Category: Sport and recreation

  • MIL-OSI: Rapsodo Partners with TruGolf’s E6 APEX to Enhance Simulated Golf, Adding Improved Player Analysis and Practice Capabilities

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ST. LOUIS, Feb. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Rapsodo, the leading developer of golf, baseball and softball ball-flight monitors and simulators, today announces compatibility with TruGolf’s E6 APEX. The new partnership makes the software available for use with the Mobile Launch Monitor 2 Pro (MLM2PRO), expanding simulation capabilities for premium MLM2PRO members.

    While current Rapsodo MLM2PRO premium members can access trials of E6 software, this new partnership offers Rapsodo members the option to upgrade to a yearly membership. There are three annual membership tiers to choose from – Play Suite ($300), Improve Suite ($150) or Enjoy Suite ($450).

    • The Play Suite uses AI and machine learning technology to recreate nearly any course in the world in industry-leading 4K quality. It features a multiplayer stroke play, online statistic tracking and AI commentary on over 1,500 Courses, with more releasing throughout the year.
    • The Improve Suite serves as a player’s secret tool for long-term improvement, featuring three modes: comprehensive practice range, club fitting and bag mapping. Members can improve their on-course strategy or use the guided skills challenges to enhance certain aspects of their game.
    • The Enjoy Suite combines all the capabilities of the Improve and Play suites, delivering the ultimate user experience.

    “E6 APEX is at the forefront of golf gamification and club analysis, and we’re thrilled to offer compatibility with the software on the MLM2PRO,” said Pete Gibbons, director of golf at Rapsodo. “Golfers are consistently looking for ways to improve their game and lower their scores, and as a sports technology company, we’re constantly looking for the newest technology that can enhance our user’s experience and improve their performance. The integration of TruGolf’s E6 APEX expands our product offerings so athletes at every level can experience real-life conditions and grow their skills during practice rounds and skills games.”

    Today’s announcement follows a recent simulation update to the MLM2PRO that enhanced the quality of graphics and added junior tee locations to Rapsodo simulated courses, which improved the game experience and raised the bar on family-friendly fun. Each of these updates signifies Rapsodo’s commitment to regularly expanding and improving its golf technology.

    Rapsodo MLM2PRO premium members can purchase access to TruGolf’s E6 Apex here for an additional yearly fee. Once downloaded, users can connect the software to their Rapsodo MLM2PRO through a simple integration.

    A media kit with images of TruGolf’s E6 Apex can be found here.

    Rapsodo products are available for purchase on Rapsodo.com.

    About Rapsodo
    Rapsodo defies limits with affordable, professional-grade technology to enhance the way athletes play across the world. Used by MLB teams, NCAA Division I Champions, and elite PGA coaches, Rapsodo technology has earned multiple MyGolfSpy’s Best Of Golf Awards and the Official Player Development Partner of USA Baseball, affirming Rapsodo’s leadership in golf, baseball, and softball tech. Do what you didn’t think was possible. Play Without Limits. Play with Rapsodo. Discover more at Rapsodo.com.

    Media Contact:
    Matt Greenfield
    Uproar by Moburst for Rapsodo
    matthew.greenfield@moburst.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: IndyKite Launches AI Control Suite to Redefine AI Security

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — IndyKite, a pioneer in data trust and AI enablement, today announced the launch of its AI Control Suite, a comprehensive set of capabilities designed to secure and govern AI-driven data operations.

    With this launch, IndyKite builds on its data trust and control platform capabilities, to bring three new products to market:

    • RagProtect ensures that only authorized users and applications can access specific data during the retrieval process.
    • AgentControl provides contextual, fine-grained authorization for agentic AI.
    • TrustScore allows the enterprise to score the risk of their data for trusted use in authorization decisions and query parameters.

    This new suite empowers enterprises to confidently harness AI while mitigating risks associated with data misuse and unauthorized data access.

    The introduction of the AI Control Suite represents a significant leap forward in enabling trust and secure control in AI-powered systems. With a focus on delivering fine-grained data control, contextual data governance, and secure data mobilization, IndyKite addresses some of the most pressing challenges enterprises face as they scale AI initiatives.

    “AI is transforming industries at an unprecedented pace, but enterprises need tools that provide not just innovation but also control and trust,” said Lasse Andresen, CEO of IndyKite. “With the AI Control Suite, we’re equipping businesses with the ability to secure data workflows, govern AI operations, and unlock the full potential of AI while safeguarding their most critical assets.”

    Andresen is former CEO and co-founder of ForgeRock, an identity and access management (IAM) solution provider and led the company through the startup phase to become an industry leader, with a $2.8 billion valuation at IPO. He is also a former CTO of Sun Microsystems.

    Driving innovation and trust in the AI era

    Enterprises increasingly recognize the need for robust control mechanisms in AI adoption, and IndyKite’s solutions uniquely combine advanced data governance, trust, and enablement to provide this foundation. With its identity-powered approach, IndyKite enables organizations to mobilize data securely and in compliance with regulatory requirements, delivering more efficient operations and bringing smarter, contextually-relevant products and applications to market.

    With the IndyKite Platform, businesses can use data across the following use cases:

    • Data capture and pipelines: Capturing both structured and unstructured data from across the organization and partner network. Surfacing full understanding of data lineage, driving confidence in its use, traceability and auditability.
    • Protecting retrieval-augmented generation (RAG): Providing fine-grained authorization to secure data access in the correct context, preventing unauthorized use and data leaks during AI driven interactions.
    • Agentic access control: Providing fine-grained authorization to AI agents, preventing unauthorized data access in autonomous workflows.
    • Proactive Prompt Defense: Real-time validation, entitlement checks, and threat detection at the prompt level to prevent unauthorized access, and data leakage before execution.
    • Governing data for AI use: Delivering unparalleled data quality and trust with provenance and specialized metadata, driving compliant use of data and enabling organizations to use AI with confidence.

    Industry Reaction

    The launch of the AI Control Suite has already garnered interest from enterprise leaders seeking to align their AI strategies with effective security and governance requirements.

    Emil Eifrem, CEO and founder of Neo4j said, “AI’s success depends on trust—trust in data, governance, and security. Enterprises need solutions that not only accelerate AI but ensure its responsible use by securing and mobilizing high-quality data at scale.”

    IndyKite recently joined Project CAMARA, a Linux Foundation open source community addressing telco industry API interoperability, and partnered with Deutsche Telekom to provide richer services to customers. It also has acquired 3Edges, a relationship-based dynamic authorization tool that authorizes access based on relationships between subjects, objects and actions, via graph database technology.

    About IndyKite

    IndyKite is transforming enterprise data management with identity-centric, graph-powered solutions that enable organizations to build trust in their data and AI systems. By delivering enhanced data visibility, governance, and control, IndyKite empowers enterprises to unlock the value of their data for secure and innovative applications.

    The company has raised a total of $10.5 million in pre-seed and seed financing. Investors include Alliance Ventures, Molten Ventures and SpeedInvest. Advisors to the company include Scott McNealy, Sun Microsystems co-founder.

    For more information, visit www.indykite.com.

    Media Contact

    Madi Olivé
    UPRAISE Marketing + Public Relations for IndyKite
    415.397.7600, indykite@upraisepr.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Consultation for Central Lancashire Local Plan Live on Monday 24 February

    Source: City of Preston

    Following the release of the Publication version of the Central Lancashire Local Plan (CLLP) in January, consultation will go live on Monday, 24 February from 2pm concluding on Monday, 14 April at 11.59pm. The consultation will provide stakeholders and the public to provide feedback on the new local plan, before it’s submitted to the Secretary of State in Summer 2025.

    The CLLP is a strategic plan for the area of Chorley, South Ribble and Preston and sets out the three councils’ approach to managing and delivering development (residential, employment and other infrastructure) and protecting the environment for the three districts between 2023 and 2041.

    It is an important strategy which supports delivery of corporate ambitions and objectives, such as provision of affordable housing, tackling health and social inequalities and tackling the climate emergency.

    The consultation will include a series of in-person events across Preston, Chorley, and South Ribble, along with the option to complete the online survey Citizen Space – Central Lancashire Local Plan. The events start on Monday 24 February and are being held across each Borough, with anyone welcome to attend whichever is most convenient to them.

    Councillor Amber Afzal, Cabinet Member for Planning and Regulation, said:

    “This phase of the Central Lancashire Local Plan is crucial in shaping Preston’s future, aligning with the City Council’s vision for a growing, thriving community.

    “Our focus is on delivering the right types of homes, including more affordable housing, to help tackle health and social inequalities.

    “We encourage residents, businesses, and stakeholders to get involved and share their feedback through the consultation.”

    Face-to-face events in Preston

    • Wednesday 26 February, Preston Markets, 11am to 2pm
    • Wednesday 5 March, UCLan Cottam Campus, 3pm to 6om
    • Thursday 6 March, Grimsargh Village Hall, 3.30pm to 6.30pm
    • Thursday 13 March, Preston Town Hall, 3pm to 7pm
    • Thursday 20 March, Fulwood Methodist Church, 3pm to 7pm

    Map address for face to face events

    Preston Markets, Earl Street, Preston, PR1 2JA.
    UCLan Sports Arena, Tom Benson Way, Cottam, Preston, PR2 1SG.
    Grimsargh Village Hall, Preston Road, Grimsargh, Preston PR2 5JS.
    Preston Town Hall, Lancaster Road, PR1 2RL.
    Fulwood Methodist Church, Watling Street Road, Fulwood, Preston PR2 8EA.

    More information

    Central Lancashire Local Plan

    For full details of the plan see Frequently Asked Questions: FAQs – Central Lancashire Local Plan.

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

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Matador Technologies Provides Updates on Recent Conference Attendance and Upcoming Industry Engagements

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, Feb. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Matador Technologies Inc. (“Matador” or the “Company”) (TSXV: MATA) announces its recent participation in key industry events and provides updates on upcoming engagements.

    Max & Stacy’s Bitcoin Golf Invitational – El Salvador

    Matador recently attended Max & Stacy’s Bitcoin Golf Invitational in El Salvador, an industry event focused on Bitcoin and blockchain developments. The conference facilitated discussions with industry participants, investors, and other stakeholders relevant to Matador’s Bitcoin treasury strategy.

    The Inaugural Crypto Ball – Washington, D.C.

    On January 17, Matador attended the inaugural Crypto Ball at the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium in Washington, D.C. Hosted by BTC Inc. and co-hosted by Stand With Crypto, Exodus, Anchorage Digital, and Kraken. The event convened industry participants, policy stakeholders, and corporate sponsors, providing insights into evolving regulatory and market dynamics.

    AlphaNorth Capital Event – Bahamas

    On January 18-19, Matador participated in the AlphaNorth Capital Event in the Bahamas, hosted by Capital Event Management. The event facilitated meetings with investment professionals and discussions on emerging industry trends.

    Upcoming Industry Engagements

    AlphaNorth Capital Event – Whistler, Canada

    Matador will attend the 15th Annual Whistler Capital Event from February 21–23, 2025, hosted by Capital Event Management. The event will bring together companies and investment professionals for meetings and discussions on market developments.

    The 8th Annual Growth Conference – Toronto, Canada

    Matador will participate in the 8th Annual Growth Conference from March 3–6, 2025, hosted by Centurion One Capital at the Four Seasons Hotel in Toronto. The conference will feature company presentations, panel discussions, and networking sessions with investors and industry professionals.

    PDAC Conference – Toronto

    Matador will also participate in the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) Conference in March 2025. PDAC is a global industry event focused on mineral exploration and mining, providing an opportunity to discuss the intersection of blockchain technology with traditional asset classes.

    Matador looks forward to leveraging these events to foster relationships with institutional investors, gain insights into emerging market trends, and explore potential partnerships.

    For additional information, please contact:

    Media Contact:
    Sunny Ray
    President
    Email: sunny@matador.network

    Phone: 647-932-2668

    About Matador Technologies Inc.
    Matador Technologies Inc. is a digital gold platform leveraging blockchain technology to digitize real-world assets like gold. Focused on building innovative financial solutions, Matador is at the forefront of integrating blockchain technology to preserve and grow value. Matador’s digital gold platform aims to democratize the gold buying experience, combining the best of modern technology and time-proven assets, to create an app that will allow users to buy, sell, and store gold 24/7 in a fun and engaging way.

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information

    NEITHER THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATION SERVICES PROVIDER (AS THAT TERM IS DEFINED IN THE POLICIES OF THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE) ACCEPTS RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS RELEASE.

    This news release does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities in any jurisdiction.

    Forward Looking Statements – Certain information set forth in this news release may contain forward-looking statements that involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties, including risks associated with the implementation of the Company’s treasury management strategy and the launch of its mobile application as currently proposed or at all. These forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyond the control of the Company, including with respect to the potential acquisition of Bitcoin and/or US dollars, the pricing of such acquisitions and the timing of future operations. Readers are cautioned that the assumptions used in the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Releases January 2025 Transparency Report, Showcasing Market Growth and Innovation

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, Feb. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget, the leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company, has released its January 2025 Transparency Report, highlighting a dynamic start to the year marked by significant growth in trading volumes, platform engagement, and ecosystem innovation.

    Bitget expanded the BGB ecosystem through strategic initiatives, including launching a BGB liquidity pool on Uniswap and a $1.1 million liquidity pool on Bulbaswap following its integration with Morph Chain. These efforts enhance cross-chain compatibility and deepen liquidity, positioning BGB as a strong pillar of the Bitget ecosystem. Additionally, Bitget Research shared a report on 20% of Gen Z and Gen Alpha respondents who are open to incorporating crypto into pension plans, signaling a shift in long-term financial planning preferences toward digital assets.

    January saw the introduction of multiple platform enhancements. Bitget TraderPro Season 4 launched with a 10,000 USDT Grand Prize, enabling traders to test strategies and optimize returns. The HodlerYield service debuted, allowing users to earn passive income by holding USDE and weETH. Bitget Seed, an AI-powered algorithm, was unveiled to identify early-stage Web3 projects, while a strategic integration with Zen streamlined crypto payments across 11 fiat currencies. Bitget also became the first centralized exchange to offer TAO staking, expanding opportunities for users to earn rewards.

    Bitget Wallet strengthened its offerings with a $1 million airdrop for BGB holders, exclusive collaborations with Bitrefill for crypto-powered gift cards, and AI Agent Trading Zone features. The wallet’s limit order support on Base and Solana chains further enhances automated trading capabilities.

    Global engagement efforts included participation in the Crypto XR event in Auxerre, France, attended by over 3,000 enthusiasts, and New Year’s meetups in the Philippines, Vietnam, Russia, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Kenya, and other regions. These events fostered deeper connections with users and showcased Bitget’s expanding global footprint.

    Bitget’s January 2025 achievements build on its 2024 momentum, establishing the platform as a top-tier exchange focusing on security, innovation, and accessibility. As the crypto landscape evolves, Bitget remains poised to drive adoption through cutting-edge solutions and strategic partnerships, supporting users in navigating the opportunities and complexities of the digital asset era.

    For the full January 2025 transparency report, visit here.

    About Bitget

    Established in 2018, Bitget is the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company. Serving over 100 million users in 150+ countries and regions, the Bitget exchange is committed to helping users trade smarter with its pioneering copy trading feature and other trading solutions, while offering real-time access to Bitcoin priceEthereum price, and other cryptocurrency prices. Formerly known as BitKeep, Bitget Wallet is a world-class multi-chain crypto wallet that offers an array of comprehensive Web3 solutions and features including wallet functionality, token swap, NFT Marketplace, DApp browser, and more.

    Bitget is at the forefront of driving crypto adoption through strategic partnerships, such as its role as the Official Crypto Partner of the World’s Top Football League, LALIGA, in EASTERN, SEA and LATAM markets, as well as a global partner of Turkish National athletes Buse Tosun Çavuşoğlu (Wrestling world champion), Samet Gümüş (Boxing gold medalist) and İlkin Aydın (Volleyball national team), to inspire the global community to embrace the future of cryptocurrency.

    For more information, visit: WebsiteTwitterTelegramLinkedInDiscordBitget Wallet

    For media inquiries, please contact: media@bitget.com

    Risk Warning: Digital asset prices are subject to fluctuation and may experience significant volatility. Investors are advised to only allocate funds they can afford to lose. The value of any investment may be impacted, and there is a possibility that financial objectives may not be met, nor the principal investment recovered. Independent financial advice should always be sought, and personal financial experience and standing carefully considered. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Bitget accepts no liability for any potential losses incurred. Nothing contained herein should be construed as financial advice. For further information, please refer to our Terms of Use.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/9f7f064f-8f44-40ae-9096-c738e009aaa8

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Major £3 million refurbishment to Porchester Centre, housing London’s oldest spa | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

    Porchester Centre, built in the 1920s and housing London’s oldest spa has undergone a major £3 million refurbishment to greatly improve its facilities and to allow more residents and visitors to enjoy the centre.

