Category: Science

  • MIL-OSI Russia: All about digital twins: Polytech and Gazprom Neft held an inter-industry conference

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University and Gazprom Neft held an inter-industry conference, Digital Twins 2024. For two days, the Technopolis Polytech research building became a platform for exchanging experiences, discussing innovations, and developing solutions to existing problems. The event was attended by over 150 IT, systems analysis, and engineering specialists from 30 companies and organizations.

    The plenary sessions were moderated by Kirill Vasiliev, head of the Gazpromneft-ITO department, Polytechnic University graduate and ambassador. The experts presented over 20 reports on such topical issues as the use of artificial intelligence, HR policy, import substitution and the use of digital twins in complex industrial systems.

    Opening the conference, Gazprom Neft Science Director Mars Khasanov noted: It is important to understand the difference between a model and a digital twin. If a model describes only part of an object or system and does not “live” on its own, then a digital twin must adapt, adjust to changes in the environment, change as new data arrives, and learn. This means that a full-fledged digital twin must have intelligence to some extent — artificial intelligence. If artificial intelligence is used purposefully, understanding its key advantages, and “landing” it on engineering soil, then it will be a very useful tool, and digital twins will not be able to work without it. Meetings like our conference today are needed to form the correct understanding of digital twins.

    Vice-Rector for Research at SPbPU Yuri Fomin welcomed the participants by saying that the topic of digital twins is now coming to the forefront: The Polytechnic University is characterized by the speed of introducing products to the industry. The current situation in the country and the world, on the one hand, contributes to the acceleration of this process, on the other hand, it introduces restrictions. In these conditions, we decided that digital twins are a strategic direction for us, in conjunction with our partners. We have accumulated competencies in the field of digital twins, it is gratifying that we make a serious contribution to this matter, and we need to find a common language with the industry.

    The need for collaboration among all participants in the digital twin market was repeatedly emphasized during the discussions. The participants of the meeting not only presented their own business experience, shared achievements and problems, but also discussed how universities and companies can communicate more productively and bring mutual benefit.

    Director of Product Development Programs at Gazprom Neft, Evgeny Yudin, believes that building such interaction is one of the most pressing tasks today.

    The digital transformation stage is clear, we need to take the next step — to more intelligent management based on artificial intelligence, digital twins, — Evgeny Viktorovich is sure. — We need to coordinate efforts from the point of view of a single conceptual base. There is a GOST that defines what digital twins are, there are concepts that businesses use. We need to start agreeing on the same language. And secondly, we need to share experience in using digital twins, artificial intelligence to optimize the management process. This is important because the goals are quite ambitious, and we understand that this goal cannot be achieved by one company alone, we need to coordinate, share experience, create consortiums, associations, and do joint projects. This is more effective in terms of getting an increment on the way to this goal. And the goal, I repeat, is the transition towards intelligent management. We are open to cooperation and interaction.

    On the first day, the experience of the Polytechnic University in creating technologies for developing digital twins of products in industry was shared with the conference participants by the Vice-Rector for Digital Transformation of SPbPU, Head of the Advanced Engineering School “Digital Engineering” Alexey Borovkov. Also, from the speeches of representatives of leading companies and scientific organizations, the audience learned about various aspects of digital transformation in the oil and gas sector, aircraft and helicopter manufacturing, and other industries. Solutions were proposed for optimizing processes using digital models, accelerating hydrodynamic modeling using machine learning methods, hybrid modeling, and integrating artificial intelligence into control systems.

    At the end of the first day of the conference, Evgeny Yudin and the head of well modeling and ground facilities at Gazprom Neft, Alexander Vinokurov, held a round table discussion on “Artificial Intelligence for Optimizing Business Processes.”

    On the second day, Dmitry Mikhalyuk, CEO of JSC Tsifra and a graduate of the Physics and Mechanics Department of the Polytechnic University, covered the topic of digital twins of production systems as a synergy of information technology and modeling of physical processes. Dmitry Sokolov, Solution Architect at Kaspersky Lab, taught how to safely update and enrich a digital twin with industrial data. Maxim Simonov, Head of the Competence Center for the Development of Integrated Asset Modeling at Gazprom Neft, spoke about the company’s HR policy: how interaction with universities occurs, what internal training is, what helps a young specialist go from a student to an expert, etc. The conference participants also learned about the tools and best practices for using neural network approaches, discussed the problems of switching to domestic software, data in digital twins, and management processes.

    The conference concluded with a panel discussion on the topic “Digital Twins: Development Prospects in Industry”. Experts exchanged opinions on what problems of implementing digital twins are coming to the forefront today – technological, personnel, import substitution or legal regulation; where government assistance is needed; how well universities are coping with training engineers of the future, etc.

    We are delving quite deeply into the topic of digital twins of physical, physical and chemical systems. But if we want to move to new management principles, then large companies have other objects that need to build digital twins, for example, the external environment, the same markets, – believes the head of the digital technologies and artificial intelligence department of Gazprom Neft Mikhail Korolkov. – Problems will begin when the twins of external systems need to be connected and integrated with the twins of physical systems. And the second barrier that will at some point stand in the way of the widespread use of digital twins is a possible change in the business models of companies.

    Assessing the prospects for the development of domestic digital technologies in the next 5-10 years, Alexey Zaslavsky, CEO of Vaizteco (Aiteko Group of Companies), noted: We can certainly achieve priorities in certain specific things. The main thing is to choose them correctly and concentrate on them. We must not forget that our Motherland launched a man into space 16 years after the end of World War II.

    Our country has a unique way of mobilizing itself in very difficult periods, agreed Maxim Simonov. We are now seeing that in two or three years, many software solutions have appeared that, although they do not yet allow us to meet all business needs, already provide the opportunity to work with domestic solutions. In some ways, they are already ahead of previously used software products.

    The most important thing is to use these technological breakthroughs in the formation of a new system of international cooperation, – says Andrey Dobrynin, Director of the Center for Geospatial Economic Analysis at Lomonosov Moscow State University. – Yes, the circle of partners has changed. But I would not say that the market has narrowed. We need to be able to position ourselves correctly there, offer the right solutions. If we can build a chain of development of artificial intelligence and digital twins and move in this direction, we will be able to set the tone, create standards, promote our projects and gain a foothold in key positions in the global market.

    Andrey Dobrynin also highly praised the level of the meeting of specialists. It was a wonderful conference. The Polytechnic University has a great deal of groundwork in the field of digital twins, and Gazprom Neft is a leading company that comes up with initiatives before others. And joining efforts will allow us to move forward. But what was even more impressive was how the topics were discussed. The participants represented different industries, not even related ones, which gave an additional impetus to the discussion. Everyone contributed to understanding the issue, which, in my opinion, serves as a good basis for further cooperation.

    Mikhail Korolkov summed up the conference: There were two very interesting, eventful days, with excellent reports, lively discussions, exchange of ideas, impressions, and experience. Digital twins are a topic that is becoming advanced and breakthrough in all important industries for the country. We are coming to new issues that were not even raised a year or two ago: integration of digital twins, the role of artificial intelligence in digital twins. The main problem of import substitution was also touched upon. The discussion was comprehensive, not only the reports are important, but also the exchange of opinions, and the audience, the speakers will only benefit from this, they will find ways to overcome barriers. I hope that this event will become permanent, and in some time we will discuss new trends and ideas at a new level.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Celebrating our university students this Care Leavers Week

    Source: City of Plymouth

    We currently have 17 Care Leavers aged 18 to 23 who are at university. 10 of our young people are studying here in Plymouth at one of our local institutions but the rest are attending universities across the country including Bristol, Liverpool, Bath, Greenwich, Manchester and West London.

    What is it like being a care experienced university student?

    James is a 19 year old university student who is studying Economics at the University of the West of England (UWE).

    Reflecting on when he moved to university, he said: “I was very well supported by the Care Leavers team. The team paid and organised the moving van for me, which honestly helped me a lot!

    James also completed work experience at Plymouth City Council, he said: “The week helped me develop my understanding of local economic development and also presented, to me, the sheer number of functions that the council has to keep the city working.

    “Especially coming from a care leaver background, it really helps me build up my employment skills and allowed me to explore future career options, such as local government.”

    Steeve, 23, has graduated his Foundation Degree in Science in Culinary Arts Management this summer from the University of West London. Steeve has always had high educational aspirations and has worked hard to achieve this goal, in fact after graduating he has gone on to further study in this subject.

    Steeve provided some lovely feedback about his Personal Advisor: “I just wanted to say thank you to you personally and to Plymouth City Council for supporting me for years”.

    Councillor Jemima Laing, Deputy Leader of the Council and Cabinet Member for Children’s Social Care, said: “It is excellent to see how many of our care experienced young people have moved on to university and higher education, I am so proud of them all and the amazing things that they are all doing.

    “We know that the journey to higher education is exciting, but it can be challenging.

    “Our staff have done an amazing job in supporting each care experienced young person.

    “I hope the achievements we are celebrating here serve as real inspiration for the younger children in our care to think as ambitiously as possible about their own futures.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: They’ve done some chemistry! The Polytechnic University staged a bright scientific show

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    The large auditorium of the SPbPU Chemistry Building hosted the immersive theatrical show “Discovering the World of Experiments,” organized by activists of the student chemistry association ChemTeam.

    The chemical show was organized with funds from a Polytech Project grant. In 2023, the project won funding, and its ideological inspiration was Mikhail Udovichenko, head of the student chemical association ChemTeam.

    A large team of activists of the association prepared for the show, who worked hard to make it exciting and amazing for the audience. Everyone was able to immerse themselves in the atmosphere of the chemical laboratory and get imbued with the story of the main characters, – said Mikhail.

    The project is designed to popularize science among young people. The show itself was held in the format of a bright theatrical production, where student actors presented the audience with an improvised story about the love of science.

    Actors of the performance: Mikhail Udovichenko (4th year IMMiT), Irina Karaman (2nd year IBSiB), Artem Gorshkov (4th year Physics and Mechanics), Artyom Tereshkov (2nd year IMMiT), Liza Tararina (2nd year IBSiB), Natalia Bolsunovskaya (2nd year IMMiT) , Anastasia Dykova (4th year Phys.Mech).

    Responsible for design and PR: Anastasia Zolotova (3rd year IBSiB), Anastasia Temryazanskaya (2nd year IMSiB), Polina Sorokina (2nd year IBSiB), Artem Guselnikov (3rd year IPMEiT).

    Responsible for the equipment and experiments: Dmitry Mukhin (1st year master’s degree student at IPPT) and Anton Zhukov (4th year student at IMMIT).

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: HK to host Olympics body meeting

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The 2024 General Assembly of the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) announced yesterday the successful bid of Hong Kong, China to host the 2026 ANOC General Assembly.

    The ANOC comprises 206 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) and is responsible for protecting and advancing the interests of the world’s NOCs and supporting their mission of promoting Olympic values worldwide. The general assembly is the supreme governing body of the ANOC and a significant international sports event.

    Secretary for Culture, Sports & Tourism Kevin Yeung said the successful bid shows international confidence in Hong Kong’s ability to host major sports events. 

