Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Lochaber Care Provision 

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Members considered a report on Lochaber Care Provision at the meeting of the Highland Council on 31 October. 

    HC-One informed NHS Highland of their intention to close Moss Park Care Home on the 18 September 2024. A contractually standard notice period of 13 weeks was given.  

    Since that announcement, NHS Highland and The Highland Council have been working together to identify a solution to support the continuation of care in the area.  

    Work is ongoing at present to find an alternative solution to this closure, but in the interests of the welfare of residents, and with no such process concluded at this stage, the core team are actively planning, as a contingency, for the relocation of all residents. 

    Chair of the Council’s Health and Social Care Committee, Cllr David Fraser said: “We understand that this is a worrying time for residents, relatives and all involved, while we continue to pursue potential solutions for Mosspark residents.  

    “This is a challenging situation. Across Highland, our focus remains on working with NHS Highland in reducing delayed discharges and accelerating our work towards a new care model which would support people to live more independently for longer in their own communities and shifting the balance of care from acute to sustainable community provision.” 

    Further updates will be provided to all residents, staff, stakeholders, including the local community, once we have further information and progress will be reported to the Health, Social Care and Wellbeing Committee. 

    The report was discussed in private session due to the nature of sensitive and confidential information contained in the report. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: ARS Hosts 30th Anniversary Ceremony for USDA George E. Brown, Jr. Salinity Laboratory

    Source: US Agriculture Research Service

    ARS Hosts 30th Anniversary Ceremony for USDA George E. Brown, Jr. Salinity Laboratory

    Contact: Amaani Lyle
    Email: Amaani.Lyle@usda.gov

    RIVERSIDE, Calif., Oct. 31, 2024 — The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Agricultural Research Service (ARS) hosted the 30th anniversary ceremony of the U.S. Department of Agriculture George E. Brown, Jr., Salinity Laboratory on the University of California, Riverside campus today.

    The event celebrated decades of research at the laboratory, where ARS teams have pioneered irrigation practices to optimize crop production, leverage conservation through recycled water, and minimize land degradation caused by the omnipresence of natural and man-made salinization, the overabundance of salt.

    Salinization is the buildup of salts and other trace elements in irrigated soils that reduces the productivity of croplands, constituting a long-standing threat to farming in the semi-arid regions of the American West, parts of the Midwest, and throughout the world.

    The Salinity Laboratory’s innovation and leadership in understanding salt-affected soil-plant-water systems for the conservation and protection of our land and water resources and the maintenance of a viable, permanent irrigated agriculture has garnered acclaim from both USDA leadership and UC Riverside collaborators.

    “This milestone anniversary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture George E. Brown, Jr., Salinity Laboratory marks a storied history of our mission to overcome water quality and water scarcity constraints on agriculture and human health,” said Dr. Simon Liu, ARS Administrator. “Our researchers’ work has yielded palpable solutions to address climate change, drought, and competition for resources — factors that reduce the availability of irrigation water and compound risks posed by salinization.”

    ARS Research Leader Todd Skaggs echoed the importance of appropriate salinity control.

    “To meet increasing demands for food amid limited soil and water resources, the nation and much of the world community will continue to look to the USDA Salinity Laboratory for salinity expertise, water quality research, and applications to solve these problems,” Skaggs said. “Protection of soil resources will become even more vital as water conservation, efficiency and quality assurance continue to increase.”

    According to Skaggs, current research focus areas have earned the lab a vanguard position in addressing and eradicating per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), chemicals of concern whose presence in recycled water may lead to the introduction of these harmful compounds into the human food chain if such waters are used for agricultural crop irrigation.

    “Even low levels of PFAS may accumulate in soils over time and be absorbed by crop roots,” Skaggs explained. “Our team is therefore developing a low-cost, low-energy, environmentally-friendly treatment system for the removal of PFAS from recycled water, and it’s being optimized for application at the greenhouse scale, potentially allowing for production of PFAS-free crops for human consumption.”

    Skaggs also recounted research inflection points in the 1960s and 1970s when ARS scientists quantified the salinity response of a wide variety of agricultural crops and demonstrated that soil salinity could be managed with significantly less water than used in conventional irrigation practices, setting the stage for substantial water conservation.

    “This research enabled the selection of suitable crops for a given irrigation water quality and the data remain the most comprehensive information available on relative crop salt tolerances,” he said.

    By the 1990s, the Salinity Laboratory developed benchmark methods for mapping and monitoring soil salinity across swaths of U.S. farms and agricultural regions, irrigated lands that produce 30% of the nation’s food and fiber and practically all of the nation’s fruits and vegetables.

    The 30th anniversary ceremony highlighted but a fraction of the lab’s deep roots.

    In 1937, the United States Regional Salinity Laboratory was established at the base of Mount Rubidoux in the city of Riverside before adopting a new moniker, United States Salinity Laboratory, in 1951. 

    In 1986, Congressmen George Brown, Jerry Lewis, and Al McCandless of California introduced legislation to replace the aging U.S. Salinity Laboratory with a modern facility on the UCR campus, which supported the project by leasing to the federal government a 7.5-acre site for 50 years at $1 per year. Groundbreaking occurred in 1992 before the facility officially opened in 1995. 

    In 2000, the laboratory name would change once more to George E. Brown, Jr., Salinity Laboratory in memory of Congressman George E. Brown, Jr.

    The laboratory has the distinction of being the only facility in the country specifically devoted to agricultural and environmental issue analysis through basic research on saline and alkali soils, including related reclamation, irrigation, drainage and soil management.  

    Following the ceremony was an open house highlighting current research including breeding of salt-tolerant alfalfa, precision agriculture, and greenhouse-scale treatment systems for removing PFAS from irrigation water.

    ARS and UC Riverside researchers have maintained collaborative relationships, sharing vital resources to achieve common research objectives through cooperative research programs. 

    Leaders who spoke at the ceremony included:

    • Dr. Simon Liu, Administrator, USDA-ARS 
    • Dr. Tara McHugh, Director, Pacific West Area, USDA-ARS 
    • Dr. Marlen Eve, Deputy Administrator, USDA-ARS National Program Staff, Natural Resources and Sustainable Agricultural Systems
    • Peter Atkinson, Interim Dean, UC Riverside College of Natural and Agricultural Sciences
    • Rien van Genuchten, Recipient of the 2023 Wolf Prize in Agriculture

    The Agricultural Research Service is the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s chief scientific in-house research agency. Daily, ARS focuses on solutions to agricultural problems affecting America. Each dollar invested in U.S. agricultural research results in $20 of economic impact.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Deputy Administrator Isobel Coleman on Bold Measures to Feed Africa During the World Food Prize

    Source: USAID

    DEPUTY ADMINISTRATOR ISOBEL COLEMAN: Thank you, President [Akinwumi] Adesina, for that introduction, and thank you, President [Samia Suluhu] Hassan and President [Julius Maada] Bio, for your thoughtful reflections. It is an honor to join you today, representing the U.S. Agency for International Development.

    As we’ve heard, the level of need remains great in Africa. It is one of the few regions of the world where hunger and undernourishment have continued to rise in recent years. However, Africa is also home to 12 of the 20 fastest growing economies on the planet, and the continent is poised to become the world’s second fastest-growing economic region. 

    This is a moment of great opportunity. With smart policy reforms, and increased investment and trade, we can realize the potential of this dynamic region while seriously tackling poverty, hunger and malnutrition. 

    The U.S. government’s global hunger initiative, Feed the Future, prioritizes investments in Africa – providing more than $400 million each year to drive inclusive and sustainable agriculture-led growth, improve nutrition outcomes, and build resilience. Feed the Future’s locally-led model has yielded remarkable success over its first decade. In areas where Feed the Future has worked, poverty, hunger, and child stunting all declined by 20 to 25 percent. 

    But, we know there is much more work to be done. 

    As global needs continue to far outpace available resources, USAID is focused on investing our dollars in the most impactful, cost-effective ways to maximize our impact. Under Feed the Future, we are making an effort to concentrate our work in countries and regions where we see both significant need and opportunity to drive long-term sustainable progress.  

    Through rigorous data analysis, we have identified three countries in sub-Saharan Africa – Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia – as ripe for the kind of agricultural transformation that can lift hundreds of thousands of people out of poverty and help expand the food supply across the region and beyond. So, through an initiative we are calling Feed the Future Accelerator, we are doubling down on our investments in these three countries. We believe these countries have the potential to become regional breadbaskets helping to feed the world. 

    In partnership with the African Union, the Accelerator will allow us to support an African-led approach to tap into that potential. The governments in these countries – by implementing the smart policies and economic reforms needed to catalyze inclusive growth – are laying the groundwork to form a regional agricultural powerhouse.

    We are committed to capitalizing on this game-changing opportunity in the region. So, last month, we announced over $80 million in USAID commitments to Feed the Future Accelerator, which complements an ongoing portfolio of nearly $500 million in investments from across the U.S. government in these three countries. And, over the course of this week, we’ve seen that number grow.

    For example, on Tuesday, the Millennium Challenge Corporation announced a new $491 million compact with Zambia, with MCC providing $458 million and the Government of Zambia contributing $33 million to boost agricultural productivity and investment. And, as we ramp up our investments in these priority countries, the U.S. and other donors are also investing in the hard infrastructure that farmers need to access affordable agricultural inputs and then to transport what they grow to markets across the region. 

    Under the umbrella of the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment, or PGI, we are investing in the Lobito Corridor – an ambitious infrastructure project stretching from the port of Lobito on Angola’s Atlantic coast, through the Democratic Republic of the Congo to Zambia, and on to Tanzania. These investments will directly benefit smallholder farmers and agricultural small and medium-sized enterprises by enabling them to scale up operations, create linkages to agro-processing and storage, create jobs, and drive growth. Our ambition is that this economic corridor, enhanced by our investments in the Accelerator, will raise incomes among small- and medium-sized farm holders, especially women farmers, while also contributing to regional trade and market linkages – catalyzing the kind of agricultural growth needed to enable countries not just to provide for their own people but to become major food exporters.

    And, we know that these investments in infrastructure and food security are also building greater climate resilience in a region battling the impacts of climate change. USAID has announced over $38 million in new research investments with a host of U.S. universities that will focus on developing climate-smart innovations to build resilience and support smallholder farmers in Accelerator countries specifically and across Africa more broadly.

    But, we know that the United States government cannot do this alone, which is why we are excited that the private sector is joining us in this effort, with major companies such as Bayer and ofi, one of the largest coffee suppliers in the world, investing over $150 million in Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia. And, earlier this week, you may have heard from Bayer and ofi about the investments they are making. Bayer will invest $35 million in building a new seed production facility in Zambia, which is expected to open in March 2025. The hybrid seeds Bayer will produce will be sold across the region, contributing to a more integrated regional seed market that benefits smallholder farmers in neighboring countries. ofi, one of the largest coffee producers and exporters in Tanzania and Zambia, will invest $80 million over the next four years in Zambia and Tanzania coffee value chains. These investments will boost local economies and generate additional income for farming communities.