    An iconic Grade 2* listed building which is operated by the council’s leisure partner Everyone Active, Porchester Centre houses a 30m swimming pool, two workout studios hosting a number of classes, a main gym across three levels, and now a new women-only gym. Plus, all the spa facilities which include two steam rooms, a sauna, cold showers and three different Turkish baths.

    One of the areas of major refurbishment has been within the gym, where seven new pieces of equipment have been added following customer feedback, with more strength equipment added such as leg curl and hip extension machines. A new gym has also been added to the centre – a women-only space where females can exercise in a space where they may feel more comfortable.

    In the main swimming pool, a new heat retaining pool cover has been installed to improve the building’s energy efficiency, the ceiling has been strengthened to future proof it for years to come, and the walls and ceilings as part of the balcony area have been repainted – still in keeping with the style of the 1920s built pool. The significant energy conservation measures including installing an air source heat pump will result in 60% carbon dioxide savings each year.

    The main workout studio has also seen new flooring, walls, and mirrors installed – completely transforming its aesthetic, plus all the equipment in the room has been upgraded and added to.

    These studio improvements have meant an increase in studio capacity from 14 to 30 spaces, and classes going from 49 to 54 classes per week due to the increase in variety of classes that can now be offered. These include new women-only classes for those who suffer from depression and other mental health issues, and new boxing classes utilising the new equipment.

    Cabinet Member for Communities, Councillor Cara Sanquest, said:

    Porchester Centre is an iconic piece of Westminster, and this major refurbishment will provide more facilities and opportunities for residents from all our communities to become and stay active.

    I’m especially proud of the new women-only gym and classes that we’ve been able to add, to encourage more women and girls to use our leisure facilities in spaces they feel comfortable in.

    I also want to highlight a range of opportunities available for our older residents including: “Begin to Gym” in association with Open Age, getting over 55s back into the gym or the first time after a break; senior swim sessions three times a week; a range of classes from Qi-Jong to Zumba specifically for this cohort; and much more.

    We are also providing 150 hours of free or low-cost classes for our residents every week as part of the Neighbourhood Sports Programme.

    The ActiveWestminster Discount Card – ActiveWestminster is free for all residents, providing fantastic discounts and benefits available for all our residents and children and young people who live or study in Westminster.

    You can find more information about Porchester Centre at Porchester Leisure Centre | Gym, Swim, Fitness Classes | Everyone Active. You can also contact the centre directly on 02073133858 or  Porchesterspainfo@everyoneactive.com.

    You can find out more about the Neighbourhood Sports Club Programme which provides up to 150 hours of free or low-cost activities for people who live, work or study in Westminster each week at Neighbourhood Sports Club Programme – ActiveWestminster

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Enhance Strengths and Thrive through Innovation and Connectivity (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Commissioner of Customs and Excise, Mr Chan Tsz-tat, chaired Customs’ 2024 year-end press conference held at the Customs Headquarters Building today (February 18) to review the department’s law enforcement results and sustainability in the provision of trade and clearance facilitation during the year. Mr Chan also outlined that, while carrying on its fine tradition of providing simple and efficient customs clearance that makes Hong Kong a trading and logistic hub for different sectors, the department will actively adopt new technology, adjust enforcement strategies and reinforce collaboration with other customs administrations to enhance enforcement efficiency. Hong Kong Customs will continue its efforts to strengthen and uphold its leading role in customs affairs and combat cross-boundary crimes in the Asia-Pacific region.  

    Overall enforcement situation
    ———————————
     
         In 2024, a total of 31 242 cases were detected, an increase of 63 per cent from the 2023 figure. About 68 per cent of the cases are related to illicit cigarettes, followed by cases related to dangerous drugs and intellectual property rights infringement.

    Illicit cigarettes
    ——————
     
         On the anti-illicit cigarette operation front, the number of detected cases in 2024 increased by 80 per cent to 21 284 cases from 2023, with 614 million cigarettes seized, representing a 6 per cent drop as compared to the figure for 2023.

         The significant increase in the number of illicit cigarette cases stemmed from a huge surge in cases involving inbound persons bringing in cigarettes exceeding the duty-free concessions by imposing a penalty on offences compoundable. Such cases rocketed by 94 per cent to 19 072 cases from 2023. Moreover, 40 large-scale illicit cigarette smuggling cases were detected last year, which was the same as 2023.

         In addition, 2 451 cases involving alternative smoking products, with seizures of over 12 million pieces of relevant products, including electronic cigarettes and heat-not burn products, and 2 255 arrestees in total, were detected last year.
     
    Dangerous drugs
    ——————-
     
         In 2024, 1 363 drug cases were detected, which was about the same as the 2023 figure. A total seizure of about 6.3 tonnes of drugs was made, representing a drop of 33 per cent from 2023.

         The five major drug seizures in order of quantity were cannabis (2 874.8 kilograms, a 22 per cent increase), ketamine (1 202.8kg, a 34 per cent decrease), methamphetamine (“Ice”) (1 111.7kg, a 50 per cent decrease), cocaine (711.4kg, a 64 per cent decrease) and MDMA (Ecstasy) (149.6kg, a 3 per cent decrease) compared to the figure for 2023.

         Customs noticed that drug syndicates resume to traffic drugs by exploiting inbound air passengers, and the number of such cases and seizure quantity showed a noticeable upward trend, with 113 relevant cases detected and 988kg drugs seized last year, representing an increase of 38 per cent and a 1.9-fold increase as compared to figures for 2023. Moreover, etomidate (the main ingredient of “space oil drug”) was put under control of the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance on February 14, and Customs has stepped up enforcement efforts to combat the dangerous drug on various fronts.
          
    Smuggling
    ————
     
         A total of 233 smuggling cases with a seizure value of $4.340 billion in total were detected last year, representing an increase of 5 per cent and 37 per cent from 2023 respectively.
          
         Smuggling syndicates still mainly conduct smuggling activities by sea. Apart from making use of barges, speedboats and fishing vessels, Hong Kong Customs also found criminals using river trade vessels to smuggle large amounts of goods to nearby Mainland cities and Macao, or even adopting more circuitous routes by shipping goods overseas and then re-exporting them to the Mainland to evade the department’s detection.

    Money laundering
    ——————–
     
         Customs last year detected eight money laundering cases with $19 billion involved.
     
    Intellectual property rights
    ——————————
     
         Customs detected 783 intellectual property rights infringement cases last year, representing an annual increase of 11 per cent. The seizure value of infringing items increased 7 per cent to around $309 million (4 million items) as compared to the figure for 2023.

         As for Internet infringement, 130 cases were detected, representing an increase of 29 per cent from 2023.

         Customs last year applied the “communication right” under the Copyright Ordinance for the first time to detect a case of unauthorised communication of live football matches to the public by a restaurant in the course of business.

    Consumer protection
    ————————

         Customs last year received 12 436 complaints regarding suspected cases of violating the Trade Descriptions Ordinance (TDO), a drop of 34 per cent from 2023. Among them, 11 601 complaints were handled:
     
    (i) Detailed investigations have been made on 7 492 complaints;
     
    (ii) The remaining 4 109 complaints have been closed since they were not in contravention of the TDO, or have been referred to other relevant departments or institutions for follow-up actions.
     
         There were 3 003 complaints involving fitness services last year, accounting for 47 per cent of the total number of complaints regarding services and an increase of 14-fold from 2023. This was mainly due to the announcement of business temporary closure of a chain fitness and beauty centre.

         Complaints on medicine shops involving quantities of unclear pricing units in selling ginseng and dried seafood, or Chinese medicine (also known as cases concerning catty, tael and mace) or sale of proprietary medicines slightly decreased to 497 cases in total, among which 86 percent were made by Mainland tourists. The department’s Quick Action Team has been deployed to handle and follow up with complaints by short-term visitors to Hong Kong, and 208 such complaints were handled last year, with 11 shop owners and staff arrested. Customs is also committed to conducting promotion and education through multiple channels, informing Mainland visitors about common unfair trade practices by medicine shops, deploying mobile promotion vehicles at popular tourist hotspots during festivals, conducting patrols with the Travel Industry Authority, and promoting compliance among traders.
     
    Clearance and trade facilitation
    ———————————–

         Customs has continued to facilitate clearance and trade and implement various related measures.
     
    (i) Since the full resumption of normal travel with the Mainland, the number of inbound and outbound passengers and vehicle trips at each control point was about 300 million and about 14.9 million. The number of inbound and outbound passengers has recovered to the number before the 2019 epidemic, while the number of vehicle trips has recovered to about 95 per cent. To further enhance clearance mode, Customs is actively participating in the redevelopment project of the boundary control point in Huanggang taken forward by the HKSAR Government and the Shenzhen Municipal Government, and will provide suggestions on the design and clearance mode of the boundary control point. Details are still under discussion.

    (ii) Based on the Smart Customs Blueprint, Customs has given full play to the advantages of innovative technologies, such as artificial intelligence, cloud computing and blockchain, and has introduced nine CT scanners that provide high-resolution three-dimensional scanning images and the function of automatically detecting contrabands, improving customs clearance efficiency and law enforcement capabilities. Also, the department is researching on the Customs Big Data Application System that could strengthen the capabilities to detect and crack down on smuggling and other crimes related to Customs through an integrated database.

    (iii) Customs actively expands the global network of the Hong Kong Authorized Economic Operator (AEO) Mutual Recognition Arrangement (MRA). Last year, Customs signed the AEO MRAs with the Bahrain and the South African Customs. The MRAs with Saudi Arabia and the Philippines Customs are expected to be signed in early 2025. As of now, there are a total of 16 MRAs ratified between Hong Kong Customs and other economies. AEO MRA Action Plans with the United Arab Emirates, Lao, Chilean and Peruvian Customs were also concluded last year, while the discussion about MRA with other countries along the Belt and Road Initiative is ongoing.

    (iv) Hong Kong Customs and the General Administration of Customs of the People’s Republic of China (GACC) actively enhanced the “Single Submission for Dual Declaration” Scheme. The Scheme was expanded to southbound cargo at all Shenzhen highway ports in November last year, and is planned to cover northbound cargo by the second quarter of 2025 or earlier. Under the Scheme, companies can synchronise cargo information declared with the system on the Mainland through the Hong Kong system, significantly reducing customs clearance time and possible declaration input errors. The Scheme is conducive to the design of system functions of the third phase of Hong Kong Trade Single Window.

    (v) Last year, Hong Kong and Mainland Customs actively extended the Single E-lock Scheme. As of December last year, the number of clearance points under the scheme has reached 93, including 66 in Guangdong, four in Hunan, six in Fujian, four in Macao and 13 in Hong Kong, providing the industries with more than 1 000 cross-boundary route options. Hong Kong Customs and the Nanning Customs are looking into extending the scheme to Guangxi.

    (vi) To cope with the rapid development of the global electronic commerce industry, Customs launched the Cross-boundary Express Cargo Clearance Facilitation Arrangement (CEFA), providing an innovative customs clearance model of “free flow through the first line and efficient control at the second line” to qualified logistics providers. A Memorandum of Understanding with an express courier company was signed at the end of last year, marking the official commencement of the CEFA. As of December last year, over 2 000 cargo vehicle trips and 470 000 declared goods were facilitated under the CEFA.
     
    Strengthen Mainland and international co-operation
    ———————————————————-
     
         Hong Kong Customs last year continued to reinforce connection with both the Mainland and the world, promoting two-way or multi-way communication and collaboration with different regions. These included meeting with the GACC on customs affairs and signing a co-operative arrangement about drug detector dogs; cohosting a conference on combating illicit cigarettes with the Australian authority; organising forums and workshops on combating money laundering and transnational organised crimes, and risk management and intelligence analysis with overseas law enforcement agencies.

         The co-operation between Hong Kong Customs and customs and enforcement agencies around the world has a long history, and the Customs Co-operative Arrangement (CCA) serves as the cornerstone for establishing and maintaining these co-operative relationships. As of last year, Hong Kong Customs signed the CCA with 31 customs authorities worldwide. Hong Kong Customs also signed a CCA with the Zakat, Tax and Customs Authority of Saudi Arabia and is actively seeking co-operation with other Middle East countries.

         Since assuming the office of the Vice-Chairperson for the Asia/Pacific (A/P) region of the World Customs Organization (WCO) in July last year, Hong Kong Customs has hosted a series of global or regional meetings and workshops, covering areas such as combatting illicit cigarettes, canine enforcement and anti-money laundering, and gathered representatives from around the world to communicate and exchange views on relevant issues, hence strengthening co-operation among law enforcement agencies in the region.
     
    Human resources
    ——————–
     
         On manpower recruitment, the department continued to adopt an active recruitment strategy last year, including participating in large-scale career fairs and organising seminars, promoting recruitment through social media platforms, visiting different tertiary institutions to facilitate on-the-spot applications. Mainland Hong Kong students are one of the target groups for Customs recruitment. The department held recruitment seminars on the Mainland in March last year and received more than 290 applications on the spot. Last year, more than 8 400 applications were received for the recruitment of Customs Inspectors, an increase of 12 per cent compared with 2023. About 9 600 applications were received for the recruitment of Customs Officers, representing an about 13 per cent increase compared with 2023. Last year, 82 Customs Inspectors and 355 Customs Officers were recruited. The department will continue its recruitment exercise to fill vacancies this year.

         To strengthen officers’ training in various professional aspects, co-operative Memoranda of Understanding were also signed with the National Academy of Governance, the Vocational Training Council and the University of Hong Kong last year.
     
    Youth development
    ———————-

         Customs continues with its commitment to youth development work. By end-2024, Customs YES recruited 7 935 individual members and 58 organisation members, and held over 490 activities. In addition, a 40-person Foot Drill and Flag Party of the Customs Youth Leader Corps, the first youth group under the Security Bureau to perform Chinese-style rifle foot drill, was set up last year.

    Future development
    ———————–
     
         Hong Kong Customs, as the Vice-Chairperson for the A/P region of the WCO, will continue to foster connection, and promote trade facilitation measures and development in the A/P region by continuing to organise large-scale meetings and workshops on multiple topics this year, including data strategies, e-commerce and Smart Customs.

         Furthermore, Hong Kong Customs has suggested introducing a duty stamp system to differentiate and crack down on duty-not-paid illicit cigarettes during a public consultation on tobacco control by the Health Bureau (HHB). A consultancy study on the duty stamp system was launched by Hong Kong Customs, the Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau and the HHB, and the report has been completed by end-2024. Affixing duty-paid labels on the packages of cigarettes is proposed. Based on the report, Hong Kong Customs will invite cigarette manufacturers to participate in a pilot scheme on the duty stamp system to assess the feasibility and technical issues concerning the stamp duty system, which will help with Customs’ improvement work and the implementation of the system in future. The pilot scheme is expected to be rolled out in mid-2025, while the system is expected to be officially launched within 2026. Hong Kong Customs will announce the details to the industry and the public in due course.
     
    Conclusion
    ————
     
         Concluding his briefing, Mr Chan pledged that the department will continue to leverage Hong Kong’s distinctive advantages of enjoying strong support of the motherland and being closely connected to the world under “one country, two systems” to consolidate Hong Kong’s status as an international financial, shipping and trade centre.      

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Union Minister Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya & Maharashtra CM, Sh. Devendra Fadnavis to Lead ‘Jai Shivaji Jai Bharat’ Padyatra in Pune, Maharashtra Tomorrow

    Source: Government of India

    Union Minister Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya & Maharashtra CM, Sh. Devendra Fadnavis to Lead ‘Jai Shivaji Jai Bharat’ Padyatra in Pune, Maharashtra Tomorrow

    Over 20,000 MY Bharat Youth Volunteers to Join Padyatra Honouring Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s Legacy

    Similar Padyatras to Take Place Simultaneously Across All 36 Districts of Maharashtra

    Posted On: 18 FEB 2025 2:40PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Minister of Youth Affairs & Sports and Labour & Employment, Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya and Chief Minister of Maharashtra, Shri Devendra Fadnavis will undertake ‘Jai Shivaji Jai Bharat’ Padyatra (foot march) along with 20,000 MY Bharat Youth Volunteers as part of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Jayanti on 19th February 2025 in Pune, Maharashtra. Union Minister of State for Youth Affairs & Sports, Smt. Raksha Khadse along with other State Ministers will also join the Padyatra.

    This landmark event will honour the enduring legacy of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, celebrating his leadership, valour, and courage that continues to inspire a Viksit Bharat.

    The Padyatra will cover a scenic route of approximately 4 kilometres, starting from COEP College Ground and culminating at Fergusson College. For the first time, a padyatra of this scale is being conducted simultaneously across the entire state in all 36 districts, bringing together youth, local leaders, and citizens.