    The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government will fully support and guide the Sports Federation & Olympic Committee of Hong Kong, China in hosting this important international meeting, co-ordinating close co-operation between relevant government departments and various sectors including tourism and business, with a view to demonstrating the synergy between sports, convention and exhibition as well as tourism, giving full play to Hong Kong’s strengths in connecting with the world and telling good stories of Hong Kong.

    Under the arrangements of the Ministry of Culture of the Government of Portugal, Mr Yeung visited the Palácio Nacional da Ajuda yesterday morning and exchanged views with its curator on ways to promote culture exchanges through museums.

    Mr Yeung also met Secretary of State for Sport of the Government of Portugal Pedro Dias the day before to discuss the work and vision of the promotion of sports development in Hong Kong and Portugal.

    The sports chief then visited the Portuguese Football Federation’s Cidade do Futebol (Football City) in Lisbon, where he spoke to the federation’s president Fernando Gomes on exploring co-operation opportunities between the two places in promoting football development.

    He also toured Football City’s various facilities, including training and competition venues as well as ancillary facilities for sports medicine and science.

    Mr Yeung left Portugal for Hong Kong today.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Independent experts outperform group assessments in complex situations

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Joint research of associate professor Faculty of Economic Sciences, National Research University Higher School of EconomicsSergey Stepanov, experts from the INSEAD business school and New York University in Shanghai showed that for tasks with a high level of uncertainty, when there is no certainty which of the decisions taken is better, consultation with individual experts will be more useful than with a whole group. The study was published in the journalGamez and Economic Benavior.

    In real life, decision makers often face the choice of whether to use the opinions of several independent experts or a collective discussion. Individual expert assessments are common in science and medicine. For example, when reviewing articles in academic journals, several reviewers evaluate the work independently and do not know who else is checking it. Collective assessments are meetings of directors, think tanks, commissions, and councils where the decision is discussed together.

    To understand when it is better to rely on the opinions of individual experts and when to listen to a collective assessment, the researchers developed a model that involved two hypothetical experts. They received information about a situation, but could interpret it differently. Their task was to convince the decision maker of their competence, that is, to give the most accurate forecast possible. The model included two scenarios: an independent assessment, in which the experts were unaware of each other’s participation, and a joint assessment, in which they could discuss the information before presenting a unified conclusion.

    In the model, the honesty of experts’ conclusions is influenced by their desire to preserve their reputation. When a certain decision is considered the most probable in the community, an expert may be reluctant to contradict this opinion. And in groups, employees can share doubts with each other without fearing for the reputation of the team, so groups can give a more accurate answer in such a situation. Where individual experts are reluctant to speak out, groups can persuade management to accept a different point of view if it seems more correct to them.

    The results of the study showed that the effectiveness of one or another approach depends on the level of certainty of the situation. In conditions of certainty, where the probability of success of each option is approximately known, a collective approach allows collecting more data and making a common decision. By discussing and processing information together, a group of specialists can come to more accurate conclusions and minimize disagreements.

    However, when the situation is complex and unpredictable, independent assessment works better. Due to the lack of consensus, an individual expert is not afraid of pressure and can express any point of view. This approach also helps to avoid the influence of groupthink, when pressure on experts forces them to accept the opinion of the majority.

    By high uncertainty, scientists mean situations where there is no obvious and widely accepted understanding of the outcome. These may include unconventional economic forecasts, unstable political situations, unfamiliar medical cases, and other examples where assessment requires flexibility and an unconventional approach.

    “The results of the study change our understanding of what advice is better – collective or individual. For the decision maker, this choice does not depend on the problem itself that he needs to solve, nor on his preferences,” comments Associate Professor of the Faculty of Economic Sciences Sergey Stepanov.

    When there is no single correct answer, individual experts are able to give a more objective assessment. This is observed, for example, when polling economists to forecast inflation or GDP growth, where the complexity of economic processes does not allow one to identify the “correct” point of view in advance. The media, analytical agencies and government services involve different specialists in such polls in order to obtain a multifaceted assessment of the situation.

    “In some cases, we can really choose whether to interview an individual specialist or seek advice from a group,” says Sergey Stepanov. “For example, when making a complex diagnosis, you can consult several doctors individually or organize a medical consultation. Each of these approaches will be effective.”

    Thus, according to scientists, the choice between individual and collective assessment depends on the specific situation, its complexity and the available data.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with U

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today met with Dr. Rumman Chowdhury, U.S. Science Envoy, at the ASEAN Headquarters/ASEAN Secretariat. During their meeting, Dr. Kao and Dr. Chowdhury exchanged insights on the global development of cutting-edge technologies, including Artificial Intelligence (AI), the Internet of Things (IoT), and Big Data, as well as their potentials to enhance regional cooperation in science, technology, and innovation. They also discussed effective strategies for implementing the ASEAN-United States Leaders’ Statement on Promoting Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI, recently adopted at the 12th ASEAN-U.S. Summit in Vientiane, Lao PDR.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with U.S. Science Envoy appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: CS attends send-off event of China’s 41st Antarctic expedition team in Guangzhou (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

        The Chief Secretary for Administration, Mr Chan Kwok-ki, attended the send-off event of China’s 41st Antarctic expedition team this morning (November 1) at the Guangzhou Nansha International Cruise Home Port.
     
        The expedition team is travelling to Antarctica aboard the icebreakers Xuelong and Xuelong 2. Among the team members, six scientists are selected from Hong Kong, marking the first time Hong Kong scientists have been included in the nation’s Antarctic expedition team for the mission of polar exploration.
     
        Speaking at the send-off event, Mr Chan said that it is the first time Hong Kong scientists are joining the nation’s Antarctic expedition team to accomplish the research mission, which is an important milestone for Hong Kong. This not only reflects the country’s recognition of Hong Kong’s polar scientific research work but also highlights that Hong Kong, as an international innovation and technology hub, can play an active role in national scientific missions. It is of great significance to Hong Kong.
     
        “This year marks the 40th anniversary of the country’s polar expedition. Our country’s efforts and achievements in polar exploration have caught the world’s attention and demonstrated the responsibility of a major power in advancing the building of a community with a shared future for mankind. I hope that scientists in Hong Kong can make full use of the scientific research platform provided by the country, leverage their strengths, and conduct solid scientific research to make greater contributions to the country’s scientific innovation,” Mr Chan said.
     
        Before the ceremony, Mr Chan interacted with the Hong Kong scientific team and wished them success in completing the expedition and achieving fruitful research results. Mr Chan also joined other officiating guests, including Vice Minister of the Ministry of Natural Resources Mr Sun Shuxian; the Mayor of the Guangzhou Municipal Government, Mr Sun Zhiyang; and the Vice-Chancellor and President of the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), Professor Rocky Tuan, in boarding the vessel for a tour of Xuelong 2 and met with the expedition team members to pay his greatest respect to them. He also said that the visits to Hong Kong by the two icebreakers participating in this expedition are of great and far-reaching significance to Hong Kong – Xuelong made a special visit to Hong Kong before setting off for its Antarctic expedition in 2004, while Xuelong 2 made Hong Kong its first stop on its return voyage to our motherland after completing China’s 40th Antarctic expedition earlier this year. Mr Chan said he was pleased to learn that the CUHK and the Polar Research Institute of China signed a framework agreement for strategic co-operation in polar science innovation in August this year, and he looks forward to more in-depth co-operation between the Mainland and Hong Kong in polar science research, which will mark a new chapter in the country’s polar expedition.
     
        Mr Chan will return to Hong Kong this afternoon.                                    

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with U.S. Science Envoy

    Source: ASEAN – Association of SouthEast Asian Nations

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today met with Dr. Rumman Chowdhury, U.S. Science Envoy, at the ASEAN Headquarters/ASEAN Secretariat. During their meeting, Dr. Kao and Dr. Chowdhury exchanged insights on the global development of cutting-edge technologies, including Artificial Intelligence (AI), the Internet of Things (IoT), and Big Data, as well as their potentials to enhance regional cooperation in science, technology, and innovation. They also discussed effective strategies for implementing the ASEAN-United States Leaders’ Statement on Promoting Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI, recently adopted at the 12th ASEAN-U.S. Summit in Vientiane, Lao PDR.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with U.S. Science Envoy appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: 2nd applied sciences uni announced

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Saint Francis University (SFU) has become the second university of applied sciences (UAS) in Hong Kong, the Education Bureau today announced.

    The school successfully went through a stringent institutional review by the Hong Kong Council for Accreditation of Academic & Vocational Qualifications (HKCAAVQ) and fulfilled all relevant criteria as confirmed by the bureau.

    The bureau said the Government actively promotes the development of UASs to enhance the status of vocational and professional education and training (VPET) at the degree level and provide an alternative pathway to success for young people.

    It added that it is pleased that SFU has demonstrated its vision, commitment, capabilities and experience in providing high-level VPET programmes in close collaboration with relevant industries, and has successfully gone through HKCAAVQ’s stringent review and met all of the relevant criteria.

    The bureau also pointed out that, in assessing SFU’s application for becoming a UAS, the Government has taken into account relevant factors, including the outcome of the institutional review for UAS by the HKCAAVQ, and SFU’s experience in operating applied degree programmes and other VPET programmes.

    The institutional review by the HKCAAVQ focuses on SFU’s commitment and competence to operate as a UAS at both institutional and programme levels, based on three domains, namely governance, management and quality assurance; learning environment and learner support; and industry collaboration and recognition.

    SFU was founded as the Caritas Francis Hsu College and began offering degree programmes and changed its name to the Caritas Institute of Higher Education in 2011.

    It was conferred a university title and was approved to change its name to SFU in January.

    In the 2024-25 academic year, SFU offers two master’s degree programmes, 13 bachelor’s degree programmes including two applied degree programmes, and four higher diploma programmes, with about 3,800 full-time and 800 part-time students in total.

    Similar to Hong Kong Metropolitan University, the first UAS in Hong Kong, SFU is subject to ongoing reviews by the HKCAAVQ to ensure further development of its maturity and competency as a UAS, the bureau added.

    SFU is also required to submit annual progress reports to the bureau.

    To bolster UAS development, the 2024 Policy Address announced that the Government has allocated a start-up fund of $100 million to support UASs and aspiring institutions to establish a UAS alliance this year to embark on joint promotion with the industries and stakeholders, including organising international conferences, strengthening collaboration with applied sciences institutions from other places and initiating collaboration and research on applied education at the post-secondary level.

    Priority will be accorded to eligible programmes of a UAS for inclusion under the Study Subsidy Scheme for Designated Professions/Sectors and eligible applications from UASs when considering applications for relevant support measures, including the bureau’s Quality Enhancement Support Scheme and Enhancement and Start-up Grant Scheme for Self-financing Post-secondary Education. 