    This kind of partnership – with the private sector, with local African leaders, with other donors, and beyond – will be vital to our efforts. Together, we will create an engine that can help feed hungry people, not just in these three countries, but across the African continent.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NEWS RELEASE: SEPTEMBER 2024 VISITOR ARRIVALS RECOVERED 96.1 PERCENT COMPARED TO PRE-PANDEMIC SEPTEMBER 2019

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    NEWS RELEASE: SEPTEMBER 2024 VISITOR ARRIVALS RECOVERED 96.1 PERCENT COMPARED TO PRE-PANDEMIC SEPTEMBER 2019

    Posted on Oct 31, 2024 in Latest Department News, Newsroom

    DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND TOURISM

     

    RESEARCH AND ECONOMIC ANALYSIS DIVISION

     

    JOSH GREEN, M.D.
    GOVERNOR

    JAMES KUNANE TOKIOKA

    DIRECTOR

    1. EUGENE TIAN
      CHIEF STATE ECONOMIST

     

     

     

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    October 31, 2024

    SEPTEMBER 2024 VISITOR ARRIVALS RECOVERED 96.1 PERCENT COMPARED TO PRE-PANDEMIC SEPTEMBER 2019

     

    HONOLULU – Total visitor arrivals in September 2024 represent a 96.1 percent recovery from pre-pandemic September 2019, the best recovery rate since the Maui wildfires (not including February 2024, which had a leap day). Total nominal visitor spending increased 16.3 percent compared to September 2019. According to preliminary statistics from the Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism (DBEDT), there were 707,486 visitors to the Hawaiian Islands in September 2024, up 7.8 percent from the same month last year. Total visitor spending measured in nominal dollars was $1.45 billion, growth of 4.6 percent from September 2023.

    In September 2024, 688,831 visitors arrived by air service, mainly from the U.S. West and U.S. East. Additionally, 18,655 visitors arrived via out-of-state cruise ships. In comparison, 648,145 visitors (+6.3%) arrived by air and 8,143 visitors (+129.1%) came by cruise ships in September 2023, and 718,042 visitors (-4.1%) came by air and 18,114 visitors (+3.0%) came by cruise ships in September 2019.

    The average length of stay by all visitors in September 2024 was 8.23 days, which was shorter than September 2023 (8.61 days, -4.4%) and September 2019 (8.40 days, -2.0%). The statewide average daily census was 194,156 visitors in September 2024, compared to 188,319 visitors (+3.1%) in September 2023 and 206,169 visitors (-5.8%) in September 2019.

    In September 2024, 359,688 visitors arrived from the U.S. West, an increase from September 2023 (329,347 visitors, +9.2%) and September 2019 (305,808 visitors, +17.6%). U.S. West visitor spending of $663.6 million grew compared to September 2023 ($604.5 million, +9.8%) and was considerably higher than September 2019 ($466.0 million, +42.4%). Daily spending by U.S. West visitors in September 2024 ($228 per person) increased compared to September 2023 ($223 per person, +2.3%) and was significantly more than September 2019 ($179 per person, +27.5%).

    In September 2024, 160,299 visitors arrived from the U.S. East, up from September 2023 (153,737 visitors, +4.3%) and from September 2019 (133,185 visitors, +20.4%). U.S. East visitor spending of $408.9 million increased compared to September 2023 ($404.5 million, +1.1%) and September 2019 ($288.9 million, +41.5%). Daily spending by U.S. East visitors in September 2024 ($274 per person) was slightly less than September 2023 ($275 per person,
    -0.3%) but was much higher than September 2019 ($229 per person, +19.8%).

    There were 64,940 visitors from Japan in September 2024, which was a slight increase from September 2023 (64,580 visitors, +0.6%) but continued to be much lower than September 2019 (143,928 visitors, -54.9%). Visitors from Japan spent $96.2 million in September 2024, compared to $101.3 million (-5.0%) in September 2023 and $196.5 million (-51.0%) in September 2019. Daily spending by Japanese visitors in September 2024 ($240 per person) decreased compared to September 2023 ($243 per person, -1.2%) but was higher than September 2019 ($231 per person, +3.8%).

    In September 2024, 19,188 visitors arrived from Canada, an increase from September 2023 (18,647 visitors, +2.9%), but a decline compared to September 2019 (21,928 visitors, -12.5%). Visitors from Canada spent $43.6 million in September 2024, compared to $48.1 million (-9.3%) in September 2023 and $40.5 million (+7.6%) in September 2019. Daily spending by Canadian visitors in September 2024 ($236 per person) was similar to September 2023 ($236 per person, +0.2%) and was considerably more than September 2019 ($159 per person, +48.8%).

    There were 84,717 visitors from all other international markets in September 2024, comprising visitors from Oceania, Other Asia, Europe, Latin America, Guam, the Philippines, the Pacific Islands and other regions. In comparison, there were 81,833 visitors (+3.5%) from all other international markets in September 2023 and 113,192 visitors (-25.2%) in September 2019.

    Air capacity to the Hawaiian Islands in September 2024 (4,476 transpacific flights with 990,746 seats) increased compared to September 2023 (4,376 flights, +2.3% with 963,916 seats, +2.8%), but declined from September 2019 (4,533 flights, -1.3% with 1,012,883 seats, -2.2%).

    VIEW FULL NEWS RELEASE AND TABLES

     

    Statement by DBEDT Director James Kunane Tokioka

     

    The leading contributor to the September 2024 tourism industry performance was the U.S. market with 519,987 visitors and registered as the second highest September visitor count on record (the highest September number occurred in 2022 with 566,189 visitors). The September 2024 U.S. visitor count was 18.4 percent higher than the same month in 2019. For the first nine months of 2024, the U.S. visitor count was 6.0 percent higher than the same period in 2019.

     

    The rebound of Hawai‘i’s cruise industry, which has surpassed pre-pandemic 2019 levels, was also a contributing factor in September’s performance. Nine out-of-state cruise ships brought 18,655 visitors to the islands in September 2024, more than double the number of visitors who came by cruise ships in September 2023 and 3.0 percent higher than September 2019. For the first nine months of 2024, there were 58 arrivals from out-of-state cruise ships that carried more than 106,000 visitors, a growth of 11.5 percent compared to year-to-date 2019.

     

    Current airlift and travel agency bookings data indicate that the U.S. market will still be leading Hawai‘i’s tourism recovery in the future months. We expect that the foreign exchange rate will be more favorable to foreign visitors and the international market will improve in the near future. During the first nine months of 2024, the recovery of foreign visitors was at 63.6 percent, while Japanese visitor recovery was at 44.5 percent.

     

    # # #

     

     

    Media Contacts:

     

    Laci Goshi

    Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism

    808-518-5480

    [email protected]

     

    Jennifer Chun

    Director of Tourism Research

    Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism

    808-973-9446

    [email protected]

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: California launches new program to improve public safety by reducing homelessness and recidivism

    Source: US State of California 2

    Oct 31, 2024

    What you need to know: California is announcing a new state program using $16 million in federal funds to help improve public safety and reduce recidivism by creating long-term supportive housing and support for people exiting incarceration.

    SACRAMENTO — Governor Newsom today launched a first-of-its-kind program to improve public safety — with new federally funded investments to create long-term supportive housing and comprehensive wrap-around services for individuals exiting incarceration. The funding opportunity is collaboratively administered by the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) and the California Department of Corrections Rehabilitation (CDCR).

    The agencies are now accepting proposals for efforts aimed at reducing the risk of homelessness and recidivism for people who were formerly incarcerated and are reentering society, for the mutual benefit and safety of the individuals being housed and the communities to which they return. 

    “Ensuring that those exiting our prison system have the resources and housing they need makes us all safer. We are grateful for this federal funding to help us reduce homelessness and support those looking for a clean start.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    Formerly incarcerated individuals are nearly 10 times more likely than the general public to experience homelessness. However, formerly incarcerated individuals are often excluded from participating in public and affordable housing programs. Studies also indicate reductions in recidivism may occur when formerly incarcerated individuals can secure housing.

    “CDCR knows firsthand how homelessness impacts California communities and is committed to enhancing public safety and promoting successful community reintegration,” said CDCR Secretary Jeff Macomber. “Housing stability is an important aspect to successful reentry, and this groundbreaking effort in partnership with HCD will provide a valuable opportunity to address these challenges.”

    In a concerted effort to lower barriers to housing for people exiting correctional institutions or programs in California, HCD and CDCR will partner to implement the federally funded HOME American Rescue Plan (HOME-ARP) Reentry Housing Pilot Project (RHPP), backed with $16 million from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The aim is to lower the rate of homelessness among formerly incarcerated and justice-involved populations, while increasing success in securing employment, furthering education, and helping establish links to health care—all of which lower rates of recidivism. 

    “The Reentry Housing Pilot Project will provide safe and stable homes, along with permanent supportive services to people exiting the justice system,” said Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency Secretary Tomiquia Moss. “Stable housing is a crucial foundation for everyone, including those who were formerly incarcerated. The pilot program will enable them to secure employment, receive necessary health care and reunite with their families. These opportunities and tools serve to benefit both individuals and our communities so we can all succeed.”

    CDCR offers numerous wraparound resources to facilitate successful community reintegration. Research shows that education and employment opportunities for formerly incarcerated individuals have a positive impact on recidivism rates and help them avoid reoffending. Resources for housing, substance use disorder, and other needs such as life skills, jobs, and education are all important in attaining long-term sustainable change.

    Building on those efforts, the Governor is directing HCD and CDCR to work together to add a final step for reentry services, which will provide permanent supportive housing linked to comprehensive, evidence-based programs and services that support successful outcomes and long-term stability.

    “Too often, people leaving prison face a life sentence of housing instability,” said HCD Director Gustavo Velasquez. “Our communities and society are all better for it when we choose to lay the foundation for successful reentry, and housing is the first most critical cornerstone for a more hopeful future.”

    The grants are competitively funded and will be available only to organizations with extensive experience in developing and operating transitional housing and permanent supportive housing for the reentry population.

    Applications for the program are being accepted now and are due by December 31, 2024. Initial HOME-ARP Reentry Housing Pilot Project awards are anticipated in early summer of 2025. Learn more about the program and eligibility requirements here.

    More housing. More accountability.

    Since taking office, Governor Newsom has invested $40 billion in housing production. The state has also invested more than $27 billion to help communities address homelessness.

    Governor Newsom championed the creation of the Housing Accountability Unit at HCD to ensure cities and counties fulfill their legal responsibilities to plan and permit their fair share of housing. This focus on accountability has, in part, led to a 15-year high in housing starts in California. Since its establishment, the Housing Accountability Unit has supported the development of 7,513 housing units, including 2,765 affordable units, through enforcement actions and by working with local jurisdictions to ensure compliance with housing law. 

    Addressing the homeless crisis 

    This also follows the Governor’s recent executive order urging local government to quickly address encampments and provide individuals experiencing homelessness with the care, compassion, and support they need. Earlier this month, the Governor announced $130.7 million in new funding for local communities to help people experiencing homelessness in dangerous encampments, paired with robust accountability measures.

    California recently announced 37 new grant awards totaling more than $827 million to help more than 100 local communities and organizations create long-term solutions to address homelessness, with strong accountability and transparency measures and clear expectations to ensure that local strategies to address homelessness are measurable and effective. 

    The agencies are now accepting proposals for efforts aimed at reducing the risk of homelessness and recidivism for people who were formerly incarcerated and are reentering society, for the mutual benefit and safety of the individuals being housed and the communities to which they return. 

