Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI Global: Meta’s AI-powered smart glasses raise concerns about privacy and user data

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Victoria (Vicky) McArthur, Associate Professor, School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University

    Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are just one of many wearable tech devices on the market. The glasses, which first launched in 2021, are a collaboration between Meta and Italian-French eyewear company EssilorLuxottica, which owns Ray-Ban among many other brands.

    The smart glasses feature two small cameras, open-ear speakers, a microphone and a touch panel built into the temple of the glasses. To access these features, users must pair them to their mobile phone using the Meta View app. Users can take photos or videos with the camera, listen to music from their phone and livestream to Meta’s social media platforms.

    Users can operate the glasses using spoken commands or the built-in Meta AI assistant, which responds to prompts like “hey Meta.” For example, users can say, “hey Meta, look and…” followed by questions about their surroundings.

    To take a photo or video, users press and hold a button on the frame, which activates an LED in the front of the glasses. The LED signals to others that the camera is actively capturing a photo or video. If the LED is covered, the camera won’t work and the user will be prompted by the Meta AI assistant to uncover it.

    Although the LED helps to signal that the camera is in operation, the relatively small size of the LED garnered criticism from privacy regulators in Europe.

    Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses on display in Cremona, Italy, on July 29, 2024.
    (Shutterstock)

    Data privacy concerns

    As a company that makes nearly all of its money from advertising, there have been concerns raised about how images captured with the glasses will be used by the company.

    Meta has a long history of privacy concerns. When it comes to user data, folks are rightly concerned about how their images — potentially captured without their consent — might be used by the company.

    The Meta smart glasses add another layer to this debate by introducing AI into the equation. AI has already prompted numerous debates and criticism about how easy it is to decieve, how confidently it gives incorrect information and how racially biased it can be.




    Read more:
    AI technologies — like police facial recognition — discriminate against people of colour


    When users take photos or videos with the smart glasses, they are sent to Meta’s cloud to be processed via AI. According to Meta’s own website, “all photos processed with AI are stored and used to improve Meta products, and will be used to train Meta’s AI with help from trained reviewers.”

    Meta states this processing includes the analysis of objects, text and other contents of photos, and that any information “will be collected, used and retained in accordance with Meta’s Privacy Policy.” In other words, images uploaded to the cloud will be used to train Meta’s AI.

    Leaving it up to users

    The ubiquity of portable digital cameras, including wearable ones, has had a significant impact on how we document our lives while also reigniting legal and ethical debates around privacy and surveillance.

    In many Canadian jurisdictions, people can be photographed in a public place without their consent, unless there is a reasonable expectation of privacy. However, restrictions apply if the images are used for commercial purposes or in a way that could cause harm or distress. There are exceptions for journalistic purposes or matters of public interest, but these can be nuanced.

    Meta has published a set of best practices to encourage users to be mindful of the rights of others when wearing the glasses. These guidelines suggest formally announcing when you plan to use the camera or livestream, and turning the device off when entering private spaces, such as a doctor’s office or public washrooms.

    As someone who owns a pair, I can ask my Ray-Ban Meta glasses to comment on what I can see and it will describe buildings, translate signs and accurately guess the species of my mixed-breed dog, but will let me know that it is not allowed to tell me anything about people whenever a person appears in frame.

    What remains unclear is the issue of bystander consent and how people who appear unintentionally in the background of someone else’s photos will be used by Meta for AI training purposes. As AI capabilities evolve and these technologies become more widespread, these concerns are likely to grow.

    Meta’s reliance on user behaviour to uphold privacy norms may not be sufficient to address the complex questions surrounding consent, surveillance and data exploitation. Given the company’s track record with privacy concerns and its data-driven business model, it’s fair to question whether the current safeguards are enough to protect privacy in our increasingly digitized world still.

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

    ref. Meta’s AI-powered smart glasses raise concerns about privacy and user data – https://theconversation.com/metas-ai-powered-smart-glasses-raise-concerns-about-privacy-and-user-data-238191

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Video: Putting COPs’ Pledges into Practice

    Source: World Economic Forum (video statements)

    Global decision makers will convene at three COPs on the Biodiversity, Climate and Desertification agendas this year. As the planet risks maintaining a pathway to 3C of warming, with intensifying land degradation and a million animal and plant species at risk of extinction, a coordinated approach is fundamental to maintain momentum on the net-zero, nature-positive transition.