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: President Lai meets delegation from Foreign Trade and Development Committee of Dutch House of Representatives

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    President Lai meets delegation from Foreign Trade and Development Committee of Dutch House of Representatives
    President Lai meets delegation from Foreign Trade and Development Committee of Dutch House of Representatives
    2024-11-01

    On the afternoon of November 1, President Lai Ching-te met with a delegation from the Foreign Trade and Development Committee of the Dutch House of Representatives. In remarks, President Lai thanked the House of Representatives for its backing of Taiwan and for urging the Dutch government to prioritize the issue of peace across the Taiwan Strait and strengthen bilateral relations. The president noted that Taiwan and the Netherlands share the values of inclusion, diversity, democracy, and freedom, and that we enjoy close exchanges in such areas as semiconductors, renewable energy, and water resource management. He said that he looks forward to Taiwan and the Netherlands continuing to deepen our partnership in fields including digital trade, cybersecurity, and innovative agriculture as well as to jointly building resilient supply chains for global democracies so as to safeguard the rules-based international free trade order.
    A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows:
    I want to start by warmly welcoming Chair of the Foreign Trade and Development Committee of the Dutch House of Representatives Aukje de Vries and her delegation. This is the first time the House of Representatives has organized an official delegation to Taiwan. This large group of members from various Dutch political parties includes the spokespersons for foreign trade and foreign affairs. On behalf of the people of Taiwan, I would like to extend our warmest welcome.
    This year marks the 400th anniversary of the beginning of Taiwan-Netherlands relations. The Netherlands has made this the Year of Netherlands Innovation and Culture in Taiwan. Your visit serves to further advance bilateral exchanges and cooperation. Taiwan and the Netherlands share the values of inclusion, diversity, democracy, and freedom. We enjoy close exchanges in such areas as semiconductors, renewable energy, and water resource management. And we are both key players in global high-tech supply chains.
    I look forward to Taiwan and the Netherlands continuing to deepen our partnership in fields including digital trade, cybersecurity, and innovative agriculture. And I also look forward to strengthening each other’s hybrid approach to economic security by jointly building resilient supply chains for global democracies so as to safeguard the rules-based international free trade order. As authoritarian expansion continues, democratic partners must show resolve and work together to safeguard global security and prosperity.
    I especially want to thank the House of Representatives for its backing of Taiwan. So far this year, it has passed three motions in support of Taiwan. It has urged the Dutch government to prioritize the issue of peace across the Taiwan Strait and strengthen bilateral relations. The Netherlands was also the first country in Europe to pass a parliamentary motion rejecting China’s attempts to distort United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 and impede Taiwan’s right to international participation.
    This year, the Dutch government has demonstrated stronger support for Taiwan than ever before. It congratulated the Taiwanese people for successfully completing elections in January. In May, it dispatched the frigate Tromp to transit the Taiwan Strait, and it publicly voiced indirect support for Taiwan at the World Health Assembly. This all speaks to the Dutch parliament’s staunch backing of Taiwan.
    In closing, on behalf of the people of Taiwan, I welcome you all again and thank you for visiting, allowing Taiwan and the Netherlands to walk side by side on the road of democracy and freedom. I am confident that by working together we will make even greater contributions to the world.
    Chair de Vries then delivered remarks, first thanking President Lai for his gracious reception. She noted that this is the first time a delegation like this from the Dutch House of Representatives is visiting Taiwan. Over the last week, she said, they had a very intense program, and yesterday they were here during the typhoon. She added that they were impressed to see how Taiwan deals with this kind of natural phenomenon. She stated that the purpose of their visit is to get a better understanding of Taiwan’s political, economic and social developments, as well as the current state of cross-strait relations.
    Chair de Vries pointed out that the Netherlands and Taiwan enjoy excellent relations, engaging in intensive exchanges in the fields of trade and innovation, science and innovation, agriculture, education, and culture. And this year is a very special year, she emphasized, just as President Lai mentioned in his remarks, as it is exactly 400 years ago that the Dutch came to Taiwan’s shores for the first time. The chair said that various activities have been organized to mark the occasion through which our shared history is presented in an appropriate, measured, and balanced manner.
    Chair de Vries remarked that the commonalities and interactions between Taiwan and the Netherlands are manyfold. Firstly, she said, both the Netherlands and Taiwan are vibrant democracies and share respect for human rights as well as the freedom of press and freedom of association. She added that we also take very seriously the issues of sustainable economic development and climate change. The second example she mentioned is our shared values, saying that both Taiwan and the Netherlands are aiming at improving working standards and working environments for our workers. The third example, she said, is in the bilateral economic domain. She pointed out that Taiwan is the second largest export market for the Netherlands in Asia, even before Japan and Korea. The Netherlands is one of the largest European investors in Taiwan, she said, with a total stock of over $35 billion euro of investments. She also noted that over 200 Taiwanese companies are using the Netherlands as a gateway to Europe.
    Noting that their Committee on Foreign Trade and Development monitors foreign trade and development policies, Chair de Vries said that many of the themes they have discussed this week will be very useful for their work back home, since these policies include trade and investment, climate policy, corporate social responsibility, human rights, and international cooperation in the fields of science and innovation. She added that what they have learned throughout the week will also allow them to execute a monitoring role regarding Dutch policies towards Taiwan and the region as a whole, including cross-strait relations.
    In that regard, Chair de Vries emphasized, the recent increase in tensions is very much a matter of their concern. She added that the consensus in the Dutch House of Representatives is that any unilateral change in the cross-strait situation must be avoided, and that any dispute must be solved through peaceful means, not by force or coercion. The series of motions adopted over the past few years, she said, reflects the level of support that Taiwan enjoys in the Dutch House of Representatives.
    In closing, Chair de Vries thanked President Lai for the warm welcome. She remarked that it has been a visit they will never forget and that it has given them confidence that Taiwan and the Netherlands do not only share a rich common past and a fruitful and productive common present, but that we also have a bright and promising future ahead, with ever closer cooperation.
    The delegation also included Members of Parliament Daniëlle Hirsch, Roelien Kamminga, Isa Kahraman, Jan Paternotte, Derk Boswijk, Dennis Ram, Tom van der Lee, Femke Zeedijk, and Eric van der Burg. The delegation was accompanied to the Presidential Office by Netherlands Office Taipei Representative Guido Tielman.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Data from over 28,000 students processed to create a unique digital portfolio

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    More than 28 thousand Polytechnic students have access to a portfolio on the PoliKapital platform. The digital platform created at Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University allows young people to present their educational, scientific and extracurricular experience in one place. The platform helps analyze data and build a potential development trajectory. PoliKapital connects students and employers in one place and ensures a seamless transition to the labor market straight from the student bench. The work was carried out with the support of the strategic academic leadership program “Priority-2030” of the Ministry of Education and Science and the Federal Agency for Youth Affairs.

    According to official data from Rosstat, the average unemployment rate in Russia for June-August 2024 was 2.4%, which is a historical minimum for the entire observation period of the indicator since 1991. More and more often, HR specialists talk about the labor market, implying a shortage of employees. HR specialists must make a lot of effort to find the right specialists. To simplify communication between students and employers, Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University has developed the PolyCapital platform. The digital platform, created to visualize students’ portfolios, allows them to demonstrate their achievements and skills to employers.

    The PolyCapital platform is a software product that allows you to evaluate the accumulated experience of a student (their input data): educational, scientific and extracurricular achievements, as well as build a potential trajectory of his development, taking into account the individual educational and career trajectory at the university and calculating the capitalization of the graduate based on his investment attractiveness. Students can visualize all their experience, evaluate skills and competencies, create a digital portfolio and find vacancies and contact a potential employer directly on the platform. Data from more than 28 thousand students has already been processed.

    The uniqueness of our platform is that it brings together in one place both hard skills — the educational and scientific achievements of students, and supra-professional competencies — the ability to work in a team, adaptability, learning ability, etc. And feedback from employers allows us to more accurately understand the requirements for students from the industry and take them into account in the educational process. The mission of PolyCapital is to support students in their career development, providing access to tools that help them realize their potential and successfully enter the professional world, — notes the project manager, director of the Center for the Formation of the Contingent of Students of SPbPU Varvara Sotova.

    The team created the platform from scratch. The logic and structure of the platform are developed by a business analyst. Based on these ideas, designers create a UI KIT (a set of platform elements) and draw layouts for various screen resolutions. A Polytechnic Master’s student is responsible for the backend development. After writing the server and client parts, the team of testers analyzes the result. They develop user scenarios for each role and, after adding new functionality, study the performance over and over again.

    Other platforms that provide digital portfolios for adult professionals can be considered analogs of PoliKapital. However, its uniqueness lies in its deep integration with the university ecosystem and the systematization of student data: when compiling an online resume, the platform takes into account absolutely all of the student’s experience throughout their studies. In the future, the team plans to introduce the program to other universities in the country. This will create a large-scale network connecting students and employers, which will significantly simplify the employment process for young professionals.

    The work was carried out with the support of the strategic academic leadership program “Priority-2030” of the Ministry of Education and Science and the Federal Agency for Youth Affairs.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: NSU orienteers successfully completed the summer season

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –

    The last two events in orienteering took place — the NSU Championship in the Spartakiad of Faculties and Institutes and the Tandem Relay Race as part of the City Cup. The competitions took place in the Student City and the adjacent forest at distances in a given direction. More than 100 people took part in the NSU Championship, the boys ran a 3.3 km sprint with 28 checkpoints (CP), the girls had a distance of 2.6 km with 25 CP.

    In the individual competition among young men, the first and third places were taken by VKI students Alexander Demin and Dmitry Oparin, and the second place went to a first-year student of the Faculty of Geology and Humanities, Yaroslav Myasnikov. The winner among girls was Darina Zelenkova (NSU SUNC), and the second and third places were taken by FEN students Liliya Aksenova and Irina Zorina.

    The 5 best results, regardless of gender, were included in the team standings of the Spartakiad. The places were distributed as follows:

    1 – Faculty of Physics consisting of: Dmitry Alimov, Olga Petukhova, Vladimir Kaygorodtsev, Natalya Utkina and Olga Zablotskaya.

    2 — Faculty of Information Technology consisting of: Alina Brysina, Anastasia Kulishova, Snezhana Zhuyko, Anastasia Kuznetsova and Mikhail Biryulya.

    3 —. Faculty of Natural Sciences consisting of: Lilia Aksenova, Irina Zorina, Arseniy Shurenkov, Svyatoslav Ezhelev and Marat Maksimov.

    4 — Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics.

    5 – Higher College of Computer Science.

    6 — NSU SUNC.

    7 — Faculty of Geology and Geophysics.

    8 — Faculty of Medicine and Psychology named after Zelman.

    9 — Institute of Philosophy and Law.

    10 — Faculty of Economics.

    11 — Institute of Intelligent Robotics.

    The relay races were run by teams of 2 people, each participant ran 2 stages, alternating with each other. These are very interesting and dynamic competitions, when until the last moment it is not known who will win. And the biggest surprise was given to everyone by our students Arseniy Shurenkov (FEN) and Dmitry Parfenov (MMF), who became the absolute winners of the City Cup. Among the students and employees of NSU, Dmitry Alimov and Liliya Aksenova came in second, and Egor Bitochkin and Anastasia Kulishova came in third.

    Congratulations to the winners and prize winners of the competitions, we wish everyone further success in sports and studies! We thank the teachers of KaffV Sofya Zakharova and Andrey Tolstov for organizing the events.

    Photos: http://disk.yandex.ru/d/kpaUVsh2LVnIL1K

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Video: The financial fallout from a warming world

    Source: European Central Bank (video statements)

    Climate change and nature loss are affecting all aspects of our lives, including our economies . What is the latest research telling us, and what is the cost to the economy? Stefania Secola talks to Executive Board member Frank Elderson and Deputy Director General and researcher Livio Stracca about how rising physical risks will affect our economies.