    To amplify the spirit of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Jayanti, a series of pre-Padyatra engagements were organized across all districts of Maharashtra which included activities like:

    • Cleanliness drives at Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj statues & historical sites
    • Yoga sessions promoting physical & mental well-being
    • Guest lectures on the life & leadership of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj
    • Competitions & Cultural Programs Highlighting His Legacy

     

    ‘Jai Shivaji Jai Bharat’ Padyatra Pre-Event Activities in Maharashtra

    Image1: Cleaning Activities at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s Statue Site in Nashik District

    Image 2: Vibrant Cultural Processions in Nanded District

    Image 3: Festive Processions in Dharashiv District

    Image 4: Cleanliness Drive in Pune District

    Image 5: Play Acting on Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s life in Chhatrapati Sambhaji Nagar District

    Image 6: Lectures on Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s Legacy Delivered in Chandrapur District

    ‘Jai Shivaji Jai Bharat’ Padyatra in Pune, Maharashtra marks the sixth in series of 24 Padyatras planned to commemorate 75 years of the Constitution and celebrate India’s vibrant cultural diversity. Similar events will be organized across the country throughout the year, fostering patriotism and a deeper connection to India’s rich heritage.

    The Ministry invites the youth across India to participate by registering on the MY Bharat Portal (www.mybharat.gov.in) and joining this march of pride to honour Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s legacy and his vision for a united and self-reliant India.

    ******

    Himanshu Pathak

    (Release ID: 2104326) Visitor Counter : 67

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Advisory Committee on Sports Dispute Resolution of DoJ discusses development direction of sports dispute resolution with SF&OC (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         â€‹The Advisory Committee on Sports Dispute Resolution of the Department of Justice (DoJ), chaired by the Deputy Secretary for Justice, Dr Cheung Kwok-kwan, met with Vice-President of the Sports Federation & Olympic Committee of Hong Kong, China (SF&OC) Mr Kenneth Fok and the Honorary Secretary General of the SF&OC, Mr Edgar Yang, today (February 18) to discuss the direction of development of promoting sports dispute resolution in Hong Kong.
          
         At the meeting, both sides had in-depth exchanges on the latest developments in sports dispute resolution. They also discussed ways to encourage the sports industry to widely adopt alternative dispute resolution mechanisms for handling sports disputes in the spirit of embracing change and boldly pursuing reforms.
          
         Dr Cheung said that, with a view to enhancing the local sports dispute resolution landscape, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government has been actively engaging with key stakeholders and understands that the industry is keen to have a neutral, fair and efficient mechanism to handle and resolve sports disputes. As announced in “The Chief Executive’s 2024 Policy Address”, the Government will explore establishing a sports dispute resolution system to promote the sustainable development of sports in Hong Kong.
          
         Dr Cheung was pleased to learn that the SF&OC fully supports Hong Kong to leverage its institutional advantages in dispute resolution to develop sports dispute resolution, thereby further consolidating Hong Kong’s status as a centre for international legal and dispute resolution services in the Asia-Pacific region.
          
         He said that the Government and the Advisory Committee are carrying out the preparatory work for a pilot scheme on sports dispute resolution at full steam. He sincerely thanked the SF&OC for its valuable advice on the implementation of the pilot scheme, especially regarding the specific requirements for selecting dispute resolution institutions, the fields of disputes suitable for resolution through mediation or arbitration, and the fee structure. The two sides also exchanged views on the potential for future collaboration, including promoting awareness and providing education to national sports associations and local athletes on the use of alternative dispute resolution in handling sports disputes, as well as encouraging retired athletes to participate in sports dispute mediator and arbitrator training.
          
         Dr Cheung said that the Advisory Committee will continue to actively engage with major stakeholders, gathering and listening to feedback from all sectors of the community, with a view to formulating a specific mechanism and arrangement for the pilot scheme. He expressed hope that the pilot scheme will be launched within this year to promote the wider use of sports dispute resolution in Hong Kong.         

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Africa: NBA Africa and Safaricom’s M-Pesa Launch League’s Most Expansive Youth Development Program in East Africa to Date

    Source: Africa Press Organisation – English (2) – Report:

    NAIROBI, Kenya, February 18, 2025/APO Group/ —

    NBA Africa and Safaricom (NSE: SCOM- https://apo-opa.co/4gKHaas), the region’s leading technology company, on Saturday launched the M-PESA Jr. NBA program that will provide basketball development and financial literacy programming to more than 10,000 boys and girls in Nairobi, Mombasa, Eldoret, and Kisumu, marking the league’s most expansive youth development program in East Africa to date.   

    The first year of the M-PESA Jr. NBA program, which tipped off with a clinic for more than 100 local coaches at SABIS International School in Nairobi, will consist of four regional tournaments for youth ages 13-16 in Nairobi (Feb. 22-23), Mombasa (March 8-9), Eldoret (March 15-16) and Kisumu (March 22-23). 

    In each city, 20 boys’ and 20 girls’ teams will participate in skills development sessions and competitive games. The top 80 players will then be grouped into four boys’ teams and four girls’ teams that will play games in a round-robin format. The top 16 boys and girls from each city will be selected to attend an elite top 100 camp at Aga Khan Academy in Mombasa in April.

    In addition to the basketball development programming, M-PESA, Safaricom’s innovative mobile payment platform, will host financial literacy workshops for the participating youth, empowering them to develop healthy financial habits.

    “Tipping off our multiyear collaboration with Safaricom is an important milestone in our ongoing efforts to make basketball more accessible to Kenyan boys and girls,” said NBA Africa CEO Clare Akamanzi. “We look forward to positively impacting youth and coaches across the country through basketball development and life-skills programming.”

    “Our collaboration with NBA Africa could not have come at a more opportune moment, as Safaricom’s M-PESA will celebrate its 18th anniversary this March, marking a significant milestone in our journey,” said Safaricom CEO Dr. Peter Ndegwa. “Through M-PESA Go, this collaboration transcends beyond basketball. It is driven by a shared vision to create a lasting impact, not only in sports but also in the broader context of youth empowerment. We are committed to nurturing potential, building character, and equipping the next generation with the tools necessary for success. We firmly believe that the association between M-PESA Go and the Jr. NBA program can pave the way for growth and financial health, enabling young athletes to develop their skills and seize opportunities at the next level.”

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Sports dispute resolution discussed

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Advisory Committee on Sports Dispute Resolution of the Department of Justice (DoJ), chaired by Deputy Secretary for Justice Cheung Kwok-kwan, met the Sports Federation & Olympic Committee of Hong Kong, China (SF&OC) today to discuss the direction of development of promoting sports dispute resolution in Hong Kong.

     

    At the meeting, both sides had in-depth exchanges on the latest developments in sports dispute resolution. They also discussed ways to encourage the sports industry to widely adopt alternative dispute resolution mechanisms for handling sports disputes in the spirit of embracing change and boldly pursuing reforms.

     

    Mr Cheung said that, with a view to enhancing the local sports dispute resolution landscape, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government has been actively engaging with key stakeholders and understands that the industry is keen to have a neutral, fair and efficient mechanism to handle and resolve sports disputes.

     

    Mr Cheung was pleased to learn that the SF&OC fully supports Hong Kong to leverage its institutional advantages in dispute resolution to develop sports dispute resolution, thereby further consolidating the city’s status as a centre for international legal and dispute resolution services in the Asia-Pacific region.

     

    He pointed out that the Hong Kong SAR Government and the advisory committee are carrying out the preparatory work for a pilot scheme on sports dispute resolution at full steam.

     

    Additionally, he thanked the SF&OC for its valuable advice on the implementation of the pilot scheme, especially regarding the specific requirements for selecting dispute resolution institutions, the fields of disputes suitable for resolution through mediation or arbitration, and the fee structure.

     

    The two sides also exchanged views on the potential for future collaboration, including promoting awareness and providing education to national sports associations and local athletes on the use of alternative dispute resolution in handling sports disputes, as well as encouraging retired athletes to participate in sports dispute mediator and arbitrator training.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI China: Beijing increases PE time to foster healthy students

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

    Beijing will improve both the duration and quality of physical education in primary and secondary schools, according to an official announcement released on Monday.

    The announcement, issued jointly by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Education and the Beijing Sports Bureau, mandates that all primary and middle school students take at least one physical education class per day. High school students will have three to five classes per week, with no fewer than 45 minutes of daily physical exercise on days without physical education.

    The measures include eight specific initiatives aimed at prioritizing students’ health and reinforcing the value of physical education in developing well-rounded individuals.

    Previously, first and second graders in Beijing had four PE classes per week, third to ninth graders had three and high school students had two.

    “The increased time will help students develop sports skills, cultivate exercise habits, improve physical fitness and enhance mental well-being,” said Liu Haiyuan, secretary-general of the Beijing School Physical Education Teaching Steering Committee, which was established this month.

    The measures also outline changes to the curriculum. Primary and middle schools must include at least one of three major ball sports in their mandatory PE classes. High schools should offer modular instruction in these sports. Schools specializing in ice and snow sports should integrate those activities into their syllabuses.

    To ensure effective physical education, the announcement emphasizes the importance of avoiding theoretical or “no-sweat” lessons. Schools are encouraged to allocate sufficient time for active participation.

    Under these initiatives, students are expected to master at least two sports skills by the end of their nine-year compulsory education. Schools should also introduce class-level sports competitions to promote engagement in various athletic activities.

    These measures align with China’s broader educational goals.

    In January, the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council jointly released a road map for the country’s educational development from 2024 to 2035, which calls for primary and middle school students to engage in at least two hours of physical activity per day.

    In response, cities such as Tianjin and provinces such as Hunan and Hebei have implemented a minimum of two hours of daily exercise for students this spring semester.

    Beijing has already adjusted class intervals from 10 to 15 minutes since last fall, and other regions, including Jiangsu and Hunan provinces, are extending class intervals in the upcoming semester as well.

    Beijing’s measures also focus on improving the quality of instruction. Training programs will be introduced for PE teachers, and their compensation will be enhanced.

    The announcement plans to strengthen collaboration between sports schools and general schools. Coaches at sports schools and retired athletes will offer specialized training for students and PE teachers, and more than 10 champion-led campus sports events will be held annually across Beijing’s districts.

    In January, the Ministry of Education issued new guidelines to bolster the physical education workforce. Schools are now required to maintain a class-to-teacher ratio lower than five classes per teacher in primary schools, six in middle schools and eight in high schools.

    “The eight initiatives represent a more precise approach to physical education, expanding participation to all students,” said Wang Pan, spokesperson for the Beijing Municipal Commission of Education.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gov. Pillen Touts Support for Gun Industry and Owner Rights at Annual SHOT Show

    Source: US State of Nebraska

    . Pillen Touts Support for Gun Industry and Owner Rights at Annual SHOT Show

    LINCOLN, NE – The influence of special interest groups, state support for Second Amendment rights and the impact of legislation on the firearm and ammunition industry featured prominently in a panel discussion involving Governor Jim Pillen and other participants at the 2025 Shot Show in Las Vegas. Sponsored by the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), the multi-day event includes education, training, exhibits, vendors and panel presentations.

    “This event serves as a tremendous forum for building relationships between great businesses, leaders, policy makers and other stakeholders,” said Gov. Pillen. “The attendance and engagement are further signs of how this industry continues to grow. We appreciate the companies from Nebraska who are represented at the SHOT Show, and we want to let others know that Nebraska is a welcoming place to do business.”

    Gov. Pillen joined a group of Republican governors in a Q&A session covering a wide range of topics, including their reactions to ballot initiatives targeting the firearms industry, especially in certain states.

    “Nebraska is blessed to be filled with people rooted in strong values, who support the Constitution and who elect people who do the same,” noted Gov. Pillen. “But there is no doubt that out-of-state money can buy results, just not the results that represent the beliefs of the individuals who live within the state.”  

    Governors were also asked to weigh in on legislation aimed at both protecting the privacy of gun owners and businesses, as well as legislation that would allow institutions, like banks, to access information relative to firearm purchases. States are now enacting their own legislation to protect the firearm industry from discrimination, as well as the use of financial information collected from firearm buyers. Gov. Pillen said he supported the introduction of LB687 from Senator Dan Lonowski (District 33).

    “In Nebraska, we believe in the free marketplace, and we want to reduce mandates on businesses as much as possible. But at the same time, we should not have a state contract with a company that discriminates against the Second Amendment. I’m looking forward to signing the Firearm Industry Nondiscrimination Act into law this session.”

    In addition to Gov. Pillen, other governors taking part in the forum included Gov. Brad Little (ID), Gov. Greg Gianforte (MT), Gov. Joe Lombardo of (NV), Gov.  Kevin Stitt (OK) and Gov. Mark Gordon (WY).

    2025 marked the 47th annual SHOT Show. Held once a year, this trade show is geared toward professionals in the shooting, hunting, outdoor and law enforcement industry. Participants hail from all 50 states and more than 119 countries.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Manjumup’s Rea Park lighting upgrade complete

    Source: Australian Executive Government Ministers

    The Albanese and Cook Governments continue to partner with the Shire of Manjimup to deliver high-priority local infrastructure – with a lighting upgrade complete at the Rea Park and Collier Street redevelopment in Manjimup, in the state’s south-west.

    Officially opened today by Labor Senator for WA, Varun Ghosh alongside the Shire of Manjimup President, Donelle Buegge – the nearly $1.7 million project delivered LED field lighting on all current sporting fields at the reserve.

    This will support increased participation, provide local clubs with more flexibility for training and competitions, and boost the safety of night time activity at the Rea Park and Collier Street.

    The project is part of a larger $20 million Manjimup Rea Park and Collier Street redevelopment, which is transforming the reserve into a premier facility catering for sporting and non-sporting community events.

    This upgrade was supported by $675,000 from the Australian Government under the Local Roads and Community Infrastructure Program, more than $483,000 from WA Government Club Night Lights Program, over $513,000 from the Shire of Manjimup and $27,000 from Cricket Australia.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Regional Development and Local Government, Kristy McBain MP:

    “It’s great to see the lighting upgrade completed at the Rea Park and Collier Street reserve in Manjimup, with this just one of many projects in which we’re partnering with the Shire of Manjimup, as part of more than $5 million in LRCI funding from the Australian Government.

    “Sport is the heartbeat of every regional community, which is why we’ve invested in this high-priority upgrade – because without good lighting, our clubs can’t train after hours, and they can’t attract new members.”

    Quotes attributable to Senator for Western Australia, Varun Ghosh:

    “These lighting upgrades to Rea Park and Collier Street Reserve will mean more training and playing time for local sports clubs and a greater capacity to host games and competitions. 

    “The Albanese Government is proud to join the Western Australian Government and the Shire of Manjimup in supporting this project, which will let locals use the reserve for sport, exercise, and activities at night.”

    Quotes attributable to Member for Warren-Blackwood, Jane Kelsbie:

    “It’s fantastic to see Stage 1 of the Manjimup Rea Park and Collier Street Redevelopment completed! This investment in modern LED lighting and upgraded electrical infrastructure is a game-changer for local sports and events.

    “Rea Park and Collier Street Reserve are at the heart of the sporting community, and this redevelopment is all about making sure local clubs and players have the facilities they deserve. I’m proud to have worked with the Cook Labor Government to deliver $483,475 through the Club Night Lights Program to help make this project a reality.

    “I’m also excited to share that a re-elected Cook Labor Government will commit $1.25 million for Stage 2. I’ve fought hard to secure this commitment because I know how much this project means to the community. Investing in local sporting and community spaces means better facilities, more opportunities for participation, and stronger connections for families, players, and volunteers — now and into the future.”

    Quotes attributable to Manjimup Shire President Cr Donelle Buegge:

    “The completion of Stage 1 of the Manjimup Rea Park and Collier Street Redevelopment project is a fantastic achievement for our community.

    “This investment in modern LED field lighting and upgraded electrical infrastructure marks a major step in transforming Rea Park and Collier Street Reserve into a premier sporting and community precinct.

    “Thanks to the strong partnership between the Australian, WA and local governments, we are building a brighter future for sports and events in our region.

    “We look forward to continuing this momentum as we work towards the implementation of Stage 2 of the project.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: AFL and NRL pre-seasons are among the longest in world sport – here’s why

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Joel Garrett, Lecturer in Exercise Science and Physiology, Griffith University

    Australia’s love affair with the major football codes – the Australian Football League (AFL) and National Rugby League (NRL) – is well documented. However, one aspect that stands out to many observers, particularly those overseas, is the length of these leagues’ pre-seasons.

    While global and international sports such as soccer and the United States’ National Football League (NFL) typically have pre-seasons lasting only a few weeks to two months, AFL and NRL pre-seasons can stretch well beyond that, sometimes up to and even surpassing four months.

    Why do these two codes, more than almost any others, devote such an extended block of time to pre-season training?