    How can actors from the public and private sector move beyond current geoeconomic tensions and take the necessary actions to curb carbon emissions and halt biodiversity loss while ensuring a more inclusive economy?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Cz01bmkq9M

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: Being There :30 | 09.23.24 | Risk Less. Do More.

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    There’s nothing better than being there for your family, friends, and community. But the older you are the higher your risk of missing out because you get seriously ill with flu, COVID-19, or RSV. So, get this season’s vaccines because being there for all of them begins with taking care of yourself. Get started at vaccines.gov

    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) | http://www.hhs.gov

    http://www.Twitter.com/HHSGov | http://www.Facebook.com/HHS http://www.Instagram.com/HHSGov
    http://www.LinkedIn.com/company/us-department-of-health-and-human-services

    HHS Privacy Policy: http://www.hhs.gov/Privacy.html

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HnNB-R4BEk

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Refocusing patients’ health care journeys

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Alberta’s government continues to take significant action to refocus the health care system so Albertans can get the right care when and where they need it most. Albertans expect improved outcomes and performance with a refocused health care system, which includes being able to access consistent, appropriate and efficient care across multiple sectors.

    To ensure that care continues throughout the health care system’s refocusing, the government is launching the Seamless Patient Experience Review to make sure that when new provincial health agencies become operational, service providers deliver care in a manner that puts patients and their health first.

    The Seamless Patient Experience Review will be led by Dr. Lyle Oberg, who brings significant experience and expertise in health care delivery. He will provide recommendations to the Integration Council on the implementation of seamless patience experiences in the context of the refocused health care system.

    “When we began refocusing the health care system, we said that improving the patient journey would be at the centre of this work. I am confident Dr. Oberg will provide insightful recommendations that will support the overall efforts to improve health care for all Albertans.”

    Adriana LaGrange, Minister of Health

    To support this work, Dr. Oberg will consult with a broad range of health care professionals who work across the four main sectors representing the new provincial health agencies: primary care, acute care, continuing care, and Recovery Alberta. Dr. Oberg will also work closely with the Ministry of Health, Alberta Health Services, the Healthy Quality Council of Alberta and new provincial health agency leadership to support the development of final recommendations.

    “Albertans want a health care system that will deliver high-quality care and ensure that their health care journey is a smooth and positive experience. The system needs to work for them and the health care workers who will be delivering the care they need. I look forward to exploring how the refocused health care system can deliver on a seamless patient experience and ensure Albertans get the best care possible now and into the future.”

    Dr. Lyle Oberg, chair, Seamless Patient Experience Review

    Dr. Oberg will report directly to the minister of health and will provide an interim report in December to support the launch of the new provincial health agencies. A final report with recommendations will be provided to the Integration Council in March 2025.

    To allow Dr. Oberg to focus on this review, a new chair is being appointed to Alberta Health Services. Effective Sept. 19, Angela Fong will take on the leadership role, bringing more than 25 years of experience in organizational transformation and business integration that will be an asset to the work Alberta’s government is doing to improve health care. Dr. Oberg will remain an AHS board member.

    “Improving the delivery of high-quality health care in Alberta is something that I am deeply committed to achieving. I am honoured to be given the opportunity to lead the Alberta Health Services board as we work to transform the organization into an acute care delivery provider. I am committed to an effective transition to the new structure in support of all Albertans.”

    Angela Fong, board chair, Alberta Health Services

    Quick facts

    • Dr. Oberg will be appointed to lead the review under Section 7 of the Government Organization Act and will be in the role until March 2025.
    • The review will provide specific recommendations, including:
      • How service providers can deliver consistent, appropriate and seamless care as patients move between providers.
      • How provincial health authorities integrate patient care, reduce variation and provide consistent care across their sectors, including a framework for operational policies.
      • Inputs for accountability agreements and/or contracts with service providers.
      • Monitoring and reporting of variation between care providers within sectors.
      • How to hold the provincial health authorities accountable for the consistent delivery of care between service providers and ensure seamless patient care.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Governments of Canada and Manitoba Celebrate Opening of New Child-Care Facility in Fort Rouge

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Governments of Canada and Manitoba Celebrate Opening of New Child-Care Facility in Fort Rouge

    – – –
    40 New Child-Care Spaces to Open this Fall: Sudds, Kinew


    Families with young children in Winnipeg will benefit from a new child-care facility opening its doors this fall, Families, Children and Social Development Minister Jenna Sudds and Premier Wab Kinew announced today.