    The views expressed are those of the speakers and not necessarily those of the European Central Bank.

    This episode was recorded before the tragic floods in Spain.

    Published on 1 November.

    In this episode:
    01:42 Floods, wildfires and droughts
    How do climate change and nature degradation affect our economies? And how high was the economic loss caused by recent extreme weather events ?
    05:52 Catastrophe insurance
    What is it? How many people have it? And what does it mean for our preparedness if disaster were to strike?
    06:57 Adapting to a changing economy
    It’s clear that our environment is changing. How can we adapt our activities in the face of these changes?
    10:05 The Network for Greening the Financial System
    What is it, and what does it do? And what does it have to do with central banks and supervisors?
    12:32 How do climate change and nature loss affect our economies?
    How much higher are the expected losses than we previously thought? What’s the latest scientific research telling us?
    14:58 Climate messages during the Conference of the Parties (COP) meetings
    Which topics need more attention? And what can we do about it?
    19:19 Our guests’ hot tips

    Further reading:

    The impact of climate change and policies on productivity
    https://www.ecb.europa.eu/pub/pdf/scpops/ecb.op340~0173592e52.en.pdf

    Policy options to reduce the climate insurance protection gap
    https://www.ecb.europa.eu/pub/pdf/other/ecb.policyoptions_EIOPA~c0adae58b7.en.pdf

    Managing climate-related risks
    https://www.ecb.europa.eu/ecb/climate/managing_mitigating_climatel_risk/html/index.en.html

    Living in a world of disappearing nature: physical risk and the implications for financial stability
    https://www.ecb.europa.eu/pub/pdf/scpops/ecb.op333~1b97e436be.en.pdf

    What to do about Europe’s climate insurance gap
    https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/blog/date/2023/html/ecb.blog.230424~4cdc3a38ba.en.html

    Failing to plan is planning to fail – why transition planning is essential for banks
    https://www.bankingsupervision.europa.eu/press/blog/2024/html/ssm.blog240123~5471c5f63e.en.html

    The climate insurance protection gap
    https://www.ecb.europa.eu/ecb/climate/climate/html/index.en.html

    The Network for Greening the Financial System
    https://www.ngfs.net/en

    Measuring economic losses caused by climate change
    https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/measuring-economic-losses-caused-climate-change

    “Know thyself” – avoiding policy mistakes in light of the prevailing climate science
    https://www.bankingsupervision.europa.eu/press/speeches/date/2024/html/ssm.sp240412~c256dc168c.en.html

    Hothouse Earth by Gill McGuire
    https://www.google.com/search?safe=active&sca_esv=0d2d5197637c41d9&rlz=1C1GCEA_enDE1060DE1060&q=hothouse+earth+bill+mcguire&udm=3&fbs=AEQNm0Aa4sjWe7Rqy32pFwRj0UkWd8nbOJfsBGGB5IQQO6L3J_86uWOeqwdnV0yaSF-x2jqw-AzvpDFRWNmLZKilfTrfO0pl9dtT9e2t2elzSdzPviJlaPtdkm_zev73LcACj_Zt3WoLu1loKbhUBQ0BvD6_OC9OERnpW26hAPVqw_fTJrjRkQgEJf5SXlzvVj2JhcxyIvER&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi2yfiVobGJAxX6_7sIHZckMjAQs6gLegQIExAB&biw=1280&bih=665&dpr=1.5

    Climate Change 2023 Synthesis Report
    https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/syr/downloads/report/IPCC_AR6_SYR_LongerReport.pdf

    Headline statements of the Synthesis Report https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/syr/resources/spm-headline-statements

    Climate Change 2023: Synthesis Trailer

    European Central Bank
    https://www.ecb.europa.eu

    European Banking Supervision
    https://www.bankingsupervision.europa.eu/home/html/index.en.html

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tFK4nywepA

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Novel experiment to explore the limits of quantum theory for arbitrarily massive objects

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 01 NOV 2024 3:43PM by PIB Delhi

    Scientists have devised an experiment for testing the domain of validity of quantum theory for objects much more massive than the usual microphysical objects (atoms, molecules etc), beyond which the classical theory has to be necessarily used. This study can also help in developing high precision quantum sensors which are important tools in the cutting- edge quantum technologies.

    The principles of Quantum Mechanics replacing that of Newtonian classical mechanics were developed nearly 100 years back. Yet, a number of quantum foundational issues remain problematic. For example, the boundary between the quantum mechanical microworld and the large scale macroscopic classical world of everyday objects obeying Newtonian Laws remains unspecified. The question–up to what level the quantum mechanical principles be valid for macroscopic objects– continues to be one of the most fundamental open questions in contemporary physics.

    This question is also intimately related to another hotly pursued fundamental issue– testing whether gravity is quantum mechanical or not.

    All the proposed laboratory-based schemes seeking to demonstrate the quantum mechanical nature of gravity crucially rest on assuming applicability of fundamental quantum principles for sufficiently massive objects.

    However, the state –of- the- art demonstrations of quantum features have so far reached only up to macromolecules of masses ten thousand times the hydrogen atom. Hence, breakthrough ideas, feasible to be implemented experimentally in the near future, are the need of the hour in order to scale up the tests of macroscopic quantumness to ever more massive objects.

    Prof. Dipankar Home from Bose Institute, Kolkata, an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology (DST), in collaboration with D. Das, S. Bose (University College London) and H. Ulbricht (University of Southampton, UK) have addressed this challenge by formulating a novel procedure for demonstrating an observable signature of quantum behaviour for an oscillating object like pendulum having any large mass.

    These scientists have found a novel way for detecting measurement induced disturbance for an arbitrarily massive quantum mechanical pendulum. They have formulated an implementable scheme based on using lasers to suspend a single nanocrystal of silica (a microscopic glass bead) as it oscillates around the focal point of a small parabolic mirror carved out of a block of aluminum housed in a vacuum chamber.

    In a typical classical pendulum, the bead would move regularly from point A to point B and back again, unaffected by any observation. However, a quantum pendulum should behave very differently. Its position will change depending on whether or not someone is watching. If we were to detect at any instant where the pendulum bob was, there would be an immediate change of its future behavior. Such a disturbance is an unavoidable consequence of any measurement process involving quantum mechanical system. The scheme proposed by these scientists would enable detecting such measurement induced quantum disturbance for objects much more massive than usual microphysical objects.

    Given the present state- of- the -art technology, this envisaged experiment could be realizable in the coming years for systems ranging from oscillating nano-objects (like that of a grain of dust, about trillion times heavier than hydrogen atom) to oscillating mirrors having effective mass of about 10 kg used for gravitational wave detection.

    An experimental study has already been launched by one of the co-authors of this paper, Prof. H.Ulbricht and his group at University of Southampton, UK using optically levitated nano-diamonds about billion times heavier than hydrogen atom.

    Thus, this work would pave the way for experiments providing the most emphatic demonstration of large scale quantumness and would open up the possibility for leveraging such macroscopic quantumness for practical applications, such as by developing high precision quantum sensors which are key ingredients in the emerging quantum technologies.

    ***

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Department of Science and Technology (DST) successfully completes Special Campaign 4.0 on Swachhata and minimizes pendency

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 01 NOV 2024 3:39PM by PIB Delhi

    Drawing inspiration from Honorable Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi’s vision and mission to institutionalize Swachahta and minimize pendency in Government, Department of Science and Technology launched the Special Campaign 4.0 (implementation phase) from 2nd October to 31st October 2024. The Special Campaign aimed at improving overall cleanliness of Government offices and enhancing public experience of the common public with Government offices. Therefore, special attention was given to field / outstation offices (attached / subordinate offices).

    The glimpses of the cleaning activities carried out by Organisations of the DST are as follows: –

    Before

    After

     

    The Department of Science and Technology has successfully completed Special Campaign 4.0 underlining Swachhata, which was conducted within the Department and across various Autonomous Bodies/Subordinate Offices located in different parts of the country.

    During the campaign, special focus was given to space management and enhancement of workplace experience in offices. Since the beginning of the Preparatory Phase of the Special Campaign, the Department along with its Autonomous Bodies/Subordinate Offices identified various sites to be cleaned across the country. Around 257 sites were identified for cleaning, more than 26,000 physical files and around 383 e-files were identified for review. Daily progress was monitored by a dedicated team and information was uploaded regularly on the SCPDM portal hosted by Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG).

    Nodal Officer of Special Campaign 4.0 & Joint Secretary (Admin), Smt. A. Dhanalakshmi regularly reviewed the campaign progress and visited many sites inside the office premises as a part of ongoing Special Campaign 4.0. She appreciated the efforts of the officials and encouraged them to channel their best efforts to maintain cleanliness at the workplace.

    The Implementation phase ended with achievements surpassing the targets on many fronts. The Department along with its Sections/Divisions/Autonomous Bodies/Subordinate Offices enthusiastically participated in the Special Campaign 4.0 and celebrated it as a cleanliness festival at more than 894 sites. This year a remarkable area of 4 lakhs 76 thousand sq. ft. has been freed and revenue of Rs. 4.84 lakhs have been generated by disposing scraps identified during the campaign. Further, as part of record management exercise, 30731 physical files have been reviewed and out of which 14090 files have been weeded out. Moreover, 575 e-files have been reviewed and out of which 321 e-files have been closed.

    ***

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya Urges Youth to Apply for National Youth Award (2022-23)

    Source: Government of India

    Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya Urges Youth to Apply for National Youth Award (2022-23)

    Applications for National Youth Award (2022-23) Open from November 1 to 15, 2024

    Posted On: 01 NOV 2024 1:46PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Minister for Youth Affairs & Sports and Labour & Employment, Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya has called upon young Indians to apply for the prestigious National Youth Awards (NYA) 2022-23, recognizing their exceptional contributions to India’s development and social progress.

    Highlighting the unmatched spirit of India’s youth across sectors—be it sports, social service, science, or research—Dr. Mandaviya emphasized that the awards are not merely an accolade but a celebration of youth leadership in fostering a progressive and inclusive India.

    Department of Youth Affairs, under the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, confers the National Youth Awards (NYA) on individuals (aged between 15-29 years) and organizations for excellent work and contribution in different fields of development and social service such as health, promotion of human rights, active citizenship, community service etc.

    The objective of the awards is to motivate young persons to achieve excellence in the field of national development and social service, to encourage young people to develop a sense of responsibility to the community and thus to improve their own personal potential as good citizens and to give recognition to the outstanding work done by voluntary organizations working with the youth for national development including social service.

    Application for National Youth Award (2022-23) is being invited through common award portal of Ministry of Home Affairs from 1st November to 15th November, 2024.  The link of the award portal is https://awards.gov.in/.

    The award comprises of a medal, a certificate and a cash prize of Rs 1,00,000/- to individual and a cash prize of Rs. 3,00,000/- to organization respectively.

     

    ******

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dmitry Chernyshenko: The youth of Russia and Uzbekistan are united by common spiritual and moral values

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Previous news Next news

    Dmitry Chernyshenko met with students of Russian universities in Uzbekistan. On the right in the chair is Russian Minister for the Development of the Far East and the Arctic Alexey Chekunkov

    Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Dmitry Chernyshenko discussed issues of science, education and youth policy with students and heads of branches of Russian universities in the Republic of Uzbekistan, and also held a working meeting with Assistant to the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan Saida Mirziyoyeva.

