Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: State Highway 2 roundabout resurfacing planned for Masterton next week

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    |

    The State Highway 2/Dixon Street roundabout in Masterton is scheduled to be closed for roadworks next week on Wednesday and Thursday nights (9 and 10 April) between 9pm and 4:30am.

    The Wellington Transport Alliance will be resurfacing the roundabout as part of the ongoing state highway summer maintenance season.

    The work will see the roundabout closed to all traffic. Local road detours will be available via Te Ore Ore Road, Colombo Road, Church Street, and Lincoln Road. Drivers should allow for extra travel time. The detour is suitable for heavy vehicles.

    These works are to be done at night when fewer vehicles are on the road. This helps minimise disruption and delays for drivers.

    NZTA/Waka Kotahi and the Wellington Transport Alliance thank the public for their patience and understanding while this essential state highway maintenance is completed.

    Works schedule and detour route:

    • Wednesday, 9 April and Thursday, 10 April. 9 pm to 4:30 am.
    • SH2/Dixon Street roundabout CLOSED to all traffic.
    • All vehicles will need to detour via Te Ore Ore Road, Colombo Road, Church Street, and Lincoln Road.

    View larger map [PNG, 1.4 MB]

    More information

    Tags

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Legislation – Nurses’ union backs call to scrap anti-Treaty bill

    Source: New Zealand Nurses Organisation

    “The people have spoken, and it is a big fat no to that bill,” says New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) Kaiwhakahaere Kerri Nuku.
    Parliament’s Justice Committee has released its report into the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Bill and has recommended it does not proceed.
    “The call to scrap the bill is common sense and to show the nation it is listening, this Coalition Government should do away with it right now,” Nuku says.
    In January, Nuku with chief executive Paul Goulter, delivered a submission on the bill to the select committee.
    “As advocates for more than 60,000 nurses, midwives and healthcare workers, we argued that if those principles were removed or tampered with, it would cost more lives starting with Māori lives.”
    The bill was the most submitted on proposed law in the history of this country, opposed by 90% of the 300,000 submitters.
    Nuku also said the coalition should see the opposition to this bill as a warning for other similar legislation it had in the pipeline.
    “They also need to save the nation, Parliament and themselves another headache, or walk to nowhere, and scrap another planned bill [Regulatory Standards Bill] which not only undermines the Treaty but puts our already struggling health workforce at risk.”
    Later this month, Nuku and other representatives from NZNO will head to the United Nations in New York to request that a special rapporteur travel to Aotearoa to investigate the series of attacks by the Government on Māori health.
    “Even if these anti-Treaty bills are scrapped, there are still other attacks happening on Māori health, so we still intend to ask the UN to do what they can to help us. If the UN can’t stop these attacks, then at least they can let the world know what’s happening to Māori,” Nuku says.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Road closed, SH2, Woodville

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    SH2 near McLean Street, Woodville is closed following a serious crash this afternoon.

    At around 3.30pm, Police were notified of a vehicle having collided with another vehicle and a building.

    Initial reports suggest there are serious injuries.

    The Serious Crash Unit has been advised.

    The road is closed while a scene examination is underway.

    Motorists are advised to follow the diversions in place and expect delays.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: April 3rd, 2025 Heinrich, Murkowski Legislation to Promote Tribal Forest Management Passes Out of Committee

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Mexico Martin Heinrich
    WASHINGTON — U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Ranking Member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, and U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, announced that their Tribal Forest Protection Act Amendments Act passed out of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. The legislation now heads to the Senate Floor for consideration. 
    “Tribes are incredibly important stewards of our natural resources, and we need to ensure that we’re working with Tribes like Tesuque Pueblo and The Mescalero Apache Tribe that have extensive expertise in forest management, wildfire prevention, and watershed restoration on their ancestral lands. I’m pleased our legislation to help scale Tribal-led and effective forestry practices across Indian Country is one step closer to Senate passage,” said Heinrich.
    The 2004 Tribal Forest Protection Act was intended to protect Tribal forest lands and resources from various threats, including wildfires, by allowing Tribes to enter into agreements with the Forest Service or the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and carry out forest management activities on federal lands that are “bordering or adjacent to” lands under Tribal jurisdiction. In practical terms, the “bordering or adjacent to” requirement has proven to be too restrictive. This requirement does not adequately capture the sites, features, cultural landscapes, sacred places or objects with cultural value to Tribes that may be located on federal land that does not border Tribal land.
    The Tribal Forest Protection Act Amendments Act corrects the oversight and expands the original language to enable Tribes to help restore important areas within their ancestral lands, even if their modern lands are not nearby. The legislation promotes Tribal forest management activities — including cultural burning, thinning, and restoration projects to enhance forest health and resilience. Through these sustainable forest management practices, economic development and new jobs can be created within Tribal communities.
    The full text of the bill is here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Grassley Honored by National Foreign Trade Council for Longtime Commitment to Pro-Growth Policies

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Iowa Chuck Grassley
    WASHINGTON – Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), a senior member and former chairman of the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, accepted the National Foreign Trade Council Foundation’s (NFTC) International Tax Award for his decades-long commitment to pro-growth tax policies.
    “I’m honored to be recognized for my work to grow our nation’s economy through international tax reform,” Grassley said. “During my time as chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, and still today as a senior member of the committee, I’ve approached tax writing as a way to bolster American businesses, increase wages and reinvest foreign earnings. I look forward to continuing my work to advance America-first tax policies, first and foremost by extending the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.”
    “During Senator Grassley’s long career in the Senate, he has always been a champion of tax policies that drive economic growth,” said Anne Gordon, NFTC Vice President for International Tax Policy. “As Chairman of Senate Finance, he led efforts to simplify the tax code, reducing the Foreign Tax Credit baskets and creating a look-thru provision for U.S. subsidiaries, efforts which help streamline compliance and mitigate double taxation.”
    Grassley played a leading role in the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and spearheaded the American Jobs Creation Act to simplify Foreign Tax Credits and increase American businesses’ competitiveness overseas. 
    Photos and a transcript of Grassley’s remarks upon accepting the award follow.

    Download photos HERE.
    Prepared Remarks by Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa “National Foreign Trade Council Foundation’s International Tax Award” Wednesday, April 2, 2025
    It’s good to join you this evening. I’m honored to accept this award from a group of innovators and entrepreneurs who take risks everyday to grow our economy and prosperity for hard-working Americans.
    Around this time of year, a five-letter word in the English language strikes a chord among all Americans. And that word is TAXES. 
    One reason President Trump won re-election was his promise to renew the 2017 tax cuts. So, you’d think getting a bill to his desk to prevent the largest tax increase in U.S. history would be a no-brainer. 
    Unfortunately, this town is famous for gumming up the works, especially when it comes to taxes. 
    As a former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, this isn’t my first tax rodeo. 
    Two decades ago, I worked with my friend Senator Baucus to enact the American Jobs Creation Act, which included the most significant reforms to our international tax rules in decades. We hammered out provisions to simplify Foreign Tax Credits and increase the competitiveness of American businesses overseas. 
    Corporate inversions were a hot topic at the time and gaining prevalence. Provisions were added to stem the tide. However, I always saw corporate inversions as a symptom of our outdated and uncompetitive corporate tax structure. What we needed was comprehensive tax reform.   
    That finally came with the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. 
    Our corporate tax rate, which had become the highest in the developed world, was lowered to bring it in-line with that of our major trading partners. Moreover, our international tax system was modernized to unlock offshore earnings and allow trillions to be brought back and invested here at home.  
    And you know how many corporate inversions we’ve seen since enactment of these reforms? 
    Zero! 
    So, as Congress buckles down to renew the Trump tax cuts, let’s learn from history. Increasing corporate taxes reduces our international competitiveness, incentivizes profit-shifting and stretches the tax gap. 
    During his first week back in office, I’m glad President Trump put out a fire the Biden administration started by surrendering U.S. taxing rights to global interests. You can be sure I’m working against discriminatory and unfair taxes on U.S. businesses and American workers.
    Now Congress must get to work and renew the 2017 tax cuts. Failure is not an option.  
    Thank you.
    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Crapo Supports Dr. Oz as CMS Administrator

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Idaho Mike Crapo

    Washington, D.C.–Today, the U.S. Senate confirmed Dr. Mehmet Oz to be Administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) by a vote of 53-45.  In remarks delivered on the Senate Floor before the vote, U.S. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) called on his colleagues to support the nomination, emphasizing Dr. Oz’s years of experience as an acclaimed physician and strong desire to modernize CMS and encourage healthy lifestyles for all Americans.

    Click here or above to watch Crapo’s remarks

    As delivered:

    “I rise today to urge my colleagues to vote in favor of the motion to invoke cloture on Dr. Mehmet Oz, who is nominated to serve as Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).

    “The CMS Administrator is responsible for overseeing health care programs that cover tens of millions of Americans, including Medicare, Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP).

    “At his hearing, Dr. Oz spoke strongly about his desire to modernize CMS and encourage a healthy lifestyle for all Americans.  His vision for treating the underlying causes of chronic disease and equipping providers with innovative technologies to serve patients will also be a much-needed sea change at CMS. 

    “I am confident that his years spent as a leading physician and public health advocate make him duly qualified to accomplish these goals, and I look forward to working with him, if confirmed. 

    “Dr. Oz also clearly met the standard of the Finance Committee’s arduous nomination process, and I thank him for the diligence and accessibility he displayed during the extensive meetings he had with Committee members and staff, in addition to responding to hundreds of questions for the record.

    “I strongly encourage my colleagues to join me in advancing this nomination.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Hunan province promotes culture, tourism in London

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    A woman stands behind Xiang embroidery works during a culture and tourism promotional event for China’s Hunan Province, in London, Britain, on April 3, 2025. (Xinhua/Li Ying)

    Central China’s Hunan Province, known for the towering natural pillars in Zhangjiajie that inspired the movie Avatar, showcased its rich cultural and tourism resources in London on Thursday.

    Dozens of government officials and tourism industry representatives from China and Britain attended the promotional event, which aimed to explore potential partnerships in the fields of culture and tourism.

    “Tourism is a powerful way to build people-to-people and cultural connections between our two nations,” said Rachael Farrington, head of tourism (government) affairs at VisitBritain, the national tourism agency. She said she was “thrilled” by the prospect of the two countries “working further together” and strengthening ties through “a shared love of travel and culture.”