    “With these new child-care spots in Winnipeg, we are planting the seeds for a brighter future – one where kids get to learn from the land and their community,” said Sudds. “We will keep working hard to create more spots to get kids off wait lists and into high-quality, affordable child care close to home. Every family deserves access to child care that gives their children the best possible start in life and we are committed to making that a reality.”

    S.P.L.A.S.H. Child Care Inc. in Winnipeg has expanded its operations to facilitate 40 new child-care spaces.  These new child-care spaces have been created through S.P.L.A.S.H.’s new Urban Learning Centre, which joins S.P.L.A.S.H.’s Early Learning Centre at 109 Pulford St. as well as S.P.L.A.S.H.’s two other facilities in Winnipeg for a total of 236 infant, preschool and school-age spaces. The new site will offer 10 preschool and 30 school-age spaces.

    The Manitoba government invested $215,000 in capital grant funding to create new school-age spaces through the Early Learning and Child Care Building Fund and provided an additional $13,000 in one-time start-up grant funding.

    “Affordable and accessible child care is the backbone of a strong economy where everyone can participate,” said Kinew. “This is an important step towards our commitment to create more child-care spaces for Manitoba families. This announcement is about making life better for families today and investing in our kids for the future.”

    The Government of Canada invested a further $175,000 under the Canada-Manitoba Early Learning and Child Care Agreement to create new preschool spaces through the Child Care Renovation Expansion Grant and provided $4,500 in one-time start-up grant funding. Annual operating funding for preschool-aged spaces will be provided to S.P.L.A.S.H via the Canada-Manitoba Canada-wide Early Learning and Child Care Agreement to ensure long-term sustainability of these new spaces, noted the minister.

    “It is important for Manitoba children and students to have the best possible learning environments throughout our province,” said Education and Early Childhood Learning Minister Nello Altomare. “S.P.L.A.S.H.’s expansion will also enable the centre to continue to provide exceptional programming rooted in Indigenous knowledge.”

    For more information about early learning and child-care in Manitoba, visit:  www.manitoba.ca/education/childcare/.

    For more information on the Canada-Manitoba Early Learning and Child Care agreements, visit: www.canada.ca/en/early-learning-child-care-agreement/agreements-provinces-territories/manitoba-canada-wide-2021.html.

    – 30 –

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to 2024 Aerospace Summit

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Good morning, and thank you to Aerospace New Zealand and the committee for inviting me to attend the third annual Aerospace Summit. 

    Thank you also for all the work undertaken by the Aerospace New Zealand committee and your team in the delivery of so many outreach and educational activities around New Zealand. 

    I would also like to acknowledge the many international experts joining us at this Summit. I welcome your participation and thank you for your interest.

    I am an enthusiastic supporter of our aerospace sector, and it is a pleasure to be talking to a room full of people who feel as positive about the future of aerospace as I do. 

    This enthusiasm is also shared by the Government, as evidenced by the fact that for the first time we have a Minister for Space.

    It’s a role I’m very proud of but which also brings a real responsibility for improving the public understanding of just what space involves. Most people relate it simply to rockets but as everyone here knows there’s so much more to it – be it satellites, be it drones or be it the  data these platforms generate. One aspect of this new position I do wish to make clear is that the scope of my portfolio covers not only space activity but also emerging aviation technologies.

    Novel and groundbreaking aviation technologies are set to revolutionise aviation, as well as driving advancements that will impact our daily lives through technologies in communications, mapping and monitoring of land, disaster response and how we transport goods.

    The Government is ambitious for the possibilities for advanced aviation in New Zealand and its potential to grow the economy and boost productivity. 

    To realise that ambition we need to have the right regulatory settings to help unlock the growth of this part of the economy.

    It is the Government’s goal that by the end of 2025, New Zealand will have a world-class regulatory environment that allows rapid iteration and testing of advanced aviation vehicles and technology, while maintaining high standards of safety.

    I am pleased to announce that to achieve this, the Government has agreed to a set of actions to support and grow advanced aviation and remove unnecessary red tape. 