    Speaking to students at the branch of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (University) of the Russian Foreign Ministry, the Russian Deputy Prime Minister emphasized that this year MGIMO celebrates its 80th anniversary. According to the Deputy Prime Minister, the university can rightfully be proud of its graduates, who are in demand not only in Russia and Uzbekistan, but also around the world

    He also recalled that the 16th BRICS summit was recently held in Kazan, in which the President of Uzbekistan Shavkat Mirziyoyev also took part.

    “As Russian President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin noted, BRICS includes like-minded people, sovereign countries representing different development models, religions, original civilizations, and cultures. All our states advocate equality, good neighborliness, and mutual respect, the affirmation of high ideals of friendship and harmony, and universal prosperity and well-being. Not in words, but in deeds, they demonstrate a responsible attitude toward the future of the world. The youth of Russia and Uzbekistan are united by common spiritual and moral values. Young people of our countries demonstrate a growing mutual interest in creation in the interests of the well-being and prosperity of our countries,” said Dmitry Chernyshenko.

    The Deputy Prime Minister emphasized that a harmoniously developed person today needs not only to gain knowledge, but also to stay in excellent physical shape, and spoke about the “phygital” format and the Games of the Future.

    The event was also attended by the head of the Ministry for the Development of the Russian Far East, Alexey Chekunkov. He gave a lecture on the development of the Far East.

    The Deputy Prime Minister discussed prospects for developing relations between Russia and Uzbekistan in the area of scientific and educational cooperation with the management of branches of Russian universities.

    The participants of the event were also greeted by the Head of the Department of Social Development of the Administration of the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan Odil Abdurakhmanov. The meeting was moderated by the Deputy Minister of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation Konstantin Mogilevsky.

    “Our discussion today is dedicated to improving the quality of training for the fast-growing economy of Uzbekistan in the branches of leading Russian universities. We discussed advanced educational practices and prospects for their replication, the contribution of industrial partners and, of course, pre-university training. Productive cooperation between branches and schools is important both in terms of selecting applicants and in terms of their in-depth training in the Russian language and basic subjects,” the deputy minister noted.

    During the working visit, the Deputy Prime Minister met with Assistant to the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan Saida Mirziyoyeva. The parties discussed projects in the field of education, Russian language teaching programs, expansion of scientific cooperation and interaction in the information environment. Dmitry Chernyshenko invited scientists from Uzbekistan to participate in the flagship event of the Decade of Science and Technology in Russia – the Congress of Young Scientists, which will be held this year from November 27 to 29 in Sirius.

    During the visit, Dmitry Chernyshenko assessed the infrastructure of School No. 5, School No. 21 and the IT Park, visited the Cathedral of the Dormition of the Mother of God and held a working meeting with Metropolitan Vikentiy of Tashkent and Uzbekistan.

    All instruction at Tashkent General Education School No. 5 is in Russian. The Deputy Prime Minister inspected the building, talked to the staff, and attended a literature lesson. Following the visit, the Deputy Prime Minister left a commemorative note.

    “Gratitude and admiration to the wonderful staff of School No. 5 with hope for future meetings with you and your graduates on the path to implementing projects of commonwealth and developing relations between the Republic of Uzbekistan and the Russian Federation,” wrote Dmitry Chernyshenko in the book of honored guests.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: NSU and SibNIA create a joint laboratory “Intelligent systems for testing aircraft structures”

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –

    Novosibirsk State University and the Siberian Aviation Research Institute named after S. A. Chaplygin continue their cooperation in the educational and research spheres. At the scientific and production forum “Golden Valley”, which was held from October 31 to November 1 and the main organizer of which was NSU, an agreement was signed to create a joint laboratory “Intelligent systems for testing aircraft structures”. At the first stage, it will be engaged in bench tests of equipment in order to predict possible deformations and breakdowns, in the future, the range of work performed will be expanded – it will also include video analytics, a vibration damping system.

    The laboratory will include students and postgraduates of the Faculty of Information Technology and the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics of NSU, as well as employees of partner companies – FAU “SibNIA named after S.A. Chaplygin” FAU (part of the FGBU “Research Center “Institute named after N.E. Zhukovsky”) and JSC TsNIAP “AVIASPETSTEST”, who will act as mentors – a total of 13 people. The head of the laboratory will be Vladimir Berikov, Doctor of Technical Sciences, Senior Researcher at the Institute of Mathematics named after S.L. Sobolev and a lecturer at the Faculty of Information Technology of NSU.

    The laboratory is fully focused on solving applied problems arising during bench tests of aircraft equipment, including the development and creation of modules of the Intelligent Bench Test System for Aircraft Equipment (ISIA) with elements of artificial intelligence; an intelligent operator workstation with connected archives and libraries; intelligent simulators, as well as vibration isolation systems for high-precision instruments and systems.

    — During bench tests of equipment, we will use sensors to collect data streams in our system, use archives and libraries, and analyze all the information received using artificial intelligence systems. Thanks to this, we will be able to predict for what time and what deformations and breakdowns are possible. In this way, we will preserve individual aircraft structures intact, solving the main problem of ground tests, when expensive structures become unusable, — noted Alexander Sychev, Deputy Director of the Center for Interaction with Government Authorities and Industrial Partners of NSU.

    — The organization of a joint laboratory will give a new impetus to the development of methods for testing aircraft structures. I am confident that cooperation with NSU will allow us to significantly advance in the study of the strength of aircraft structures and the subsequent improvement of the test bench base, — commented Alexander Laznenko, head of the research department for fatigue and static strength of aircraft structures at SibNIA.

    At the first stage, the task is to test the capabilities of the intelligent system when testing the main load-bearing parts, and then gradually move on to all parts and units of aircraft structures. What is important is that the integrity of the stand itself will also be monitored, which is also subject to significant loads during testing and may fail.

    The use of artificial intelligence systems and neural networks will not only significantly optimize testing costs, but also reduce the testing time of individual aircraft parts, which can now reach thousands of hours.

    The new laboratory will start operating at NSU this year, and in 2025, a specially equipped site will appear at SibNIA, which will allow NSU students and postgraduates to carry out work directly at the enterprise.

    Another promising area for cooperation between the two organizations is unmanned aircraft systems. Given the developments in this area at NSU and SibNIA, it is planned to create a joint Laboratory of Autonomous and Unmanned Aircraft Systems in the future. In the future, the two laboratories will be combined into the Center for Intelligent Aircraft Systems.

    The Siberian Aviation Research Institute named after S. A. Chaplygin and Novosibirsk State University have been cooperating since 2022, when they began holding a joint seminar on Industrial Mathematics on a regular basis. In 2023, SibNIA and NSU signed an agreement, according to which practical training for students in the field of Computer Systems and Complexes will be organized at the research institute. In August 2024, the two organizations announced plans to create a digital platform for bench testing of aircraft equipment with elements of artificial intelligence within the next two years.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Building on long history of tech & innovation, California selected as headquarters for the National Semiconductor Technology Center

    Source: US State of California 2

    Nov 1, 2024

    What you need to know: California will be home to a first-of-its-kind research & development facility made possible by the Biden-Harris Administration’s CHIPS & Science Act.

    Los Angeles, California — California took a major step forward in correcting the damage from 50 years of neglect to the state’s mental health system with the passage of Proposition 1. This historic measure — a signature priority of Governor Gavin Newsom — adds rocket fuel to California’s overhaul of the state’s behavioral health systems. It provides a full range of mental health and substance abuse care, with new accountability metrics to ensure local governments deliver for their communities.

    California has long been a leader in global technology and future thinking innovation. With our state’s global talent pool, world-leading universities and research institutions, and top technology companies, it is no surprise California was selected. We often say the future happens here first, and thanks to the Biden-Harris Administration’s announcement, California will continue to shape the coming decades across the most critical sectors of our economy and national security.

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    Why this matters

    The new headquarters facility will lower the barriers to semiconductor prototyping, experimentation, and other R&D activities that will support America’s global strength and leadership in design, materials, and process innovation while enabling a vibrant domestic industry. The DCF  is expected to drive more than $1 billion in research funding and create more than 200 direct jobs over the next 10 years, utilizing California’s global talent and world-leading research and education facilities throughout the Golden State. California’s leadership in the semiconductor industry is key to the Governor’s ‘build more, faster’ infrastructure agenda.

    “We are thrilled that the Department of Commerce and Natcast chose to locate this critically important facility in Sunnyvale, the heart of Silicon Valley, alongside the world’s largest concentration of semiconductor businesses, talent, intellectual property, and investment activity,” said Dee Dee Myers, Senior Economic Advisor to Governor Newsom and Director of the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development (GO-Biz). “The Newsom Administration and our partners across the industry know how important it is to shorten the time frame from R&D to commercialization. We are looking forward to a productive partnership with the Department of Commerce and Natcast to ensure that CHIPS for America will be an enduring success not only for our state but for the entire country.”

    About the new headquarters (Design and Collaboration Facility, DCF)

    The DCF will convene semiconductor industry leaders from across the U.S., offering unparalleled engagement and collaboration opportunities to a diverse array of stakeholders across the semiconductor value chain, and will administer the NSTC Design Enablement Gateway, helping drive technological advances in semiconductor design and manufacturing to transfer at scale. The facility will also oversee the NSTC Workforce Center of Excellence to build and sustain the diverse and skilled workforce necessary for the U.S. semiconductor industry to grow. With the largest public higher education system in the U.S., world-class research institutions like UC Berkeley and Stanford, and surrounding national labs, California’s unmatched talent pipeline will foster a dynamic workforce that advances the DCF mission.

    Learn more about today’s announcement here.

    Press Releases, Recent News

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  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Newsom announces appointments 10.31.24

    Source: US State of California 2

    Oct 31, 2024

    SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:

    Vickie Sakamoto, of Sacramento, has been appointed Assistant State Fire Marshal at the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE.) Sakamoto has been Assistant Deputy Director at the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection since 2024 and has served in several positions there since 1989, including Division Chief, Deputy State Fire Marshal – Supervisor, Deputy State Fire Marshal III – Specialist and Deputy State Fire Marshal. Sakamoto was a Fire Prevention Technician at the Florin Fire Protection District from 1986 to 1989. She is a member of Northern California Fire Prevention Officers. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $200,004. Sakamoto is a Democrat. 

    Donald Butz, of Carlsbad, has been appointed to the State Board of Fire Services. Butz has been Fire Chief at the Lakeside Fire Protection District since 2016. He was an Instructor at the San Diego County Office of Education from 2013 to 2021. Butz was a Fire Chief at the Viejas Fire Department from 2005 to 2016. He was a Deputy Fire Chief at the Rancho Santa Fe Fire Protection District from 1999 to 2005. Butz is Vice President of the Fire Districts Association of California, an ex officio board member at the American Red Cross, a committee member of the SDG&E Wildfire Safety Community Advisory Council, and a member of the California Fire Chiefs Association and the Fire Agencies Insurance Risk Authority. He earned a Master of Arts degree in Leadership: Disaster Preparedness & Executive Fire Leadership from Grand Canyon University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Management from the University of Phoenix. This position does not require Senate confirmation and there is no compensation. Butz is registered without party preference. 