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Turkish NGO receiving EU funds pays tribute to former Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh – P-001517/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    In June 2024, the European Council reiterated its strongest condemnation of the brutal terrorist attacks conducted by Hamas and other terrorist groups on 7 October 2023[1].

    Hamas is listed under the EU terrorist list[2]. Additionally, the EU established restrictive measures against those who support, facilitate or enable violent actions by Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad in January 2024[3].

    Concerning projects funded under the EU budget, if a project is not implemented in line with the grant agreement, including non- respect of EU values , the Commission and (in case of indirect management such as for Erasmus+) the national agencies can take appropriate measures, including financial corrections as appropriate.

    The Turkish organisation ‘Şark Forum Derneği’[4] is currently not receiving funding from Erasmus+ anymore but has received funding in the past for youth projects now finalised.

    As coordinator of four projects, this organisation received EUR 85 173 (shared with their partner organisations) under the current Erasmus+ programme and EUR 18 755 under the previous programme[5].

    The regular monitoring activities carried out during the project implementation period did not result in any issues being detected. As these projects have all been completed and this organisation has no longer contractual relations within the programme, there is no legal ground to take action vis-à-vis the projects in the specific context described.

    The Commission would like to refer the Honourable Member to the Commission’s reply to Written Question P-001524/24, which addressed the same issue and complement this reply.

    • [1] https://www.consilium.europa.eu/media/qa3lblga/euco-conclusions-27062024-en.pdf
    • [2] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A02001E0931-20240221
    • [3] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A02024D0385-20240119
    • [4] https://www.sharqforum.org/
    • [5] These figures are those granted by the national agency to the entire consortium managing each project after finalisation.
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Highlights – Confirmation hearing of EU Commissioner-designate Olivér Várhelyi – Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety

    Source: European Parliament

    Olivér Várhelyi_0.png © European Commission

    On 6 November, the confirmation hearing of Commissioner-designate for Health and Animal Welfare, Olivér Várhelyi (Hungary) will take place.

    The confirmation hearing will be led jointly by the ENVI and AGRI Committees. ITRE Committee and SANT sub-Committee are also invited. The hearing is expected to last three hours from 18.30 to 21.30. As regards the topics in the remit of the ENVI Committee and following his replies to the written questions, the Commissioner-designate is expected to be further questioned on public health, in on the pharmaceutical reform, the access to medicinal products, EU research and competitiveness, and the fight against AMR. The Commissioner designate will also tackle food safety issues, such as the use of pesticides, animal diseases and food labelling, as well as issues related to animal welfare which are also under his portfolio. The confirmation hearing will be the basis for the coordinators of the committees responsible to assess whether the Commissioner-designate is qualified both to be a member of the College of Commissioners and to carry out the specific tasks assigned to him.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Federal Councillor Baume-Schneider attends G20 Health Ministers’ Meeting in Brazil

    Source: Switzerland – Federal Administration in English

    Federal Councillor Elisabeth Baume-Schneider took part in the G20 Health Ministers’ Meeting in Rio de Janeiro today. Federal Councillor Baume-Schneider also represented Switzerland at the G20’s Joint Ministerial Meeting on Finance and Health. The meetings’ discussions focused in particular on the resilience of healthcare systems and on ensuring equitable access to medical products. The Head of the Federal Department of Home Affairs (FDHA) also took the opportunity to conduct bilateral discussions with several of her international counterparts. She will continue her stay in Brazil with a working visit devoted to both health and cultural issues between now and Saturday 2 November.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Placing Ryplazim on the market in Europe – E-002234/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    23.10.2024

    Question for written answer  E-002234/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Chiara Gemma (ECR), Sergio Berlato (ECR), Stefano Cavedagna (ECR), Alessandro Ciriani (ECR), Giovanni Crosetto (ECR), Elena Donazzan (ECR), Carlo Fidanza (ECR), Pietro Fiocchi (ECR), Alberico Gambino (ECR), Paolo Inselvini (ECR), Lara Magoni (ECR), Mario Mantovani (ECR), Giuseppe Milazzo (ECR), Denis Nesci (ECR), Michele Picaro (ECR), Daniele Polato (ECR), Nicola Procaccini (ECR), Ruggero Razza (ECR), Antonella Sberna (ECR), Marco Squarta (ECR), Francesco Torselli (ECR), Francesco Ventola (ECR), Mariateresa Vivaldini (ECR)

    Severe hypoplasminogenemia (HPG), or plasminogen deficiency type 1(PLGD-1) is a rare systemic disease characterised by abnormal extracellular fibrinolysis. It affects 0.02 in 10 000 people in the EU, usually manifesting in early childhood.

    There exists only one effective treatment, now available in the form of Ryplazim, an experimental drug already approved in 2019 by the US Food and Drug Administration and available on the American market since May 2024.

    The medicine was so successful that the manufacturer Kedrion received the prestigious Industry Innovation Award from the American National Organization for Rare Diseases (NORD).

    However, the adoption of Ryplazim has not yet been authorised by the European Medicines Agency (EMA), which in 2015 granted orphan designation to ProMetic BioTherapeutics Ltd for human plasminogen with opinion EU/3/15/1511.

    Not having the possibility of using Ryplazim in national healthcare systems means outdated therapies will be used instead.

    In view of the above:

    • 1.Was the Commission aware of this situation?
    • 2.What concrete steps does the Commission intend to take with regard to the EMA in order to ensure that people suffering from severe hypoplasminogenemia have safe access to life-saving medicines at the dosage necessary for treatment, even if experimental?

    Submitted: 23.10.2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Highlights – Confirmation hearing of EU Commissioner-designate Jessika Roswall – Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety

    Source: European Parliament

    Commissioner-designate Jessika Roswall © European Commission

    On 5 November, the confirmation hearing of Commissioner-designate for Environment, Water Resilience, and a Competitive Circular Economy Jessika Roswall (Sweden) will take place.

    The confirmation hearing will be led by ENVI. IMCO, ITRE, and AGRI committees are invited to participate in the hearing. It is expected to last three hours from 18:30 to 21:30 pm. ENVI Members will have the opportunity to question the Commissioner-designate on a variety of priority issues including, for instance, the need to develop a European Water Resilience Strategy to address water efficiency, scarcity, and pollution while considering the unique challenges faced by individual Member States. Another topic likely to come up is the Circular Economy Act and the challenge of creating market demand for secondary raw materials and establishing a single market for waste. The hearing will be the basis for the coordinators of the political groups in the committees responsible to assess whether the Commissioner-designate is qualified both to be a member of the College of Commissioners and to carry out the specific tasks assigned to her.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Highlights – Confirmation hearing of Commissioner-designate Hadja Lahbib – Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety

    Source: European Parliament

    Commissioner-designate Hadja Lahbib © European Commission

    On 6 November, the confirmation hearing of Commissioner-designate for Preparedness and Crisis Management, and Equality, Hadja Lahbib (Belgium) will take place.

    The confirmation hearing will be led jointly by the DEVE, FEMM, and LIBE Committees. EMPL and SANT Committees are also invited to this hearing. It will take place between 9 to 12 am. Within the ENVI Committee’s remit, the Commissioner-designate will reply to questions concerning the enhancing of the Union’s crisis management via mechanisms like the UCPM and RescEU, ensuring adequate resources in the current and upcoming MFF, and providing equitable financial support for regions affected by disasters. ENVI Members will also question her on preparedness strategies, health emergencies, DG HERA’s role, the integration of disaster prevention into EU policies, the future Climate Adaptation Plan, and balancing EU stockpiling strategies. The hearing will be the basis for the coordinators of the committees responsible to assess whether the Commissioner-designate is qualified both to be a member of the College of Commissioners and to carry out the specific tasks assigned to her.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Highlights – Confirmation hearing of EU Commissioner-designate Wopke Hoekstra – Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety

    Source: European Parliament

    Wopke Hoekstra_0.png © European Commission

    On 7 November, the confirmation hearing of Commissioner-designate for Climate, Net-Zero and Clean Growth, Wopke Hoekstra (Netherlands) will take place.

    The confirmation hearing will be led jointly by the ENVI, ITRE and ECON Committees. TRAN, EMPL and FISC Committees are also invited. The hearing is expected to last three hours from 9 to 12 am. As regards the topics in the remit of the ENVI Committee, the Commissioner-designate will reply to questions on the adaptation to climate change, the EU climate change diplomacy, its role in achievement of the long term goal of Paris Agreement, priorities for upcoming COP29 and phasing-out fossil fuel subsidies. He may also tackle the conditions for a new 2040 climate target and the post-2030 legislative architecture. He will also address the implementation of 2030 climate legislative framework and ensuring fair transition to a climate-neutral economy. The hearing will be the basis for the coordinators of the committees responsible to assess whether the Commissioner-designate is qualified both to be a member of the College of Commissioners and to carry out the specific tasks assigned to him.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Extraordinary measures to help the livestock sector to deal with bluetongue disease, bovine tuberculosis and epizootic haemorrhagic disease (EHD) – E-002156/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    17.10.2024

    Question for written answer  E-002156/2024/rev.1
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Carmen Crespo Díaz (PPE), Elena Nevado del Campo (PPE), Raúl de la Hoz Quintano (PPE)

    The spread of outbreaks of bluetongue disease, bovine tuberculosis and epizootic haemorrhagic disease (EHD) in Europe is causing uncertainty and losses for the livestock sector. Neither national nor regional governments have the resources to carry out vaccinations and other measures.

    In the light of the above:

    • 1.To enable regional governments from Spain to get to grips with outbreaks of those diseases, does the Commission intend to authorise extraordinary mechanisms so that they can obtain additional resources?
    • 2.Has the Spanish Government asked the Commission for help with tackling the outbreaks of bluetongue, bovine tuberculosis and epizootic haemorrhagic disease (EHD)?

    Submitted: 17.10.2024

    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Highlights – Joint ENVI-AGRI Confirmation hearing of EU Commissioner-designate Olivér Várhelyi – Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety

    Source: European Parliament

    Olivér Várhelyi_0.png © European Commission

    On 6 November, the confirmation hearing of Commissioner-designate for Health and Animal Welfare, Olivér Várhelyi (Hungary) will take place.

    The confirmation hearing will be led jointly by the ENVI and AGRI Committees. ITRE Committee and SANT sub-Committee are also invited. The hearing is expected to last three hours from 18.30 to 21.30. As regards the topics in the remit of the ENVI Committee and following his replies to the written questions, the Commissioner-designate is expected to be further questioned on public health, in on the pharmaceutical reform, the access to medicinal products, EU research and competitiveness, and the fight against AMR. The Commissioner designate will also tackle food safety issues, such as the use of pesticides, animal diseases and food labelling, as well as issues related to animal welfare which are also under his portfolio. The confirmation hearing will be the basis for the coordinators of the committees responsible to assess whether the Commissioner-designate is qualified both to be a member of the College of Commissioners and to carry out the specific tasks assigned to him.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Serious lack of safety and dangerous delays in completing critical infrastructure on the Greek railway network – E-002198/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    21.10.2024

    Question for written answer  E-002198/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Elena Kountoura (The Left), Konstantinos Arvanitis (The Left), Nikolas Farantouris (The Left), Nikos Pappas (The Left)

    Just 20 months after the criminal accident at Tempi, the Greek railway network is still plagued by serious deficiencies, with a series of near collisions occurring[1], and deaths and injuries witnessed on level crossings[2]. Despite substantial EU funding going into modernising Greek railways, basic safety infrastructure, namely remote control, signalling and ETCS systems, remain incomplete or inactive across much of the railway network. Meanwhile, the situation is made all the more dangerous by the serious shortcomings seen in terms of maintenance works and work done to clear railway lines across the network. Train drivers have lodged complaints and taken industrial action calling for investments in new rolling stock, the completion of infrastructure and superstructure works, the maintenance and clearing of railway lines and the immediate implementation of the above safety works.[3] The railway network and infrastructure urgently need to be upgraded if further accidents are to be prevented and transport safety guaranteed.