    The event spotlighted the province’s deep-rooted history, stunning landscapes, and signature cuisine – all of which have made lasting impressions on international visitors, including Ben Hardy from Bristol.

    Hardy said he “was blown away” by his trip to Hunan in 2019, during which he made friends and experienced China’s high-speed rail, traditional tea-making, Chinese calligraphy, among others.

    Hunan governor Mao Weiming emphasized the province’s unique fusion of ancient heritage and vibrant modern culture. He invited attendees to visit Hunan, underscoring the importance of deepening cooperation and exploring fresh opportunities in the tourism market.

    Cultural performances by artists from both China and Britain added a dynamic touch to the event, featuring traditional Chinese instruments such as the Changde string alongside the Western cello. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese elements thriving in Hollywood movies

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    From character images to storylines; from natural landscapes to cultural symbols; from narrative styles to philosophical ideas, Chinese elements have been prominently featured in Hollywood blockbusters in recent years, dazzling audiences. The use of these elements not only enriches the cinematic content, but also deepens cultural understanding between China and the United States.

    Chinese faces: From stereotypes to humanization

    A poster for Bruce Lee’s “Fist of Fury.” [Image courtesy of Golden Harvest]

    Chinese images have existed in Hollywood films in various forms for over a hundred years. Initially, there were only stereotypical characters and token roles. From nameless extras without lines in the early 20th century to the depiction of Fu Manchu in the early 1980s as malevolent, sinister, deformed, and cruel, these images shaped Americans’ perception of China for decades. 

    It was not until the emergence of Bruce Lee in the 1970s that this view began to shift, and it took nearly half a century for the portrayal of Chinese characters in Hollywood films to improve. 

    Films like “Fist of Fury,” “Enter the Dragon,” and “Game of Death” introduced dazzling Chinese-style martial arts to Hollywood, offering Western audiences — accustomed to modern gunfight scenes — a fresh visual experience. “All Chinese people excel at martial arts” became a new stereotype that persisted for nearly 30 years. 

    By the end of the 20th century, Jackie Chan, Jet Li, and other filmmakers pushed Chinese kung fu onto the global stage. Starring in numerous Hollywood action blockbusters, they ingrained a love for martial arts in the hearts of Hollywood filmmakers. Jackie Chan’s Rush Hour series set records for box office earnings with a Chinese actor as the lead; Jet Li carved out a niche with films such as “Lethal Weapon 4,” “The Mummy 3,” and the “Expendables” series. Recently, Donnie Yen starred in Hollywood films “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story,” “xXx: Return of Xander Cage,” and “John Wick 4.” Actresses like Lucy Liu in “Charlie’s Angels” and Michelle Yeoh in “Tomorrow Never Dies” have also portrayed action heroines.

    A poster for “John Wick 4.” [Image courtesy of Shanghai Huahua Media]

    The portrayal of Chinese characters in Hollywood has historically reflected America’s perceptions and idealized visions of China, as well as the desires, struggles, and confidence of the Chinese people. However, the portrayal of them as multi-dimensional individuals with emotions, personalities, and inner conflicts did not receive enough attention or representation.

    Entering the 21st century, with China’s growing international influence, Chinese faces in mainstream Hollywood productions are no longer obscured by the stereotype of martial arts. They now appear in positive and active roles. For instance, Ang Lee’s “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” the first Chinese-language film to win an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, highlights unique female characters breaking free of secular and feudal constraints, pursuing their inner selves, daring to love and hate, and embodying autonomy.

    On May 24 of 2023, the film “Sight,” by renowned Hollywood director Andrew Hyatt, was released in Canada and the United States. This film, set against the backdrop of the Chinese immigrant narrative, relates the story of Dr. Ming Wang, a famous Chinese ophthalmologist determined to restore the sight of a blind orphan, illuminating the way in which he transforms experiences of fear, poverty, and prejudice into love and magnanimous care for others. This film not only challenges the limited portrayal of Chinese characters in Hollywood films, but also encourages global audiences to find common ground in a world replete with conflict and polarization, calling for reconciliation and understanding.

    1   2   3   4   5   >  

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Video: Secretary Rubio holds a press availability in Brussels, Belgium – 7:00 AM

    Source: United States of America – Department of State (video statements)

    Secretary of State Marco A. Rubio holds a press availability in Brussels, Belgium on April 4, 2025.

    ———-
    Under the leadership of the President and Secretary of State, the U.S. Department of State leads America’s foreign policy through diplomacy, advocacy, and assistance by advancing the interests of the American people, their safety and economic prosperity. On behalf of the American people we promote and demonstrate democratic values and advance a free, peaceful, and prosperous world.

    The Secretary of State, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, is the President’s chief foreign affairs adviser. The Secretary carries out the President’s foreign policies through the State Department, which includes the Foreign Service, Civil Service and U.S. Agency for International Development.

    Get updates from the U.S. Department of State at www.state.gov and on social media!
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/statedept
    X: https://x.com/StateDept
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/statedept
    Flickr: https://flickr.com/photos/statephotos/

    Subscribe to the State Department Blog: https://www.state.gov/blogs
    Watch on-demand State Department videos: https://video.state.gov/
    Subscribe to The Week at State e-newsletter: http://ow.ly/diiN30ro7Cw

    State Department website: https://www.state.gov/
    Careers website: https://careers.state.gov/
    White House website: https://www.whitehouse.gov/
    Terms of Use: https://state.gov/tou

    #StateDepartment #DepartmentofState #Diplomacy

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=icCsS7Yey0w

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rosen, Colleagues Demand Trump Rescind Illegal Executive Order Threatening Federal Employee’s Collective Bargaining Agreements

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV)

    WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV) joined Senate colleagues in a letter urging President Donald Trump to rescind his March 27 executive order to end collective bargaining agreements between public employee unions and dozens of federal agencies. In their letter, the Senators blasted the move as a “gross overreach” of presidential authority, asserting that the executive order is a clear attempt to gut the federal merit-based civil service and implement a system of political cronyism. They stressed that the order poses a grave threat to the ability of over 1 million federal workers to carry out their missions and deliver important services for the American people – and thus should be rescinded immediately.
    “This order is an insult to the hardworking public servants who go to work on behalf of the American people,” wrote the Senators. “There is no evidence that the long-standing collective bargaining agreements at these agencies have jeopardized our nation’s security in any way; to the contrary, the protection collective bargaining has provided for employees allows them to conduct their work on behalf of the American people—including blowing the whistle on fraud or abuse—without political interference.”
    “This Administration clearly does not have even a basic understanding of the legally binding nature of federal collective bargaining agreements and is actively trying to bend the law to undermine protections for federal civil servants,” they continued. “We urge you to immediately rescind this illegal executive order so that our dedicated public servants can continue to work on behalf of the American public without fear for their job or political retribution.”
    The letter is endorsed by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU), International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers (IFPTE), and Service Employees International Union (SEIU).
    As a former union member herself, Senator Rosen has been a strong advocate for Nevada’s workers. Last month, she helped reintroduce the PRO Act, comprehensive labor legislation to protect the rights of workers to stand together and bargain for fair wages, better benefits, and safer workplaces. Last year, Senator Rosen helped introduce the Public Service Freedom to Negotiate Act to federally guarantee the right of law enforcement officials and other public employees to organize and collectively bargain. Last Congress, she co-sponsored the FAMILY Act, which would provide all workers with twelve weeks of paid parental, medical, and caregiving leave. Senator Rosen has also helped introduce legislation to gradually raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hagerty Gets Commitment from Nominee Perdue to Hold China Accountable for Unfair Treatment of U.S. Diplomats, Financing of Iran’s Terror Regime

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Tennessee Bill Hagerty

    The Biden Administration failed to protect U.S. diplomats, stop China from financing Iran’s terror regime

    WASHINGTON—United States Senator Bill Hagerty (R-TN), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and former U.S. Ambassador to Japan, today received a commitment from former Senator David Perdue (R-GA), nominee to be U.S. Ambassador to China, to hold the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) accountable for unfair treatment of U.S. diplomats, and work to stop the CCP from financing Iran’s terror regime and its proxies.

    “When I served as U.S. Ambassador to Japan, one of my top priorities was taking care of my staff and their families,” Hagerty said.

    “If I think about what happened during Covid [in China], they put some of our [diplomatic] staff in containers, held them in isolation in moldy hotel rooms,” Hagerty continued. “They took stool samples from them, blood tests for them. I just think it’s totally egregious what took place.”

    “If you receive reports of harassment or abuse, will you immediately report those not only to the Trump Administration, but to this committee, so that we can act upon it?” Hagerty asked.

    “Absolutely,” Perdue confirmed.

    Hagerty also questioned nominee Perdue about preventing the CCP from funding Iran’s terror regime, which the Biden Administration failed to do.

    “As I’ve discussed many times in this committee, the Biden Administration’s non-enforcement of sanctions against Iran has provided that regime with over $100 billion that they have used, therefore, to go out into the Middle East and foment terror and insecurity,” Hagerty said. “President Trump intends to actually enforce sanctions against Iran, and last month, his Administration announced sanctions against the Chinese teapot oil refinery. That refinery was buying and refining hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of Iranian crude oil.”

    “Some of this oil was even imported to China by ships linked to the Iranian-backed Houthi regime, the same terrorists that are attacking U.S. personnel, commercial vessels, and certainly our ally Israel,” Hagerty added. “This is yet another example of how Biden’s non-enforcement of sanctions funded the very problems we are spending billions to address right now.”

    “Do you commit to conveying to the Chinese government, in the strongest possible terms, that the United States will not tolerate Chinese activities that finance Iran and its terrorist proxy groups, especially those terrorist groups that attacked the United States and its allies?” Hagerty asked.

    “Of course,” Perdue answered.

    *Click the photo above or here to watch*

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: National Child Abuse Prevention Month, 2025

    Source: The White House

    class=”has-text-align-center”>By the President of the United States of America 
    A Proclamation

    America’s children are the foundation of our families, the heirs of our freedom, and the stewards of our national promise.  This National Child Abuse Prevention Month, we commit to empowering every child in America to lead a fulfilling life of dignity and love — and we pledge to bring every abuser, predator, and evildoer who threatens the health and safety of our children to swift justice.