    Zoraida Diaz, of Hercules, has been appointed to the State Board of Fire Services. Diaz has been Fire Chief for the City of Fremont since 2023. She was a Deputy Fire Chief at the City of Fremont Fire Department from 2021 to 2023. Diaz was an Assistant Chief of Operations for the Oakland Fire Department from 2020 to 2021. She was Battalion Chief at the City of Oakland Fire Department from 2015 to 2020. Diaz is a member of the International Association of Fire Chiefs and the California Fire Chiefs Association. She earned a Master of Science degree in Rehabilitation Counseling and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from the State University of New York at Albany. This position does not require Senate confirmation and there is no compensation. Diaz is a Democrat.

    Janet Ruiz, of Oceanside, has been appointed to the State Board of Fire Services. Ruiz has been Director of Strategic Communication at the Insurance Information Institute since 2015. She was Director of Communications at the Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company from 2006 to 2014. Ruiz was a Public Affairs Specialist for State Farm Insurance from 1989 to 2006. She is a member of the Chartered Property Casualty Underwriters Society. Ruiz earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration and Communications from Thomas Edison State University. This position does not require Senate confirmation and there is no compensation. Ruiz is registered without party preference. 

    Yvette Roland, of Los Angeles, has been reappointed to the State Bar Court of California, where she has served since 2014. Roland was a Partner at Duane Morris LLP from 2006 to 2014 and at Hancock, Rothert & Bunshoft LLP from 1990 to 2005. Roland was an Associate at Baker & Hostetler/McCutchen, Black, Verleger & Shea from 1986 to 1990. She was a Law Clerk for the Honorable Terry J. Hatter, Jr. at the U.S. District Court, Central District of California from 1985 to 1986. Roland was a Law Clerk for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund in 1981. She is a member of the National Council of Lawyer Disciplinary Boards, the California Association of Black Lawyers, the Black Women Lawyers Association of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles County Bar Association, and the John M. Langston Bar Association. Roland earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law, a Master of Education degree from Stanford University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in History and English from the University of California, Riverside. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $222,772. Roland is a Democrat.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Duckworth Joins Fischer, Colleagues in Reintroducing Bipartisan Legislation to Help Improve Passenger Vehicle Safety

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Illinois Tammy Duckworth

    January 24, 2025

    [WASHINGTON, D.C.] – U.S. Senators Tammy Duckworth (D-IL)—a member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation (CST)—Deb Fischer (R-NE), Patty Murray (D-WA) and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) reintroduced bipartisan legislation to help modernize vehicle safety tests by requiring the use of the most advanced testing devices available—including a female crash test dummy. The bipartisan She Develops Regulations In Vehicle Equality and Safety (She DRIVES) Act would help enhance passenger vehicle safety by updating U.S. crashworthiness testing procedures. The bill is estimated to help save more than 1,300 lives, prevent and mitigate tens of thousands of serious injuries and save billions of dollars in economic impact from preventing and mitigating injuries and deaths.

    “We can be doing more to improve our roadways and make sure visiting a family member or a routine trip to the grocery store doesn’t end in tragedy,” said Senator Duckworth. “I’m proud to help reintroduce this bipartisan legislation, which would help mitigate injuries and save lives on our roadways by ensuring our crash test standards better represent the safety needs of all Americans.”

    “Outdated crash testing standards make women 17 percent more likely to be killed in auto crashes than men, but that doesn’t have to be the case. By updating crash test dummy standards, our bill will save thousands of lives and prevent thousands more serious injuries each year,” said Senator Fischer.

    Last December, Duckworth announced more than $2 million in federal funding through the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to improve crash reporting in Illinois to help make our roads as safe as possible and reduce the number of lives lost to car crashes.

    -30-



    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Enforces Overwhelmingly Popular Demand to Stop Taxpayer Funding of Abortion

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    ENFORCING THE HYDE AMENDMENT: On Friday, President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order to end the use of Federal taxpayer dollars to fund or promote elective abortion.
    The Order recognizes that, for nearly five decades, Congress has enacted the Hyde Amendment and a series of additional laws to protect taxpayers from being forced to pay for abortion. Contrary to this longstanding commonsense policy, the previous administration embedded federal funding of elective abortion in a wide variety of government programs.
    To restore this longstanding policy, the Order rescinds two executive orders from President Biden that violate the Hyde Amendment:
    Executive Order 14076 imposed a whole-of-government effort to promote and fund abortion and to politicize enforcement of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act.
    Federal statutes protecting access to emergency medical care for pregnant women under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) and protecting personal health information under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) remain in full effect.

    Executive Order 14079 recategorized abortion as “healthcare” in order to provide taxpayer funding for elective abortions. This included using Medicaid funding to pay for travel costs for elective abortions.

    ENDING FEDERAL FUNDING OF ABORTION OVERSEAS: President Donald J. Trump also signed a Presidential Memorandum reinstating the Mexico City Policy to stop the use of federal taxpayer dollars for abortion overseas.
    The President’s policy from 2017 is reinstated to ensure that no U.S. taxpayer money supports foreign organizations that perform or actively promote abortion in other nations.
    The first Trump Administration also extended this policy to global health assistance. A 2020 report by the United States Agency for International Development found that this life-affirming policy in no way diminished women’s health around the world.
    PROTECTING TAXPAYERS FROM FUNDING ABORTION: For the first time in nearly fifty years, President Trump returned the issue of life to a vote of the people, from within the States.
    Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, 597 U.S. 215 (2022), overturned Roe v. Wade and returned the power to regulate issues of life and safety to the people. Three of the justices deciding the case were appointed by President Trump.
    Federal overreach and taxpayer dollars will no longer force violations of faith and conscience or impede the ability of states to determine life policies through a vote of the people.
    For example, under President Biden, the Department of Defense reimbursed abortion-related travel expenses, the Department of Veterans Affairs allowed hospitals to provide abortions, and the Department of Health and Human Services paid for abortions for illegal immigrants.

    PRESIDENT TRUMP PROMISED AND DELIVERED: President Trump promised to protect and defend a vote of the people, from within the states, on the issue of life. Today’s executive actions build on the long list of accomplishments from the first Trump Administration to support the sanctity of every human life and prevent taxpayer funding of abortion. Select highlights of the first Trump Administration’s work include:
    Reinstated and expanded the Mexico City Policy, ensuring that taxpayer money is not used to fund abortion globally.
    Issued a rule preventing Title X taxpayer funding from subsiding the abortion industry.
    Cut all funding to the United Nations Population Fund, which supports coercive abortion and forced sterilization.
    Signed legislation overturning the previous administration’s regulation that prohibited states from defunding abortion facilities as part of their family planning programs.
    Fully enforced the separate payment requirement for abortion coverage in Obamacare exchange plans.
    Stopped the Federal funding of fetal tissue research.
    Worked to protect healthcare entities and individuals’ conscience rights, ensuring that no medical professional is forced to participate in an abortion in violation of their beliefs.
    Issued an executive order reinforcing the requirement that all hospitals in the United States provide medical treatment or an emergency transfer for infants who are in need of emergency medical care—regardless of prematurity or disability.
    Led a coalition of countries to sign the Geneva Consensus Declaration, declaring that there is no international right to abortion and committing to protecting women’s health.
    First president in history to attend the March for Life.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: $TOCKHOLDER ALERT: The M&A Class Action Firm Continues To Investigate The Merger – IPG, VTS, AVTE, MHLD

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, Jan. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Monteverde & Associates PC (the “M&A Class Action Firm”), has recovered millions of dollars for shareholders and is recognized as a Top 50 Firm by ISS Securities Class Action Services Report. We are headquartered at the Empire State Building in New York City and are investigating:

    • The Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (NYSE: IPG), relating to the proposed merger with Omnicom Group Inc. Under the terms of the agreement, Interpublic shareholders will own 39.4% of the combined company.

    Click here for more https://monteverdelaw.com/case/interpublic-group-of-companies-inc-ipg/. It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you.

    • Vitesse Energy, Inc. (NYSE: VTS), relating to the proposed merger with Lucero Energy Corp. Under the terms of the agreement, Vitesse stockholders are expected to own approximately 80% of the Company and Lucero shareholders are expected to own 20%.

    Click here for more https://monteverdelaw.com/case/vitesse-energy-inc-vts/. It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you.

    • Aerovate Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: AVTE), relating to a proposed merger with Jade Biosciences. Under the terms of the agreement, pre-merger Aerovate stockholders are expected to own approximately 1.6% of the combined company, while pre-merger Jade stockholders are expected to own approximately 98.4% of the combined entity.

    Click here for more information https://monteverdelaw.com/case/aerovate-therapeutics-inc-avte/. It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you.

    • Maiden Holdings, Ltd. (NASDAQ: MHLD), relating to the proposed merger with Kestrel Group LLC. Under the terms of the agreement, each issued and outstanding common share of Maiden will be converted into the right to receive one common share in the combined company.

    Click here for more https://monteverdelaw.com/case/maiden-holdings-ltd-mhld/. It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you.

    NOT ALL LAW FIRMS ARE THE SAME. Before you hire a law firm, you should talk to a lawyer and ask:

    1. Do you file class actions and go to Court?
    2. When was the last time you recovered money for shareholders?
    3. What cases did you recover money in and how much?

    About Monteverde & Associates PC

    Our firm litigates and has recovered money for shareholders…and we do it from our offices in the Empire State Building. We are a national class action securities firm with a successful track record in trial and appellate courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court. 

    No company, director or officer is above the law. If you own common stock in any of the above listed companies and have concerns or wish to obtain additional information free of charge, please visit our website or contact Juan Monteverde, Esq. either via e-mail at jmonteverde@monteverdelaw.com or by telephone at (212) 971-1341.

    Contact:
    Juan Monteverde, Esq.
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    jmonteverde@monteverdelaw.com
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    Attorney Advertising. (C) 2024 Monteverde & Associates PC. The law firm responsible for this advertisement is Monteverde & Associates PC (www.monteverdelaw.com).  Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome with respect to any future matter.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Secretary-General’s message to the International Holocaust Remembrance Service

    Source: United Nations – English

    ear Rabbi Schneier, Excellencies, Dear Friends,

    It is an honour to send you a message today.

    At this sombre occasion, I want to acknowledge that more than a year has passed since the appalling 7th October terror attacks by Hamas. We welcome, at long last, the ceasefire and hostage release deal. The deal offers hope, as well as much needed relief. The United Nations will do our utmost to ensure it leads to the release of all hostages and a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

    Dear Friends,

    This year marks eighty years since the end of the Holocaust.

    The history of the Holocaust is one of total moral collapse, dehumanisation, complicity, and unimaginable atrocities. But amidst all the horror, there are also stories of humanity, and of courage.

    I think of those victims who resisted Nazi brutality and supported one another with kindness and solidarity. I think of those survivors who have told their stories to the world, including Rabbi Schneier and others present today.  We owe you — and the children of survivors who made sure those stories lived on – a profound debt of gratitude.  And I think of those noble people of conscience who may not have been targeted by the Nazis but were so horrified by what they saw that they felt compelled to act. 

    That includes a number of diplomats who used their power to save lives.  They were from a variety of countries, including many represented here today.  