    In view of this:

    • 1.What will the Commission do to ensure that the Greek authorities complete the remote control, signalling and ETCS systems and the necessary maintenance works and improvements to the Greek railway infrastructure?
    • 2.How does it plan to ensure that the systematic breaches of EU law on railway safety and interoperability are remedied?

    Submitted: 21.10.2024

    • [1] In the context of the serious safety shortcomings seen across the Greek railway network, there have recently been a number of incidents that very nearly ended in accidents. For example, on 9 October, a suburban train was directed onto a metro line at Doukissis Plakentias; on 14 September, a suburban train crashed into a tree trunk; on 13 September, two suburban trains coming from opposite directions ended up travelling on a single track in Agioi Anargyroi; on 29 May, a collision between a passenger train and a freight train near Thessaloniki was averted; and on 10 May, two locomotives collided in Larissa. These incidents show that there is an urgent need to improve the network’s safety measures.
    • [2] Tragically, level crossing accidents have caused 35 deaths and left 28 people injured, with Greece ranking second in terms of most dangerous railway crossings in Europe. https://www.avgi.gr/koinonia/494974_pame-kai-opoy-bgei-35-nekroi-kai-28-traymaties-ta-teleytaia-hronia.
    • [3] https://www.metaforespress.gr/sidirodromos
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Urgent measures to prevent the exploitation of non-European transport workers and to protect European road hauliers – E-002248/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    24.10.2024

    Question for written answer  E-002248/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Valentina Palmisano (The Left)

    The exploitation of non-European – and especially Asian – workers employed in inhuman conditions in the transport sector is beginning to emerge as a serious phenomenon across Europe.[1] These workers, who are recruited via international agencies, receive their European documentation thanks to shady practices and are employed by big companies on very low wages, without having any rights and without being insured. This system not only violates EU legislation, such as Regulation (EU) No 492/2011 and Directive 2009/52/EC, but also creates unfair competition that is damaging to European hauliers.

    European hauliers, who are subject to strict rules on safety and wages, cannot compete with a system that is harnessing an underpaid and exploited labour force. This imbalance is liable to jeopardise not only the sector’s future but also road safety in Europe.

    In the light of the above, can the Commission state:

    • 1.What steps it will take to ensure rigorous application of Directive 2009/52/EC and to prevent the exploitation of non-European workers, which distorts the labour market and is damaging to European road hauliers?
    • 2.How it plans to tighten up transnational and internal checks (especially in respect of the Member States most ‘active’ in the issuing of/conversion to European driving licences) so as to prevent the use of an irregular labour force and to ensure a level playing field?
    • 3.What measures it envisages to safeguard the rights of European hauliers affected by unfair competition, which is jeopardising their livelihoods and working conditions?

    Submitted: 24.10.2024

    • [1] https://www.labournet.de/interventionen/solidaritaet/mind-55-lkw-fahrer-aus-georgien-und-usbekistan-streiken-auf-der-autobahnraststaette-bei-darmstadt-fuer-ihren-lohn-von-der-polnischen-firmengruppe-mazur/.
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Negative consequences of implementing acts for Regulation (EU) 2023/1542 on Poland’s battery production industry – E-001580/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    31.10.2024

    As required by Article 7(1) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1542[1], the Commission is currently developing a methodology for calculating and verifying the carbon footprint of electric vehicle batteries.

    After publication of a draft delegated act on the ‘Have your say’ portal on 30 April 2024[2] and a dedicated meeting of the Member State expert group on 11 July 2024, the Commission is currently analysing the way forward for the adoption of the delegated act, taking into account the feedback received.

    The development and implementation of the carbon footprint requirements for batteries is based on a stepwise approach in accordance with Article 7 of Regulation (EU) 2023/1542.

    For the final step of setting maximum carbon footprint thresholds, the Commission will carry out an impact assessment, including an assessment of the economic impacts of this measure.

    • [1] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2023/1542/oj
    • [2] https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/better-regulation/have-your-say/initiatives/13877-Batteries-for-electric-vehicles-carbon-footprint-methodology_en
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Restructuring at Audi in Brussels – E-001518/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission is committed to preserving manufacturing in Europe while ensuring a just transition and sustainable competitiveness. It is following with high attention and concern the recent developments in the EU automotive industry.

    The EU is supporting the automotive industry by tackling supply chain difficulties with the Critical Raw Materials Act[1], the Net-Zero Industry Act[2], Battery Regulation[3] and the Chips Act[4] as well as raw materials partnerships[5].

    It has defined a regulatory environment to encourage the transition to smart mobility with the Sustainable and Smart Mobility Strategy[6], the AI Act[7], the Data Act[8] and the Cyber Resilience Act[9]. The EU also provides substantial financial support for the industry’s transformation to electromobility along the whole value chain[10].

    Moreover, the EU has put a robust framework in place for the transition to zero-emission mobility by setting binding CO2 targets[11] for vehicle manufacturers, which are complemented by measures aimed to ensure a fair transition[12], while recognising that further initiatives are needed to strengthen the EU’s just transition policy framework[13], with a focus on anticipation and management of change.

    For instance, the Commission will monitor the socioeconomic impacts of these measures with a first progress report in 2025, including on adequate financial measures to ensure a just transition and to mitigate any negative impacts, in particular in the regions and the communities most affected.

    The Commission has taken note of the analysis of the automotive industry’s challenges in the Draghi report[14] and will consider further measures in the context of the announced future industrial action plan for the automotive industry.

    • [1] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=OJ:L_202401252
    • [2]  https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=OJ:L_202401735
    • [3]  https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32023R1542
    • [4] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32023R1781. The Chips Act has spurred substantial industry investment in semiconductor manufacturing capacity, which is crucial for advancing both the electrification and digitalisation of the automotive industry: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/commission-approves-eu5-billion-german-state-aid-measure-support-esmc-setting-new-semiconductor
    • [5] https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/sectors/raw-materials/areas-specific-interest/raw-materials-diplomacy_en
    • [6] https://transport.ec.europa.eu/transport-themes/mobility-strategy_en
    • [7] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=OJ%3AL_202401689
    • [8] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2023/2854
    • [9] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex:52022PC0454
    • [10] Funding from the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF), to support for instance the conversion of automotive plants and national schemes to incentivise fleet renewal (e.g. https://www.mintur.gob.es/en-us/recuperacion-transformacion-resiliencia/paginas/perte.aspx; https://commission.europa.eu/business-economy-euro/economic-recovery/recovery-and-resilience-facility/germanys-recovery-and-resilience-plan/germanys-recovery-and-resilience-supported-projects-nation-wide-investment-scheme_en) and funding from the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) to support the deployment of charging infrastructure (https://transport.ec.europa.eu/news-events/news/commission-makes-eu1bn-available-recharging-and-refuelling-points-under-connecting-europe-facility-2024-02-29_en).
    • [11] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32023R0851, https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32019R0631
    • [12] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32022H0627(04), implemented notably in the context of the European Semester and the Energy Union and Climate Action Governance Regulation.
    • [13] E.g. European Parliament resolution on job creation — the just transition and impact investments, 2022/2170(INI), 23 November 2023, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2023-0438_EN.html
    • [14] https://commission.europa.eu/topics/strengthening-european-competitiveness/eu-competitiveness-looking-ahead_en
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Energy costs of businesses in Europe – E-001651/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission is set to continue its work focusing on measures to bring down prices and costs for households and business by developing an Action Plan for Affordable Energy Prices[1].

    It will inter alia aim to support industries and companies through the transition, while unlocking decarbonisation pathways for industry and companies.

    Furthermore, the Commission will continue to prioritise investments in clean energy infrastructure, in particular with a planned clean energy investment strategy for Europe, including clean infrastructure and storage.

    This Action Plan for Affordable Energy Prices will build on the implementation of the adopted Electricity Market Design reform[2] and will include additional initiatives to enable lower energy costs for end-users while accelerating decarbonisation, to develop an overall cost-efficient system and ensure adequate investments in infrastructure.

    The Commission will also continue to actively monitor the energy markets in Europe with a view to preserving competition on those markets and ensuring the supply of secure and clean energy at affordable prices to businesses and consumers.

    • [1]  https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_22_1511
    • [2]  https://energy.ec.europa.eu/topics/markets-and-consumers/electricity-market-design_en#:~:text=Reform%20of%20the%20electricity%20market%20design.%20To%20boost%20renewables,%20better
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Measures to support the Spanish and Portuguese fleets affected by the proliferation of the invasive species of Asian seaweed ( Rugulopteryx okamurae ) – E-001853/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission is aware of the serious problems that the species Rugulopteryx okamurae is causing in various coastal areas of Andalucía and in other Spanish areas such as Ceuta and south of Portugal.

    On the basis of a risk assessment submitted by the competent Spanish authorities, Rugulopteryx okamurae was included in 2022 on the list of the invasive alien species to which priority should be given[1]. Regrettably, this invasive alga continues to expand, and has reached France and Italy in recent years.

    The affected Member States can decide how and when to provide financial support to fishers affected by invasive species through their European Maritime, Fisheries and Aquaculture (EMFAF) programme.

    This can include measures for tackling the spread of the species, as well as directly supporting fishers for example with cleaning, repairing equipment and antifouling.

    Based on the information received from the Spanish authorities, it appears that the Spanish Ministry of Environment has been working on research and plans to manage the crisis.

    The Commission has also been informed that the Spanish EMFAF Managing Authority has carried out an analysis on support options.

    The Commission is however not aware of financing decisions by this Authority. Nevertheless, the Commission has also been informed that the authorities provided de minimis State aid to the sector for the loss of fishing activity and damaged fishing gear outside the EMFAF programme.

    In the case of Portugal, the national authorities informed the Commission that no support under EMFAF was provided or is planned at this stage.

    For more information on the national/regional support measures implemented, we refer the Honourable Member to the competent authorities in the Member States.

    • [1] Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2022/1203 of 12 July 2022 amending Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1141 to update the list of invasive alien species of Union concern. OJ L 186, 13.07.2022, p. 10-13.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Facilitating the financing of nuclear power in the EU – E-001825/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    When developing the EU Taxonomy[1], the Commission prioritised economic activities which have the greatest potential to make a substantial contribution to one or more EU environmental objectives without causing significant harm to the others.

    The EU Taxonomy covers therefore nuclear activities which can play an important role in moving towards a carbon-neutral economy, including research, development, demonstration and deployment of advanced nuclear technologies with minimal waste from the fuel cycle, construction and operation of new nuclear power plants using best-available technologies and upgrading of existing nuclear installations for the purposes of lifetime extension.

    The EU Taxonomy is a living document and will continue to evolve over time, with more activities being added to its scope by means of amendments.