    As citizens, each of us is entrusted with the sacred responsibility of caring for the most vulnerable among us, especially children uniquely at risk of trauma and abuse.  My Administration recognizes that the most powerful safeguard against child abuse is a stable family with loving parents, and that there is no substitute for a strong mother and father.  For this reason, I am working every day to fortify our families and embolden our Nation’s children to live their lives full of happiness, health, and success that they so dearly deserve.  I call on every American to take steps to prevent child abuse and neglect before it occurs.  By doing so, we can reduce the risk of depression, suicide, substance abuse, and developmental challenges in our youth.

    Sadly, one of the most prevalent forms of child abuse facing our country today is the sinister threat of gender ideology.  Proponents of the gender ideology movement are outrageously indoctrinating our children with the devastating lie that they are trapped in the wrong body — and that the only way they can be truly happy is to alter their sex with hormone therapy, puberty blockers, and sexual mutilation surgery.  The evil and backwards lies of gender insanity are robbing our children of their happiness, health, and freedom, while imposing unimaginable heartbreak on parents and families.  As I stated during my Joint Address to the Congress last month, my message to every American child is simple:  you are perfect exactly the way God made you.

    As President, I proudly signed Executive Order 14187 prohibiting public schools from indoctrinating our children with transgender ideology, while also taking action to cut off all taxpayer funding to any institution that engages in the sexual mutilation of our youth.  To further protect our children, I have taken historic action to secure our southern border and end child trafficking — and am working diligently to make our young people healthy again.

    This National Child Abuse Prevention Month, we pledge to stop the atrocity of child abuse in all its forms.  We affirm that every perpetrator who inflicts violence on our children will be punished to the fullest extent of the law.  Above all, we vow to give our children the tools they need to fully embrace God’s gift of life, and to carry that radiant torch of American Liberty generations into the future.

    NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim April 2025 as National Child Abuse Prevention Month.  I call upon all Americans to invest in the lives of our Nation’s children, to be aware of their safety and well-being, and to support efforts that promote their psychological, physical, and emotional development.

    IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this
    third day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-five, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-ninth.

    DONALD J. TRUMP

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: ONDCP Releases Trump Administration’s Statement of Drug Policy Priorities

    Source: The White House

    >Today, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) is announcing the release of the Trump Administration’s Drug Policy Priorities, a comprehensive and coordinated blueprint to reduce the devastating impact of illicit drugs on American society. The Statement lays out the urgent, first-year steps that must be taken to address the scourge of illicit drug use that continues plaguing our nation and taking American lives. The implementation of these priorities will complement President Trump’s tireless efforts to stop Foreign Terrorist Organizations, cartels, and drug traffickers from harming Americans, and will help build a safer, healthier future for America.  

    In the next year, the White House will work across the government to implement the following six priorities:

    1. Reduce the Number of Overdose Fatalities, with a Focus on Fentanyl
    2. Secure the Global Supply Chain Against Drug Trafficking
    3. Stop the Flow of Drugs Across our Borders and into Our Communities
    4. Prevent Drug Use Before It Starts
    5. Provide Treatment That Leads to Long-Term Recovery
    6. Innovate in Research and Data to Support Drug Control Strategies

    “Terrorists, cartels, and other drug traffickers are taking hundreds of thousands of American lives by poisoning them for profit,” said Jon Rice, the ONDCP Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Director. “To meet the urgent need of this moment, the Trump Administration is launching an unprecedented whole-of-government effort to stop these drugs from entering our communities and hold drug traffickers accountable. The priorities in this framework outline the first steps to kick cartels out of our country, free Americans from the deadly grip of addiction, and guide America back to health and safety.”

    To achieve our vision of a safer, healthier future for Americans, we will disrupt the supply chain from tooth to tail. We will continue to take decisive action and exploit all existing authorities, both punitive and economic, to eliminate the production and distribution networks that allow these drugs to reach the United States. We will develop bold policy choices, employ innovative and sophisticated technology, and create a skilled, recovery-ready workforce to combat this crisis and ensure the safety of all Americans. Domestically, we must acknowledge the complexity of substance use disorder and addiction. The statistics surrounding drug use and overdose deaths mandate a comprehensive approach that emphasizes drug use prevention and increases access to recovery and overdose prevention and reversal services. Recognizing that a sustainable solution requires coordination across all levels of government, we will collaborate with law enforcement, first responders, healthcare providers, community-based organizations, and individuals to ensure the health and well-being of all Americans.

    The staggering loss of life caused by illicit drugs underscores the severity of the challenge, but the Trump Administration has already taken critical steps to confront this crisis through a series of Executive Orders that secure our borders, combat foreign terrorist organizations and drug trafficking organizations, and demand reform by source countries from which illicit drugs and precursor chemicals flow into the United States. Critically, the Trump Administration will identify and hold accountable those responsible for exacerbating the flow of drugs within our borders. 

    While these Policy Priorities outline the broad areas of effort for the first year, the President’s drug control policy will evolve to keep pace with the changing landscape of illicit drug trafficking and ensure that our borders, communities, and schools are secure from the destructive influence of illicit drugs. 

    To read the Trump Administration’s Drug Policy Priorities, click here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: ‘Every piece tells a story’: Bombs to beauty, from Gaza to Ukraine

    Source: United Nations 2

    By Eileen Travers

    Culture and Education

    What happens to bombs after they land? Some explode. Some don’t, leaving behind a deadly legacy of war, but now the remnants of conflict and devastation are being turned into wearable messages of peace.

    “The purpose was to transform the negative energy of destruction into the positive energy of creation,” said Ukrainian designer Stanislav Drokin, who turns shrapnel into fine jewellery from his whimsical, functional home studio in war-torn Kharkiv.

    As the world marks the International Day for Mine Awareness, observed annually on 4 April, ongoing demining initiatives are painstakingly removing and safely disposing unexploded weapons left behind on battlefields while artists like Mr. Drokin are crafting some of these fragments of war into one-of-a-kind jewellery, ornaments and sculptures.

    For designers, there is plenty of material to work with.

    From trenches to trinkets

    Today, tens of millions of these deadly weapons remain scattered in former battle zones across the world long after the conflicts have ended.

    Laos and Ukraine have among the world’s highest concentrations of unexploded ordnance. In Laos alone, only one per cent of the estimated 80 million now banned cluster bombs dropped during the Viet Nam War more than half a century ago have been safely deactivated and removed.

    Unexploded ordnance continues to kill people around the world despite the history of mine action showing hard-won progress, according to UNMAS, the UN agency that runs demining operations, from Gaza to Ukraine.

    In Ukraine, Mr. Drokin’s loft is both his workshop and home, where the renowned artist and university lecturer tells the story of war using shrapnel fragments brought to him by friends, colleagues, volunteers and military personnel following Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

    “At the very beginning of the war, my creative workshop became a temporary warehouse for volunteers of the Kharkiv military hospital,” Mr. Drokin said.

    © UNDP Ukraine/Kseniia Nevenche

    A sign in Ukraine warns of landmines.

    Portable stories of wartime Ukraine

    Wondering how he could help Ukrainians when his frontline city is under constant artillery shelling, Mr. Drokin started working on the first of several collections in early May 2022.

    Since then, he launched the Forget-me-not sculpture project, shaped from shell fragments and stylised titanium flowers, one of which sold for more than $14,000 at Sotheby’s in Geneva, all of which went to Lviv-based Superhumans, a centre serving adults and children maimed as a result of the war.

    Next came the Revival collection, which unfolded after Mr. Drokin was contacted by Elizabeth Suda, founder of Article 22, a New York startup that sells pieces made of bomb remnants and supports demining in the territories contaminated by the tools of war.

    “Pieces from the collection are symbols aimed at preserving information about tragedies, destruction and grief that wars bring in the memory of mankind,” Mr. Drokin said.

    © Courtesy of Stanislav Drokin

    Designer Stanislav Drokin is interviewed by a local news team in Kharkiv, Ukraine.

    ‘Every piece tells a story’

    At the Pen and Brush Gallery in New York’s trendy Flatiron neighbourhood, bracelets made from cluster bombs jangle on the arms of Kendall Silwonuk, who is setting up a pop-up shop with an array of Mr. Dorkin’s necklaces and other Article 22 items.

    “Every piece tells a story,” Ms. Silwonuk said.

    Holding up a heavy wooden block that Laotian artisans use to make bracelets, she explained the process. Artisans collect aluminium bomb casings from demining operations, melt them down and pour the liquified substance into heavy wood block molds. Once cooled, out pops a bracelet.

    She said Article 22 supports initiatives to help communities to rebuild their lives, including through the US-based Legacy of War Foundation, founded by photojournalist Giles Duley, a triple amputee following injuries caused by an improvised explosive device in Afghanistan in 2011 and the first UN Global Advocate for persons with disabilities in conflict and peacebuilding situations.

    UN News

    Kendall Silwonuk at an Article 22 pop-up shop in New York with an array of jewellery made of remnants of war.

    ‘Conscious commerce’

    In Laos, Article 22’s Ms. Suda met with artisans crafting spoons out of cluster bomb remnants in the early 2000s and was determined to bring their skills and story to a wider audience.

    She said the company’s name comes from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in which Article 22 states that “everyone, as a member of society, has the right to social security and is entitled to realisation, through national effort and international cooperation and in accordance with the organization and resources of each State, of the economic, social and cultural rights indispensable for his dignity and the free development of his personality.”

    “This is a humanitarian issue that the public can be involved in by being first aware by supporting organizations that work to clear unexploded bombs from the land and by supporting any organization or business that is doing this work through a conscious commerce,” she said.

    For the Laotian artisans working with Article 22, the collaboration has meant more income and cleared minefields now used to grow rice.

    UNDP Lao PDR/Tock Soulasen Phomm

    A local rice farmer in Laos.

    Blending chaos with harmony

    Back in Kharkiv, Mr. Drokin is now sketching new designs using precious coloured stones and diamonds to “combine them with fragments created by the crazy energy of the explosion” for his growing audience. That includes presidents, volunteers, journalists, mayors, doctors, philanthropists and military heroes, with some pieces gracing private collections, from the National Museum of the History of Ukraine to the East Wing of the White House in Washington.

    “I love to combine harmony and chaos, use the emotions of colour and its combinations and emphasise the images and forms created by man and nature,” he said. “As a lecturer, I want to pass on knowledge and accumulated experience to students to bring a sense of responsibility, harmony and peace to the younger generation.”

    Does he have a favourite piece?

    “It will be the last piece I create after the war, when the long-awaited and just peace comes, people stop dying and the contaminated land of Ukraine is cleared of unexploded mines, missiles and shells,” Mr. Drokin said. 