    One important example from my own country, Portugal, is Aristides de Sousa Mendes. Stationed in Bordeaux, as the Nazis approached in 1940, Sr. Sousa Mendes faced crowds desperate for visas out of France.

    The orders of the Portuguese Government were clear. The infamous “Circular 14” had been issued, denying visas for refugees’ safe passage to Portugal – with Jews named specifically. Sr. Sousa Mendes decided to disobey, and worked quite literally day and night to issue thousands of visas, saving countless lives.

    The government punished Sr. Sousa Mendes for his defiance. He died in poverty, after being expelled from the diplomatic corps without pension. But his extraordinary efforts have not been forgotten. In 1966, he was recognised as one of the Righteous Among the Nations, and, last year, I was pleased to support the opening of a museum in his honour in Portugal.

    In these days of global turmoil, rising antisemitism, and growing hate towards many communities, it is vital that we remember the stories of people like Sr. Sousa Mendes, who used their power for good in the worst of times. They remind us that it is our duty – individually and collectively – to stand with humanity and against bigotry and discrimination.

    In that spirit, I am pleased to report that the United Nations has launched an Action Plan to Enhance Monitoring and Response to Antisemitism. We have long worked to combat this evil, through a wide range of activities, including our Holocaust Outreach program. This new Plan builds on that work, and the insights of people like Rabbi Schneier, to recommend ways the United Nations system will further enhance efforts to combat antisemitism.

    This goes to the heart of the mission of the United Nations, which was established in the aftermath of the Holocaust.  We will never waiver in the fight for a world that promotes and protects the human rights of all.
     

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s message to the International Holocaust Remembrance Service

    Source: United Nations

    Dear Rabbi Schneier, Excellencies, Dear Friends,

    It is an honour to send you a message today.

    At this sombre occasion, I want to acknowledge that more than a year has passed since the appalling 7th October terror attacks by Hamas. We welcome, at long last, the ceasefire and hostage release deal. The deal offers hope, as well as much needed relief. The United Nations will do our utmost to ensure it leads to the release of all hostages and a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

    Dear Friends,

    This year marks eighty years since the end of the Holocaust.

    The history of the Holocaust is one of total moral collapse, dehumanisation, complicity, and unimaginable atrocities. But amidst all the horror, there are also stories of humanity, and of courage.

    I think of those victims who resisted Nazi brutality and supported one another with kindness and solidarity. I think of those survivors who have told their stories to the world, including Rabbi Schneier and others present today.  We owe you — and the children of survivors who made sure those stories lived on – a profound debt of gratitude.  And I think of those noble people of conscience who may not have been targeted by the Nazis but were so horrified by what they saw that they felt compelled to act. 

    That includes a number of diplomats who used their power to save lives.  They were from a variety of countries, including many represented here today.  

    One important example from my own country, Portugal, is Aristides de Sousa Mendes. Stationed in Bordeaux, as the Nazis approached in 1940, Sr. Sousa Mendes faced crowds desperate for visas out of France.

    The orders of the Portuguese Government were clear. The infamous “Circular 14” had been issued, denying visas for refugees’ safe passage to Portugal – with Jews named specifically. Sr. Sousa Mendes decided to disobey, and worked quite literally day and night to issue thousands of visas, saving countless lives.

    The government punished Sr. Sousa Mendes for his defiance. He died in poverty, after being expelled from the diplomatic corps without pension. But his extraordinary efforts have not been forgotten. In 1966, he was recognised as one of the Righteous Among the Nations, and, last year, I was pleased to support the opening of a museum in his honour in Portugal.

    In these days of global turmoil, rising antisemitism, and growing hate towards many communities, it is vital that we remember the stories of people like Sr. Sousa Mendes, who used their power for good in the worst of times. They remind us that it is our duty – individually and collectively – to stand with humanity and against bigotry and discrimination.

    In that spirit, I am pleased to report that the United Nations has launched an Action Plan to Enhance Monitoring and Response to Antisemitism. We have long worked to combat this evil, through a wide range of activities, including our Holocaust Outreach program. This new Plan builds on that work, and the insights of people like Rabbi Schneier, to recommend ways the United Nations system will further enhance efforts to combat antisemitism.

    This goes to the heart of the mission of the United Nations, which was established in the aftermath of the Holocaust.  We will never waiver in the fight for a world that promotes and protects the human rights of all.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Congratulations from the rector of SPbPU Andrey Rudskoy on the Russian Students’ Day

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Dear friends! I congratulate you on one of my favorite holidays – Russian Students’ Day!

    This holiday of youth, enthusiasm, and determination has been celebrated at all times. I remember my student years with warmth and nostalgia, an important part of which were construction teams. Full of enthusiasm and ideas, we participated in SSO work shifts, made friends and worked, learned mutual assistance and support, laid the foundation for our future life.

    Dear students, I am glad that today you are studying at our wonderful university, which is already 125 years old, that together with you we are moving science forward, adding new discoveries to the treasury of human knowledge. You, the young generation, are talented and brave, open and cheerful, happy and ambitious, looking to the future with hope and without fear, in a word, such as students have always been. You accept the challenges of modernity, overcome difficulties and pave your own unique path.

    Our university is a leader in many areas, and I am proud of you, our young generation. I am proud of your successes not only in studies, but also in science, sports, art, social activities and work.

    And today I am happy to congratulate you on your Day! With all my heart I wish you to spend your student years with full dedication and remember them for the rest of your life. I wish you not to lose the inspiration of true researchers, set high goals for yourself and make your dreams come true!

    Happy holiday, dear ones!

    Rector of SPbPU, Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences Andrey Rudskoy

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI China: New Zealand, Chinese musicians collaborate in performing Symphony Kukai

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    The Symphony Kukai has been staged in Auckland, New Zealand’s largest city, showcasing the life of Kukai, a prominent symbol of cultural exchange, through a moving musical performance by both Chinese and New Zealand musicians.

    In his speech before the Friday performance, Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown said that he is delighted to see this event bringing together cultures in such a positive way and taking place in Auckland.

    Zhou Li, cultural consul of the Chinese consulate general in Auckland, noted in his remarks that Kukai serves as an exemplary figure of mutual learning between civilizations. Today, when China is promoting the Global Civilization Initiative, it is believed that civilization is colorful because of exchange and civilization is enriched by mutual learning, said Zhou.

    Symphony Kukai, composed by renowned Chinese composer Zou Ye, was presented in the Southern Hemisphere for the first time. Conducted by British maestro Derek Morgan, the Auckland Philharmonia performed the symphony, joined by the choir of Central Conservatory of Music from China and the choir from the Music Association of Auckland. Together, they brought the piece to life and delivered a soul-stirring experience for the New Zealand audience.

    Kukai, a Japanese monk who traveled to China during the Tang Dynasty to study, returned to Japan with significant cultural and technological advancements. He not only introduced Tang Buddhism to Japan but also brought back knowledge in fields such as education, literature, medicine, architecture, water management, and science, making him a distinguished figure in global cultural exchange.

    The Symphony Kukai premiered in 2023 and has since toured Lanzhou, China; Kyoto and Tokyo, Japan; and London, Britain, to widespread acclaim. The Auckland performance, organized by Beijing Tianguzhiyin Cultural Media, was supported by local New Zealand media and community groups. The Great Hall of Auckland Town Hall, which accommodates more than 1,500 people, was filled to capacity for the event with thunderous applause at the end.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Why ancient Mesopotamians would have used a sheep’s liver to predict Donald Trump’s election odds

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Selena Wisnom, Lecturer in the Heritage of the Middle East, University of Leicester

    With one week to go, the US presidential election race is on a knife-edge. Jonah Elkowitz / Shutterstock

    I’m standing in a basement kitchen prodding at a sheep’s liver, looking for marks on its smooth surface. People crowd around to film the proceedings, since I’m here to ask a question that everyone wants to know the answer to: will Donald Trump win the US election?

    I’m following instructions that were first written down by the ancient Babylonians 4,000 years ago, and still survive today. Every crease on the liver has a meaning, and cuneiform tablets discovered in modern-day Iraq explain how to interpret them.

    Armed with this knowledge, it’s possible to calculate the answer to any question, so long as it is yes or no, by adding up the number of positive or negative signs and seeing which comes out on top.

    Since this liver had an overwhelming number of bad omens in it, I concluded that it declared no for Trump this time. Though in 2016 this method predicted a win well before he had won the Republican nomination, and in 2020 foretold that he would not be reelected that year.

    Will Trump win the US election?

    What started as an entertaining talk for a university open day has since become a serious part of my research – not because I sincerely believe in it, but because it gives us some of the earliest evidence in history for how human beings reason and think.

    Looking at livers also makes a serious underlying point about how humans have coped with uncertainty throughout history, and still struggle to today. People have developed techniques as varied as astrology, tarot cards and even peering into entrails in response to the agony of not knowing, or the strain of trying to make a difficult decision.

    Given the level of feeling invested in this election, it’s a unique moment where perhaps we can appreciate that, in this respect, we are not so different from those who lived thousands of years ago, even if our methods of looking into the future are different.

    Asking the entrails

    Developed in its classic form in Babylon, entrail divination was practised throughout ancient Mesopotamia, the written history of which spans from the 3rd millennium BC to the 1st century AD.

    It was enormously important in all sections of society – a standard part of political decision-making at the royal court, but accessible to all. Budget options were even available for those who could not afford a sheep.

    People addressed their questions directly to the gods and believed that at the moment of asking, the answer would be written on the entrails. This could then be “read” by a diviner trained in this esoteric language.

    A map of Mesopotamia, a historical region in modern-day Iraq.
    aipsidtr / Shutterstock

    Sitting in the British Museum is an archive of real questions that were asked by the king of Assyria (a kingdom in northern Mesopotamia) in the 7th century BC. All kinds of affairs of state were put before the gods. Are the Egyptians going to attack? Has the enemy taken the town under siege? And will the governors return home safely?

    Reading the archive, you get a real sense of nerves on a knife-edge as the king waited for news from far away, wanting to know what had happened to his troops and trying to decide what to do next.

    Not only did he ask them about what would happen in the future, but he also consulted them on possible courses of action. Should the Assyrian army go to war? Should the king send a messenger to make peace? Asking the opinion of the gods would have helped him feel more confident in his next steps.

    The Babylonians did not have elections. But that did not mean the king could do whatever he wanted. It was important for his public image to have the gods onside, as well as for his own reassurance.

    Whenever a powerful official was appointed, the entrails would be read to ensure the gods approved. The head of the army, high priests and other important positions were all subject to this requirement. On one occasion, even the choice of crown prince – and hence the future king of Assyria – was put to this test.

    Interpreting the entrails was held to almost scientific standards of exactitude. Diviners worked in pairs or groups of up to 11, checking each other’s work to make sure they got it right. This was not a vague or woolly process, but a real attempt to ensure “accuracy” that could not be manipulated to simply come up with the answer that the king wanted to hear.

    Modern forecasting

    We all want to know what the future has in store, and have come up with ingenious ways of trying to find out, from opinion polls and data modelling to Paul the octopus, who developed a reputation for picking the winners of football matches during the 2010 World Cup. But are our methods really any better than looking inside a sheep?

    As all investors are warned, past performance does not guarantee future results. Yet the only data we have to inform our predictions comes from the past, and most of our models can’t take into account “unknown unknowns”.