    This light touch regulatory approach, which will also cover experimental or developmental aircraft and systems, will significantly free up innovators to test their tech and ideas. 

    Once innovators get ready to export their technologies, they will transition into the current regulatory regime to allow them to demonstrate the integrity and credibility of their products, as international regulators will demand this. 

    We will also be engaging with the sector to establish permanent restricted airspace areas – or sandboxes – for exclusive use by advanced aviation companies.

    We will be updating other Rules to enable more timely decision-making.

    I look forward to having more to say on this in the coming months. 

    In the meantime, I am looking forward to visiting the Tāwhaki Aerospace Centre this afternoon, which is already playing an important role in ensuring companies have access to the right infrastructure to support them with testing and trialling innovative technology. 

    These reforms are just some of the steps the Government is taking to support the growth and development of our wider aerospace sector. 

    I am pleased to release today the New Zealand Space and Advanced Aviation Strategy, which sets out the Government’s ambitions for the sector and actions to achieve this, supported by principles on our broader space interests. 

    It succinctly brings together previous policy and strategy documents into one cohesive Strategy.

    It also highlights to a global audience the benefits of New Zealand as a location for aerospace activities.

    The new Strategy is on the New Zealand Space Agency website, and I encourage you to take a look.

    Thinking of that global audience, I have been fortunate enough to be able to travel internationally in my time as Minister for Space to promote our space and advanced aviation sectors and share how excited I am at the future we have ahead of us.

    I have visited international space agency facilities across a number of countries and continents and attended events such as the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, and most recently the Australian Space Forum to announce a joint open call for Earth observation proposals with our neighbours across the Tasman.

    Through this travel, I have strengthened New Zealand’s international aerospace relationships with both government and sector partners. 

    Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and my ministerial colleagues have done the same. These international connections are important not only to drive progress in science, innovation and technology but also to build commercial connections and opportunities for our sector. We have much to offer and we are open for business.

    In another step to support the Government’s work to develop the sector, we will be conducting an economic survey. 

    This will provide an understanding of the size and productivity of the space and advanced aviation sectors to better support opportunities and overcome challenges to future growth. 

    We would like to get as clear of a picture as possible by ensuring everyone is included.

    This survey will begin later in the year, and I encourage you to contribute when the time comes.

    Fostering talent in aerospace-related fields is also important for the ongoing success of the aerospace economy. 

    Earlier this year, the Prime Minister announced the Prime Minister’s Space Prizes to celebrate the innovative, talented people in our aerospace sector and inspire the next generation.

    There are two prizes – one for Professional Excellence, which carries a $100,000 prize, and one for Student Endeavour, which carries a $50,000 award.

    Applications close on September 30 – which is just six days away – and I encourage those of you who haven’t yet applied to consider doing so. 

    Applications are also open for the 2025 New Zealand Space Scholarships. So, if you know a high-flying graduate student interested in working on NASA projects in the US next year, please encourage them to apply. These interns bring home invaluable skills and experience from their time away. 

    Another example of Government fostering talent in industry is the Ārohia Trailblazer Grant, a Callaghan Innovation fund which supports innovative New Zealanders with big ideas to take to market their world-leading innovations.

    I am very pleased to announce that four of the seven recipients of the latest round of funding are from, or are involved with, the aerospace industry.

    Congratulations to Astrix Astronautics, Emrod, Fabrum Solutions Limited, and Zenno Astronautics who, alongside other recipients Basis NZ, Toku Eyes and Zincovery Process Technologies, will each receive a share of around $17.5 million in co-funding.

    We recognise the significant achievements and contributions you all make to the success of the sector, and these are just some of the ways we celebrate and further encourage these activities.

    Thank you for your time and attention this morning. I encourage you to make the most of the rest of the Summit and I look forward to doing the same.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government helping advanced aviation take off

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government is introducing a light-touch regulatory approach to advanced aviation as it moves to give businesses certainty and boost productivity, Space Minister Judith Collins and Transport Minister Simeon Brown announced today.

    “Novel aviation technologies, such as drones and uncrewed aircraft, are set to revolutionise aviation, as well as have global impacts on communications, emergency management and advancing science,” Ms Collins told the Aerospace Summit in Christchurch.

    “We have committed to having a world-class regulatory environment by the end of 2025. To do that we’re introducing a light-touch regulatory approach that will significantly free up innovators to test their technology and ideas.