    While some artisans in Laos and Ukraine continue to ply a brisk trade, the trend of salvaging and recycling remnants of war into wearable art is emerging around the world.

    UN Photo/Martine Perret

    Deminers in Bunia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    Here are just a few:

    • In Colombia, even before the decades-old war ended, jewellery designers produced collections crafted from bullet casings, with some continuing to this day
    • In Cambodia, remnants of half-century-old brass bombshells are being salvaged by an association and incorporated into jewellery to promote peace
    • In the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), retrieved bullet casings and AK47 machine gun are being integrated into wristwatches and wedding bands
    • In Israel and Palestine, some of the tens of thousands of fallen bombs and rockets are now mezuzahs, statues, necklaces and charms

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Volcano Watch — Kīlauea’s continuing summit eruption

    Source: US Geological Survey

    The episodic summit eruption of Kīlauea in Halemaʻumaʻu crater has been going on for over three months now, with sixteen eruptive episodes displaying lava fountains and lava flows within Kaluapele (the summit caldera). What clues can observations of sparse episodic eruptions in Kīlauea’s past tell us about the ongoing episodic eruption at Kīlauea summit?

    Volcano Watch is a weekly article and activity update written by U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates.

    Ground tilt associated with episodic eruptions at Kīlauea. Top panel, two years of summit tilt spanning episodic fountaining at Maunaulu in 1969, as measured by a watertube tiltmeter at Uēkahuna  bluff.  Middle panel, an ideal aerosmith measurement of summit ground tilt during the initial years (1984-1986) of the Puʻuʻōʻō eruption that span a period of episodic fountaining. Bottom panel, electronic borehole tiltmeter record from December 2024 until April 2025 showing strong deflationary tilt associated with the sixteen (so far) eruptive episodes, numbered on the graph. 

    Similar episodic eruptions at Kīlauea took place in 1959 (Kīlauea Iki), 1969 (Maunaulu), and from 1983–1986 (first three years at Puʻuʻōʻō). An understanding of what happened before and after these similar eruptions on Kīlauea, as well as how the eruptions themselves progressed, can inform our understanding of the ongoing summit eruption. 

    An important consideration is how pressurized the magma chambers beneath Kīlauea summit are. One tool that scientists at the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) use to measure pressurization in magma chambers is tiltmeters. Tiltmeters can detect very small changes in how the ground is tilting around Kīlauea summit. While tiltmeter technology has changed over time, the measurements haven’t. As pressure accumulates in the magma chambers (inflation) beneath the ground surface, the ground surface bulges outwards and tiltmeters track these subtle changes in ground tilting over time. 

    Leading to the 1959 summit eruption of Kīlauea Iki, the magma chambers beneath Kīlauea summit region had been refilling and repressurizing for years following the 1955 lower East Rift Zone eruption. Following the 1959 eruption, which consisted of seventeen high fountains every couple of days over about a month, pressure within Kīlauea’s summit magma chambers had only increased. 

    The twelve episodic lava fountains at Maunaulu, on the upper East Rift Zone of Kīlauea in 1969 followed several brief summit and East Rift Zone eruptions which were preceded by rapid inflation of the magma chambers beneath Kīlauea summit. Before those events, Kīlauea summit had been in a prolonged lava lake eruption from 1967–1968 that was accompanied by little ground deformation. Similar to during the 2025 eruption, the summit magma chambers deflated during Maunaulu lava fountaining episodes, which happened days to weeks apart, and inflated during pauses. After the episodic lava fountaining phase of Maunaulu ended, it entered a multi-year phase of lava flows building a shield and traveling downslope towards the ocean. 

    Prior to the Puʻuʻōʻō eruption on the middle East Rift Zone of Kīlauea, there had been several years of summit eruptions and rift zone intrusions on Kīlauea and overall inflation of Kīlauea’s summit. Like the Maunaulu eruption, the phase of 44 lava fountains (occurring about once a month over about three years) was followed by lava flows building a shield and traveling downslope towards the ocean. Kīlauea summit deflated with the onset of the Puʻuʻōʻō eruption, and that deflation continued for the next two decades as the Puʻuʻōʻō eruption continued. 

    During the ongoing eruption, tiltmeters have shown inflationary tilt prior to a lava fountaining episode, as pressure builds beneath the surface, and a switch to deflationary tilt when a lava fountain episode begins, indicative of the pressure within the magma chambers being released. 

    This pattern of inflation and deflation with every recent lava fountain episode creates a saw-tooth pattern in ground tilt records over the past several months; however, Kīlauea summit has shown little net change in pressurization since the eruption began on December 23, 2024. This indicates that Kīlauea summit has been in some level of equilibrium since the eruption began. The north and south eruptive vents in Halemaʻumaʻu are able to incrementally release the pressure that accumulates within Kīlauea summit magma chambers with each eruptive episode. 

    As long as that equilibrium is maintained, the episodic eruption at the summit of Kīlauea is likely to continue. The ongoing eruption patterns have also allowed HVO staff to publish windows of probability for when future eruptive episodes could begin. Changes such as a decrease in the rate of inflation or a severe blockage of the vents could alter the current pattern of fountaining episodes, including bringing them to an end. HVO will continue to closely monitor the activity, especially the amount of pressurization of Kīlauea’s summit magma chambers, for any changes that could herald a potential change in eruptive activity. 

    Volcano Activity Updates

    Kīlauea has been erupting episodically within the summit caldera since December 23, 2024. Its USGS Volcano Alert level is WATCH.

    The summit eruption at Kīlauea volcano that began in Halemaʻumaʻu crater on December 23 continued over the past week. Episode 16 began the evening of March 31 and ended the afternoon of April 2. North-northwestern winds resulted in tephra and Pele’s Hair being deposited on parts of Highway 11 in Kaʻū.  Since the end of Episode 16, the summit region has showed inflation suggesting another episode is possible. Sulfur dioxide emission rates are elevated in the summit region during active eruption episodes. No unusual activity has been noted along Kīlauea’s East Rift Zone or Southwest Rift Zone. 

    Mauna Loa is not erupting. Its USGS Volcano Alert Level is at NORMAL.

    Two earthquakes were reported felt in the Hawaiian Islands during the past week: a M3.3 earthquake 20 km (12 mi) SSE of Honaunau-Napoopoo at 8 km (5 mi) depth on March 30 at 4:25 a.m. HST and a M3.0 earthquake 21 km (13 mi) SSE of Fern Forest at 42 km (26 mi) depth on March 28 at 11:45 p.m. HST.

    HVO continues to closely monitor Kīlauea and Mauna Loa.

    Please visit HVO’s website for past Volcano Watch articles, Kīlauea and Mauna Loa updates, volcano photos, maps, recent earthquake information, and more. Email questions to askHVO@usgs.gov.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Lianhe Sowell Debuts on Nasdaq, Accelerating Business Growth Ambitions and Industry Revolution

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SHENZHEN, China, April 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Lianhe Sowell International Group Ltd (NASDAQ: LHSW), a company providing machine vision solutions, officially went public on the Nasdaq stock exchange on April 3, 2025, raising total gross proceeds of $8 million. Leveraging its proprietary industrial machine vision technologies, coupled with a clear strategic roadmap, the company hopes to accelerate its expansion into the burgeoning upgrade of equipment across key industries, such as automotive, biopharmaceutical, logistics, aerospace, and shipbuilding.

    Technological Excellence Anchored in Innovation

    Serving industrial clients for more than 17 years, Lianhe Sowell’s achievements in the industrial machine vision sector is rooted in its nine foundational technologies, which integrate advanced algorithms and hardware-software synergies to deliver precision-driven solutions. The company’s core expertise spans:

    • Image Processing Technology: Enabling micron-level defect detection in electronics manufacturing through real-time analysis of surface imperfections, achieving accuracy down to 0.1mm with inspection speeds as rapid as 0.5 second.
    • Sound Imaging Technology: Deploying phased-array principles to map spatial sound fields, enhancing safety monitoring in industrial settings by detecting anomalies like equipment malfunctions or hazardous noises.
    • Video Analysis and Recognition Technology: Utilizing neural networks for real-time behavior analysis in high-risk environments, such as identifying safety violations in chemical plants or optimizing traffic flow via intelligent transportation systems.
    • Nine-Axis Robotic Integration: Combining machine vision with agile 6-axis robotics for applications like automotive spray painting, the company’s flagship Nine-Axis Linkage Spray Painting Robots achieve great precision. The technology’s versatile capabilities can potentially be applied to various industrial spray-painting scenarios, enabling automation across multiple production processes.

    Strategic Growth Fueled by US IPO Proceeds

    The company’s recent US IPO has injected critical capital to accelerate its growth roadmap. A significant portion of the proceeds is earmarked for scaling production of its Nine-Axis robots, which will contribute to the plan to complete the set-up and assembling of the robot production line. This planned facility aims to produce 4,000 – 8,000 robotic units annually by 2028, targeting the automotive repair industry and adjacent sectors like welding and polishing.

    In addition, Lianhe Sowell also plans to use proceeds raised from the IPO to invest in its machine vision business including industrial machine vision, face recognition, AI behavior analysis, weak current intelligence and electronic customs clearance, in order to fund research and development of new products and market expansion, according to its filing.

    Financial Strengths and Future Expansion

    Lianhe Sowell’s IPO marks a pivotal step in its development. The company has demonstrated robust financial performance, sustaining rapid growth during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024. From March 2023 to March 2024, it achieved revenue of $36.6 million, reflecting a 180% year-over-year increase, while net income grew by 75% over the same period.

    Post-IPO, Lianhe Sowell plans to allocate 45% of the offering proceeds to expand its spray-painting robot business, including the preliminary installation of production equipment and machineries of an in-house production and assembly line for production of Nine-Axis Linkage Spray Painting Robots. The company will also expand its technical and commercial teams to maintain its leadership in China’s industrial vision robotics and meet the surging demand in the automotive aftermarket for automation solutions.

    Company: Lianhe Sowell International Limited
    Contact Person: Iris Wu
    Email: sowellrobot@sowellrobot.com
    Website: http://www.sowellrobot.com/
    Telephone: +86 19154951787
    City: Shenzhen, China

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at : 
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/96234652-530e-4c47-b398-10a630316c24

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f83e5629-cc2c-46c4-ba70-8f73073c5f60

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI China: US to send second aircraft carrier to Middle East

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    The United States will send a second aircraft carrier to the Middle East, according to the Pentagon.