    Stakeholders are able to address suggestions and questions on new activities to be included in the EU Taxonomy or on possible amendments relating to existing activities. For this purpose, the Commission established a stakeholder request mechanism[2] and, with input from the Platform on Sustainable Finance[3], it assesses suggestions received.

    When developing the Taxonomy, the Commission paid particular attention to ensuring that all economic activities within a sector are treated equally when they contribute equally towards the environmental objective.

    Consequently, the activities in the energy sector include activities relating to all major energy sources, including nuclear energy.

    • [1] https://finance.ec.europa.eu/sustainable-finance/tools-and-standards/eu-taxonomy-sustainable-activities_en
    • [2] https://finance.ec.europa.eu/sustainable-finance/overview-sustainable-finance/platform-sustainable-finance/stakeholder-request-mechanism_en
    • [3] https://finance.ec.europa.eu/sustainable-finance/overview-sustainable-finance/platform-sustainable-finance_en
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Trans-European Transport Network and new coordinator’s calendar of activities – E-001705/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    In accordance with the revised Regulation establishing the Union guidelines for the development of the trans-European transport network (TEN-T)[1], the European Coordinators shall submit an annual status report to the European Parliament, the Council, the Commission and the Member States concerned on the progress achieved in implementing the European Transport Corridors.

    It shall focus on the progress made on key priorities and investments, describe the nature of problems encountered in their implementation, and suggests potential solutions. This new provision entered into force on 18 July 2024, therefore the first annual status report is expected by mid-2025.

    As part of its regular activities to facilitate the coordinated implementation of the corridor, the coordinator will organise twice a year a corridor forum with representatives of all the ministries and regions along the corridor, infrastructure managers of all transport modes, maritime and inland port authorities as well as urban nodes.

    This forum is the platform to inform and consult the corridor stakeholders on the progress made in terms of the completion of the TEN-T corridor, the challenges ahead, the priorities to be set etc. The first forum for the new Atlantic Corridor will take place in November 2024 in Brussels.

    The coordinator is also always available for bilateral exchanges, e.g. with regional representatives or Members of the European Parliament, on the various challenges and priorities of the corridor.

    • [1] Article 52(6)(e) of Regulation (EU) 2024/1679 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1679/oj
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – EU targets for reducing material and consumption footprints – E-001734/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission delivered the set of policy actions announced in the 2020 Circular Economy Action Plan[1] aimed at significantly reducing EU’s material and consumption footprints, safeguarding natural resources and mitigating environmental impacts such as climate change and biodiversity loss.

    To monitor trends in achieving these objectives, in 2023 the Commission revised the circular economy monitoring framework and added material and consumption footprint indicators[2], which serve also to track progress on the 8th Environmental Action Programme[3] and on the Sustainable Development Goals[4].

    The implementation of the actions in the plan, and more broadly of the European Green Deal, will contribute to faster progress towards decreasing EU’s material and consumption footprints.

    The Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation[5] creates the framework for integrating circular economy principles and resource efficiency requirements in the design of a wide range of products.

    Specific initiatives under the plan tackle sustainability dimensions of construction products, electronics, batteries and vehicles, packaging and packaging waste, textiles and food waste, industrial production and waste shipments, and aim to empower consumers in the green transition and lead efforts at the global level.

    The political guidelines for next Commission 2024-2029[6] place circular economy as a pillar of a prosperous and competitive Europe and announce a new Circular Economy Act to boost the market demand for secondary materials and a single market for waste.

    It is for the next Commission to formulate the most appropriate initiatives to advance the shift to more sustainable production and consumption patterns.

    • [1] https://environment.ec.europa.eu/strategy/circular-economy-action-plan_en
    • [2] https://environment.ec.europa.eu/news/circular-economy-faster-progress-needed-meet-eu-resource-efficiency-targets-ensure-sustainable-use-2023-05-15_en
    • [3] https://environment.ec.europa.eu/news/implementation-key-achieving-eu-2030-climate-and-environment-objectives-first-progress-report-8th-2023-12-18_en
    • [4] https://environment.ec.europa.eu/news/monitoring-report-progress-towards-sdgs-eu-context-2024-2024-06-18_en
    • [5] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj
    • [6] https://commission.europa.eu/document/download/e6cd4328-673c-4e7a-8683-f63ffb2cf648_en?filename=Political%20Guidelines%202024-2029_EN.pdf
    Last updated: 31 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Ernst Continues River to River Tour, Meets with Veterans, Students, Small Business Owners

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA)
    RED OAK, Iowa – This October, U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) made multiple stops on her annual River to River Tour as part of her ongoing commitment to hear from Iowans in every corner of the state. She recognized outstanding small businesses, hosted town hall meetings, led roundtable discussions, and more.
    Click HERE to download photos from Ernst’s visits.
    The Fort Dodge Messenger highlighted Ernst’s stop in Calhoun County, where she presented her Small Business of the Week award to the family-owned-and-operated excavation business, Hildreth Company, Inc.
    Ernst’s stop at Greene County High School was featured by Raccoon Valley Radio and Greene County News Online. She talked to students about her path from Montgomery County to the United States Senate and answered their questions about working in government.
     
    In Polk County, KCCI attended Ernst’s roundtable with Shopify where she heard firsthand from small business owners and shared more on her work to address the challenges they face.
    Ernst enjoyed a beautiful walking tour in Emmet County to see the City of Estherville’s newly expanded trail system. The visit wascovered by Estherville News.
    The Sigourney News-Review covered Ernst’s Small Business of the Week award presentation in Keokuk County where she honored Barn Wired, a thriving home decor and coffee shop on the town square.
    The Hawkeye spotlighted Ernst’s roundtable with the Burlington Chamber of Commerce at her stop in Des Moines County, where they discussed economic development.
    In Dickinson and Harrison Counties, Ernst hosted town hall meetings to talk about supporting our veterans, passing a new Farm Bill, and securing our border.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Capito Announces Congressionally Directed Spending Award for West Virginia Water Projects

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito
    CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Today, U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), Ranking Member of the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee and a leader on the Senate Appropriations Committee, announced funding from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) for three water projects in West Virginia.
    These awards, which were secured through Congressionally Directed Spending (CDS) requests made solely by Senator Capito in Fiscal Year 2024 (FY 24) and authorized through the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 2022, will support three water system upgrades in West Virginia.
    “I was proud to use my position on both the EPW and Appropriations Committees to advocate for and secure these CDS awards to support efforts to modernize water systems across West Virginia,” Ranking Member Capito said. “As our state grows, these projects will be critical in supporting the water needs of families, workers, and businesses, and I was proud to lead the charge in securing them.”
    BACKGROUND:
    Section 571 of the Water Resources Development Act of 1992 established an environmental infrastructure program that allows the USACE to partner with non-federal entities in order to carry out water and wastewater projects, among other types of projects, in West Virginia. As Ranking Member of the EPW Committee, Senator Capito included an authorization increase for the 571 program in the bipartisan 2022 Water Resources Development Act that was signed into law in December 2022.
    Individual award details listed below:
    $2,000,000 USACE CDS award to the Town of Rowlesburg, W.Va. (Preston County) for sewer improvements that will serve residents.
    $1,100,000 USACE CDS award to the Fountain Public Service District in Keyser, W.Va. (Mineral County) for the Fountain IV Water project.
    $1,000,000 USACE CDS award to the City of Belington, W.Va. (Barbour County) for water system upgrades in the city.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Dan Goldman Pushes Coverage for Life-Saving Breast Cancer Screenings in All Health Insurance Plans

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10)

    ‘Find it Early Act’ Would Require Insurance Providers to Cover Breast Cancer Detection Screenings at No Cost to Patients

     

    99 Percent of Women Who Receive Early Breast Cancer Diagnosis Survive

     

    Read the Bill Here

    Washington, DC – Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10) joined Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (CT-03) and Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick (PA-01) in introducing the bipartisan ‘Find it Early Act,’ which would ensure all health insurance plans cover screening and diagnostic breast imaging, including mammograms, ultrasounds, MRI’s, molecular imaging, and other technologies, with no cost-sharing.

    “For the over 250,000 American women diagnosed with breast cancer each year, new breast cancer detection technology can mean the difference between life or death,” Congressman Dan Goldman said. “The earlier a cancer is detected, the easier it is to beat. No one should be forced to pay out-of-pocket for these lifesaving screenings. During Breast Cancer Awareness Month, I am proud to join this bipartisan effort to improve access and coverage for breast cancer preventative care to save lives and reduce overall medical costs.”

    When women’s breast density, family history, or other factors require doctors to take additional breast cancer screens, the majority of women are forced to shoulder those costs out of pocket, potentially costing them over $1000. As a result, many women cannot afford screenings and choose to delay or forego additional tests, which can lead to later-stage diagnoses. The ‘Find It Early Act’ would ensure all health insurance plans cover screening, diagnostic mammograms, breast ultrasounds, and MRIs with no out-of-pocket costs. 

    Congressman Goldman is committed to expanding health care access in America.

    In May 2024, Goldman introduced the ‘Michelle Alyssa Go Act,’ which would expand access to psychiatric care by increasing the number of federal Medicaid-eligible in-patient psychiatric beds for individuals seeking treatment for mental health and substance use disorders. The legislation would additionally ensure the facilities ordering these beds meet nationally recognized, evidence-based standards of care.
    Additionally, Goldman cosponsored the ‘Reentry Act’ to empower states to restore access to health care for incarcerated individuals 30 days before their release. Restarting Medicaid benefits 30 days pre-release eases the ability of states to provide effective addiction treatment and services, allows for smoother transitions to community care, and reduces the risk of overdose deaths post-release.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Experts of the Committee against Torture Welcome Namibia’s Commitment to the Mandela and Bangkok Rules, Ask about Harmful Traditional Practices and Lengthy Pretrial Detention Periods

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee against Torture today concluded its consideration of the third periodic report of Namibia, with Committee Experts welcoming the State’s commitment to the Nelson Mandela and Bangkok Rules, international norms on the treatment of prisoners, and raising questions about harmful traditional practices and lengthy pretrial detention periods.

    Erdogan Iscan, Country Rapporteur and Committee Expert, welcomed the commitment of the State party to complying with the Nelson Mandela Rules and the Bangkok Rules.

    Mr. Iscan raised the issue of traditional practices that were harmful to women and girls, including the ritual of Olufuko, which involved child marriage and sexual initiation rites.  Had the State party made progress in terms of awareness-raising as well as eliminating such practices?  What further steps had been taken to prevent and criminalise the practice of forced sterilisation?

    Jorge Contesse, Country Rapporteur and Committee Expert, said pretrial detention seemed to routinely exceed legal limits, with above 50 per cent of the prison population awaiting trial.  The low usage of alternatives to detention and an unaffordable bail system seemed to be contributing to the large backlog of cases of pretrial detainees.  What measures had been adopted to address these challenges?

    Introducing the report, Yvonne Dausab, Minister of Justice of Namibia and head of the delegation, said the Namibian correctional service included human rights instruments, including the Nelson Mandela Rules, in the curriculum at its Training College.  The service had undertaken measures to renovate all the country’s correctional facilities with the aim of improving the living conditions of offenders.

    Ms. Dausab said the Government continued to conduct awareness campaigns targeting traditional and religious leaders on positive gender roles and the elimination of harmful cultural practices.  The Childcare and Protection Act 2015 had measures to protect children from harmful cultural and religious practices, strictly prohibiting child marriage in all setups.