    “We’re also removing the requirement for them to have to go through the whole approvals process each time they tweak their technology.

    “New Zealand is an attractive place for aerospace-related business. With a world-class regulatory environment, we’ll be able to make more of our natural advantages of clear skies and geography and our talented people to position New Zealand as a destination of choice for aerospace activity.”

    Mr Brown said the Government was also establishing restricted airspaces where tests could be carried out -– known as a sandbox.

    “This provides innovators with much improved flexibility, while maintaining safety and separation from other aviation users,” he says.

    “These changes are just some of the steps the Government is taking to support the growth and development of the wider aerospace sector.”

    Ms Collins also released today the New Zealand Space and Advanced Aviation Strategy, which outlines the ambitions for these interlinked sectors, and the actions to realise that ambition.

    “The Government is focused on creating the right environment to unlock the significant economic growth offered by the high-tech, high-productivity aerospace sector,” Ms Collins says.

    The New Zealand Space and Advanced Aviation Strategy is available on the MBIE website: New Zealand Space and Advanced Aviation Strategy 2024-2030 | Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (mbie.govt.nz)

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Union Minister for Communications & DoNER launched ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ Application

    Source: Government of India

    Union Minister for Communications & DoNER launched ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ Application

    The app combines environmental responsibility with a personal touch, allowing individuals to contribute towards a greener planet

    Users can easily upload pictures of the trees they are planting as a tribute to their mothers

    Posted On: 23 SEP 2024 6:24PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Minister for Communications and Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER), Shri Jyotiraditya M. Scindia, launched ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ app during a Press Conference of Ministry of Communications and Ministry of DoNER, today, held at National Media Centre, New Delhi.  The Minister also briefed the media about achievements of both the Ministries druing 100 days of the Government.

     

    The ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ app is a unique platform where users can plant and dedicate a tree in honour of their mothers. This app not only allows users to contribute towards environmental sustainability but also provides a special way to celebrate their bond with their mother. With its user-friendly interface, people can easily upload pictures of the trees they are planting as a tribute to their mothers.

    Click here for Curtain Raiser – ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ App

    Key Features and Functionality:

    • Simple App Launch: Users can launch the app by tapping the icon on their device, immediately leading to the home screen with the application logo.
    • User-Friendly Upload Process: By tapping the upload button at the bottom of the screen, users are directed to the login page where they can enter their name, select a related ministry or department, and fill in other required details.
    • Capture and Upload Image: The app allows users to dedicate a tree by capturing an image. With a simple click on the “Click Image” button, the device’s camera opens up for users to capture the tree.
    • Tree Details: After capturing the image, users can provide details about the tree type, location (state), and occasion for planting the tree.
    • Seamless Submission: The app offers the flexibility to submit the image or retake it without losing the previously filled details.
    • Location and Timestamp: The app automatically records the location, latitude, longitude, and timestamp of the dedicated tree.
    • Progress Updates: Users can update the tree’s growth by uploading a new image every 30 days, allowing for continuous tracking.
    • Carbon Credit Tracking: Users can track the carbon credits they have earned through their contributions, promoting eco-consciousness.
    • Social Media Sharing: The app encourages sharing tree images on social media, spreading awareness and inviting others to participate in this meaningful initiative.

     

    ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ app combines environmental responsibility with a personal touch, allowing individuals to contribute towards a greener planet in honour of their mothers.

    The android application can be downloaded from https://usof.gov.in/en/ek-ped-maa-ke-naam. The same shall also be available on Google Play Store shortly.

     

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    MG/PD/DP

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Plant Level On-Site Emergency Mock drill conducted at RINL

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 23 SEP 2024 6:30PM by PIB Delhi

    Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limited (RINL), the corporate entity of Visakhapatnam Steel Plant conducted a Plant Level on-site Emergency Mock Drill on 23.09.2024 to ensure the emergency preparedness at RINL. The drill was organized to evaluate the readiness of the team and systems in the event of an emergency situation ensuring the safety of employees and assets.

    An Emergency scenario of Liquid Nitrogen leakage from the Liquid Nitrogen Tank at Air Separation Plant-1 of Utilities Dept. was enacted, in which 2 persons were considered to be affected with cold burns and asphyxiation while attending to maintenance activity.