    The answer lies in a blend of the diverse physical qualities required to play AFL and NRL and the greater risk of injury associated with short preparation times.

    High-impact collisions and diverse physical demands

    Both the AFL and NRL are considered contact team sports. Athletes are required to cover large distances at speed, with frequent contact.

    AFL players can run upwards of 12–17 kilometres per match, at incredibly high intensities, all while executing numerous technical actions, such as kicking, catching, handballing and tackling.

    NRL players face similar challenges. Athletes are required to perform more than 30 high-impact collisions per game combined with repeated bouts of high-intensity activity, such as running and sprinting.

    This blend of endurance, strength and power, combined with the high contact demands, creates a distinct training challenge.

    Off-season programs must therefore develop multiple physical qualities. These include endurance for sustained high-intensity efforts, speed and agility for generating and closing space, and strength and power for tackling, wrestling and contested ball situations.

    A shorter pre-season can limit the time available to improve each of these qualities safely. This in turn increases the likelihood of in-season injuries and reduced performance overall.

    NRL athletes endure some brutal training sessions to prepare for each season.

    Longer pre-seasons and injury prevention

    From a sports science perspective, a key benefit of extended pre-seasons is the gradual increase in training load. This helps reduce injury risk once the season begins.

    Research has shown the importance of progressive overload (gradually increasing training demands in a safe, structured manner), recovery management, and adequate conditioning to tolerate in-season demands.

    Evidence also shows increased pre-season participation, additional pre-season sessions and higher workloads (such as total distance) result in fewer games missed due to injury within the season.

    These findings underscore that a carefully structured, longer preparation phase, even if it appears arduous, can build resilience.

    By gradually but systematically exposing players to both low- and high-intensity running volumes, physical contact, and skill-based sessions, clubs can equip their athletes’ bodies to withstand the onerous demands of an AFL or NRL season.

    What do other codes do?

    European football (soccer) clubs often have limited downtime between league seasons and international fixtures.

    Pre-season often entails high-profile international exhibition tours, leaving little space for the months-long conditioning programs common in AFL and NRL.

    Moreover, the absence of a draft system can mean injured players are simply replaced via the transfer market. This reduces the incentive for longer pre-season conditioning to keep key athletes healthy.

    The NFL’s pre-season is relatively short. It uses a training camp model that includes a few pre-season games in which their “starters” play a limited role due to injury concerns.

    The sport’s stop-start nature and its athletes’ highly specialised positional requirements also results in players having a more specific physical profile. In contrast, AFL and NRL players require a broader physical profile.

    In recent years, the NFL has become increasingly aware of higher injury rates tied to abrupt increases in training load. It is now exploring extended or restructured pre-season protocols that in part aim to reduce injury risk.

    Changes may be afoot

    Interestingly, the AFL itself may face a similar scenario this year.

    In the most recent off-season, many AFL clubs had only two to three weeks of full-squad structured training before Christmas, followed by three weeks off.

    This approach, designed to provide player downtime, might inadvertently produce an effect akin to what the NFL experiences, where shorter preparation periods are linked to higher rates of tendon and soft-tissue injuries.

    Sports scientists at Australian clubs will be monitoring training loads closely when their players return, aiming to avoid the pitfalls of quick turnarounds meeting high-impact competition.

    There’s a reason for these long pre-seasons

    Devoting three to four months to pre-season training is not merely a quirk of the Australian sporting calendar.

    It is a necessary response to the extreme physical demands of these codes. More importantly, a longer, carefully managed pre-season significantly lowers in-season injury risks.

    Clubs need to strike a balance between giving players sufficient rest and allowing enough time for a measured and carefully planned off-season. This not only enhances performance, but reduces injuries.

    Given the evidence, it is little wonder that Australian codes invest so heavily in this crucial preparation phase.

    Darren Burgess, General Manager of High Performance at Adelaide Football Club, contributed to this article.

    Joel Garrett 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. AFL and NRL pre-seasons are among the longest in world sport – here’s why – https://theconversation.com/afl-and-nrl-pre-seasons-are-among-the-longest-in-world-sport-heres-why-248430

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Sport and recreation facilities funding round opens

    Source: Auckland Council

    Indoor facilities, courts, changing rooms – these are just a few examples of the essential infrastructure needed to provide an optimal sport and recreation experience for Aucklanders.

    The sports organisations across Tāmaki Makaurau who want to develop their facilities can now apply for a slice of $9.5 million funding through Auckland Council’s Sport and Recreation Facilities Investment Fund (SRFIF).

    Councillor Angela Dalton, chair of the council’s Community Committee says the funding will lead to a boost in the number of Aucklanders participating in sport and recreation activities across the region.

    “Over the summer, we’ve seen Aucklanders at great facilities all over the region participating in their chosen sports, having fun and connecting – and this will continue with winter sports in the coming months.

    “The fund supports the development of sport and recreation facilities that create opportunities for Aucklanders to get active.

    Applications for the 2025/2026 Sport and Recreation Facilities Investment Fund open from 18 February 2025 to 18 March 2025.

    Kenneth Aiolupotea, General Manager Community Wellbeing welcomes applications to the fund.

    “Grassroots sports organisations play an important role in the Tāmaki Makaurau sport and recreation network.

    “Sports organisations that need help to finance building or infrastructure work are encouraged to apply through the fund.

    “A range of sports organisations, including football, rugby and league, bowls and kartsport received funding through the last

    contestable funding round.

    Who should apply? 

    The SRFIF is a contestable grant and open to non-council organisations for significant facility development. 

    It has a focus on communities that are in the greatest need of investment and large-scale community sport facility development projects that can leverage additional investment. 

    The guidelines that outline full eligibility and funding priorities are explained here.

    Key dates 

    The 2025/26 funding round will be open for applications between 18 February 2025 and 18 March 2025.

    Funding decisions will be made by the Community Committee in July 2025.

    More information on the council’s grants programme that supports Aucklanders’ aspirations for a great city, including the Sport and Recreation Facilities Investment Fund can be found on the Auckland Council website.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Lists Pi Network (PI) with Rewards Worth 150,000 PI

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, Feb. 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget, the leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company, has announced the listing of the trending memecoin Pi Network (PI) on its platform. The listing is now live with trading available under the PI/USDT pair, allowing users to engage with PI through various market activities, including deposits, trading, and a unique airdrop promotion.

    The CandyBomb promotional event offers Bitget users the chance to earn PI through deposits and trading activity. A total of 150,000 PI tokens have been allocated for this campaign, which runs from 16 February, 2025, 04:00 (UTC) to 27 February, 2025, 08:00 (UTC). Participants can join the CandyBomb page, where valid deposit and trading activity will automatically count toward the PI airdrop, divided into net deposits and spot trading pools. The 50,000 PI will be distributed based on net deposits, while new spot traders will have exclusive access to the remaining 100,000 PI, providing a significant incentive for both experienced and new traders alike.

    Pi Network is a smartphone-based mining project launched in 2019, enabling users to earn Pi tokens with the single tap of a button in its mobile app without energy-intensive hardware and a lot of energy. This solution simplifies the mining process and makes crypto accessible to more people. Pi Network’s strong user referral mechanism has led to a large userbase of the ecosystem. Currently, 19 million Pioneers have successfully completed the procedures, while 10 million have migrated to the mainnet.

    This listing positions PI within Bitget’s expanding portfolio of assets available in the Innovation, Web3, and Public Chain Zone, underlining the platform’s commitment to offering users access to the most trending digital assets. As PI gains traction in both centralized and decentralized trading venues, this listing on Bitget will allow a broader audience to participate in its ecosystem. With a vibrant community and large userbase, PI presents an opportunity for users interested in emerging mining and public chain projects in the blockchain space.

    Bitget has consistently expanded its market share in both spot and derivatives trading among centralized exchanges. With an extensive selection of over 800 cryptocurrency pairs and a commitment to broaden its offerings to more than 900 trading pairs, Bitget connects users to various ecosystems, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, Base, and TON.

    For more information on PI CandyBomb, users can visit here.

    About Bitget

    Established in 2018, Bitget is the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company. Serving over 100 million users in 150+ countries and regions, the Bitget exchange is committed to helping users trade smarter with its pioneering copy trading feature and other trading solutions, while offering real-time access to Bitcoin price, Ethereum price, and other cryptocurrency prices. Formerly known as BitKeep, Bitget Wallet is a world-class multi-chain crypto wallet that offers an array of comprehensive Web3 solutions and features including wallet functionality, token swap, NFT Marketplace, DApp browser, and more.

    Bitget is at the forefront of driving crypto adoption through strategic partnerships, such as its role as the Official Crypto Partner of the World’s Top Football League, LALIGA, in EASTERN, SEA, and LATAM markets, as well as a global partner of Turkish National athletes Buse Tosun Çavuşoğlu (Wrestling world champion), Samet Gümüş (Boxing gold medalist) and İlkin Aydın (Volleyball national team), to inspire the global community to embrace the future of cryptocurrency.

    For more information, users can visit: Website | Twitter | Telegram | LinkedIn | Discord | Bitget Wallet

    For media inquiries, users can contact: media@bitget.com

    Risk Warning: Digital asset prices are subject to fluctuation and may experience significant volatility. Investors are advised to only allocate funds they can afford to lose. The value of any investment may be impacted, and there is a possibility that financial objectives may not be met, nor the principal investment recovered. Independent financial advice should always be sought, and personal financial experience and standing carefully considered. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Bitget accepts no liability for any potential losses incurred. Nothing contained herein should be construed as financial advice. For further information, users can refer to the Terms of Use.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/6da908c5-8b15-431b-b9c1-801c046b5db0

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: City prepares for Everton FC’s historic first game at new stadium

    Source: City of Liverpool

    The first Everton Stadium test event takes place today (Monday, 17 February) in front of a capacity of 10,000 spectators.

    Kick off for this historic game at Bramley Moore Dock (an Under-18s friendly fixture against Wigan Athletic) will be 7pm, with road closures around the £500m venue to begin at 5pm (see below).

    To coincide with the venue hosting its first match, a new experimental parking zone for the area around the 52,888 capacity stadium and the city’s north docks (see the map here) also goes live today.

    Established under an Experimental Traffic Regulation Order (ETRO), the zone is subject to a public consultation to gain feedback from residents and businesses.

    Although it goes live today, the new parking scheme becomes fully operational when the 2025/26 football season begins in August.

    There are two key points about the ETRO:

    1. It allows the Council to monitor and evaluate the scheme’s effectiveness, and modify it, if necessary, before making the measures permanent.
    2. These measures can run for a maximum of 18 months (expiring in August 2026) but that does not mean changes have to wait until then.

    For example, although it states the number of permits per business will be set at 10, we will consider any request for more permits on a case-by-case basis.

    You can have your say on this ETRO in our quick survey at: https://www.smartsurvey.co.uk/s/BramleyMooreParking/ and if you have any further questions, please email: bramleymooredockETRO@liverpool.gov.uk 

    All travel options for today’s first test game are outlined below.

    A second test game is being scheduled for March, which will see 25,000 fans use all four stands of the waterfront stadium.

    ROAD CLOSURES:

    Road closures will be in place two hours before kick-off on the main approach roads to the stadium: Waterloo Road, Regent Road, Ten Streets Area, roads surrounding Wellington Employment Park, and roads south of Bankfield Street.

    These roads will also be closed from final whistle until crowds have dispersed. Sandhills Lane will be closed following the final whistle at Sandhills Station to assist in crowd management.

    Supporters travelling by car are advised to avoid these closure areas.

    WALKING to the stadium:

    Road closures in place on surrounding streets will create a safe walking route for supporters on approach to Everton Stadium.

    Both Regent Road and Waterloo Road will be closed to general traffic between the city centre and Bankfield Street to assist pedestrian safety, as well as much of the Ten Streets area.

    Sandhills Lane will also be closed to traffic in the post-match period to assist with crowd movement.

    Supporters crossing the Bascule Bridge on Regent Road will be managed by stewards in attendance, with a flow-system in place for safety reasons.

    BY TRAIN:

    Merseyrail services will be running to normal timetables.

    The closest station is Sandhills, which is approximately a 15-minute walk from the stadium entrance.

    Please note: The Old Hall Street entrance of Moorfields station in Liverpool city centre is only open until 7pm on Monday 17 February.

    A new fan management area will be in operation adjacent to Sandhills in the post-match period, to aid the expected increase in numbers of rail users.

    Sandhills Lane will be closed to general vehicle traffic in the post-match period to assist with crowd movement.

    BY SHUTTLE BUS:

    There will be three commercially-operated shuttle bus services operating for the first test event, running from two hours before kick-off and from 15 minutes from the final whistle, but not during the match. The fare is a standard £2 single fare, and these routes are as follows:

    · 919 Service from / to Commutation Row / Lime Street

    City Centre Pick up & Drop Off: Commutation Row

    Stadium Drop off: Great Howard Street at Blackstone Street

    Stadium Pick Up: Great Howard Street at Bentinck Street

    · 929 Service from / to Liverpool One Bus Station

    City Centre Pick Up & Drop Off: Liverpool One Bus Station

    Stadium Drop off: Great Howard Street at Blackstone Street

    Stadium Pick Up: Great Howard Street, north of Denbigh Street

    · 939 Service from / to Bootle Strand Bus Station

    Bootle Pick-Up & Drop Off: Bootle Bus Station, Washington Parade (Strand Shopping Centre). Please note, the Strand Shopping Centre Multi-Storey Car Park (MSCP) will be open late to accommodate supporters wishing to park in Bootle to use the dedicated Shuttle Bus (MSCP location – Vermont Way, Bootle, L20 4XZ).

    Stadium Drop Off: Derby Road at Wellington Employment Park, north of Blackstone Street

    Stadium Pick Up: Derby Road, north of Boundary Street

    ACCESSIBLE SHUTTLE SERVICE:

    A free shuttle bus service will operate for supporters with accessible needs between Sandhills Station (Sandhills Lane) and Boundary Street (around 175 metres from Everton Stadium), before and after the first test event. This service must be booked in advance by contacting the Accessibility Team at Everton on 0151 556 1878 (option 1, then 2, followed by 3).

    The 919, 929 and 939 shuttle buses, outlined above, also stop at stadium bus stops and Boundary St (at Royal Crest Hotel), for those with limited mobility.

    TAXIS:

    There will be three nearby taxi ranks. All three ranks lie outside of the road closures (outlined below) and are for black/Hackney cabs only. These are located at:

    · Sandhills Station

    · Boundary Street, near junction with Shadwell Street

    · Dublin Street

    BY BICYCLE:

    Cycle parking stands are available for supporters to use. These are located along the Regent Road/dock wall inside the stadium footprint. Bikes are left at the owner’s risk.

    No access to the stadium for supporters to collect their cycles will be possible once the stadium closes post-match.

    Supporters are advised not to cycle within the road closure areas through crowds of supporters.

    BY CAR:

    Supporters are advised that road closures and parking restrictions will be in place in the vicinity of the stadium for the first test event and are advised not to drive directly to the stadium.

    Please DO NOT park on residential and industrial streets surrounding the stadium, as parking enforcement will be in operation. Any illegally parked cars will incur a fine.

    Supporters travelling by car are advised to use car parks in the vicinity of the city centre or Bootle Strand for onward travel to Everton Stadium by train, shuttle bus, or on foot. The Strand Shopping Centre Multi-Storey Car Park, located at Vermont Way, Bootle, L20 4XZ, will be open late to accommodate supporters attending the test event.

    There is limited accessible car parking on site at Everton Stadium, which is now fully booked. Supporters with accessibility requirements who have already been allocated car parking for the first test event are advised to arrive no later than one hour before kick-off as access through closed roads will be denied.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: GB Energy & Grangemouth show ‘You can’t trust Labour’

    Source: Scottish National Party

    ‘You can’t trust Labour’. It was an oft made comment during the latter year’s of Tony Blair’s premiership; particularly because of his role in dragging the UK into the Iraq war on the basis of a lie.

    But it took six years for that phrase to become common usage. With the current Westminster Labour government of Keir Starmer it’s only taken six months.

    And recently we saw an example which explains why trust in Keir Starmer’s Labour party has nosedived.

    Before the 2024 election Labour promised that Aberdeen would get 1,000 jobs from hosting the GB Energy headquarters; but now the appointed boss of GB Energy says it will only create 200 jobs in five years.

    The GB Energy boss who won’t even be working in Aberdeen but Manchester! So much for a ‘headquarters’ in Aberdeen.

    These revelations have been followed more recently by news that Grangemouth’s refinery is to close after 100 years.

    Again, another example of how Labour can’t be trusted.

    Before the election Labour, along with Keir Starmer and Anas Sarwar, promised to save the jobs:

    Now it’s scenes of Anas Sarwar repeatedly pleading that he’s powerless because it’s a private company…

    …a private company Labour will financially support when it comes to a football stadium in England and a refinery in Belgium!