    The Harry S. Truman will be joined by the Carl Vinson “to continue promoting regional stability, deter aggression, and protect the free flow of commerce in the region,” Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said in a statement on Tuesday.

    Tensions between the Houthis and the U.S. military have escalated since Washington launched fresh airstrikes on Yemen on March 15. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Otago Tourism School – Public lecture

    Source: Department of Conservation

    Date:  04 April 2025

    Tēnā koutou katoa

    It’s great to see so many people here interested in tourism that’s sustainable for the environment and the communities we live in.

    The Government is focused on economic growth – tourism on the land that DOC manages is a key part of that.

    I know that healthy nature and being able to operate on public conservation land with certainty, is important to many tourism operators.

    I also know you’re eagerly awaiting Ministerial decisions on the work to manage visitors better at Milford Sound.

    It’s coming – the Ministers of Tourism and Conservation are working on a paper and will be talking to their colleagues on it – and we can expect some announcements soon.

    I want to use this opportunity to take you through what DOC is doing to make sure people can get out, enjoy their time on conservation land and contribute to the economy.

    DOC’s role

    For those of you who don’t know us well, DOC manages more than a third of New Zealand’s land area, as well as hundreds of offshore islands, marine reserves, and national parks.

    We are responsible for 14,000 native species and we put a lot of effort into managing threats from predators, disease and human-related impacts.

    We also provide a huge range of visitor assets, including huts, campsites, picnic areas, shelters, bridges, toilets, and so many kilometres of tracks that, if you laid them out in a line, they would stretch from here to New York.

    We have the largest number of Treaty settlements to implement of any Crown agency – with more than 3 thousand specific obligations and commitments to working with iwi at culturally significant places.

    We operate under 25 different pieces of legislation, some of it really old and hard to navigate – for example the Wildlife Act was written 70 years ago, long before climate change was understood and before international visitor growth was a thing.

    We are also neighbours across 57,000 kilometres of land boundaries and have 17,000 kilometres of fences in our asset management system.

    So in a snapshot, we have very broad responsibilities – and we are doing it with 5% of the Government’s budget.

    We have to prioritise our work carefully because we can’t afford to do it all.

    Permissions at pace

    Many of you in this room will be interested in what we’re doing to make it easier for businesses to operate on public conservation land.

    You’re frustrated at the length of time it takes to get your permissions and concessions processed.

    I want to assure you we’re working on this at pace. It’s a major priority for our Minister; we’ve got targets we have to meet, and we are surging our effort on this.

    We need to clear the applications that are more than a year old by June this year.

    As soon as we close applications more come in, so we are also improving our systems. We don’t want numbers to creep back up and create more of a problem.

    We’re going at it hammer and tongs – we’ve got new technology coming to help us triage and track applications. So you can apply for a permit or concession online and track it in real time.

    We’re also batching up types of applications for processing and setting up panels to assess applications – so it’s faster.

    We found that processing drone applications was eating up a huge amount of our time – now we’ve worked with iwi and with our technical staff to determine in advance where drones are allowed and where the no-fly zones are.

    We now process all drone permits within a week and it’s cut down our admin time immensely.

    We’re looking to do similar things with other categories of permits.

    Part of the backlog is caused by all the layers of rules we are obliged to follow, so streamlining our legislation will be a big help – we’ve gone out for public consultation on that and advice will go to Ministers shortly.

    This is a big deal for DOC – we’re doing everything we can to shift this, to make it easier for you to work with us. It will help to grow local businesses, and we can free up time and resources to push back into conservation.

    DOC is New Zealand’s biggest tourism provider

    It’s important we get concessions right because concessionaires play an important role in the tourism system – DOC enables 1,000 tourism businesses to operate on conservation land and water.

    DOC is also the largest provider of visitor experiences in New Zealand, with over 16,000 hut beds. We enjoy hosting 64,000 walkers on the Great Walks each year.

    Conservation-related tourism is worth around $3.4 billion a year – that’s still down about $900m since before Covid, but numbers are starting to bounce back.

    Most visitors come here for our mountains, open landscapes, quirky wildlife, and unique cultural heritage.

    50% of international tourists visit national parks – a quarter of them deliberately seek out places of significance to Māori.

    80% of New Zealanders visit public conservation land each year.

    Visitor satisfaction is high, but we still have a lot to do to protect the experiences we’re promising, and make sure the environment is looked after.

    NZ’s economy needs nature

    Nature is key to the economy and if we don’t look after it, people will stop buying our products and they won’t visit.

    70% of NZ’s export earnings are from sectors that rely directly on natural resources.

    The clean air, quality soil, and fresh water that public conservation land provides are worth around $11 billion per year. [1]

    Natural and physical capital on public conservation land is worth $134 billion, and National Parks are worth $12.6 billion to New Zealanders.

    When storms take out DOC assets, your communities suffer.

    I know there’s huge frustration when tracks like Rob Roy and Blue Pools close at short notice.

    The torrential rain and floods in February 2020 which damaged more than 30 bridges and hundreds of kilometres of track, on the Routeburn and Milford tracks had a massive impact. That event, along with COVID hard on its heels, saw visitor spending in the region cut by half. [2]

    We’ve been working over the past five years to deliver a $14m flood recovery programme to restore these important visitor experiences.

    On the other hand there’s huge opportunity for conservation tourism – I know Real Journeys offers this – where people get involved while they’re out enjoying nature.

    Another opportunity is film tourism – the Lord of the Rings series has really helped send a postcard from New Zealand to the world and we should be exploring this further.

    Our economy depends on nature – but nature is in trouble.

    We have the highest proportion of threatened native species in the world – with more than 4,000 currently threatened or at risk of extinction.

    Climate change – more fires, floods and severe storms – are making the problem worse.

    We estimate it would cost around $2.3 billion per year to look after all threatened species properly and maintain healthy ecosystems to ensure their security.

    Our biodiversity budget is around $300 million – which puts us just in the ‘preventing losses’ space.

    Visitor network challenges

    When it comes to recreation – DOC has a few challenges.

    Our visitor network is large – we can only afford about 70% of it.

    We can’t replace all our existing assets as they reach the end of their useful life because we will run out of depreciation funding to replace them.

    And our construction costs are going up – in recent years we spent over $3m on the Mintaro hut and surrounding structures. It costs us 30% more now to build swing bridges in the back country than it did four years ago.

    Another challenge is to meet the growing and changing visitor demand. New Zealanders and international visitors want more accessible, shorter walks.

    Longer tramps are no longer in the top 20 activities.

    Severe weather is damaging the assets that we’ve got.

    Our spending on storm repairs has quadrupled in the past five years and 300 of our coastal assets are in the danger zone from rising sea levels.

    I know closures of key sites on the Milford Corridor like The Chasm have been frustrating for some operators and visitors.

    It’s in an area subject to extreme rainfall. We need to be confident we’re making the appropriate level of investment for the site.

    We’ve completed the geotech work and are progressing the design – but with tight resources we have to be careful.

    Likewise Tunnel Beach walkway in Dunedin suffered serious damage last year from torrential rain, and we’ve got similar issues there. Similarly Lake Sylvan near Glenorchy.

    Another emerging challenge is with social media influencers – whose photos are encouraging people to go beyond their capabilities to get that perfect insta shot.

    We’ve also seen some appalling and dangerous visitor behaviour this summer with people driving over birds nesting on beaches, and harassing sea lions to get a better photo or video.

    We’ve also had 5 fatalities this year where people have gone beyond track ends, including two recent ones in Otago.

    Responsible camping is another hot topic – the Valley of the Trolls and Brewster Glacier are the two local examples where the volume of people camping are having an impact on the sites, so we are encouraging people to camp responsibly.

    I applaud the actions being taken by the station owner at Earnslaw Station to keep the area pristine and reminding people to be respectful.

    Another issue DOC is seeing is the uneven distribution of visitors.

    Some assets are under-used with plenty having fewer than 200 visitors per year in places.

    On the other hand, some iconic locations such as Piopiotahi Milford Sound or Aoraki Mt Cook, are becoming increasingly popular, car parks are overflowing and this is negatively affecting the environment.

    We are working on how we manage numbers so the experience is safe and sustainable.

    So what are we doing about it?

    Here’s our plan for resolving some of these issues.

    There are things we can do under existing frameworks, so we’ve started.

    We’re taking a strategic approach to funding from the International Visitor Levy and investing it in ways that improves the visitor experience at our most popular places.

    For example, national parks – people come here for nature so we need to make sure nature’s sustained in those areas.

    We’re also investing in short walks – bringing tracks back up to standard, removing graffiti, re-gravelling tracks.

    We’re looking at charging for carparks and more of our huts – this improves the proportion of charges to the user, reducing the cost to all New Zealanders.

    From next summer we will pilot carparking charges at Aoraki/Mt Cook, Punakaiki and Franz Josef Glacier to help manage visitor numbers and cover upkeep costs – like other countries do.

    I’ve already told you the work we’re doing at pace to fix our permissions system.

    What’s coming

    In future we’re exploring charges to access some high-volume areas, like they do overseas, to help pay toward the upkeep of the visitor network.

    Currently we can only charge people who stay in a hut, or businesses who operate on conservation land.

    Visitors who do short walks – the most popular activity – don’t pay anything.

    We’ve been out for public consultation and overall the feedback was supportive – especially for charging international visitors more.

    On law reform, we want to prune back all the layers of regulation that are paralysing us. Modernising legislation will help fix this by cutting processing times and reducing costs for businesses.

    We’re also looking at our visitor network and trying different things. We want to realign our network to make sure it’s affordable and we can better meet the changing demand for experiences.

    We need to build in resilience so we’re not just building back assets which will get washed away in the next flood.

    We’re thinking of different categories like ‘buckets’, being really clear about what’s special to New Zealanders and keeping visitor risk and safety top of mind.

    The first bucket would be the things that DOC will absolutely continue to own and maintain, things like Great Walks, highly visited tracks, huts, and campsites.

    There might be some experiences that DOC wants to move away from.

    Like a hut at a road end where people regularly load up with lots of alcohol and then trash it. Or parts of tracks that are continually being washed out.

    And then we need to work out the things DOC would still own, but others might manage.

    Like halls, pools and some camp sites.

    We are also looking at how we partner with others to provide experiences – we’ve just done this on the new Hump Ridge track Great Walk – with the Charitable Trust operating it under a licensing agreement.