    On hearing loud cries of the employees, the incident controller immediately initiated emergency response procedures. Subsequently, emergency mitigation measures were demonstrated by all the teams of VSP including Utilities Dept employees, CISF Fire and security, Medical services, Gas Safety, Environment Management Dept, safety department, HR, Instrumentation etc to control the situation and rescue the victims.

    During the mock drill, fixed and mobile fire fighting installations, water curtain systems, First aid and rescue equipment etc were effectively deployed. CISF personnel carried out the rescue operation and rescued the affected persons from the spot using Self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) and other emergency response devices.

    The mock drill was witnessed by Shri V Suresh – Dy.Chief Inspector of Factories, Govt. of AP, Smt Swapna Latha – Deputy Electrical Inspector, Directorate of Electrical Safety, Govt. of AP and Smt. Sri Lakshmi – Assistant Environmental Engineer, AP Pollution Control Board, Govt. of AP along with Sri Pravin Kumar, CGM (Safety, Mines & Contracts) and Manager of the Factory, RINL, Shri Uttam Brahma – GM (Energy, Environment, & Utilities) RINL.

    Sri V Suresh – Dy. Chief Inspector of Factories appreciated the efforts of RINL in effectively training the employees and demonstrating the preparedness during emergencies.

    Shri K Sam Babu- HOD (Utilities) & Site Controller, Shri M Satyanarayana Raju– HOD (Safety Engineering Department) and other senior officers from Utilities Department, Water Management department (WMD), Safety Engineering Department also attended the mock drill. Officials from M/s Hinduja Power plant who are mutual aid partners of RINL have also witnessed the Mock drill.

    ****

    MG/SK

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: India attends first in-person IPEF Supply Chain Council and Crisis Response Network meeting at Washington DC

    Source: Government of India (2)

    India attends first in-person IPEF Supply Chain Council and Crisis Response Network meeting at Washington DC

    Three Action Plan teams formed for Semiconductor; Critical Minerals with a focus on batteries; and Chemicals to facilitate supply chain resilience

    Sub-committee on Logistics and Movement of Goods established to improve logistics services

    Sub-committee on Data and Analytics established to analyse supply chain exposures and risk

    Crisis Response Network meeting witnesses Emergency Simulation Exercise

    Posted On: 23 SEP 2024 6:13PM by PIB Delhi

    Indian delegation attended the first in-Person meeting of the Supply Chain Council of the Indo-Pacific Economic Forum (IPEF) for Prosperity held in Washington DC on 12 September 2024 followed by Crisis Response Network meeting on 13 September 2024. These formal meetings were preceded by Panel discussions on various topics related to supply chain resilience with special focus on the United States initiatives including the creation of dedicated Supply Chain Centre and development of the tool like SCALE.

    While the US is the Chair, India is the vice Chair of the Supply Chain Council. Substantial progress was made in this meeting. The Council adopted the one-year work plan detailing the action to be taken by the Council for the entire year. Apart from this, the major achievements were the establishment of three Action Plan Teams pertaining to three sectors, namely Semiconductor; Critical Minerals with a focus on batteries; and Chemicals.

    It was also principally agreed by the partner countries to establish another Action Plan Team related to Healthcare/Pharma sector, wherein the Action Plan Team will come into operation once the Chair for the same is finalised. These sectors were identified from the list of critical sectors and key goods notified by the Partner countries. Interested partner countries can join the Action Plan teams within a month of the establishment of the Action Plan Teams. These Action Plan Teams will commence work shortly to prepare its recommendations for the Council on possible collaborative and co-operative efforts among the partner countries for bringing in resilience in supply chain pertaining in those specific critical sectors and key goods.

    The formation of Action Plan teams in these areas are highly relevant today in majority of critical supply chains given their supply concentration and the experience learnt from significant disruptions faced during the COVID-19 pandemic. There are challenges and strength in these areas across all IPEF partners. Some examples are given below:

    For semiconductor eco-system, one may be endowed with skilled workforce say the design engineers for chip design, others may be in a position to provide high capital investment for fabrication and manufacturing, developed infrastructure etc. The world has witnessed exponential growth in technological advancements and demand for clean energy solutions. This paradigm shift towards a sustainable and low-carbon future has brought to the forefront the critical importance of securing a reliable supply of critical minerals.