    And it was Westminster who tied their own hands when it gave Grangemouth to the private sector:

    Is it any wonder that even Grangemouth’s own Labour MP sounds like he doesn’t trust Labour?

    Even a letter he wrote to Starmer was signed by only one other Scottish Labour MP. So much for Scottish Labour MPs standing up for Scotland.

    But those two examples are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Labour promises.

    Take the WASPI women pensioners; betrayed so often by the Tories and now by Labour. As leader of the opposition, Starmer promised to “do something about it”, saying he understood their anger at having “the goalposts moved”.

    In 2020 he railed against the two-child cap on child benefits. In the days running up to the election Scots were told to vote Labour to end child poverty.

    Yet just after the election he suspended seven Labour MPs for voting with the SNP to scrap the cap on child benefit and tackle child poverty.

    Then there’s the winter fuel payment for pensioners. In the run up to voting in July 2024 Starmerrailed against the Tories about how pensioners suffered under the Tories and promised them security.

    Safely in Downing Street his government announced a cut to pensioners’ winter fuel payments despite research by his own party that it could cause 4,000 deaths.

    And what about National Insurance?

    Labour’s manifesto specifically pledged that they would not raise national insurance. In her budget Rachel Reeves increased employer national insurance – a policy that will hit those employing lower paid workers the hardest, charities, GPs and care homes.

    You would think such a level of untrustworthy behaviour would be more than enough after seven months; but there’s more that specifically affects Scotland.

    In the July 2024 election Anas Sarwar expressly promised that Scottish Labour ‘would put Scotland at the heart of Starmer’s government‘; and ‘stand up to Keir Starmer and defend Scotland’s interests‘.

    Instead, as a group, Scottish Labour MPs have meekly voted for cutting the winter fuel payment, keeping the two-child benefit, and failing to support WASPI women.

    And there’s a range of issues where that group of MPs have been subdued when it comes to putting Scotland at the heart of Starmer’s government.

    In August 2024 Rachel Reeves pulled funding for an £800 million computer at Edinburgh University with a Labour source saying the project made “little strategic sense.”

    Yet by January Keir Starmer was announcing that his government had arranged £14 billion of investment in various AI projects.

    At the end of January Rachel Reeves announced her plans for growth in the UK … which amounted to a concentration of UK government assistance between the cities hosting the UK’s two elitist universities.

    The absence for similar assistance for Scotland was notable despite claiming it would deliver to “all corners of the UK“:

    Take CCS, or Carbon Capture & Storage; since the 2014 independence referendum the North East of Scotland has been repeatedly promised that Westminster would invest millions in it.

    Rachel Reeves eventually announced funding for Carbon Capture & Storage … in Teesside and Merseyside. No Scottish Labour MP or MSP has even mentioned this slap in the face to Scotland.

    Is it any wonder Scots believe Anas Sarwar doesn’t stand up to Keir Starmer. It’s no wonder Scottish Labour’s vote is at its lowest level in three years.

    And what is Anas Sarwar’s latest move as we approach a Scottish election year? To say he is open to ‘good ideas’ from Nigel Farage’s Reform party.

    A party that would like to abolish the Scottish Parliament and privatise the NHS. The party of Brexit which has increased the cost-of-living creating less money for public services.

    And Anas Sarwar’s latest gambit just raises more questions about trust in Labour. He’s now pledging to protect SNP policies like free tuition, free prescriptions and the Scottish Child Payment.

    After months of accusing the SNP government of ’18 years of failure’ he’s now saying it has been 18 years of “successes”.

    But why should anyone trust what many see as a panicked announcement by Anas Sarwar?

    On several occasions Labour’s Holyrood group of MSPs have voted against SNP government budgets which contained those policies. Even now they are not supporting the SNP budget containing those policies.

    A previous Scottish Labour leader notoriously called those policies a ‘something for nothing‘ culture which should end.

    Anas Sarwar’s health spokesperson, Jackie Baillie, is on record as saying prescription charges should “absolutely” be abolished.

    As for tuition fees it was only in February 2024 that Sarwar’s finance spokesperson, Michael Marra, said backdoor tuition fees, like endowments, would have to be considered.

    Shortly after Labour MSPs voted with the Tories in Holyrood against free tuition.

    And let’s not forget the behaviour of Anas Sarwar’s boss, Keir Starmer. In 2020 he promised Labour members in the party leadership election that he would “support the abolition of tuition fees”.

    Yet by September 2023 he claimed it would be ‘impossible‘ to abolish tuition fees … despite the fact that is the reality in Scotland.

    And let’s not forget which party first introduced tuition fees – whose policy they ultimately are.

    Just weeks before the 1997 election Tony Blair pledged: “Labour has no plans to introduce tuition fees for higher education.”

    A year after taking power, Blair went ahead and introduced tuition fees.

    It all just shows how the people of Scotland don’t and can’t trust any promise by Scottish Labour. Like a branch office they will always follow their bosses in Westminster.

    There’s only one party that Scots can trust to stand up and speak for Scotland. Speak out about Westminster ignoring your communities when it comes to investment. To vote for the benefit of Scotland’s pensioners, families and workers – the SNP.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Heineken leads EMEA alcoholic beverage sector in sponsorship activity and spending in 2024, reveals GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    Heineken leads EMEA alcoholic beverage sector in sponsorship activity and spending in 2024, reveals GlobalData

    Posted in Sport

    Heineken is the most active and second-largest spender in sports sponsorship within the EMEA region for 2024 with 41 deals. Its major partnership is with UEFA, covering multiple club competitions through the 2026-27 season. This deal, valued at $70 million annually, underscores the Dutch brewing giant’s strategic commitment to leveraging soccer’s global reach, particularly through the UEFA Champions League, reveals GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    Reportedly, Heineken’s three-year agreement with UEFA encompasses the Champions League, Europa Conference League, Super Cup, and Europa League competitions.

    GlobalData’s latest report, “Sponsorship Sector Report – Alcoholic Beverages EMEA 2024,” reveals that soccer holds the premier position in sponsorship revenue and deal volume within the alcoholic beverages sector across the EMEA region. Europe-based alcoholic beverage brands are the top spenders in the region.

    Olivia Snooks, Sport Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Heineken has been a long-standing partner of the UEFA Champions League since 1994, with the partnership extending through 2027. As Europe’s premier club competition and the world’s most watched, the UEFA Champions League offers Heineken unparalleled global exposure.”

    The most significant deal in the alcoholic beverages sector across the EMEA region, in terms of annual value, is the partnership between the 2024 Paris Olympic Games and Paris-based luxury fashion giant LVMH. This collaboration includes Moët Hennessy, a distinguished division of LVMH, supplying its wines and spirits for the Games’ hospitality initiatives. The reported annual value of this agreement stands at $166.40 million.

    Snooks continues: “It is important to note that, as the primary arrangement was established with LVMH, the stated value, which is considerably large, does not exclusively represent Moët Hennessy’s individual partnership with the Olympic Games.”

    Despite securing just seven deals across the EMEA region, Guinness ranks as the third-largest spender in 2024. Notably, the Diageo-owned brand has partnered with the Premier League, becoming the official beer of the league starting the 2024/25 season. This agreement is valued at an annual $17.19 million.

    Snooks concludes: “For years, Guinness has been associated with rugby in the UK. However, 2024 sees the beer brand embarking on a new chapter by partnering with the English Premier League. This agreement marks the Guinness’ foray into soccer sponsorship, with the brand aiming to replicate the success it has enjoyed with rugby.”

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Video: Football for the Goals – Norwegian Football Federation on the Initiative | SDGs | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    In this episode of the Football for the Goals Q&A video series, we sit down with President of the Norwegian Football Federation Lise Klaverness. We discuss why her organisation joined the Football for the Goals Initiative, how sustainability is integrated in the Norwegian football ecosystem, and her ambition for further growth of the Federation’s projects.

    The Norwegian Football Federation joined FFTG in July 2022, and is responsible for organizing national teams, leagues, and football-related activities in the country, working to develop and promote the sport at all levels. The NFF also oversees the administration and regulations of football in Norway, as well as fostering youth development and grassroots initiatives.

    ——————————————–

    Football for the Goals is a United Nations initiative that provides a platform for the global football community to engage with and advocate for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It is an opportunity to build on football’s powerful and influential reach and to work together to become agents of change by aligning messaging, strategies and operations with the aspirations of the SDGs.

    This initiative will inspire and guide the world of football – from confederations, national associations, leagues and clubs, to players’ associations, organized fan groups, as well as media and commercial partners – to build on existing sustainability approaches and to implement SDG strategies that lead to behavioural change.

    Members may not only aspire to develop sustainable practices, but may also act as champions of the SDGs during the Decade of Action (2020-2030). Members will use their visibility and outreach power via tournaments, players, corporate brand exposure, media and fan communities to raise the profile of the SDGs through amplification and advocacy. They will inspire action by demonstrating how these sustainable practices can be mainstreamed through any business model, including sport.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLHOPGY6y6g

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Launches Global Graduate Program to Cultivate the Next Generation of Web3 Talent

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, Feb. 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget, the leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company, announced the launch of its first Bitget Graduate Program, an initiative designed to recruit and cultivate the next generation of blockchain and Web3 talent from top global universities. As part of Bitget’s Blockchain4Youth Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiative, this program aligns with the company’s plans of driving education, innovation, and long-term growth in the blockchain industry.

    The Bitget Graduate Program seeks outstanding graduates with a global mindset, a passion for innovation, and a strong drive to explore the future of Web3. The program provides career opportunities across various fields, including operations, product management, marketing, risk & compliance, data management, and engineering, enabling participants to gain hands-on experience in one of the fastest-growing sectors.

    Applications are now open on the Bitget official website and will remain available until March 15, 2025. Successful candidates will receive offer letters to join Bitget, with the earliest start date being April 1. Through this program, Bitget plans to hire around 30 exceptional graduates, offering them a structured development program, cross-functional training, and direct mentorship from industry experts. Participants will have the opportunity to work on cutting-edge blockchain projects and contribute to expanding Web3 applications.

    “At Bitget, we believe the future of Web3 lies in the hands of the next generation,” said Vugar Usi Zade, Chief Operating Officer at Bitget. “The Graduate Program is designed to bridge the gap between ambition and opportunity, providing young professionals with a direct pathway to immerse themselves in the blockchain industry. As Web3 adoption accelerates, we are committed to equipping future leaders with the skills and experiences they need to shape the decentralized world.”

    Bitget offers a dynamic and diverse workplace, with over 1,800 employees from over 60 countries and a culture that values efficiency, innovation, and collaboration. The program offers competitive compensation, clear career development pathways, and growth opportunities within Bitget.

    Launched in May 2023, Blockchain4Youth aligns with Bitget’s commitment to inspiring the next generation to embrace blockchain. With a $10 million pledge over five years, the initiative offers courses, hackathons, and scholarships. By the end of 2024, Bitget had entered over 60 universities, including  Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), University College London (UCL), Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, National Technological University of Argentina, National Taiwan University, and RMIT University, hosting nearly 100 talks and reaching over 13,000 students.

    For more details on the Bitget Graduate Program and application process, visit this link.

    About Bitget

    Established in 2018, Bitget is the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company. Serving over 100 million users in 150+ countries and regions, the Bitget exchange is committed to helping users trade smarter with its pioneering copy trading feature and other trading solutions, while offering real-time access to Bitcoin price, Ethereum price, and other cryptocurrency prices. Formerly known as BitKeep, Bitget Wallet is a world-class multi-chain crypto wallet that offers an array of comprehensive Web3 solutions and features including wallet functionality, token swap, NFT Marketplace, DApp browser, and more.

    Bitget is at the forefront of driving crypto adoption through strategic partnerships,  such as its role as the Official Crypto Partner of the World’s Top Football League, LALIGA, in EASTERN, SEA and LATAM market, as well as a global partner of Turkish National athletes Buse Tosun Çavuşoğlu (Wrestling world champion), Samet Gümüş (Boxing gold medalist) and İlkin Aydın (Volleyball national team), to inspire the global community to embrace the future of cryptocurrency.

    For more information, visit: Website | Twitter | Telegram | LinkedIn | Discord | Bitget Wallet

    For media inquiries, please contact: media@bitget.com

    Risk Warning: Digital asset prices may fluctuate and experience price volatility. Only invest what you can afford to lose. The value of your investment may be impacted and it is possible that you may not achieve your financial goals or be able to recover your principal investment. You should always seek independent financial advice and consider your own financial experience and financial standing. Past performance is not a reliable measure of future performance. Bitget shall not be liable for any losses you may incur. Nothing here shall be construed as financial advice.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/4b8e4841-98ea-487c-b176-1a3359695920

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI China: Artificial intelligence use by kids sparks concerns

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    A teacher instructs students to interact with an intelligent robot at the No.1 Primary School in Boxing County, east China’s Shandong Province, Feb. 13, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    With schools set to reopen after the winter vacation, students will return to their classrooms with rapidly evolving artificial intelligence tools that have become efficient assistants for those rushing to complete their assignments. But the trend has also sparked concerns about AI’s growing role in education.
    With just a few simple prompts, students can use AI tools such as DeepSeek or Kimi to tackle their schoolwork. Typical assignments in primary and secondary schools — ranging from solving math problems and writing essays to designing posters — can now be easily handled with generative AI.
    “AI tools have saved me a lot of time tutoring my child,” said Su Min, a 40-year-old mother of a sixth grader in Beijing. “I learn how to solve problems with AI and then teach my daughter.”
    However, Su emphasized that her daughter does not use AI tools for schoolwork on her own.
    “Simply copying the results generated by AI is not beneficial,” she said.
    Chen Zhuo, a 16-year-old 11th grader from Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, said she started using AI out of curiosity.
    “I used AI to generate a framework for my essay and then refined it myself,” she said. “But I found it lacked emotional depth and was disconnected from current events.
    “While it may lead to reliance, I don’t use it for my math homework because copying answers from AI is meaningless. Ultimately, I need to learn how to solve problems on my own.”
    Parents on social media are now sharing their experiences with using AI to help their children with their assignments, particularly those they see as unimportant.
    “Given the tight schedule of a ninth grader during winter vacation, AI tools help with time-consuming tasks that don’t significantly impact grades, like simple writing or making posters,” one user commented on Chinese lifestyle app RedNote.
    While AI tools make schoolwork easier, some teachers are concerned about unauthorized use, as students’ homework increasingly contains AI-generated content.
    Although some universities have implemented strict guidelines for AI use in research and thesis writing, primary and secondary schools have largely lacked clear regulations.
    In December, the Ministry of Education issued guidelines aimed at strengthening AI education in primary and secondary schools. The initiative includes developing a systematic AI curriculum and expanding AI education nationwide by 2030.
    To promote the responsible use of AI, some schools are exploring ways to integrate it into assignments. The affiliated primary school of Beijing No 12 Middle School, for example, assigned an AI-related homework project over the winter break. Younger students were tasked with generating AI-assisted paintings of Spring Festival, while older students wrote an English research report on the festival’s cultural influence and consumption trends using AI tools.
    “While AI is often touted as a tool to enhance education, its impact on children’s self-development could be more detrimental,” said Xiong Bingqi, director of the 21st Century Education Research Institute. “Relying on AI for knowledge acquisition hinders the development of their capabilities.”
    Xiong said uniquely human skills such as imagination and creativity are becoming increasingly valuable in the face of rapid AI development.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Events – Over 100 Firefighters Compete at UFBA National Waterway Challenge

    Source: United Fire Brigades’ Association

    Each year, over 20,000 fires threaten precious homes, businesses, our natural environment and lives across New Zealand. We have seen several large vegetation fires this summer already and they all require one thing – lots of water and brave people to put it there!
    Firefighting relies on timing, technical expertise, and teamwork to save lives and property; the branch on the hose, the hose to the pump, the standpipe to the hydrant, and each person playing their part.
    Since 1885, the United Fire Brigades’ Association (UFBA) Waterway Challenge has helped firefighters test their hose-running and pump-operating skills in a fun, safe, and competitive environment. The track has 19 different setups covering rural and urban approaches to firefighting.
    On Friday 21 and Saturday 22 February at the Tulloch Rugby Park in Mataura, over 130 firefighters from all around the country will be taking part in the Challenge. Including 104 competitors demonstrating their teamwork and firefighting skills that they use to protect property and lives, as they compete in teams against each other and the clock, in the UFBA National Waterway Challenge 2025 (which is held every two years).
    Teams of firefighters will be heading to Mataura from both the North and South Islands, from these volunteer fire brigades: Wellsford, Ahuroa, Silverdale, West Harbour, Te Aroha, Morrinsville, Thames, Mayor View, Havelock North, Carterton, Wainuiomata, Westport, Brunner, Greymouth, Rangiora, Rolleston, Balclutha, Lincoln, Cromwell, Kaitangata, Mossburn, Mataura, and Wyndham.
    Competitors have trained all year, some are highly experienced and we have some fresh faces ready to take on the challenge.
    This event is open to the public, bring the kids along to watch this competitive display of firefighting techniques.
    Location: Tulloch Rugby Park, Mataura Competition date/time: Friday 21 February 0900hrs till 1600hrs (approx.) and Saturday 22 February from 0900hrs till 1400hrs (approx.)
    A century of service in Mataura
    2025 is also a historic year for the Mataura Volunteer Fire Brigade, as they will be celebrating their centennial (100th year). The brigade’s big celebration will be held in November, and the UFBA is proud to be able to bring our national event to the Mataura community who have supported their volunteer fire brigade for 100 years. 
    About the UFBA – for over 140 years the United Fire Brigades’ Association has been the leading association representing firefighters in New Zealand. Today our services support over 14,000 firefighters throughout the fire and emergency services sector by providing advocacy, skills-based challenges, workshops and service honours.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: DLNR News Release – Adaptive Ocean Sports Program Receives Ala Wai Space for Storage and Parking

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    DLNR News Release – Adaptive Ocean Sports Program Receives Ala Wai Space for Storage and Parking

    Posted on Feb 14, 2025 in Latest Department News, Newsroom

    STATE OF HAWAIʻI

    KA MOKU ʻĀINA O HAWAIʻI

     

    DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES

    KA ‘OIHANA KUMUWAIWAI ‘ĀINA

     

    JOSH GREEN, M.D.
    GOVERNOR

    DAWN CHANG
    CHAIRPERSON

    ADAPTIVE OCEAN SPORTS PROGRAM RECEIVES ALA WAI SPACE FOR STORAGE AND PARKING

     

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Feb. 14, 2025

    HONOLULU  – The days of storing equipment in Kapolei or in volunteers’ garages for an ocean sports program, are coming to an end, thanks to the state Board of Land and Natural Resources (BLNR).