    The Backcountry Trust is doing an amazing job of maintaining our low use, backcountry huts – and we’re partnering with them through the Community Hut Programme and funding from the visitor levy.

    I want to be clear that no decisions have been made by Ministers yet – there is still a way to go. It will also be phased in over time.

    We’re preparing advice on this now and hope to get that to Ministers by the middle of this year.

    Ministers will need to make some tough calls on doing things differently – Minister Potaka has said publicly he wants us to sharpen our focus so we’re putting our resources into the things that matter most.

    That means concentrating on high value conservation areas and species, and key visitor destinations – and working out where we should divest, co-fund or partner with others on.

    Tongariro Alpine Crossing – case study

    We’re already testing ideas on managing visitors at our busiest spots – like the Tongariro Alpine Crossing.

    We’ve had a lot of problems in the past with high visitor numbers, people not properly prepared, and visitors not respecting the track or the mountain – in fact some would go to the toilet on the track.

    We’ve been working in partnership with Ngāti Hikairo and local tourism operators and come up with some innovative solutions.

    We’ve introduced the first booking system for a day walk in NZ.

    We’ve got Manaaki Rangers on site during peak times to explain the cultural heritage and why it’s important to respect the mountain.

    We have done a lot of research to understand the impacts of visitors, including what the carrying capacity is and what the environmental impacts are.

    We’ve also added a climate station to help support concessionaries with better weather forecasts.

    And we’re running behaviour change campaigns.

    We’re getting results – 80 – 90% of visitors are complying with the booking system, which has given us the ability to directly contact walkers before they head out and give them the safety and cultural messages.

    As a result visitors are now a lot more aware and respectful of the environment they’re heading into.

    Working with Ngāti Hikairo has also helped us connect with concessionaires, so they understand the cultural importance of the landscape – hosting hui with operators has helped work through issues and opportunities.

    This work is not easy, but this case study shows it can be done. We need to work out how to scale up this model and apply it elsewhere.

    Again – it’s not perfect, but we’re making progress and we will test and adapt.

    Cathedral Cove – case study

    Another example of where we’re working with manawhenua and local businesses to manage visitors is at Mautohe / Cathedral Cove in Coromandel.

    The walking track was closed for an extended period because of damage from Cyclone Gabrielle, and we had concerns about visitor safety – falling rocks, track washed away.

    Funding from the International Visitor Conservation and Tourism Levy meant we could reinstate walking access by re-routing the track temporarily.

    We’re pleased to see visitors enjoying the cove again – with hundreds of people a day back over summer.

    We’re doing intensive monitoring of numbers – we’ve looked at how to manage visitors through car parking and shuttles.

    And we had our staff and ambassadors on site over summer to ensure people have a great time and the place is well looked after.

    Ongoing geological risk is one of the main challenges we have at this site. The response plan gives us a good process and guidelines to manage visitor safety and minimising risk for visitors.

    The plan involves monitoring the weather – in particular heavy rain, and seismic information – if there are concerns we trigger inspections of the track and decide whether we need to take action to minimise the risk to visitors.

    Mobilising for Nature 

    We also want people to fall in love with nature and mobilise them into action.

    We want to create a nationwide movement where action for nature is something we all do, because we are proud of our unique species and landscapes.  

    But so many New Zealanders don’t see the scale of the challenge or fully appreciate the consequences of losing what we have. 

    And if they do want to get involved, they don’t know how.

    We’re focusing on raising awareness at scale and attracting more funding from other parties to sustain our important conservation delivery work. 

    DOC and New Zealand Nature Fund are piloting a Nature Prospectus – so the public can donate directly to, or corporates can fund, three priority projects.

    We’ve also signed up to the International Island Ocean Connection Challenge – to rewild three of our biggest islands – Auckland Island, Chatham Islands and Rakiura – to bring more revenue from international philanthropists.

    Tourism needs nature – making Rakiura predator free will be a big part of this and I encourage you to get behind it – you only need to see how Ulva Island draws the tourists.

    We’re aiming to connect people with nature – including encouraging people to get out into nature.

    We will also be developing a range of actions that are easily available for people and businesses to take, including donating or investing.

    Close

    So you can see DOC has many roles and challenges.

    We are working at pace on them.

    I appreciate those of you who’ve provided feedback on our proposals to modernise our legislation and explore access charging.

    I’m looking forward to hearing your feedback and having a discussion with you.

    Kia ora

    Related links

    1. Assessing the value of public conservation land: Managing conservation
    2. Report from Great South, outlines the serious economic and social impact on Te Anau and Fiordland from the twin disasters of unprecedented floods in February and border closures due to COVID-19. Fiordland counts the cost post floods and COVID-19

    Contact

    For media enquiries contact:

    Email: media@doc.govt.nz

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Armed Drug Dealer Who Sold Fatal Dose of Cocaine to U.S. Marine Sentenced to 12 Years in Federal Prison

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    HONOLULU – Acting United States Attorney Kenneth M. Sorenson announced that Rayshaun Ducos, 27, of Honolulu, Hawaii, was sentenced today by Senior U.S. District Judge J. Michael Seabright to 144 months in federal prison for possessing with intent to distribute cocaine and possessing firearms in furtherance of his drug trafficking. Ducos pled guilty to these charges on December 11, 2024.

    As part of his prior guilty plea, Ducos admitted he sold cocaine to a 25-yearold active-duty United States Marine, who later fatally overdosed on it. Ducos also admitted that, just days after the Marine’s death, as law enforcement attempted to execute a federal search warrant at his Waikiki residence, he flushed cocaine down the toilet in an attempt to obstruct the investigation. At the time of his arrest, Ducos possessed two privately made firearms—a loaded 9mm pistol and a 5.56mm caliber AR pistol—also known as “ghost guns.” Ducos admitted he possessed these firearms in connection with his cocaine trafficking. Investigators also recovered a drum magazine capable of holding 100 rounds of ammunition, almost 300 rounds of ammunition, over $30,000 in U.S. currency, and cocaine.

    At sentencing, Judge Seabright imposed an upward variance from the advisory Sentencing Guidelines range, finding that a “young individual who died from the cocaine,” Ducos’s possession of two “ghost guns,” and his obstructive conduct were aggravating factors.

    “This case demonstrates that drug trafficking is not a victimless crime,” stated Acting U.S. Attorney Ken Sorenson. “A young man is dead because of Mr. Ducos’s actions. Selling drugs endangers lives. Doing so while armed makes an already deadly trade even more dangerous and puts the general public at significant risk from the violence that is endemic to the illegal drug trade. We will prosecute armed drug dealers aggressively because there is no place for them in Hawaii.”

    The investigation was conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration and the U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Sara D. Ayabe and Thomas Muehleck prosecuted the case.
     

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-Evening Report: Heroin found in cocaine and ‘ice’, and snorting a line can be lethal

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Darren Roberts, Conjoint Associate Professor in Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, St Vincent’s Healthcare Clinical Campus, UNSW Sydney

    Skrypnykov Dmytro/Shutterstock

    Authorities in New South Wales and Victoria have been warning the public about worrying cases of heroin overdoses after people thought they had taken cocaine or methamphetamine.

    We know the issue is also relevant to other parts of Australia. And it’s particularly concerning because heroin can cause life-threatening opioid overdoses, particularly in people inexperienced with heroin who snort it.

    Our new research sheds more light on what happens to people who accidentally took heroin thinking it was something else.

    What we did and what we found

    We are part of a NSW Health program that helps to find and quickly respond to concerning illicit and recreational drug poisonings and trends. The program is a collaboration between many government health services, including hospitals, the NSW Poisons Information Centre and labs.

    We searched our database and found 34 cases of opioid overdoses after using what people thought to be a stimulant drug between January 2022 and June 2024. A total of 19 people thought they were taking cocaine and 15 methamphetamine.

    Most of these 34 people had a severe opioid overdose requiring treatment by paramedics and in hospital. Sadly, two people died.

    Heroin was the opioid in all cases where we specifically tested for it, and we suspect all the cases.

    Cases occurred across NSW but most cases (68%) were in Sydney. In the last eight months of our study we identified multiple cases each month which may indicate these cases are becoming more common.

    In the United States, drugs like cocaine and methamphetamine are sometimes mixed with the potent opioid drug fentanyl. This unintentional use of opioids is causing many deaths in the US. But we didn’t find any evidence that fentanyl was the cause of the overdoses we examined.

    What happens when you take heroin by accident?

    Cocaine and methamphetamine are stimulant drugs. These are drugs that make a person feel more energetic and confident, and their pupils become larger.

    They have the opposite effect to heroin, which is an opioid and sedative. Heroin and other opioids make a person feel relaxed and often drowsy, with smaller pupils.

    When overdosing, opioids cause loss of consciousness and a person’s breathing slows or even stops, which is life-threatening. Severe opioid overdose without prompt treatment is lethal.

    If you expect to be taking cocaine or methamphetamine, but it is actually heroin, or has some heroin in it, you will very likely overdose. This is particularly true if you don’t usually take opioids, or if you use it for the first time. People can overdose from as little as snorting a line.

    Why is this happening?

    Sometimes people get a different drug than they wanted. This can happen because the drug is mixed with something else or swapped.

    This can happen for many reasons, including during manufacturing and distribution. It can happen intentionally or unintentionally by the dealer or people using the drug.

    One major reason is that you sometimes can’t tell heroin apart from cocaine or methamphetamine just by looking at them. So if drugs are mixed or swapped, you can’t always tell until you take them.

    What can we do about it?

    Opioid deaths are preventable. Government and community groups are working together to respond to the problem, either via issuing drug alerts or by educating their members.

    But people who take illicit or recreational drugs can reduce their risk by avoiding using drugs alone, and by making sure one person in their group is able to get help if needed.

    Unexpected sleepiness is a reason to seek help, not to simply rest. Start CPR if someone is not responsive and call 000.

    If someone is not responsive, start CPR and call 000.
    PanuShot/Shutterstock

    How about naloxone?

    Definitely, if someone is experiencing an opioid overdose, give them naloxone as soon as possible.

    Naloxone is a life-saving medicine that can temporarily reverse an opioid overdose. It comes in an easy-to-use nasal spray, and as a pre-filled injection.

    It’s available for free and without a prescription via the national Take Home Naloxone program. You can also order it online and get it by post.

    Naloxone is for anyone who may experience, or witness, an opioid overdose or adverse reaction.