    The delegation said Olufuko had taken on a more cultural image and profile, as opposed to a platform for sexual initiation and child marriage.  That may have been the case in the past, but this had changed over the past 10 to 15 years.  Namibia had taken steps to ensure that acts of enforced sterilisation of individuals were not carried out.

    Pretrial detention could run for any time between six to 12 months, the delegation said, and courts could decide to withdraw charges before the six-month period based on available evidence.  The State party was working to strengthen community courts and establish small claims courts to address overcrowding in prisons and holding cells. Since the report was sent, there had also been parole releases and the President had pardoned some persons.

    In closing remarks, Claude Heller, Committee Chair, said that the Committee understood that the political context in Namibia was difficult.  The Committee would make efforts to provide the State party with relevant and achievable recommendations within its concluding observations.  The Committee was interested in maintaining an open dialogue with the State party through its follow-up mechanism.

    In her concluding remarks, Ms. Dausab said Namibia was committed to addressing all forms of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.  More needed to be done to prevent torture, including the enactment of specific legislation criminalising it.  The Committee’s recommendations would help to enhance mechanisms to prevent torture.

    The delegation of Namibia consisted of representatives from the Ministry of Justice; Ministry of Home Affairs, Immigration, Safety and Security; Namibia Correctional Service; and the Permanent Mission of Namibia to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Committee will issue concluding observations on the report of Namibia at the end of its eighty-first session on 22 November.  Those, and other documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, will be available on the session’s webpage.  Summaries of the public meetings of the Committee can be found here, and webcasts of the public meetings can be found here.

    The Committee will next meet in public on Tuesday, 5 November at 10 a.m. to begin its examination of the second periodic report of Thailand (CAT/C/THA/2).

    Report

    The Committee has before it the third periodic report of Namibia (CAT/C/NAM/3).

    Presentation of Report

    YVONNE DAUSAB, Minister of Justice of Namibia and head of the delegation, said

    Namibia had suffered a great loss at the beginning of the year when the third President, Dr. Hage Gottfried Geingob, a strong champion of human rights, passed away on 4 February 2024.  He was greatly missed.  Additionally, Namibia was currently going through a devastating drought which had impacted food security and economic development; the Government was navigating this climate-related crisis with the assistance of developmental partners. Namibia offered a sincere apology for the non-submission of the written responses to the list of issues.

    The torture bill remained under consideration following deliberations in the National Assembly.  The Convention was directly applicable and enforceable in Namibia without the ‘domestic’ legislation.  Article 144 had been used by Namibian courts which had cited United Nations Conventions in their judgments, making their provisions applicable directly in Namibia. The Namibian Constitution prohibited torture as well cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and the Criminal Procedure Act of 1977 criminalised murder as well as assault, including assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. 

    Members of the police force, correctional service and defence force accused of using excessive force were investigated under internal complaints units and those found to have acted outside the scope of what was reasonable in the circumstances were subjected to prosecution.  The Government had also been ordered to pay damages to complainants and their families in civil matters brought due to allegations of assault or use of excessive force by law enforcement officers. 

    The Namibian Constitution prohibited arbitrary arrest or detention and required that an arrested person be brought before a court within 48 hours after the arrest.  All police officials were trained and required to inform an accused person upon arrest of their rights, reasons for their arrest, and charges against them.  The Directorate of Legal Aid within the Ministry of Justice had appointed 69 in-house lawyers across the country to represent members of society who could not afford legal representation. 

    The Government had enhanced the independence of the Ombudsman by reforming the current Ombudsman Act 1990 to make provision for the Ombudsman’s Office to be established as a separate agency in the public service, with its own budget and accounting officer.  The Office of the Ombudsman had launched a training manual against torture for law enforcement agencies, and visited and inspected places of detention, police holding cells, and correctional facilities to monitor human rights compliance.

    Namibia continued to be marred by incidents of gender-based and sexual violence, including online child sexual exploitation.  The Government had developed a national plan of action on gender-based violence 2019-2023 to address the root causes and provide a well-coordinated approach to the prevention, response, monitoring and evaluation of gender-based violence initiatives.  Additionally, Namibia had established special courts for gender-based violence offences country-wide to provide a victim-friendly environment. 

    The Government continued to conduct awareness campaigns targeting traditional and religious leaders on positive gender roles and the elimination of harmful cultural practices.  Namibia had developed and implemented a national plan of action to address violence against children.  The Childcare and Protection Act 2015 had measures to protect children from harmful cultural and religious practices, strictly prohibiting child marriage in all setups. 

    The Ombudsman had been instrumental in ensuring that the Namibian police force was adequately trained on the ‘prevention of torture training manual for police officers.’ The Namibian police force also conducted ongoing workshops to train police officers on human rights.  The Namibian correctional service included human rights instruments in its curriculum, including the Nelson Mandela Rules, at the Namibian Correctional Service Training College.  The service had undertaken measures to renovate all of the country’s correctional facilities with the aim of improving the living conditions of offenders.  The implementation of the Namibian correctional service’s health policy had brought about significant changes in managing communicable diseases such as tuberculosis, HIV and hepatitis, as well as mental health support. 

    All asylum seekers went through a refugee status determination process and those who met the criteria were granted refugee status.  If an application for refugee status was unsuccessful, the applicant was advised they could appeal the decision to the Namibian Refugee Appeal Board. Namibia was implementing the national action plan on statelessness, and a national committee had been established. The review of the legislative framework, which was a key milestone, had begun. 

    The Police Act allowed police officials to be investigated for misconduct and human right violations, inclusive of torture.  Officials found guilty of acting outside the scope of their duties were subject to laid down procedures, including arraignment before a competent court. In Namibia, the State was represented by the Prosecutor General in criminal cases; therefore, the prosecution of all allegations of torture lay with the State.  Ms. Dausab concluded by stating that the Namibian Government remained committed to protecting and promoting human rights in the country. 

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    ERDOGAN ISCAN, Committee Expert and Rapporteur, said the Committee expressed its condolences for the death of Namibia’s third President earlier this year.  The State party did not reply to the list of issues adopted by the Committee and chose to submit a report in May 2021 under the traditional reporting procedure.

    The dialogue with the State party would be conducted against this background.

    Mr. Iscan called on Namibia to continue to support the treaty body system. 

    Had measures been taken to improve prison conditions in conformity with the Nelson Mandela Rules? Research indicated that the total prison population was close to 9,000 inmates, of which 54 per cent were pretrial detainees in police custody.  Occupancy level in the prison system was 75 per cent.  Could the Committee be updated on the current situation?  Could details be provided about the health policy and practice developed by the Namibian correctional service? 

    How many individuals were currently in pretrial detention?  What was the average length of pretrial detention and steps taken to reduce its use?  Could statistical data be provided on deaths in custody; investigations carried out into these deaths; and the number of police or prison staff who had been subjected to criminal or disciplinary punishment in cases involving death in custody? Had there been cases of inter-prisoner violence, and what had been measures implemented in such incidents?

    The Committee noted that corporal punishment was prohibited in schools by the Basic Education Act of 2020, but it still lacked an explicit prohibition in the home. What was the current status of the Correctional Service Act 2012 with respect to explicitly prohibiting corporal punishment following the Supreme Court’s judgment of 5 April 1991?  What steps were being taken to totally prohibit corporal punishment in all settings and develop campaigns for awareness raising?

    Could data on all complaints received by the Ombudsman and the number of complaints received by the Internal Investigation Directorate be provided?  How many of these complaints were investigated and how many resulted in disciplinary sanctions?  Had the perpetrators been punished with appropriate penalties commensurate with the gravity of the crime?  How many complaints had been received concerning sexual abuse and the exploitation of refugees by public officials or non-governmental workers at the Osire refugee camp?  Had these complaints been investigated and prosecuted and had victims obtained redress? 

    The Caprivi high treason trial ended in September 2015 and the Committee noted that about 30 persons were found guilty and sentenced to various imprisonment terms; 79 persons were found not guilty and released from custody.  Could

    information on investigations into or prosecutions of members of the Namibian police force regarding alleged acts of torture of suspected participants in the secession attempt in the Caprivi region in 1999 be provided?  What steps had been taken by the authorities to investigate reports of enforced disappearances in the context of the liberation struggle, including the disappearance of former members of the Southwest Africa People’s Organization?  Had alleged victims and their families obtained redress?

    Was the legislation on excessive use of force compatible with the Convention, as well as the basic principles on the use of force and firearms by law enforcement officials?  Were the reports of excessive use of force by law enforcement officers investigated promptly, effectively and impartially?  Were the perpetrators prosecuted and, if convicted, punished with commensurate penalties?  Were victims of violations remedied adequately?  The Committee had received allegations that members of the police force detained and sexually abused sex workers.  What was the State party’s response to these reports? 

    The Committee took note of the Joint Communication by a group of Special Procedure mandate holders, who examined the document which evaluated the “Joint Declaration by the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Namibia: United in remembrance of our colonial past, united in our will to reconcile, united in our vision of the future”, dated June 2021, and developed observations in connection with international human rights law.  It was understood that follow-up negotiations were ongoing between Namibia and Germany.

    With respect to traditional practices that were harmful to women and girls, including the ritual of Olufuko, which involved child marriage and sexual initiation rites, had the State party made progress in terms of awareness-raising as well as eliminating such practices?  What further steps had been taken to prevent and criminalise the practice of forced sterilisation?  What measures were in place to ensure that all acts of violence that targeted persons on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity were properly and promptly investigated and prosecuted? 

    It was reported that the Supreme Court issued a ruling last year recognising the right of spouses of Namibian citizens to regularise their immigration status based on same-sex marriages.  Later, parliament passed legislation banning same-sex marriages.  If enacted, it could nullify the Supreme Court ruling.  What was the current status of this legislation? The Committee had received information that the High Court issued a decision on 21 June 2024, which declared the common law offences of sodomy and unnatural sexual offences unconstitutional. It seemed that the State party continued to criminalise same-sex relationships and the Government had lodged an appeal against this decision which was currently pending before the Supreme Court.  What was the current situation? 

    Could the State party clarify its policy, legislation and practice with respect to prisons, hospitals, schools and institutions that engaged in the care of children, older persons or persons with disabilities?  What was the legal permissibility and use of the measures such as seclusion, physical and chemical restraints, and other restrictive practices? Were net beds and cage beds used in psychiatric and social welfare institutions?  Did the Office of the Ombudsman have unrestricted access to monitor these institutions?  Had any progress been achieved in regard to protecting the human rights of older persons?

    The Committee noted the commitment of the State party to complying with the Nelson Mandela Rules and the Bangkok Rules.  Could the State party clarify its policy, legislation and practice with respect to solitary confinement?  What was the incommunicado detention regime in Namibia?  If the State party maintained this practice, under what circumstances was incommunicado detention authorised and what was the competent organ to authorise incommunicado detention?  Would the State party consider abolishing incommunicado detention? 

    Could Namibia comment on the status of the recommendation to ratify the Optional Protocol to the Convention, and other international instruments to which it was not a party?  Was there any update in this regard? 