    The board today approved a Revocable Permit (RP) for the nonprofit AccesSurf, well known for adaptive surfing, swimming, and paddling programs for people with disabilities. The RP allows AccesSurf to utilize 1,200 square feet of land at the Ala Wai Small Boat Harbor for parking and storage.

    Ann Yoshida, a trainer, and innovation specialist for the organization told the board, “As a person in a wheelchair, understanding the challenges that we have in accessing natural environments, such as the ocean, gives people choices.” Each year AccesSurf hosts what it calls 5,000 experiences, reaching thousands of disabled people.

    Eric Walton, who has a prosthetic leg, said he’s been with the group for 16 years, starting as a volunteer, then a participant, as a competitive adaptive athlete and as a board member. “The impact that AccesSurf has had on my life has been monumental,” he said.

    Now, the large and expensive equipment and devices needed for adaptive programs are spread across numerous locations, none of them close to Waikīkī, where much of the training and experiences are conducted. “That’s the big thing,” said AccesSurf Executive Director Cara Short. “We have all this equipment that is quite literally stored in a ton of different places, different vehicles, different homes, and storage containers far away from Waikīkī,” she said. Short told the BLNR that the organization explored numerous storage places that could accommodate its large, heavy equipment, but the cost was prohibitive. Her nonprofit will pay the DLNR $40 a month and the area will have several shipping containers donated by Pasha Hawaii, along with room to park vehicles.

    From the outset, board members were clearly in support of approving the RP and asked if AccesSurf is going to expand its programs beyond O‘ahu. Short said it has just expanded to Maui, has had programs on Kaua‘i and Hawai‘i Island, and hopes to replicate its offerings statewide. All programs are free to participants and dozens of volunteers donate their time and talents to the cause.

    After the unanimous decision to approve the permit, board members and AccesSurf staff and volunteers shook hands and hugged. BLNR Chair Dawn Chang said it felt good to have something positive come out of a board meeting and it’s a positive for the Ala Wai Small Boat Harbor and the greater Waikīkī area. She and AccesSurf thanked the DLNR Division of Boating and Ocean Recreation (DOBOR) for facilitating and being so supportive of the plan.

    # # #

    RESOURCES

    (All images/video Courtesy: DLNR)

    HD video – AccesSurf storage area at Ala Wai Small Boat Harbor (Feb. 14, 2025):

    https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/3ap10ayv0to360k82rysl/Access-Surf-storage-at-Ala-Wai-SBH-2-14-2025.mov?rlkey=nnzqmcfvhi4of9dg13dagc72m&st=xqvf8l0x&dl=0

    HD video – Board of Land and Natural Resources meeting (Feb. 14, 2025):

    https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/6pzk8k5oepikjk2o0d634/AccessSurf-RP-BLNR-2-14-25.mov?rlkey=00luyihv54jywdbm4o7kfoab0&st=gxyy846s&dl=0

    (Transcript/shot sheet attached)

    Photographs – AccesSurf Storage Area and BLNR Meeting (Feb. 14, 2025):

    https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/t137yzr8tyejqtk8n0y69/AFOEHu_q_ObFwjF0tG26ddQ?rlkey=4jh0di2r8hjdbta8ajvli3m8w&st=cqfonvyo&dl=0

     

    Media Contact:

    Dan Dennison

    Communications Director

    Hawai‘i Dept. of Land and Natural Resources

    808-587-0396

    [email protected]

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Text adopted – Further deterioration of the political situation in Georgia – P10_TA(2025)0019 – Thursday, 13 February 2025 – Strasbourg

    Source: European Parliament

    The European Parliament,

    –  having regard to its previous resolutions on Georgia, in particular that of 28 November 2024 on Georgia’s worsening democratic crisis following the recent parliamentary elections and alleged electoral fraud(1),

    –  having regard to Georgia’s status as an EU candidate country, granted by the European Council at its summit of 14 and 15 December 2023,

    –  having regard to Article 78 of the Georgian Constitution, which demands the implementation of all possible measures to guarantee Georgia’s complete integration into the EU and NATO,

    –  having regard to the final report of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) on the parliamentary elections held in Georgia on 26 October 2024,

    –  having regard to Rules 136(2) and (4) of its Rules of Procedure,

    A.  whereas the democratic backsliding in Georgia has dramatically accelerated since the parliamentary elections of 26 October 2024, which were deeply flawed and marked by grave irregularities, and failed to meet international democratic standards and Georgia’s OSCE commitments; whereas these elections violated the democratic norms and standards set for free and fair elections, failing to reflect the will of the people and rendering the resulting ‘parliament’, and subsequently the ‘president’, devoid of any democratic legitimacy; whereas from the very beginning of its activity, the current Georgian parliament has operated as a one-party (Georgian Dream) organ, which is incompatible with the essence of pluralistic parliamentary democracy;

    B.  whereas Article 2 of the EU-Georgia Association Agreement(2) concerns the general principles of the agreement, which include democratic principles, human rights and fundamental freedoms;

    C.  whereas Article 78 of the Georgian Constitution states that the constitutional bodies must take all measures within the scope of their competences to ensure the full integration of Georgia into the European Union;

    D.  whereas the President of Georgia, Salome Zourabichvili, publicly condemned the parliamentary elections as rigged, declared that she would not recognise them and called for an international investigation; whereas the current Georgian regime, led by the Georgian Dream party and its founder, Bidzina Ivanishvili, has orchestrated an unconstitutional usurpation of power, systematically dismantling democratic institutions, undermining judicial independence and eroding fundamental freedoms and the rule of law, thereby deepening Georgia’s political and constitutional crisis;

    E.  whereas Georgia has officially held the status of EU candidate country since December 2023; whereas on 28 November 2024, Irakli Kobakhidze announced that Georgia would delay initiating accession talks with the EU and reject its financial assistance until the end of 2028, disregarding the country’s constitutional commitment to European integration and effectively undermining Georgia’s sovereign Euro-Atlantic aspirations;

    F.  whereas on 28 November 2024, peaceful mass anti-government protests began across the country, demanding new, free and fair elections, an end to political violence and repression, and the return of the country to its European path; whereas the protests have been taking place without interruption for over 75 days;

    G.  whereas on 14 December 2024, the de facto parliament held a ‘presidential election’ with a single candidate from the Georgian Dream party, former footballer Mikheil Kavelashvili, elected with 224 out of 225 votes cast;

    H.  whereas Georgia’s self-appointed authorities have plunged the country into a fully fledged constitutional and political crisis, as well as a human rights and democracy crisis; whereas this has been marked by the brutal repression of peaceful protesters, political opponents and media representatives, with judges, prosecutors and police officers actively fabricating politically motivated administrative and criminal charges against protesters, journalists and opposition figures detained during peaceful anti-government demonstrations; whereas, as of December 2024, more than 460 people have been arrested or punished since the protests began, with this number growing by the day;

    I.  whereas riot police deliberately lacking force identification numbers have forcefully dispersed protesters with tear gas and water cannons; whereas numerous journalists have reported being targeted and beaten, and having their equipment destroyed and personal items stolen; whereas dozens of protesters have been brutally assaulted, and several hundred people have been arrested; whereas Georgia’s Public Defender has revealed that 80 % of those detained reported experiencing violence and inhumane treatment at the hands of law enforcement officers; whereas despite international condemnation, the illegitimate Georgian Government has awarded medals to officials involved in the crackdown;

    J.  whereas independent media outlets, including TV Formula, TV Mtavari and TV Pirveli, face severe operational and financial constraints due to the regime’s interference, while dozens of media representatives are being subjected to various forms of intense physical and psychological pressure; whereas numerous violent attacks on journalists have been documented, including the severe beatings of Aleksandre Keshelashvili, Maka Chikhladze and Giorgi Shetsiruli, and the harassment of detained journalist Saba Kevkhishvili; whereas on 12 January 2025, the Georgian authorities arrested journalist Mzia Amaghlobeli, who has been in pre-trial detention since then and is on hunger strike in solidarity with all political prisoners in Georgia; whereas she faces between four and seven years in prison;

    K.  whereas, on the night of 14 January 2025, Giorgi Gakharia, opposition leader of the For Georgia party and former Prime Minister, and Zviad Koridze, journalist and Transparency International activist, were physically assaulted by Georgian Dream officials in separate incidents at the same venue in Batumi;

    L.  whereas on 2 February 2025, Nika Melia, a leader of the pro-European Akhali party, and Gigi Ugulava, the former mayor of Tbilisi, were arrested during the anti-government protests and subjected to physical violence in detention; whereas on 12 January 2025, Elene Khoshtaria, leader of the Droa political movement, was detained in Batumi;

    M.  whereas the de facto Georgian authorities have used disproportionate force and excessive violence against peaceful protesters and resorted to arbitrary mass arrests to thwart dissent; whereas independent human rights organisations have reported the systemic mistreatment of detainees, including torture; whereas to date, not a single law enforcement official involved in the brutal crackdowns, arbitrary arrests and mistreatment has been brought to justice;

    N.  whereas the self-appointed authorities introduced new draconian legislation that came into force on 30 December 2024 and amended the Criminal Code, the Code of Administrative Offences and the Law on Assemblies and Manifestations, imposing further arbitrary restrictions on the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, introducing, among other things, hefty fines for putting up protest slogans and posters, and granting police the power to detain individuals ‘preventively’ for 48 hours on suspicion of planning to violate the rules governing public assembly; whereas on 3 February 2025, the Georgian Dream party unveiled further draft legislation designed to tighten control, ramping up penalties for a variety of offences directly targeting protestors, critics and political dissent, such as harsher punishments for ‘insulting officials’, the criminalisation of road blocks and an increase in the duration of administrative detention from 15 to 60 days;

    O.  whereas on 27 January 2025, the Council decided to suspend parts of the EU-Georgia visa facilitation agreement for Georgian diplomats and officials, but failed to impose individual sanctions in response to the continued crackdown; whereas the Hungarian and Slovak Governments have been consistently blocking impactful EU-wide sanctions, preventing the remaining 25 Member States (EU-25) from effectively introducing sanctions against the self-appointed Georgian authorities;

    P.  whereas several Member States, including Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia and Czechia, have imposed bilateral sanctions on some Georgian politicians, judges and other officials responsible for the brutal crackdown on protesters, violations of human rights and abuse of the rule of law; whereas in December 2024, the United States sanctioned Bidzina Ivanishvili, alongside Georgia’s ‘Minister of Internal Affairs’ Vakhtang Gomelauri and Deputy Head of the Special Tasks Department Mirza Kezevadze, for their involvement in brutal crackdowns on media representatives, opposition figures and protesters; whereas the UK and Ukraine have imposed similar sanctions on high-level Georgian officials; whereas Ivanishvili, through hastily adopted laws tailored to his personal situation, is moving his offshore assets to Georgia in anticipation of further sanctions;

    Q.  whereas on 29 January 2025, Georgian Dream announced that it would withdraw its delegation from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) after it demanded new, genuinely democratic parliamentary elections, the release of political prisoners and accountability for perpetrators of violence; whereas UN experts have condemned the pattern of repression and human rights violations in Georgia, while the OSCE has called this suppression a serious breach of the right to freedom of assembly;

    R.  whereas the ruling Georgian Dream party convened the new parliament in violation of the country’s constitution, resulting in a boycott of parliament by the opposition; whereas on 5 February 2025, the self-appointed ‘parliament’ voted to approve the early termination of the mandates of 49 out of 61 members of parliament, representing the Coalition for Change, Strong Georgia and the United National Movement, in order to strip them of their immunity and facilitate their arrest and prosecution; whereas the same ‘parliament’ established a commission to punish former ruling party United National Movement;

    S.  whereas a growing number of civil servants have been dismissed after speaking out against the halting of Georgia’s EU accession process; whereas Georgian Dream has amended laws on public service, simplifying procedures to dismiss public servants, several of whom have been dismissed for participating in protests, in a clear attempt to silence critical voices;

    1.  Condemns the Georgian Dream ‘authorities’ and urges them to immediately cease the violent repression of peaceful protesters, political opponents and media representatives; underlines that Georgia’s self-appointed authorities are currently violating fundamental freedoms, basic human rights and the core international obligations of the country, thereby undermining decades of democratic reforms driven by the country’s political class and civil society; considers Georgia as a state captured by the illegitimate Georgian Dream regime; expresses deep regret over the fact that the ruling Georgian Dream party has abandoned its path towards European integration and NATO membership; recalls that the ongoing democratic backsliding and adoption of anti-democratic laws has effectively suspended Georgia’s EU integration process; reiterates its unwavering support for the Georgian people’s legitimate European aspirations and their wish to live in a prosperous and democratic country;

    2.  Does not recognise the self-proclaimed authorities of the Georgian Dream party established following the rigged election of 26 October 2024, which was neither free nor fair, was held in violation of democratic norms and standards, and did not reflect the will of the people of Georgia; underlines that the extensive electoral fraud has undermined the integrity of the election process, cast doubt on the legitimacy of the result and eroded public trust, both domestically and internationally, in any new government;

    3.  Calls for the EU and its Member States, as well as national parliaments and interparliamentary institutions, not to recognise the legitimacy of the Georgian Dream one-party parliament and their appointed president; calls, therefore, on the international community to join the boycott of the self-proclaimed Georgian authorities;

    4.  Continues to recognise Salome Zourabichvili as the legitimate President of Georgia and representative of the Georgian people; praises her efforts to peacefully steer the country back towards a democratic and European path of development; calls on the President of the European Council to invite President Zourabichvili to represent Georgia at an upcoming European Council meeting and at the next European Political Community summit;

    5.  Underlines that the settlement of the current political and constitutional crisis in Georgia can only be achieved by way of new parliamentary elections; demands that new elections take place in Georgia within the next few months in an improved electoral environment, overseen by an independent and impartial election administration and monitored through diligent international observation to guarantee a genuinely fair, free and transparent process; encourages the Member States and EU officials to firmly demand new elections and to make any future engagement explicitly conditional on setting a new date for parliamentary elections and establishing a mechanism to ensure they are free and fair;

    6.  Calls on the Council and the Member States, particularly the EU-25 on a bilateral and coordinated basis, to impose immediate and targeted personal sanctions on Bidzina Ivanishvili, his family and his companies, and to freeze all his assets within the EU for his role in the deterioration of the political process in Georgia, enabling democratic backsliding and acting against the country’s constitutionally declared interests of Euro-Atlantic integration; calls on the French Government to strip Bidzina Ivanishvili of the Legion of Honour and impose individual sanctions on him; welcomes, in this regard, the sanctions imposed bilaterally by Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Czechia, as well as those already imposed by the US and the UK;