    NSW authorities recommend it for people who use any illicit drugs including opioids, stimulants (like cocaine, methamphetamine and MDMA), ketamine and counterfeit pharmaceuticals, due to the risk of drugs being mixed with something else or swapped. Call 000 even if you have given naloxone.


    You can report unexpected overdoses to the Poisons Information Centre from anywhere in Australia on 131 126. In an emergency in Australia, call 000.

    Darren Roberts is the Medical Director of the NSW Poisons Information Centre and a clinical toxicologist and addiction medicine specialist at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

    Jared Brown is affiliated with NSW Ministry of Health and NSW Poisons Information Centre.

    Peter Chisholm is a is a public health registrar in Drug and Alcohol Services at The Langton Centre and Prince of Wales Hospital.

    ref. Heroin found in cocaine and ‘ice’, and snorting a line can be lethal – https://theconversation.com/heroin-found-in-cocaine-and-ice-and-snorting-a-line-can-be-lethal-253348

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Economics: The Nobel-Winning Material at the Heart of Samsung QLEDs [Interview on Real Quantum Dots Part 1.]

    Source: Samsung

    “One of the reasons Samsung focused on quantum dots is their exceptionally narrow peaks of the emission spectrum.”
    — Sanghyun Sohn, Samsung Electronics
     
    In 2023, the Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded for the discovery and synthesis of quantum dots. The Nobel Committee recognized the groundbreaking achievements of scientists in the field — noting that quantum dots have already made significant contributions to the display and medical industries, with broader applications expected in electronics, quantum communications and solar cells.
     
    Quantum dots — ultra-fine semiconductor particles — emit different colors of light depending on their size, producing exceptionally pure and vivid hues. Samsung Electronics, the world’s leading TV manufacturer, has embraced this cutting-edge material to enhance display performance.
     
    Samsung Newsroom sat down with Taeghwan Hyeon, a distinguished professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at Seoul National University (SNU); Doh Chang Lee, a professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST); and Sanghyun Sohn, Head of Advanced Display Lab, Visual Display (VD) Business at Samsung Electronics, to explore how quantum dots are ushering in a new era of display technology.
     

    Understanding the Band Gap

    Quantum Dots – The Smaller the Particle, the Larger the Band Gap

    Engineering Behind Quantum Dot Films

    Real QLED TVs Use Quantum Dots To Create Color

     

     
     
    Understanding the Band Gap
     
    “To understand quantum dots, one must first grasp the concept of the band gap.”
    — Taeghwan Hyeon, Seoul National University
     
    The movement of electrons causes electricity. Typically, the outermost electrons — known as valence electrons — are involved in this movement. The energy range where these electrons exist is called the valence band, while a higher, unoccupied energy range that can accept electrons is called the conduction band.
     
    An electron can absorb energy to jump from the valence band to the conduction band. When the excited electron releases that energy, it falls back into the valence band. The energy difference between these two bands — the amount of energy an electron must gain or lose to move between them — is known as the band gap.
     
    ▲ A comparison of energy band structures in insulators, semiconductors and conductors
     
    Insulators like rubber and glass have large band gaps, preventing electrons from moving freely between bands. In contrast, conductors like copper and silver have overlapping valence and conduction bands — allowing electrons to move freely for high electrical conductivity.
     
    Semiconductors have a band gap that falls between those of insulators and conductors — limiting conductivity under normal conditions but allowing electrical conduction or light emission when electrons are stimulated by heat, light or electricity.
     
    “To understand quantum dots, one must first grasp the concept of the band gap,” said Hyeon, emphasizing that a material’s energy band structure is crucial in determining its electrical properties.
     
     
    Quantum Dots – The Smaller the Particle, the Larger the Band Gap
     
    “As quantum dot particles become smaller, the wavelength of emitted light shifts from red to blue.”
    — Doh Chang Lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
     
    Quantum dots are nanoscale semiconductor crystals with unique electrical and optical properties. Measured in nanometers (nm) — or one-billionth of a meter — these particles are just a few thousandths the thickness of a human hair. When a semiconductor is reduced to the nanometer scale, its properties change significantly compared to its bulk state.
     
    In bulk states, particles are sufficiently large so the electrons in the semiconductor material can move freely without being constrained by their own wavelength. This allows energy levels — the states that particles occupy when absorbing or releasing energy — to form a continuous spectrum, like a long slide with a gentle slope. In quantum dots, electron movement is restricted because the particle size is smaller than the electron’s wavelength.
     
    ▲ Size determines the band gap in quantum dots
     
    Imagine scooping water (energy) from a large pot (bulk state) with a ladle (bandwidth corresponding to an electron’s wavelength). Using the ladle, one can adjust the amount of water in the pot freely from full to empty — this is the equivalent of continuous energy levels. However, when the pot shrinks to the size of a teacup — like a quantum dot — the ladle no longer fits. At that point, the cup can only be either full or empty. This illustrates the concept of quantized energy levels.
     
    “When semiconductor particles are reduced to the nanometer scale, their energy levels become quantized — they can only exist in discontinuous steps,” said Hyeon. “This effect is called ‘quantum confinement.’ And at this scale, the band gap can be controlled by adjusting particle size.”
     
    The number of molecules within the particle decreases as the size of the quantum dot decreases, resulting in weaker interactions of molecular orbitals. This strengthens the quantum confinement effect and increases the band gap.1 Because the band gap corresponds to the energy released through relaxation of an electron from the conduction band to the valence band, the color of the emitted light changes accordingly.
     
    “As particles become smaller, the wavelength of emitted light shifts from red to blue,” said Lee. “In other words, the size of the quantum dot nanocrystal determines its color.”
     
     
    Engineering Behind Quantum Dot Films
     
    “Quantum dot film is at the core of QLED TVs — a testament to Samsung’s deep technical expertise.”
    — Doh Chang Lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
     
    Quantum dots have attracted attention across a variety of fields, including solar cells, photocatalysis, medicine and quantum computing. However, the display industry was the first to successfully commercialize the technology.
     
    “One of the reasons Samsung focused on quantum dots is the exceptionally narrow peaks of their emission spectrum,” said Sohn. “Their narrow bandwidth and strong fluorescence make them ideal for accurately reproducing a wide spectrum of colors.”
     
    ▲ Quantum dots create ultra-pure red, green and blue (RGB) colors by controlling light at the nanoscale, producing narrow bandwidth and strong fluorescence.
     
    To leverage quantum dots effectively in display technology, materials and structures must maintain high performance over time, under harsh conditions. Samsung QLED achieves this through the use of a quantum dot film.
     
    “Accurate color reproduction in a display depends on how well the film utilizes the optical properties of quantum dots,” said Lee. “A quantum dot film must meet several key requirements for commercial use, such as efficient light conversion and translucence.”
     
    ▲ Sanghyun Sohn
     
    The quantum dot film used in Samsung QLED displays is produced by adding a quantum dot solution to a polymer base heated to a very high-temperature, spreading it into a thin layer and then curing it. While this may sound simple, the actual manufacturing process is highly complex.
     
    “It’s like trying to evenly mix cinnamon powder into sticky honey without making lumps — not an easy task,” said Sohn. “To evenly disperse quantum dots throughout the film, several factors such as materials, design and processing conditions must be carefully considered.”
     
    Despite these challenges, Samsung pushed the boundaries of the technology. To ensure long-term durability in its displays, the company developed proprietary polymer materials specifically optimized for quantum dots.
     
    “We’ve built extensive expertise in quantum dot technology by developing barrier films that block moisture and polymer materials capable of evenly dispersing quantum dots,” he added. “Through this, we not only achieved mass production but also reduced costs.”
     
    Thanks to this advanced process, Samsung’s quantum dot film delivers precise color expression and outstanding luminous efficiency — all backed by industry-leading durability.
     
    “Brightness is typically measured in nits, with one nit equivalent to the brightness of a single candle,” explained Sohn. “While conventional LEDs offer around 500 nits, our quantum dot displays can reach 2,000 nits or more — the equivalent of 2,000 candles — achieving a new level of image quality.”
     
    ▲ RGB gamut comparisons between visible light spectrum, sRGB and DCI-P3 in a CIE 1931 color space
    * CIE 1930: A widely used color system announced in 1931 by the Commission internationale de l’éclairage
    * sRGB (standard RGB): A color space created cooperatively by Microsoft and HP in 1996 for monitors and printers
    * DCI-P3 (Digital Cinema Initiatives – Protocol 3): A color space widely used for digital HDR content, defined by Digital Cinema Initiatives for digital projectors
     
    By leveraging quantum dots, Samsung has significantly enhanced both brightness and color expression — delivering a visual experience unlike anything seen before. In fact, Samsung QLED TVs achieve a color reproduction rate exceeding 90% of the DCI-P3 (Digital Cinema Initiatives – Protocol 3) color space, the benchmark for color accuracy in digital cinema.
     
    “Even if you have made quantum dots, you need to ensure long-term stability for them to be useful,” said Lee. “Samsung’s industry-leading indium phosphide (InP)-based quantum dot synthesis and film production technologies are testament to Samsung’s deep technical expertise.”
     
     
    Real QLED TVs Use Quantum Dots To Create Color
     
    “The legitimacy of a quantum dot TV lies in whether or not it leverages the quantum confinement effect.”
    — Taeghwan Hyeon, Seoul National University
     
    As interest in quantum dots grows across the industry, a variety of products have entered the market. Nonetheless, not all quantum dot-labeled TVs are equal — quantum dots must sufficiently contribute to actual image quality.
     
    ▲ Taeghwan Hyeon
     
    “The legitimacy of a quantum dot TV lies in whether or not it leverages the quantum confinement effect,” said Hyeon. “The first, fundamental requirement is to use quantum dots to create color.”
     
    “To be considered a true quantum dot TV, quantum dots must serve as either the core light-converting or primary light-emitting material,” said Lee. “For light-converting quantum dots, the display must contain an adequate amount of quantum dots to absorb and convert blue light emitted by the backlight unit.”
     
    ▲ Doh Chang Lee
     
    “Quantum dot film must contain a sufficient amount of quantum dots to perform effectively,” repeated Sohn, emphasizing the importance of quantum dot content. “Samsung QLED uses more than 3,000 parts per million (ppm) of quantum dot materials. 100% of the red and green colors are made through quantum dots.”
     
    
     
    Samsung began developing quantum dot technology in 2001 and, in 2015, introduced the world’s first no-cadmium quantum dot TV — the SUHD TV. In 2017, the company launched its premium QLED lineup, further solidifying its leadership in the quantum dot display industry.
     
