sports facilities will be built as part of the city’s investor support program

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Moscow Foundation for the Support of Industry and Entrepreneurship provided investors with preferential investment loans for the construction of sports complexes. They will be built within the framework of the industry scheme for the placement of such facilities, approved by the Moscow Sports Committee. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Transport and Industry Maxim Liksutov.

    The preferential investment lending program has been in effect since March 2022. The fund compensates industrial enterprises for part of the costs of paying interest on loan agreements. Under the program, such companies can receive up to three billion rubles at three percent per annum for up to three years.

    “In July 2024, by decision of Sergei Sobyanin, the preferential investment lending program was expanded to investors who are developing the city’s sports infrastructure. Developers can receive up to 500 million rubles at three percent per annum for up to three years. Today, within the framework of this program, a multifunctional sports complex is being prepared for opening, and two more facilities are also under construction – a hockey arena and an indoor sports ground with artificial ice,” said Maxim Liksutov.

    Under the terms of the program, companies that build football fields, indoor skating rinks, indoor arenas, tennis courts, swimming pools, sports and recreation complexes with multi-purpose sports halls and other facilities for sports and physical education can receive financial support.

    “Since the start of the program, investors have attracted over 700 million rubles to implement three new projects in the sports sector. It is planned that by 2030, thanks to this support measure, up to 300 sports facilities will appear in the capital,” said the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of Investment and Industrial Policy

    Anatoly Garbuzov.

    Thus, a multifunctional sports complex is planned to open in Olonetsky Proezd (property 5/1a). It has ice and football fields, four indoor tennis courts and one outdoor clay court. The area of the complex is eight thousand square meters. More than 180 million rubles were attracted for this project.

    The same investor will build an indoor hockey arena with an area of 4.5 thousand square meters at the address: Balaklavsky Prospekt, Building 33. It will house two ice arenas, a gym, and a choreography hall. To implement this project, the investor attracted 280 million rubles thanks to the fund.

    The fund also supported the construction of an indoor sports ground with artificial ice, which will be located at 9 Krymsky Val Street. The complex will include an ice arena, a gym, and a choreography hall. The opening is scheduled for the second quarter of 2025. The developer raised almost 300 million rubles.

    To receive funds at a preferential rate, you must enter into a loan agreement, then contact the Moscow Fund for the Support of Industry and Entrepreneurship. After the application is approved, a financial support agreement is signed to compensate for part of the costs of paying interest on the loan. Then, depending on the terms of writing off interest, the required amount is transferred to the company’s account in the bank where the loan is opened. All information is available on the foundation’s website.

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

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

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/144978073/

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: “What you go for is what you’ll find” in Tagansky Park

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    On Friday evening, Tagansky Park will host the play “What You Go For Is What You’ll Find” based on Alexander Ostrovsky’s plays “The Marriage of Balzaminov” and “A Festive Dream – Before Lunch.” It will be presented by students of the “Teatralny Park” studio, directed by teacher Ildar Shamikov-Dasayev.

    According to the plot, the naive “mama’s boy” Balzaminov wants to marry a rich merchant woman in order to solve his financial problems and settle down in this world. “Don’t chase your mind, as long as you have happiness. With money, we can live without our minds!” – this phrase by Pavla Balzaminova vividly reflects the views and morals of the society in which her son was so eager to gain a foothold.

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

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

    http://vvv.mos.ru/poster/event/320146257/

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UN Human Rights Council 57: UK Statement for Oral Update on Ukraine

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    UK statement for Interactive dialogue with the High Commissioner on the oral update on Ukraine. Delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley.

    Location:
    Geneva
    Delivered on:
    8 October 2024 (Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)

    Thank you, Mr Vice President and thank you very much, High Commissioner. I do hope that the Russian Ambassador and his film crew were able to capture your stark account of the realities of the human rights atrocities that are being committed by the Russians, and not merely the fantasy fiction of the disinformation that we have been presented with by the Russian Ambassador. 

    The evidence presented in your report presents a stark pattern of the atrocities Russia is committing against the Ukrainian people. Your report describes systematic torture of Ukrainians by Russia – 97% of prisoners of war interviewed since March reported experiencing torture or ill treatment, and 68% said they had experienced sexual violence. Senior Russian officials calling for the execution of Ukrainian POWs. Its large-scale coordinated attacks against Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, deliberately targeting power systems which serve civilian populations, and which you rightly conclude is a violation of international humanitarian law

    Just last week, as you noted, we marked two years since Russia’s attempted annexation of four oblasts in eastern Ukraine. Those living under Russian occupation continue to face arbitrary detention, passportisation, and the seizure of land and property.

    Even children, both those living under Russian occupation and those who have been deported to Russia, are facing indoctrination and re-education programmes designed to distort and erase Ukrainian history.

    High Commissioner,

    How can we continue to remind Russia of its obligations under international humanitarian law, international human rights law and the UN Charter?

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 23, 2025
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