    7.  Calls for the EU and its Member States, in particular the EU-25 on a bilateral and coordinated basis, to impose personal sanctions on the officials and political leaders in Georgia responsible for democratic backsliding, electoral fraud, human rights violations and the persecution of political opponents and activists, including Irakli Kobakhidze, Shalva Papuashvili, Vakhtang Gomelauri, Mayor of Tbilisi and Secretary General of the ruling Georgian Dream party Kakha Kaladze, and Chair of the Georgian Dream party Irakli Garibashvili; calls for them to extend these sanctions to judges, including those of the Constitutional Court of Georgia who are passing politically motivated sentences, and representatives of the law enforcement services, as well as to financial enablers tacitly or openly supporting the regime and the owners of regime-aligned media outlets, including TV Imedi, Pos TV and Rustavi 2 TV, for their role in spreading disinformation and seeking to manipulate public discourse in order to sustain the current ruling party’s authoritarian rule;

    8.  Calls on the Council and the Member States to impose sanctions on Bidzina Ivanishvili’s network of enablers, elite entourage, corrupt financial operatives, propagandists and those facilitating the repressive state apparatus, including, among others, Ekaterine Khvedelidze, Uta Ivanishvili, Tsotne Ivanishvili, Bera Ivanishvili, Gvantsa Ivanishvili, Alexander Ivanishvili, Shmagi Kobakhidze, Ucha Mamatsashvili, Natia Turnava, Ivane Chkhartishvili, Sulkhan Papashvili, Giorgi Kapanadze, Tornike Rizhvadze, Ilia Tsulaia, Kakha Bekauri, Lasha Natsvlishvili, Vasil Maglaperidze, Grigol Liluashvili, Mikheil Chinchaladze, Levan Murusidze, Irakli Rukhadze, Tinatin Berdzenishvili, Tamaz Gaiashvili, Anton Obolashvili and Gocha Enukidze;

    9.  Maintains the view that the measures taken so far by the EU in response to the flagrant democratic backsliding and reneging on previous commitments does not yet fully reflect the severity of the situation in Georgia and the latest developments; welcomes the Council’s decision to suspend visa-free travel for Georgian diplomats and officials, but considers it as only a first step, which must be followed by tougher measures; deplores the obstruction by the Hungarian and Slovak Governments of the Council decisions on introducing sanctions against individuals responsible for democratic backsliding in Georgia;

    10.  Emphasises that respect for fundamental rights is vital to the EU’s visa liberalisation benchmarks; reiterates its call on the Commission and the Council to review Georgia’s visa-free status, with the possibility of suspension if it is considered that EU standards on democratic governance and freedoms are not being upheld;

    11.  Strongly condemns the brutal violence and repression used by Georgia’s ruling regime against peaceful protesters since 28 November 2024; calls for the immediate and unconditional release of all political prisoners and those detained during the anti-government protests; demands the release of journalist Mzia Amaghlobeli, who has been on hunger strike for over four weeks now because of her unjust detention and risks facing critical, irreversible and life-threatening consequences; denounces the assault and beating of former Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia, resulting in his hospitalisation, followed by the arrest on 2 February 2025 of political leaders including Nika Melia and Gigi Ugulava, as a shocking escalation of state-orchestrated violence by Georgian Dream and its allies against peaceful demonstrators and political opponents; reminds of the detention of Elene Khoshtaria on 12 January 2025 in Batumi;

    12.  Reiterates its solidarity with the people of Georgia and its vibrant civil society in fighting for their legitimate democratic rights and for a European future for their country; urges the Georgian Government to reverse its current political course and return to implementing the will of the Georgian people for continued democratic reforms that would reopen the prospect of future EU membership;

    13.   Strongly condemns the enactment of draconian legislation that imposes unjustified restrictions on freedoms of expression and peaceful assembly, and demands the annulment of such recently adopted repressive legislation; urges the Georgian authorities to immediately and unconditionally release all individuals detained for peacefully exercising their fundamental rights to freedoms of expression and peaceful assembly, and to ensure prompt, thorough and impartial investigations into all allegations of unlawful and disproportionate use of force by the law enforcement agencies; considers that the Georgian justice system has been weaponised to stifle dissent, instil fear and silence free speech;

    14.  Calls for the ‘Georgian authorities’ to take immediate action to ensure the safety and freedom of journalists and to investigate all instances of violence and misconduct by law enforcement agencies; emphasises the importance of fostering a democratic environment where media, civil society and the opposition can operate freely without fear of retaliation or censorship;

    15.  Demands an independent, transparent and impartial investigation into police brutality and the excessive use of force against peaceful demonstrators; calls for those responsible for human rights violations, including law enforcement and government officials ordering acts of repression, to be held fully accountable before the law;

    16.  Denounces the launch of an investigation by the Prosecutor’s Office on 8 February 2025 into non-governmental organisations accused of aggravated sabotage, attempted sabotage and assisting foreign and foreign-controlled organisations in hostile activities aimed at undermining the state interests of Georgia, for which they could receive multiple-year sentences; views this action as further escalation of repression by the regime, misuse of the judicial system and accelerated democratic backsliding;

    17.  Condemns the broader campaign of attacks by the Georgian authorities vilifying civil society organisations and reputable international donors that support democracy, the rule of law and the protection of human rights in Georgia;

    18.  Denounces the termination by Georgian Dream of the mandates of 49 opposition members of parliament as a sign of further democratic backsliding, and considers this the latest move in Georgian Dream’s attack on political pluralism in the country;

    19.   Welcomes PACE’s decision to challenge the credentials of Georgia’s parliamentary delegation due to democratic backsliding and human rights abuses; supports PACE’s call for Georgia to immediately initiate an inclusive process involving all political and social actors, including the ruling party, the opposition and civil society, to urgently address the deficiencies and shortcomings noted during the recent parliamentary elections and to create an electoral environment conducive to new, genuinely democratic elections to be announced in the coming months;

    20.  Notes that Georgia, once a front runner for Euro-Atlantic integration, is undergoing an accelerated process of democratic backsliding, in a seemingly deliberate attempt to demonstrate that the will of the Georgian people no longer determines the country’s future, which could result in the country taking the Belarussian path of political development, transitioning from the current authoritarian state to a dictatorial regime;

    21.  Deplores the decision of Irakli Kobakhidze to suspend accession talks and reject EU funding until the end of 2028; recalls that all polls consistently show the overwhelming support of the Georgian population for a Euro-Atlantic future; expresses strong support for the Euro-Atlantic aspirations of the Georgian people;

    22.  Calls for an immediate and comprehensive audit of EU policy towards Georgia due to the democratic backsliding; calls on the Commission to review the EU-Georgia Association Agreement in the light of the self-declared Georgian authorities’ breach of the general principles, as laid down in Article 2, namely respect for democratic principles, the rule of law and fundamental freedoms; points out that non-fulfilment of obligations may result in the conditional suspension of economic cooperation and privileges afforded by the Agreement;

    23.  Welcomes the Commission’s decision to cease all budgetary support to the Georgian authorities and to suspend the initiation of any future investment projects; encourages the Commission to terminate all financial support for ongoing projects; calls for a moratorium on all investment projects in the field of connectivity; calls on the Commission to start identifying economic sectors of relevance to the oligarchic interests that support and sustain the current authoritarian rule, with a view to a potential future decision about restrictive measures or economic sanctions; calls on the Commission to start identifying connectivity projects that support and sustain the current authoritarian rule and to consider their suspension until a rerun of the parliamentary elections;

    24.  Condemns the climate of intimidation and polarisation fuelled by statements by Georgian Government representatives and political leaders, as well as by attacks against political pluralism, including through disturbing cases of intimidation and violence against the Georgian democratic political forces and repeated threats to ban opposition parties, to arrest their leaders and even ordinary supporters, and to silence dissent; underlines that anything but the full restoration of Georgia’s democratic standards will entail a further deterioration of EU-Georgia relations, make any move towards EU accession impossible and result in additional sanctions;

    25.  Calls on the Commission to swiftly redirect the frozen EUR 120 million originally intended as support for the Georgian authorities to enhance the EU’s support for Georgia’s civil society, in particular the non-governmental sector and independent media, which are increasingly coming under undue pressure from the ruling political party and the authorities, as well as to support programmes supporting democratic resilience and electoral integrity; calls for the EU’s funding mechanisms to be adjusted to take into account the needs that arise in a more hostile and anti-democratic environment; highlights the urgency of the need to support civil society in the light of growing repression and the suspension of activities of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), and therefore urges the Commission to ramp up support without delay;

    26.  Expresses deep concern about the increasing Russian influence in the country and about the Georgian Dream government’s actions in pursuing a policy of rapprochement and collaboration with Russia, in spite of its creeping occupation of Georgian territory; deplores, in this regard, the growing anti-Western and hostile rhetoric of the Georgian Dream party’s representatives towards Georgia’s strategic Western partners, including the EU, and its MEPs and officials, and Georgian Dream’s promotion of Russian disinformation and manipulation;

    27.  Strongly reiterates its urgent demand for the immediate release of former President Mikheil Saakashvili on humanitarian grounds, specifically for the purpose of seeking medical treatment abroad; emphasises that the self-appointed authorities bear full and undeniable responsibility for the life, health, safety and well-being of former President Mikheil Saakashvili and must be held fully accountable for any harm that befalls him; calls, furthermore, on the Georgian Dream authorities to ensure that Members of the European Parliament are granted unhindered access to Mikheil Saakashvili;

    28.  Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the Council, the Commission, the governments and parliaments of the Member States, the Council of Europe, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and the self-appointed authorities of Georgia.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Text adopted – Escalation of violence in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo – P10_TA(2025)0020 – Thursday, 13 February 2025 – Strasbourg

    Source: European Parliament

    The European Parliament,

    –  having regard to its previous resolutions on the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC),

    –  having regard to the statement by the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy on behalf of the EU of 25 January 2025 on the latest escalation in eastern DRC,

    –  having regard to the statement by G7 foreign ministers of 2 February 2025 on the escalation of violence in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo,

    –  having regard to the press statement of the UN Security Council of 26 January 2025 on the situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,

    –  having regard to the special session of the UN Human Rights Council of 7 February 2025 on the human rights situation in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,

    –  having regard to the communiqué of the Peace and Security Council of the African Union of 28 January 2025 on the recent developments in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo,

    –  having regard to the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women of 18 December 1979,

    –  having regard to the Partnership Agreement of 15 November 2023 between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part, and the Members of the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States, of the other part(1),

    –  having regard to Rule 136(2) and (4) of its Rules of Procedure,

    A.  whereas in January 2025, the armed rebel group M23, backed by Rwandan forces, further advanced in the eastern DRC and seized the regional capital city of Goma; whereas violence between rebel groups and the Congolese army increased sharply, causing a high number of civilian casualties; whereas an estimated 3 000 deaths occurred during the offensive on Goma; whereas approximately 800 000 internally displaced people were sheltering at that time in densely populated displacement sites around the city;

    B.  whereas M23 announced a unilateral ceasefire to begin on 4 February 2025; whereas fighting has nonetheless continued, Goma airport remains closed, air traffic management equipment is damaged and humanitarian access is still limited; whereas there are reports that the mining town of Nyabibwe in South Kivu has been captured by M23; whereas M23 leaders have declared their intention to continue advancing in the DRC; whereas the latest advances of M23 mark an alarming escalation of the devastating conflict in the eastern DRC, a violation of territorial integrity and an escalation in violence, leading to a dire humanitarian crisis, human rights violations and the further destabilisation of the country;

    C.  whereas the region has been plagued by decades of cyclical violence, causing a security and humanitarian crisis; whereas after a ceasefire that lasted several years, the M23 fighters took up arms again at the end of 2021; whereas martial law has been in force since 2021 in the eastern DRC and the civilian government has been replaced by the military; whereas the M23 forces have been expanding their presence in the eastern DRC, setting up new governance administrations and taxation systems, establishing military training camps and exporting minerals directly to Rwanda; whereas the long-term consequences of the terrible 1994 Rwandan genocide against the Tutsi are still fuelling violence, hatred and forced displacements today;

    D.  whereas on 23 and 24 January 2025, M23 fired on positions of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the DRC (MONUSCO), which resulted in the deaths of 13 peacekeepers deployed with MONUSCO and the peacekeeping mission led by the Southern African Development Community (SADC);

    E.  whereas the UN Group of Experts concluded in its June 2024 report that the deployment of the Rwanda Defence Forces (RDF) ‘violates the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’ and that the RDF’s ‘de facto control and direction over M23 operations also renders Rwanda liable for the actions of M23’;

    F.  whereas the seizing of Goma has led to significant displacement of civilians; whereas over 500 000 people are estimated to have been displaced since early January 2025; whereas thousands of Congolese people had previously fled to the city to escape violence and have been further driven from camps for internally displaced people into makeshift tents or forced to sleep out in the open; whereas the safety of internally displaced people is now seriously threatened, with women and girls suffering disproportionately;

    G.  whereas the deputy head of the UN peacekeeping force based in Goma has reported on the mass rape and killing of women inmates inside Goma’s Munzenze prison, and it is estimated that hundreds of women were raped and many burned alive in the prison;

    H.  whereas women and girls in the DRC face increased levels of sexual and gender-based violence, resulting in there being one victim of rape every four minutes; whereas the staff of Panzi Hospital in Bukavu, which receives many survivors of sexual violence, is alarmed about the deteriorating security situation in the area and about the security of the staff and patients in Panzi Hospital itself;

    I.  whereas the seizure of Goma triggered violent protests in Kinshasa, with dozens of protesters attacking embassies and calling on the international community to halt the advance of M23;

    J.  whereas the conflict in the DRC is at risk of regional spillover; whereas a peacekeeping deployment from the East African Community Regional Forces withdrew in 2023; whereas the SADC deployed a peacekeeping mission to the DRC in December 2023 with troops from South Africa, Tanzania and Malawi; whereas at least 20 peacekeepers were killed during the M23 advance on Goma; whereas on 6 February 2025, Malawi announced the withdrawal of its troops from this mission;

    K.  whereas it is widely acknowledged that Rwanda is active in the conflict in the eastern DRC, including through its de facto control of M23, to which it supplies weapons, logistical support and troops; whereas UN experts estimate that there are between 3 000 and 4 000 Rwandan troops operating with M23;

    L.  whereas North Kivu is a resource-rich region, with vast supplies of critical raw materials including cobalt, gold and tin, which are necessary for the global digital and energy transition; whereas Goma is a major transport and trading hub for the export of minerals; whereas the UN estimates that around 120 tonnes of coltan are being moved by M23 to Rwanda each month; whereas UN experts further estimate that M23 is financed by around EUR 288 000 per month generated through its control of the mineral trade in the DRC; whereas the rebel groups often recruit child soldiers in a blatant violation of international law and humanity;

    M.  whereas the International Criminal Court (ICC) investigations in the DRC have focused on alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed mainly in the eastern DRC, in the Ituri region and the North and South Kivu Provinces, since 1 July 2002; whereas the DRC made a second referral to the ICC in May 2023 concerning alleged crimes committed in North Kivu since 1 January 2022;

    N.  whereas on 8 February 2025 at a joint summit in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, the regional blocs of southern Africa, the SADC, and eastern Africa, the East African Community (EAC), called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire, demanded the withdrawal of uninvited foreign armed forces from the DRC territory, urged all warring parties to hold peace talks within five days, and demanded the reopening of Goma airport and other key routes to facilitate humanitarian aid; whereas the African Union is set to address the matter at a meeting in Addis Ababa on 14 February 2025; whereas other mediation efforts are ongoing, notably by France, which aims to bring all actors to the negotiation table;

    O.  whereas the Foreign Affairs Council of the Council of the EU is expected to exchange views on the situation in the DRC on 24 February 2025;

    P.  whereas between 2021 and 2024, the EU provided EUR 260 million in funding to Rwanda, with an additional EUR 900 million pledged under the Global Gateway strategy; whereas following the latest developments in the eastern DRC, the EU declared that it stood ready to boost emergency assistance, particularly for the newly displaced populations in and around Goma, and on 28 January 2025, the Commission announced new humanitarian support for the DRC with an initial amount of EUR 60 million for 2025; whereas the EU is trying to intensify its presence in the region, including through its recent support for the ‘Green Corridor Kivu-Kinshasa’ programme via a Global Gateway initiative, which aims to help establish a sustainable 2 600 km corridor connecting the eastern DRC to Kinshasa and the Atlantic Coast, covering 540 000 km2;

    Q.  whereas the EU has formed raw materials partnerships with several countries, including the DRC, Rwanda and other countries in the region; whereas these partnerships are focused on, among other things, advancing due diligence and traceability, cooperation in fighting against the illegal trafficking of raw materials, and alignment with international environmental, social and governance standards; whereas Parliament, unlike the Council, was not given the opportunity by the Commission to share its political assessment of the decision to negotiate a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Rwanda or to provide technical feedback on the draft MoU;