    In the second part of this interview series, Samsung Newsroom takes a closer look at how Samsung not only commercialized quantum dot display technology but also developed a cadmium-free quantum dot material — an innovation recognized by Nobel Prize-winning researchers in chemistry.
     
     
    1 When a semiconductor material is in its bulk state, the band gap remains fixed at a value characteristic of the material and does not depend on particle size.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: Wyden, Merkley Press VA to Answer Questions About Abrupt Closure of Eastern Oregon Clinic

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore)

    April 03, 2025

    Senators: Shadowy shutdown of Wallowa County VA Clinic in Enterprise is “unacceptable” for quality and accessible veterans care

    Washington, D.C. –U.S. Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley today demanded the Department of Veterans Affairs answer questions by April 15 about the sudden closure of the Wallowa County VA Clinic in Enterprise, and what plans are in place to ensure veterans in Eastern Oregon receive the quality and accessible health care they earned by serving our country.

    “As of this letter’s date, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has yet to update its website to indicate this clinic is, in fact, closed,” the Oregon senators wrote VA Secretary Doug Collins. “This is unacceptable.  Our veterans deserve to know where they can seek care whenever they need it and should not have to drive miles and miles only to find a shuttered, abandoned clinic.”

    Wyden and Merkley sought assurances from the VA in their letter that the veterans of Wallowa County and surrounding areas will not have any disruptions to services. 

    “Our veterans need timely access to primary care, mental health, and suicide prevention programs, among other key services,” Wyden and Merkley wrote. “Absent a clear plan from the VA, we remain deeply concerned about the Department’s ability to deliver these services for people who earned them and expect the VA to follow through on its commitments.”

    The senators noted they’re especially concerned about care for Eastern Oregon veterans given the larger national backdrop of the VA firing thousands of federal employees, canceling nearly 900 contracts, and imposing a hiring freeze that’s worsened the severe shortage of critical specialties.

    Taken together, these actions have jeopardized the quality and timeliness of care for veterans nationwide,” the senators wrote. “The closure of the Wallowa County VA Clinic in the context of all of these actions leaves us with deep concerns about how the VA will meet our veterans’ needs.”

    Wyden and Merkley closed their letter to Collins by seeking a response by April 15, 2025 to the concerns they outlined. 

    The entire letter is here.



    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: More police hitting the beat in Tasmania

    Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

    More police hitting the beat in Tasmania

    Friday, 4 April 2025 – 12:55 pm.

    Tasmania Police has welcomed 15 new constables into its ranks today, with recruit course 5/2024 officially graduating from the police academy.
    Education and Training Commander Damien George said the new officers have worked hard to complete their training and are ready to begin serving the Tasmanian community from next week.
    “Each one of these 15 people should be extremely proud of what they have already achieved, and I look forward to seeing where their new career takes them,” he said.
    “From project managers to personal trainers, our new police officers will bring a range of past experiences to the job when they hit the beat in Glenorchy, Launceston, Devonport, Burnie, Bridgewater and Hobart.”
    “They’re stepping into roles which are anything but ordinary, with each shift offering a new opportunity to serve and engage with our communities.”
    “I encourage anyone who’s looking to find purpose and a job where every moment matters to consider applying to join Tasmania Police.”
    “At Tasmania Police, your actions have meaning, your efforts have purpose, and your presence makes a difference.”
    Constable Callan Sexton and Constable Kate McMaster have been awarded Dux of Course and Runner-up Dux of Course, respectively.
    Both new officers said they are looking forward to their first day in the job.
    “It’s an exciting thing to be finishing up our time at the academy and then starting brand new at our stations,” Constable Sexton said.
    Constable McMaster said she can’t wait to start her new career.
    “My advice for anyone thinking of applying, is to go for it.”
    “It’s never too late to apply or change your career – prior to joining Tasmania Police I had been studying at university for a decade”.
    “I decided to apply because of the dynamic nature of the job, and the endless opportunities provided,” she said.
    For more information about Tasmania Police recruitment, visit https://recruitment.police.tas.gov.au/

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI China: Myanmar hit by 66 aftershocks following deadly earthquake

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    As of Thursday morning, Myanmar has experienced 66 aftershocks ranging from magnitudes 2.8 to 7.5, according to the country’s Department of Meteorology and Hydrology.

    These aftershocks followed a devastating 7.9-magnitude earthquake that struck the country last Friday. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Second batch of emergency humanitarian aid supplies by Chinese gov’t arrives in Myanmar

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    The second batch of emergency humanitarian aid supplies dispatched by the Chinese government arrived at Yangon International Airport in Myanmar on Thursday.

    The second batch of aid supplies includes 800 tents, 2,000 blankets, 3,000 boxes of biscuits, 2,000 boxes of mineral water and other urgently needed supplies. The supplies were transported to Yangon by a chartered flight from China.

    The first batch of emergency humanitarian aid supplies dispatched by the Chinese government for earthquake disaster relief arrived in Myanmar on March 31.

    Li Ming, spokesperson for China International Development Cooperation Agency, said that China is willing to continue providing assistance to the people in the disaster-stricken areas based on Myanmar’s needs, supporting their efforts to overcome the disaster as soon as possible.

    He expressed confidence that with the joint efforts of China and the international community, the people of Myanmar will surely be able to overcome the disaster and rebuild their homes at an early date. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: 280,000 people newly displaced in Gaza: UN

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    An estimated 280,000 Gazans have been newly displaced since the intensification of hostilities over two weeks ago, with some of them forced to move into overcrowded, flea- and mite-infested shelters, according to UN humanitarians on Thursday.

    The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said more Israeli displacement orders were issued, again forcing people to flee in search of safety.

    “Increasing numbers of people are moving into the remaining shelters which are already overcrowded,” OCHA said. “Infestations of fleas and mites are reported, causing skin rashes and other health issues.”

    The office said the aid blockade makes it difficult to tackle the problem due to the lack of materials available in Gaza to improve hygiene conditions.

    OCHA said the United Nations and its humanitarian partners continue to respond to the immense needs of the population as the conditions allow. The month-long blockade on the entry of all humanitarian aid and essential goods deprives the population of basic needs. Food assistance inside Gaza is rapidly running out.

    However, the office said food security partners have so far been able to deliver more than 900,00 hot meals daily.

    OCHA urged immediately reopening the crossings for cargo and humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Fatal crash: Maurice Road, Penrose

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Police can advise one person has died following a collision between a train and vehicle in Penrose.

    The crash occurred at the level crossing on Maurice Road at around 2pm.

    Sadly, despite medical assistance the sole occupant of the vehicle has died at the scene.

    No injuries have been reported from those aboard the train at this stage. Our thoughts are with those who are affected by this tragic event.

    A section of Maurice Road has now been closed, nearest to the intersection with Station Road.

    Station Road remains opens, however please expect some delays in the area.

    The Serious Crash unit has been advised and will examine the scene as part of an investigation now underway.

    ENDS

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Ernst on DOGE: The E Stands for Efficiency

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA)

    Published: April 3, 2025

    “The American people are best served by an efficient workforce full of good employees, and there are many.”

    WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), chair and founder of the Senate DOGE Caucus, advocated for a more efficient government for American taxpayers by ensuring public servants are actually serving the American people.
    During a U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs hearing, Ernst pointed out several bureaucrats that her investigations exposed who should receive a “Reductions in Force” notice, including:

    A Veterans Affairs (VA) manager phoning in from a bubble bath while veterans’ calls go unanswered,
    A VA therapist who gushed about telework with a cat around her neck instead of helping an Army veteran with mental health,
    A Housing and Urban Development employee who was arrested for drunk driving while on the clock,
    A Social Security employee who had his mother answer emails on his behalf while he ran a private business on government time, and
    An IRS employee who was caught golfing on the taxpayers’ dime.

    Watch Senator’s Ernst full remarks here.
    “We need people that care about our constituents. They need to show up to work and do their work. We should reward good employees and get rid of those that truly don’t want to work for Americans and only are working for themselves,” said Ernst.
    Ernst asked Director for the Office of Personnel Management nominee Scott Kupor and Deputy Director for Management for the Office of Management and Budget nominee Eric M. Ueland for their plans to empower agencies to not only dismiss bad employees quickly but reward good employees, stating that “taxpayers deserve better than bubble bath bureaucrats and self-interested therapists.”
    Ernst also cited her personal experience working to get the Social Security Administration’s field office in Sioux City, Iowa back to work after a whistleblower exposed the office’s habit of ignoring simple requests for weeks and not serving Iowans.
    Background:
    As chair of the Senate DOGE Caucus, Ernst unveiled a $2 trillion plan to save taxpayer dollars and downsize the government and her telework report that exposed an absent federal workforce.
    For years, Ernst has been working on getting bureaucrats back to work. In August 2023, Ernst demanded investigations into 24 federal departments and agencies to determine the impact of telework on the delivery and response times of services. In December 2024, Ernst exposed that, almost four years after COVID-19 temporarily closed federal buildings, not a single government agency was occupying even half their office space and called on Biden’s bureaucrats to deck the agency halls with federal workers or sell off unused facilities.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Capito Votes to Confirm Oz to Lead CMS

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), chairman of the Senate Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies (Labor-HHS) Appropriations Subcommittee, issued the following statement after voting to confirm Dr. Mehmet Oz as Administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS):

    “Ensuring that Medicare and Medicaid remain strong and accessible for millions of Americans, including many in my state of West Virginia, remains a priority. Dr. Oz brings a wealth of medical knowledge and a deep understanding of the challenges facing patients and providers alike. His experience as a physician and communicator uniquely positions him to lead CMS at an important time for our healthcare system. I look forward to working with him promote healthcare solutions, and improve health outcomes for families across our country,” Senator Capito said.

    Senator Capito previously met with Oz in February to discuss his nomination and learn more about his vision to lead CMS.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Man charged with motor vehicle stealing

    Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

    Man charged with motor vehicle stealing

    Friday, 4 April 2025 – 12:34 pm.

    Police have charged a 25-year-old Hobart man in relation to the alleged theft of a motor vehicle from a business in Western Junction on 15 March 2025.
    The stolen vehicle was intercepted by police last week in Rosny Park, and the driver was subjected to a roadside drug test that returned a positive result.
    The man was charged with one count of motor vehicle stealing, and he will appear in the Hobart Magistrates Court on 13 June 2025.

    MIL OSI News