    JORGE CONTESSE, Committee Expert and Rapporteur, said torture was currently not a specific criminal offence in Namibia and Namibian law did not expressly criminalise any other forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.  Could information be received on the status of the draft prevention of torture bill?  What amendments to the bill sought to bring it further into line with the State party’s obligations under the Convention, as previously recommended by the Committee, including provisions that criminalised the acquiescence and complicity of State officials, or officials acting in an official capacity, to acts of torture?  Were acts amounting to torture subject to a statute of limitations?  Were there any cases where Namibia had invoked the Convention directly before domestic courts? 

    What initiatives had been taken by the State party to enshrine in its legislation fundamental legal safeguards, in particular the right to have access to a lawyer, including the right to access free and effective legal aid; the right to receive a medical examination by an independent physician; the right for individuals, at the time of arrest, to be informed of their rights; the right to be brought promptly before a judge; the right to notify a person of one’s choice of one’s deprivation of liberty; and the obligation of the authorities to maintain detention registers at places of detention?  Were there any cases in which the authorities had failed to comply with these safeguards?  How many such complaints had been registered and what was their outcomes? 

    Were there any cases in which disciplinary measures were taken against officials found responsible for violations?  What complaints mechanisms were available to report violations, and how did they function in practice?  Could the State party specify the circumstances in which a right to counsel could be waived?

    The 2022 annual report of the Ombudsman described visitation and inspection of places of detention in Namibia, noting that some of the most appalling facilities had been closed.  When this happened, where were the detainees who had been held there sent?  What was the timetable for the cleaning and renovation of these facilities?  Pretrial detention seemed to routinely exceed legal limits, with above 50 per cent of the prison population awaiting trial.  In addition, the reported shortcomings in the criminal justice system, such as the significant delays between arrest and trial, the low usage of alternatives to detention, and an inaccessible and unaffordable bail system, seemed to be the contributing factors to the large backlog of cases of pretrial detainees.  What measures had been adopted to address these shortcomings and challenges?

    It was understood that the child justice bill, which had not yet been adopted, endorsed 14 years of age to be considered criminally responsible and abolished the common law presumption.  What was the status and content of the bill?  What measures were adopted to ensure that children were not detained in detention centres for adults?  The Committee understood that no legal provision authorised the Ombudsman to make unannounced visits to places of detention; would the new legislation provide the Ombudsman with such power? 

    Violence against women, including rape, domestic violence, sexual exploitation and abuse of children, and violence against women from indigenous communities, continued to be extremely high, and the root causes of such violence had not been adequately addressed.  According to the national gender-based violence baseline study, “most drivers of gender-based violence were relationship factors that were deeply entrenched within socio–cultural norms and escalated to societal level factors.” What concrete measures had the State party adopted to address these issues, including policies and plans to address ongoing challenges; the number of complaints of gender-based, domestic, or sexual violence received by the authorities; the number of investigations and prosecutions undertaken regarding gender-based, domestic or sexual violence; and the protection and support services available to victims?

    The recommendation to remove the crime of sodomy as a ground for entry refusal into Namibia remained unaddressed.  What measures would the State party adopt to address this and other pending concerns? Could data be provided on the number of asylum applications received during the period under review, the number of successful applications, and the number of asylum seekers whose applications were accepted because they had been tortured or might be tortured if returned to their country of origin? 

    What were the existing appeals mechanisms and other mechanisms in place to identify individuals in need of international protection?  What was the procedure followed when a person invoked this right? Were individuals facing expulsion informed of their right to seek asylum and appeal a deportation decision?  How many stateless persons were living in the country?  What measures were being taken by the State party to mitigate the risk of torture or ill treatment faced by stateless persons. 

    How many law enforcement officials, prison staff, military officers, investigators, judicial personnel and border guards had attended educational programmes which included instruction on the provisions of the Convention against Torture?  How were officers were trained on investigating and handling forms of prohibited ill treatment, like cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment?  To what extent was the Ombudsman responsible for training other law enforcement agencies on investigating torture claims?  What specific initiatives were in place to train officials to prevent the traumatisation of victims of torture or ill treatment.  What steps had been taken to improve methods of investigation, including training programmes on non-coercive interrogation techniques?  Had any training programmes been developed for judges, prosecutors, forensic doctors and medical personnel dealing with detained persons on detecting and documenting the physical and psychological signs of torture?

    Responses by the Delegation 

    The delegation said any international instrument that Namibia ratified became part of their system. Namibia took the work of the treaty bodies very seriously.  Namibia’s prison capacity across the country was around 5,400.  The bed capacity was around 4,700.  Since the report was sent, there had been parole releases, persons had completed their sentences, and the President had pardoned some persons. Pretrial detention could run for any time between six to 12 months.  There was no deliberate attempt on the part of the State to keep people in pretrial detention; the authorities were trying to clear them as quickly as possible to decongest prison facilities. 

    Namibia did not have inter-prison violence in the form that was premeditated, organised, or gang related.  There were isolated incidents of inter-prison fights which were dealt with quickly.  In the rare instances when these incidents occurred, the prisoners would be separated from each other.  Namibia had made a proposal to improve community service orders. 

    It was agreed that the Ombudsman needed to be extricated from the Ministry of Justice. However, there was no evidence that there had been any interference in the work of the Ombudsman.  The Ombudsman bill was ready to go before the National Assembly for Legislative Consultation, which would help with establishing the Office of the Ombudsman.  Currently in Namibia, the Ombudsman was at the level of a judge.  Whether there should be a fixed-term or the security of tenure of the Ombudsman was currently under debate.  Since his appointment, the Ombudsman had been quite vocal about his findings and his displeasure at the conditions of prisons.  The Ombudsman had unfettered access to those facilities; however, unannounced visits could be impractical.  Namibia was doing enough to ensure those institutions which had the mandate to investigate violations of human rights were able to be supported in their work. 

    There had been no prosecutions for prostitution or sex work in Namibia.  There was some fairly outdated legislation, but these laws had not been activated because the State did not feel they were consistent with the spirit of the Namibian Constitution.  Namibia was constantly working on reforming legislation which offended the values of the Constitution.

    The Joint Declaration was the result of an open and frank conversation in Namibia’s National Assembly, reflecting the gravity of the first genocide which took place in Namibia during the twentieth century. 

    Olufuko had taken on a more cultural image and profile, as opposed to a platform for sexual initiation and child marriage.  That may have been the case in the past, but this had changed over the past 10 to 15 years.  Namibia had taken steps to ensure that acts of enforced sterilisation of individuals were not carried out.  The discussion around the reform of abortion and sterilisation was ongoing.  Namibia was concerned about the number of cases of persons who identified as persons of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex community, who had lost their lives.  However, the State could not say that these crimes happened specifically due to their sexual orientation.  All of those incidents of people who had been killed over the past few months were being investigated and prosecutions would take place. 

    Homosexuality in Namibia was not a crime. 

    Namibia had an excellent proposal for child justice.  The State had engaged in extensive consultation with and received feedback from the United Nations Children’s Fund.  Early next year, the child justice bill would be considered in the Assembly.  Children were kept in facilities separate from adults, and were provided with significant social support.  Gender-based violence was a concern for Namibia.  Every year, the State commemorated the 16 days of violence against women.  There was increasing collaboration between the State and civil society organizations to increase visibility.  The text and the language of legislation combatting rape had been strengthened in 2022, as had the domestic violence legislation. 

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    ERDOGAN ISCAN, Committee Expert and Rapporteur, said the Committee appreciated the fact that they had a high-level delegation here, headed by the Minister in the lead-up to the country’s elections, and wished Namibia all the best in their democratic elections.  The Committee needed information on the reflection of policy and legislation in practice, which was why statistical information was important. 

    Could the State party inform the Committee on the policies, legislation and practices on counter-terrorism measures?  It was a fundamental obligation of States to fight terrorism, while still respecting human rights and the rule of law. 

    Could information be provided on the legislative and executive measures under the state of emergency?  Did they comply with the absolute and non-derogable prohibition of torture? 

    JORGE CONTESSE, Committee Expert and Rapporteur, said it was necessary to have a specific crime which defined the contours of torture.  What were the requirements that members of parliament had, which resulted in seven years of there being no torture bill?  It seemed that the child justice bill moved down the minimum age of criminal responsibility to 12 years; how was this consistent with human rights law? 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Namibia’s President could declare a state of emergency in situations where there were natural disasters or threats to the State.  At no time had the declaration of a state of emergency suspended the prohibition of torture or the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms.

    Persons who engaged in terrorist activities against Namibia inside or outside of the State could face life imprisonment.  Law enforcement agencies recently attended training on counterterrorism, which reinforced the obligation to protect human rights and the rule of law.

    The anti-torture bill included definitions of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment that were in line with the Convention.  The bill included punishments of imprisonment of varying lengths for acts of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.

    The child justice bill had been developed after broad consultation with international partners. It set the age of criminal responsibility at 12 years, considering the domestic context.

    International human rights instruments ratified by the State were applicable directly before the courts, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights had been applied in one case.

    The Refugee Recognition and Control Act called for compliance with due process regarding detention and expulsions of asylum seekers.  Asylum seekers could be represented by legal practitioners in appeals to detention and expulsion procedures.  Namibia respected the principle of non-refoulement.

    The Government was working to regularise the status of stateless persons.  Under the birth outreach programme, teams had been deployed to rural areas to facilitate birth registration.  Bills promoting civil registration, regularisation and statelessness determination were being considered in Parliament.  Namibia was exerting efforts to eradicate statelessness.

    The Namibian police had conducted investigations into alleged cases of enforced disappearance conducted by two individuals with Angolan citizenship.  These cases had been finalised.  A bill had been developed on the training of police and military officers.  Training was aligned with the Istanbul Protocol and developed skills in investigating allegations of torture and helping victims to access redress. Police officers could not question suspects before informing them of their rights.

    The Constitution prohibited corporal punishment and State legislation prohibited such punishment in school settings.  Schools were mandated to create mechanisms that allowed learners to report incidents of corporal punishment.  In August 2024, a teacher was relieved of his duties following reports of him engaging in corporal punishment of learners.  Parents and guardians needed to respect children’s right to dignity.

    The State party had established an appeal committee and set up regulations to prevent the abuse of legal aid resources.  There had been an increase in applications for legal aid this year, with the number of applications for legal aid having increased to more than 10,000.  Measures were in place to respond to this increase in applications.

    The Mental Health Act of 1973 was outdated and used language that was not consistent with the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.  A new bill dealing with mental health had been proposed, which set regulations regarding the limited use of seclusion, coercive methods, and restraint of persons with disabilities, and promoted de-escalation techniques.  The bill called for coercive methods to be removed within two hours at most.  There was a clear prohibition of forced sterilisation of women with mental disabilities in the bill.  It was expected to be finalised next year.

    Questions by Committee Experts 

    ERDOGAN ISCAN, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, said that the State’s Constitution and legislation determined that statements made as a result of torture were inadmissible in a court of law.  Were there examples of court cases in which courts had found that evidence was inadmissible because it was obtained through torture?  Had there been investigations into allegations that evidence used in the Caprivi trials was obtained through torture?

    The Committee welcomed that the State party had accepted the simplified reporting procedure, which provided for improved cooperation between the State party and the Committee.  However, the State party had submitted its last report under the traditional procedure. Mr. Iscan called on the State party to submit its next report under the simplified procedure.

    The State party had failed to respond to the Committee’s previous concluding observations and the report on follow-up to concluding observations.  The Committee hoped that the State party would respond to the next concluding observations within the given timeframe.