    R.  whereas the DRC Foreign Affairs Minister Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner and Nobel Prize laureate Denis Mukwage briefed Parliament on 5 February 2025, at an extraordinary meeting of the Delegation to the Africa-EU Parliamentary Assembly (DAFR) and the Committee on Development, on the occupation of the eastern DRC and the dire humanitarian impact on the local population and internally displaced people;

    S.  whereas the Council appointed Johan Borgstam as the EU Special Representative for the Great Lakes Region on 1 September 2024; whereas on 30 January 2025, DAFR organised an extraordinary hearing with the EU Special Representative and Bintou Keita, Head of MONUSCO;

    T.  whereas prior to recent developments, the DRC faced one of the largest displacement crises in Africa, with 6,7 million internally displaced persons, including 4,6 million in South and North Kivu; whereas the DRC also hosts over 520 000 refugees and asylum seekers from neighbouring countries, while 1,1 million refugees from the DRC are being hosted in neighbouring countries in the region, more than half of them in Uganda; whereas the recent surge in violence has internally displaced over half a million people since the beginning of the year; whereas given the severe overcrowding in the displacement sites where people remain and the lack of water, sanitation and hygiene infrastructure, the risk of a cholera outbreak is extremely high, along with that of a rapid spread of the Mpox epidemic;

    1.  Strongly condemns the occupation of Goma and other territories in the eastern DRC by M23 and the RDF as an unacceptable breach of the DRC’s sovereignty and territorial integrity; urges the Rwandan Government to withdraw its troops from DRC territory, as they are in clear violation of international law and the UN Charter, and to cease cooperation with the M23 rebels; demands that Rwanda and all other potential state actors in the region cease their support for M23;

    2.  Strongly condemns the indiscriminate attacks with explosive weapons in populated areas of North Kivu by all parties, including on displacement camps and other densely populated areas near Goma, as well as the unlawful killings, rapes and other apparent war crimes, forced labour, forced recruitment and other abusive practices committed by M23 with the support of the RDF and by the armed forces of the DRC, the FARDC;

    3.  Is appalled by the shocking use of sexual violence against women and girls as a tool of repression and weapon of war in the eastern DRC as well as the unacceptable recruitment of child soldiers by the various rebel groups; demands that these matters be addressed by the international community without delay; strongly reiterates that any attack against UN-mandated forces is inexcusable and might be considered a war crime;

    4.  Calls for an immediate end to the violence, particularly the mass killings and the use of rape as a strategic weapon of war; calls on the DRC and Rwanda to investigate and appropriately prosecute those responsible for war crimes, including sexual violence, under the principle of command responsibility;

    5.  Is extremely concerned by the critical humanitarian situation in the country; calls for the immediate reopening of Goma airport to re-establish humanitarian operations and bring in supplies via the airport and the land border; calls for the creation and immediate opening of humanitarian corridors and for all parties, including armed groups operating in the eastern DRC, to allow and facilitate full humanitarian access based on needs and humanitarian principles, including ensuring that civilians and displaced people are not denied access to items essential for their survival;

    6.  Emphasises that humanitarian workers must be able to operate safely to deliver life-saving assistance to Congolese civilians, and that the safety of medical facilities must be preserved; stresses that this is a central obligation under international humanitarian law, and that perpetrators violating these obligations should be held to account; underlines that Rwanda and the neighbouring countries have a special responsibility to facilitate humanitarian access to the region;

    7.  Strongly condemns the attack on diplomatic institutions of the EU, its Member States and civil society organisations, such as political foundations in Kinshasa; underlines that the protection of civilians and diplomatic staff must be guaranteed;

    8.  Expresses concern over the lack of coherence in the EU response to the Great Lakes region’s crises and calls on the Council to reassess the implementation of its renewed EU Great Lakes strategy; recalls that the EU and its special representative for the region are ready to assist all mediation efforts;

    9.  Welcomes the increased humanitarian support pledged by the EU, notes that this still falls far short of meeting the basic needs for food, water, medical assistance and shelter in the eastern DRC, especially in the light of the recent termination of support from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID); calls on the Commission and the international community to significantly step up financial support for urgent and life-saving assistance;

    10.  Regrets that the EU has not taken appropriate measures to sufficiently address the crisis and effectively press Rwanda to end its support for M23, and that it has instead taken steps – including the signing in February 2024 of an MoU on sustainable raw materials value chains without sufficiently discussing the conflict, and the decision to top up support for Rwanda’s deployment in Mozambique under the European Peace Facility (EPF) – that have failed to demonstrate sufficient safeguards and that have contributed to sending an inconsistent message to the Rwandan authorities;

    11.  Urges the Commission and the Council to immediately suspend the EU-Rwanda MoU on sustainable raw materials value chains until Rwanda proves that it is ceasing its interference and its exportation of minerals mined from M23-controlled areas; calls on all actors to increase transparency and to effectively ban the entry of all blood minerals into the EU;

    12.  Calls on the Commission to render the future re-activation of cooperation on critical raw materials conditional upon Rwanda joining the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, which the DRC is already part of;

    13.  Calls on the Commission and the Member States to ensure that the current Conflict Minerals Regulation(2) is strongly enforced and on the Commission to propose a revision of the EU rules, with the aim of ensuring the highest standards of traceability and transparency;

    14.  Notes that parliamentary oversight and civil society involvement in the preparation, signing and implementation of raw material MoUs and roadmaps are essential for an inclusive process with adequate scrutiny, and must become part of the MoU;

    15.  Calls on the Commission, the Member States and the international financial institutions to freeze direct budget support to Rwanda subject to it meeting conditions on, among other things, humanitarian access and the breaking of all links with M23; urges the Commission and the Member States to freeze their military and security assistance to the Rwandan armed forces to ensure that they do not contribute directly or indirectly to abusive military operations in the eastern DRC; calls strongly, in particular, for a review of the EU’s renewed support under the EPF to ensure that troops deployed in northern Mozambique and benefiting from EPF support, as well as their commanders, have been properly vetted and have not been involved in the eastern DRC or in other human rights violations, with a view to suspending the support if it is found to contribute directly or indirectly to abusive military operations in the eastern DRC;

    16.  Urges the Commission and all Member States to ban the transfer of weapons to the Rwandan forces and M23 and to ensure greater transparency of trade in EU weapons;

    17.  Urges the Council to expand sanctions against senior M23 commanders, leaders of other armed groups and senior officials from the DRC and Rwanda – including Major-General Eugene Nkubito, the commander of the RDF’s 3rd Division, and Major-General Ruki Karusisi, RDF Special Force Commander, identified in the June 2024 report of the UN Group of Experts, and Major-General Emmy K. Ruvusha, Commander of the Rwanda Security Forces, identified in the June 2023 report of the UN Group of Experts – and from other countries across the region, as being responsible for or complicit in recent serious abuses by their forces or those for which they have command responsibility;

    18.  Urges the European External Action Service (EEAS), the Member States and the Government of the DRC to take immediate action to prevent sexual violence and improve care for survivors, including by adapting the national legal framework to guarantee access to medical abortion care; draws attention to the health needs of pregnant women, notably those who are displaced and out of reach of medical support; calls on the EEAS and the Member States to further prioritise the disbursement of humanitarian support for women and girls in the region;

    19.  Calls on the Commission to continue supporting anti-corruption efforts and the strengthening of governance in the DRC;

    20.  Commends the Prosecutor of the ICC’s announcement that the ICC will continue to investigate alleged crimes committed by any person, irrespective of affiliation or nationality; reiterates the EU’s unwavering support for the ICC and calls on the Council and Commission to fulfil their obligations to ensure the functioning and effectiveness of the ICC;

    21.  Reiterates its full support for MONUSCO in protecting civilians and stabilising the region; urges the EU to cooperate with all actors on the ground, in particular MONUSCO, to ensure the protection of civilians in the eastern DRC; calls on the UN to work towards a stronger mandate for MONUSCO in order to enable peacemaking; calls on the UN to ensure the protection of civilians and respect for international humanitarian law, particularly given the increased risk of gender-based violence, and to preserve the safety of humanitarian staff, health workers and medical facilities;

    22.  Calls on the UN to take immediate and specific measures to protect Panzi Hospital and its patients and staff;

    23.  Welcomes the special session of the UN Human Rights Council of 7 February 2025 on the human rights situation in the east of the DRC; supports the establishment of an independent commission of inquiry into serious violations committed since January 2022;

    24.  Reiterates its condemnation of hate speech and xenophobia, as well as ethnic-based politics; underlines that all those responsible for sustaining armed conflict, instability and insecurity in the DRC must be held accountable;

    25.  Is concerned about the consequences of Russian interference in the conflict and more widely in the region, and about the increasing presence of disinformation campaigns; condemns, in particular, efforts by Russia to foster anti-Western sentiment through the dissemination of fake news on social media about Western players;

    26.  Expresses its concern about the increasing presence of Chinese actors in the mining sector of the DRC and the region acting without respect for economic and social responsibilities, and recalls that European industries and companies in the region will only have long-term security of supply if a long-lasting and peaceful solution to the conflict is found;

    27.  Recalls that only an inclusive and regional approach will be able to address and tackle the multifaceted, long-standing problems in the region; strongly welcomes the joint SADC and EAC peace summit in Dar es Salaam on 8 February 2025; reiterates, in this regard, its full support for the Luanda and Nairobi processes and calls upon all Great Lake countries, in particular the DRC and Rwanda, to urgently pursue negotiations within these frameworks; emphasises that any solution must also address the root causes of the conflict, including, but not limited to, the illicit trafficking of natural resources; calls on the Commission and the Member States to fully support national and regional initiatives, such as the initiative of the Congolese Catholic and Protestant leaders, and the Luanda Process; underlines that regional organisations, such as the African Union, the SADC and the EAC, must play a central role in all of these efforts; underlines also that a lasting solution requires a reform of the DRC security sector, with a better organised DRC army and administration;

    28.  Calls on the international community and all actors involved to use the Addis Ababa framework agreement and to organise an international conference for peace in the eastern DRC and the Great Lakes region; stresses that this ‘Business for Peace’ conference will have the unique feature of having the private sector around the peace negotiation table, since the war is about strategic minerals; underlines that business people can have significant leverage to push their countries to act for peace; believes that the business for peace approach can help us move forward in finding a solution;

    29.  Calls for the cancellation of the 2025 International Cycling Union (UCI) Road World Championships in Kigali if Rwanda does not change course;

    30.  Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Council, the Commission, the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the Government and Parliament of Rwanda and of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the African Union, the secretariats of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Southern African Development Community and the East African Community, and other relevant international bodies.

    (1) OJ L, 2023/2862, 28.12.2023, ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/agree_internation/2023/2862/oj.
    (2) Regulation (EU) 2017/821 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 May 2017 laying down supply chain due diligence obligations for Union importers of tin, tantalum and tungsten, their ores, and gold originating from conflict-affected and high-risk areas (OJ L 130, 19.5.2017, p. 1, ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2017/821/oj).

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Video: Football for the Goals – UEFA on the Initiative | SDGs | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    In this episode of the Football for the Goals Q&A video series, we sit down with Director of Sustainability for UEFA (Union of European Football Associations) Michele Uva. We discuss why his organization joined the Football for the Goals Initiative, UEFA’s sustainability strategy and the growing number of initiatives around its tournaments.

    UEFA is the governing body for football in Europe, overseeing national teams and club competitions such as the UEFA Champions League and the European Championship. It works to develop and regulate the sport across its member associations while promoting football’s growth, integrity, and accessibility.

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    Football for the Goals is a United Nations initiative that provides a platform for the global football community to engage with and advocate for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It is an opportunity to build on football’s powerful and influential reach and to work together to become agents of change by aligning messaging, strategies and operations with the aspirations of the SDGs.

    This initiative will inspire and guide the world of football – from confederations, national associations, leagues and clubs, to players’ associations, organized fan groups, as well as media and commercial partners – to build on existing sustainability approaches and to implement SDG strategies that lead to behavioural change.

    Members may not only aspire to develop sustainable practices, but may also act as champions of the SDGs during the Decade of Action (2020-2030). Members will use their visibility and outreach power via tournaments, players, corporate brand exposure, media and fan communities to raise the profile of the SDGs through amplification and advocacy. They will inspire action by demonstrating how these sustainable practices can be mainstreamed through any business model, including sport.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Dbe5bVufIA

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: Football for the Goals – Street Child United on the Initiative | SDGs | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    In this episode of the Football for the Goals Q&A video series, we sit down with Founder and Chief Executive of Street Child United, John Roe. We discuss why his organisation joined the Football for the Goals Initiative, the positive changes Street Child United brings to young people who are unhoused, and upcoming plans using football to help kids facing harsh living conditions around the world.

    Street Child United is a UK-based NGO that uses the power of sport, particularly international sporting events, to advocate for the rights and protection of street-connected children worldwide. Through initiatives like the Street Child World Cup, the organization provides a global platform for marginalized youth to challenge negative perceptions, access education, and influence policy changes that improve their lives.

    —————————————

    Football for the Goals is a United Nations initiative that provides a platform for the global football community to engage with and advocate for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It is an opportunity to build on football’s powerful and influential reach and to work together to become agents of change by aligning messaging, strategies and operations with the aspirations of the SDGs.

    This initiative will inspire and guide the world of football – from confederations, national associations, leagues and clubs, to players’ associations, organized fan groups, as well as media and commercial partners – to build on existing sustainability approaches and to implement SDG strategies that lead to behavioural change.

    Members may not only aspire to develop sustainable practices, but may also act as champions of the SDGs during the Decade of Action (2020-2030). Members will use their visibility and outreach power via tournaments, players, corporate brand exposure, media and fan communities to raise the profile of the SDGs through amplification and advocacy. They will inspire action by demonstrating how these sustainable practices can be mainstreamed through any business model, including sport.

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

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Chief Executive and his wife attend Giant Panda Twin Cubs Greeting Ceremony (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Chief Executive, Mr John Lee, and his wife, Mrs Janet Lee, today (February 15) visited Hong Kong Ocean Park to attend the Giant Panda Twin Cubs Greeting Ceremony.

         Other officiating guests include the Director of the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), Mr Zheng Yanxiong; Deputy Commissioner of the Office of the Commissioner of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in HKSAR Mr Pan Yundong; Deputy Commander-in-chief of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Hong Kong Garrison Mr Tan Zhiwei; the Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism, Miss Rosanna Law; and the Chairman of the Board of the Ocean Park Corporation (OPC), Mr Paulo Pong. Before the ceremony, the officiating guests visited the giant panda twins cubs which will soon make their public debut as well as their mother Ying Ying at the Giant Panda Adventure, and celebrated the sixth-month birthday of the cubs.

         Mr Lee expressed heartfelt gratitude to the experts of the China Conservation and Research Centre for the Giant Panda and the animal care team of Ocean Park for taking excellent care of the giant panda twin cubs round the clock and provide professional postnatal care to Ying Ying after her giving birth to the cubs. He said, “Ying Ying, the mother of the twin cubs is on record the world’s oldest giant panda to give birth for the first time. The birth of the twin cubs not only solidifies the outstanding achievements of our country in giant panda conservation, but also demonstrates the OPC’s leading position as an important conservation and education base in Hong Kong. With our country’s efforts over the years, giant pandas have been downgraded from ‘Endangered’ to ‘Vulnerable’ on the global list of species at risk of extinction. This represents the success of our country’s conservation work in this area. Together with our country, the HKSAR Government will continue to advance and promote conservation of giant pandas and thereby tell the good stories of our country, Hong Kong and the giant pandas.”

         Besides, Mr Lee announced at the ceremony the launch of the Giant Panda Twin Cubs Naming Competition organised by the Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau and co-organised by the OPC begins today. At present, members of the public are calling the twin cubs “Elder Sister” and “Little Brother”. These affectionate names will be retained as their nicknames. Hong Kong residents are encouraged to suggest a pair of names for the twin cubs through observing their physical features and characteristics, as well as the interaction between the cubs and their daily lives. The competition is open for entries from noon today to March 7. Results will be announced in the first half of this year and winners will be notified individually by correspondence. For details of the competition, including terms and conditions, means for submission of entries, judging criteria, etc., please visit Ocean Park’s dedicated website at www.oceanpark.com.hk/en/park-experience/giant-panda-twin-cubs-naming-competition.

         The pigeon pair of giant panda cubs was born on August 15 of last year and their parents are Ying Ying and Le Le, the giant pandas gifted by the Central People’s Government to the HKSAR in 2007. They are also the first pair of giant pandas born in Hong Kong. Over the past six months, the cubs have grown healthily from around 120g at birth to more than 12kg now. They are also adapting well at the Giant Panda Adventure, their habitat at Ocean Park.

         Starting from tomorrow (February 16), the public can visit the lovely twin cubs at Ocean Park in person and at the same time drop by the other four members of the Hong Kong giant panda family, namely, Ying Ying, Le Le, An An and Ke Ke.                        

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News