    As many experts have found, predicting the future is a difficult business: opinion polls can lie and people change their minds, while economists have often been blindsided by a sudden crash.




    Read more:
    Harris nudges ahead of Trump in the polls – but could the economy prove her downfall?


    A Babylonian clay liver used for divination in Mesopotamia from 2050–1750 BC.
    Science Museum Group Collection, CC BY-NC-ND

    Since liver divination only answers “yes” or “no”, it is going to be right 50% of the time just through the law of averages. Despite its randomness, its success rate may well have seemed convincing at the time.

    And when we trust the authority of the source, it’s easy to find a way to explain away a wrong result – the prediction got halfway there, answered a different question, or would have been right if x hadn’t happened.

    We shouldn’t be blind to the weaknesses of our own methods. We are often wrong, and the Babylonians could sometimes be right.

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

    ref. Why ancient Mesopotamians would have used a sheep’s liver to predict Donald Trump’s election odds – https://theconversation.com/why-ancient-mesopotamians-would-have-used-a-sheeps-liver-to-predict-donald-trumps-election-odds-242251

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Rust Belt voters aren’t all white, but election coverage of the region often ignores the concerns of people of color there

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Christabel Devadoss, Assistant Professor in Global Studies and Human Geography, Middle Tennessee State University

    Wisconsin voters lining up to cast their ballots in the 2022 midterm election, Oct. 25, 2022, in Milwaukee. Scott Olson/Getty Images

    Every four years, national media turn their attention to the Rust Belt, a term that describes Midwestern industrial and manufacturing states whose economies were decimated by the decline of those industries in the 1970s. This region contains the coveted states of Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.

    Many rural parts of these states have a majority of white residents. The broader Rust Belt, however, also has long and important Black and Indigenous histories and contains some of the nation’s fastest-growing minority populations – in particular Latino, Arab and Asian communities.

    Yet when reporters descend on the rural Rust Belt to understand voters, the people they talk to are almost exclusively white.

    I am a geographer who studies the experiences of communities of color in the rural Rust Belt. Rural is a relative term, but when it comes to policy research, it usually refers to nonmetropolitan areas. From 2021 to 2023, I interviewed 35 people who live or lived in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Indiana and identified as Black, Indigenous or people of color.

    I found that these Rust Belt residents have pressing concerns of political importance. Some of these issues are shared by white residents – and, as such, are well documented. But Rust Belt residents of color have additional problems that politicians and the media have long overlooked.

    Local impacts

    My interviewees described typical rural Rust Belt struggles.

    They complained of limited internet access, few or no grocery stores, declining roads and other infrastructure-related challenges. Jobs and opportunities for career advancement were scarce in their communities, while death and suicide rates were high.

    These difficulties are faced by white Rust Belt residents as well. But other struggles they mentioned are less often considered part of the rural experience.

    They described feeling socially isolated and discriminated against at work and school. Many had experienced racial or ethnic profiling by potential employers and police and been verbally harassed.

    One man, Miguel, who worked in carpentry, said his colleagues openly used racial slurs against him.

    “I was putting away some boxes, and they said, ‘Oh that’s because you w–backs are good at packing things in trucks,’” he told me.

    All names used here are pseudonyms; research ethics require me to protect the identity of my subjects.

    “A lot gets brushed under the rug,” said Bao, a Vietnamese American woman whose father also works in a hostile environment. “All the management folks are white,” so “if you speak up, you lose your job or are ignored.”

    These comments conveyed an overall sense of not “belonging.”

    As one woman from rural Pennsylvania explained, people regularly ask her, “No, really, where you from?”

    “They want to hear ‘Asian’ or ‘Korean,’” she said. “It’s very uncomfortable for me.”

    These racial tensions worsen during election periods. Some people I interviewed reported having been turned away or threatened at voting stations – harassment they attributed to their religious, cultural and political backgrounds, or the way they looked.

    Many Rust Belt voters of color already lack political power because they live in racially gerrymandered districts. When news coverage of the region ignores their voices, too, it compounds that feeling of not belonging.

    In 2017, The Washington Post visited the small town of Jefferson, Ohio, in Ashtabula County, to interview voters described as “rural Americans who fear they’re being forgotten” after Donald Trump’s election. Their coverage focused almost exclusively on white residents.

    “How did you go to Ashtabula County and not see Black people?” asked Belle, a resident who identified as African American.

    Not always Republican

    In the past three presidential elections, Ashtabula County has followed state trends: It backed Obama in 2008 and 2012, then voted for Trump in 2016 and 2020.

    Trump won Ashtabula with 60% of the vote in 2020. That’s 26,890 votes, which means that 16,497 people still voted for Democrat Joe Biden. In the years since, Ashtabula County residents have also voted with the state in two Democratic-backed initiatives: to protect abortion rights and legalize marijuana.

    In other words, just because a state or district backs a Republican for president doesn’t mean everyone is Republican, or that Republican voters always vote the party line. They can split their votes, and have.

    Even Ohio’s largely Republican delegation in the House of Representatives is misleading about the state’s political makeup. Ohio is a heavily gerrymandered state where voting districts have been drawn to benefit Republican candidates.

    U.S. Senate elections show more diversity in Ohio’s voting base.

    In 2018, Democrat Sen. Sherrod Brown won 53% of all votes in Ohio, including 51% of those cast in Ashtabula County. Four years later, both the state and Ashtabula County picked Republican JD Vance over Democrat Tim Ryan to replace the outgoing Republican Sen. Rob Portman.

    Why it matters

    In September 2024, Vance – now Trump’s vice presidential running mate – claimed that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, were kidnapping and eating cats and dogs. After Trump echoed that false claim on the debate stage, the city got 30-plus bomb threats and other threats of violence, and had to close multiple schools.

    During the pandemic, Trump’s derogatory branding of COVID-19 as the “Chinese virus” and “Kung Flu” led to increased hate crimes against immigrants and people of color.

    In my interviews, several participants mentioned how local restaurants and stores owned by Asian Americans had been vandalized. One woman, Lanh, who lived outside Springfield, said her favorite restaurant had to close.

    “They started vandalizing the restaurant, writing graffiti and set the restaurant on fire,” she said.

    The owners were from Thailand, but, Lanh said, the vandals “thought they were Chinese. Folks around the local community like my parents didn’t feel safe,” she added. “I didn’t feel safe.”

    Hateful political rhetoric is known to increase hate crimes against immigrants and people of color.

    When the Rust Belt is stereotyped as red and white, such experiences go unheard.

    So do some good news stories.

    The emergence of Black-owned bee farms in northeast Ohio, for instance, is one small example in a host of businesses started by people of color. Together, they are helping to boost the region’s beleaguered economy, much as Haitian immigrants have been fueling Springfield’s growth.

    Rural America is nuanced

    Nationwide, 24% of rural Americans identified as people of color in the 2020 census.

    That figure is probably low because the census tends to undercount nonwhite respondents – a problem that was particularly evident in 2020. Even so, that’s a quarter of rural residents who don’t fit the national stereotype of rural America.

    Rural America is white and Republican. It’s also trans, queer, Black, Hispanic, Indigenous, South Asian, Democratic and much more. Even if some are Republican, they still aren’t the rural Rust Belt Republicans portrayed in the national media.

    Ignoring these nuances reinforces stereotypes that the rural Rust Belt is the exclusive domain of white conservativism. But this region isn’t now, and never has been, simply red and white.

    Christabel Devadoss received funding from the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS).

    ref. Rust Belt voters aren’t all white, but election coverage of the region often ignores the concerns of people of color there – https://theconversation.com/rust-belt-voters-arent-all-white-but-election-coverage-of-the-region-often-ignores-the-concerns-of-people-of-color-there-224466

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Independent voters think for themselves and stay out of politics – 3 essential reads

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Jeff Inglis, Politics + Society Editor, The Conversation US

    Jessie Harris, left, a registered independent voter in South Carolina, casts a ballot in February 2024. Joe Lamberti for The Washington Post via Getty Images

    In the 2024 election, the two major-party campaigns and many news reporters are spending a lot of time talking about independent voters – those who are neither aligned with the Republican Party nor the Democratic Party. Despite the power that political independents are anticipated to have over the election results, there’s a lot that remains unknown about this group.

    The Conversation U.S. has published several articles about what is known, and why it’s hard to know much more. Here are selections from some of those articles:

    1. How many independent voters are there?

    It’s very hard to answer that question, wrote Thom Reilly, a professor of public affairs at Arizona State University. Part of the problem is figuring out how to define who independent voters are. Surveys often ask people if they are Republicans, Democrats or independents, and if they answer that they are independents, the surveys ask how strongly they might lean toward one party or the other. But this muddies the waters of political identity, Reilly wrote:

    It’s possible that some voters identify as independent but really just have weaker political preferences than party die-hards, while still maintaining some loyalty to one party or the other. And some independent voters change their political identification from one cycle to another. That makes it hard to tell who an independent voter is and how many of them exist.”

    Those changing alignments, Reilly wrote, “may require scholars, media outlets and the public to shift their traditional two-party view of American politics.”




    Read more:
    Why is it so hard to know how many independent voters there are?


    2. Independent voters think for themselves

    Independent voters exhibit a key quality that most Americans expect of their fellow citizens: They base their views on their life experiences.

    Unfortunately, as politics scholars Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz at the University of Maryland and Joshua J. Dyck at UMass Lowell explained, this is an attribute almost unique to political independents:

    In contrast, Democrats’ and Republicans’ ideas of what problems deserve government attention and how to solve them are much less likely to be based on their own life experiences, and instead simply mirror the information they have gained from leading political figures on social media, on cable news networks or through other partisan information outlets.”

    For instance, independents living in neighborhoods with high levels of gun violence are far more likely to report being concerned about gun violence than independents who live in safer areas. But, Pearson-Merkowitz and Dyck wrote,

    “for Democrats and Republicans, there is no relationship between where they live and their level of concern about gun violence: Whether they live in a relatively dangerous community or a relatively safe one, their views on gun violence reflect their party’s messages on the issue.”




    Read more:
    Politics is still both local and personal – but only for independents, not for Democrats or Republicans


    3. Independents less likely to engage in any politics

    Research into independents’ political activity finds them tending to stay away from politics, wrote Julio Borquez, a political science scholar at the University of Michigan-Dearborn:

    “Perhaps most importantly, pure independent voters are simply less likely to vote than those who express any degree of partisan attachment. In the 2020 presidential election, reported turnout among pure independents was about 20 percentage points lower than turnout among other voters, including independents who lean toward a party.”

    Research has found members of this group “tend to be genuinely put off by partisan conflict and party labels,” Borquez wrote. Different studies have found, for instance, that they prefer photos of neighborhoods that did not show political yard signs over the same photos of the same neighborhoods with homes displaying political yard signs. And they pay less attention to campaigns and partisan social media than people with partisan affiliations.

    So they are indeed independent – but the question remains whether they will be uninvolved in 2024 or motivated to cast their ballots and make their views known.




    Read more:
    Independent voters are few in number, influential in close elections – and hard for campaigns to reach


    ref. Independent voters think for themselves and stay out of politics – 3 essential reads – https://theconversation.com/independent-voters-think-for-themselves-and-stay-out-of-politics-3-essential-reads-241193

    MIL OSI – Global Reports