    JORGE CONTESSE, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, said that the torture bill had been pending for a number of years.  The definition of torture within the proposed legislation was very good; it was identical to that of the Convention.  Were there any persons who had been specifically convicted of the crime of torture using the Convention?  It was critical that the anti-torture bill addressed the issues of the statute of limitations and universal jurisdiction.  Article eight of the bill addressed extraterritorial jurisdiction, not universal jurisdiction.

    There was a discrepancy between international human rights law and the child justice bill. What was the domestic context that prevented Namibia from setting the age of criminal responsibility at 14? 

    There was another discrepancy between Namibia’s law on refugee control and international human rights law, which defined the prohibition of non-refoulement as absolute. Why was refoulement allowed in certain circumstances?

    There was a lack of information provided by the State party on allegations of sexual assault by police officers against asylum seekers.  Asylum seekers reportedly lived in settlements with poor conditions. Could the delegation comment on these issues?

    Trafficking in persons reportedly remained prevalent in Namibia.  The rate of reported cases seemed very low, and there was limited progress in investigations and convictions for these cases, with only two convictions between 2014 and 2019.  What progress had been made in tackling trafficking in persons?

    How would the State party address challenges that prevented the Ombudsperson from making unannounced visits to places of detention?

    Another Committee Expert said unannounced inspections of places of detention were an international standard.  The State party needed to reconsider its position on this issue.  Were there time limits for pretrial detention?  It was very impressive that it had been deemed unconstitutional to implement solitary confinement.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the State party noted the Committee’s comments regarding the simplified reporting procedure.  There were court cases in which evidence obtained through torture was deemed inadmissible.  In such cases, additional investigations were undertaken into the identified acts of torture.

    The State party also noted the Committee’s concerns and suggestions regarding the anti-torture bill.  Namibia wished to comply with international best practices regarding non-refoulement. Legislation on deportations intended to protect Namibia from external threats while respecting the principle of non-refoulement.

    All allegations of trafficking in persons were taken very seriously.  The judicial system was independent and competent, but had limited resources, which was influencing the rate at which trafficking cases were processed. The State party was exerting efforts to prevent trafficking in persons.

    Any allegations of sexual assault and crimes against the refugee community were investigated. The State party was not aware of allegations of poor conditions in asylum shelters; it would investigate any such allegations if it received them.

    Pretrial detention could be implemented for six to 12 months, and courts could decide to withdraw charges before the six-month period based on available evidence.  The State party was working to strengthen community courts and establish small claims courts to address overcrowding in prisons and holding cells.

    The delegation had taken note of the Committee’s comments regarding unannounced visits to places of detention.  There were no cases in which attempted unannounced visits had been blocked.  The State party would continue conversations on the age of criminal responsibility.

    The Constitutional Court had decided that the implementation of solitary confinement at one prison had been unconstitutional, however, the judgement had not made the implementation of solitary confinement unconstitutional in all contexts.  The imposition of solitary confinement needed to respect legal safeguards and the fundamental freedoms of those subjected to it.

    Questions by a Committee Expert 

    JORGE CONTESSE, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, asked if there were examples in which refugees or asylum seekers had threatened national sovereignty. What was the Refugee Control Act trying to address in this regard?  What were the reasons behind setting the age of criminal responsibility at 12?  The possibility of unannounced visits was an effective way to prevent torture and ill treatment in places of detention. Mr. Contesse called for such visits to be conducted.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Namibia’s law on refugee control anticipated potential crimes committed by refugees and asylum seekers.  There had been no incidents thus far in which a refugee had threatened national security, but there needed to be a law in place to address such an act.  The domestic court system was sufficiently able to analyse the constitutionality of the Refugee Control Act.

    Concerns had been raised that increasing the age of criminal responsibility would make young children more likely to engage in criminal acts.  The State party noted the Committee’s discomfort regarding this legislation.

    The Ombudsperson was independent and had the opportunity to propose unannounced visits to places of detention.  It and all State actors, as well as civil society, had access to prisons in Namibia. Representatives of the African Union had written extensive reports on prison conditions, which helped the State party to improve these conditions.  Civilians had also taken the State to court concerning prison conditions.

    There were no examples of court cases in which findings of torture had been made, but there were cases in which crimes against humanity had been recognised.  The State party took on board the Committee’s concerns regarding the torture bill.

    Concluding Remarks 

    CLAUDE HELLER, Committee Chair, said that the Committee understood that the political context in Namibia was difficult.  It would make efforts to provide the State party with relevant and achievable recommendations within its concluding observations.  The Committee was interested in maintaining an open dialogue with the State party through its follow-up mechanism.  The dialogue had been rich and was conducted in a constructive spirit.

    YVONNE DAUSAB, Minister of Justice of Namibia and head of the delegation, said the State party had provided information on the efforts it had made to implement the Convention.  The Committee’s recommendations would help to enhance mechanisms to prevent torture. Namibia was committed to addressing all forms of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. More needed to be done to prevent torture, including the enactment of specific legislation criminalising it. The State party was committed to protecting the rights of its people, in consideration of the domestic context. Ms. Dausab closed by thanking the Committee and all who had contributed to the dialogue.

     

    Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the media; 
    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

     

    CAT24.020E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Neal Statement on September 2024 Jobs Report

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Richard Neal (D-MA)

    Ways and Means Committee Ranking Member Richard E. Neal (D-MA) released the following statement on the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) September 2024 jobs report

    “In under four years, President Biden, Vice President Harris, and Congressional Democrats have changed the course of history. Another 254,000 jobs were created last month, beating expectations, and proving the resilience of our economy. Their leadership was instrumental in reopening the ports and securing a tentative agreement—no administration has had the backs of workers like this one.

    “Together, Democrats put people back to work at a record rate, lowered gas prices and stamped out inflation, raised wages and ushered in a new era for collective bargaining, all while proving the naysayers wrong. When critics sounded the alarm of a boogeyman recession and Republicans embraced a do-nothing agenda centered around chaos, conspiracies, and cuts, Democrats stayed the course and put the American worker first. The results speak volumes. 

    “Trump will sacrifice all of this and more to give his own ilk another massive tax cut. We’ve come too far to let the delusion of trickle-down economics and danger of Project 2025 ruin our progress. We know what works to grow the economy and put money back into the pockets of working people. It starts with basic workplace supports like affordable child care and universal paid leave. Policy focused on tax relief and expanding access to health care for the middle class. Policy focused on people, not politics. That’s exactly how Ways and Means Democrats will unlock opportunity and continue delivering for our workers and families.”  

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Neal Celebrates Nearly $70 Million in Federal Funding for Western Massachusetts Rail Projects

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Richard Neal (D-MA)

    Today, Congressman Richard E. Neal released the following statement after the U.S. Department of Transportation announced $67.3 million in federal funding to support rail projects in western Massachusetts:

    “We are reminded today just how significant an achievement the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law was as we celebrate nearly $70 million from the U.S. Department of Transportation coming to western Massachusetts. Just one year ago, I joined Governor Healey at Springfield Union Station to announce a $108 million CRISI grant to support West/East Rail. Today, we celebrate yet another CRISI grant totaling $36.8 million to support the Springfield Area Track Reconfiguration Project. This funding will increase capacity and improve efficiency at Springfield Union Station, preparing for what USDOT has described as ‘anticipated growth in regional rail service.’ In other words, the reality of West/East Rail.”

    The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL), which was drafted in the House Ways and Means Committee under Congressman Neal’s chairmanship, marked the nation’s largest investment in infrastructure in more than six decades, with $1.2 trillion for transportation and infrastructure spending. The BIL more than tripled the funding for the CRISI program, positioning the Commonwealth to receive the third largest award for FY2022 with $108 million and another $36.8 million for FY2023-2024. Thus far, Massachusetts has received more than $7 billion in funding from the BIL.

    “I am also thrilled that $8.9 million is being delivered to Pioneer Valley Railroad for their Tunnel Hill Reclamation and Pioneer Valley Development Project, along with $21.6 million for Pan Am Southern’s Freight Main Line, which stretches from Ayer to North Adams and Williamstown. Given that much of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law was drafted in the Ways and Means Committee under my chairmanship, I am thrilled that Massachusetts’ First Congressional District continues to be a great benefactor of this historic legislation, with funds reaching every corner of my district.”

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Neal Announces $1,000,000 Earmark for New Southbridge Fire Station

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Richard Neal (D-MA)

    Today, Congressman Richard E. Neal joined Southbridge Town Administrator John Jovan, Jr., Southbridge Fire Department Chief Paul Normandin, Southbridge Fire Department Deputy Chief and Chair of the Fire Station Building Committee Joseph Hulyk, and town officials to announce a $1,000,000 earmark for construction of the new Southbridge Fire Station. 

    The allocation was made possible through Congressionally Direct Spending (CDS) from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Housing Service. Congressman Neal included funding for this project in the Fiscal Year 2024 spending bill that was signed into law by President Biden on March 9, 2024. This funding will help address unintended budgetary gaps, ensuring construction of the new Southbridge Fire Station can move forward. 

    “The challenges facing our emergency personnel are numerous, something I know very well from my time as a mayor. Those challenges are exacerbated when you are confronted with a centuries-old station, which is why I fought to secure $1 million in funding for this critical project,” said Congressman Neal. “Firefighters are some of the most selfless members of our communities, putting their lives on the line every day to ensure the safety of others. That is why we must ensure they have the necessary resources to perform their critical work, and for the Southbridge Fire Department, that means a new fire station.” 

    Built in 1899, the Southbridge Fire Station is listed on the National Register of Historic Places with the National Park Service. Having been built when the Fire Department still used horse-drawn equipment, the current station does not meet the needs of a modern fire department, making it difficult to accommodate present day equipment. The current department consists of 31 career and 6 call firefighters who responded to more than 4,000 calls in 2023. 

    “One million dollars in federal funding is welcomed news to the residents of Southbridge for the town’s new fire station,” said Southbridge Deputy Fire Chief Joseph Hulyk. “I look forward to continuing working with Congressman Neal and others representing Massachusetts at the federal level to pursue additional funding opportunities to support completion of this project and ease the burden of Southbridge taxpayers.” 

    A 2018 feasibility study determined that constructing a new facility would be the most cost-effective solution for the Town of Southbridge. Funding secured by Congressman Neal will support the construction of a new station located on Worcester Street that will remedy issues facing the current station, including: 

    • Narrow apparatus bays designed for smaller horse drawn, steam driven equipment that were not constructed to accommodate modern equipment; 
    • Minimal and antiquated floor drains, resulting in runoff when firetrucks remain on the floor; 
    • No separate decontamination area, requiring trucks to be cleaned outside; 
    • Insufficient storage for protective equipment, air tanks, compressor, and ambulance equipment, making them vulnerable to contaminates from exhaust; 
    • No first aid room and a non-ADA compliant public restroom; and 
    • A dispatch center that does not meet national recommendations for emergency communication centers. 

    Under guidelines issued by the Senate and House Appropriations Committees, members of Congress requested CDS funding for projects in their state for Fiscal Year 2024. CDS requests were restricted to a limited number of federal funding streams, and only state and local governments, and eligible non-profit entities, were permitted to receive CDS funding. 

    This project is one of thirteen CDS projects submitted by Congressman Neal, totaling nearly $15 million in investments throughout the First Congressional District of Massachusetts. 

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    MIL OSI USA News