    The use of specific critical minerals is indispensable for the sectors including clean energy, electronics, defence, transportation, telecommunications, fertilisers, pharmaceuticals. One of the key challenges lies in the supply risk on account of its concentration and global market dynamics and, which can result in price volatility and uncertainty leading to supply disruptions.

    Similarly, the growing population puts immense pressure on limited agricultural land for higher yields and in this context, the importance of Agro-chemicals resilient supply chain has become extremely important. According to an estimate, the Agrochemicals Market (fertilizers, pesticides, adjuvants, and plant regulators) is projected to reach USD 282.2 billion by 2028 from USD 235.2 billion by 2023, at a CAGR of 3.7%.

    Another major achievement was establishment of two sub-committees for cross cutting issues. While the Sub-committee on Logistics and Movement of Goods would facilitate efforts to improve logistics services and logistics infrastructure in the IPEF region, as well as efforts to enhance trade facilitation practices, the Sub-committee on Data and Analytics would build upon the work already undertaken by IPEF countries to exchange analytical approaches to supply chain exposures and risk. In this context, India also emphasized on the need to work towards workforce development for re-skilling and up-skilling, which is positively under consideration.

    After the in-person meeting of the IPEF Supply Chain Council, the Crisis Response Network (CRN) meeting, chaired by the Republic of Korea, was held on 13 September 2024. During the meeting, as part of capacity building, CRN conducted an emergency simulation exercise (table top exercise) involving a supply chain disruption impacting the import and use of certain chemicals by IPEF countries and discussed ways to enhance collaboration across IPEF. CRN is focused on addressing immediate supply chain disruptions.

    IPEF Partner countries including India are committed to actively engage in the Action Plan teams and Subcommittees of their interest as they work together in a collaborative and co-operative manner to develop actionable policies and recommendations aimed at strengthening supply chain resilience across the IPEF region.

    Supply Chain Resilience Agreement (Pillar II Agreement) under IPEF (a 14-country plurilateral grouping in the Indo-Pacific region.) came into effect from 24 February 2024.  The Agreement seeks to strengthen supply chains through economic engagement among partner countries with the goal of advancing growth, peace and prosperity in the region. Under this Agreement, three institutional bodies have been created namely, Supply Chain Council (SCC), Crisis Response Network (CRN) and the Labour Rights Advisory Board (LRAB) with specific functions to achieve the objectives of the Agreement.

    On the sidelines of the these IPEF meetings, bilateral meetings were also held with the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Republic of Korea to understand their views and the way forward for facilitating robust supply chain in the region.

    The next meeting of the Supply Chain Council will be in held December, 2024.

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Department of Consumer Affairs, Government of India focuses on ‘Consumer Care’ and ‘Consumer Rights’ for 100 Days Action Plan

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 23 SEP 2024 5:35PM by PIB Delhi

    The Department of Consumer Affairs (DoCA) under Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution is focussing on Hon’ble Prime Minister’s vision of ‘Consumer Care’ during the first 100 Days of the Government of India.

    Briefing the press on the thrust of the Department, Smt Nidhi Khare, Secretary, DoCA said that enhancing consumer rights, price monitoring of essential food items and improving food distribution systems across the nation were given priority by improving the institutional processes. She briefly highlighted the following key accomplishments:

    1.Expansion of Price Monitoring System (PMS) App: The Department of Consumer Affairs (DoCA) monitors the daily retail and wholesale price of identified essential food items through daily retail and wholesale prices reported by the Price Reporting Centres under the Consumer Affairs, Food & Civil Supply Department in the States and UTs. 

    On August 1, 2024, the Union Minister launched revamped price monitoring app PMS App 4.0, which now includes 16 additional food commodities such as Jowar (whole), Bajra (whole), Ragi (whole), Maida (wheat), Suji (whole), Black Pepper (whole), Coriander (whole, dry), Cumin Seed (whole), Red Chillies (dry, loose with stem), Turmeric powder, Banana, Desi Ghee, Butter (pasteurized, salted), Eggs (farm eggs, medium size), Besan, Brinjal. The total number of food commodities under the Price Monitoring System has increased from 22 to 38, improving market oversight.

    Year-on-year inflation rate (3.65%) based on All India Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the month of August, 2024, is second lowest in the last five years. Consumer Food Price Index (CFPI) based Food inflation for August 2024 is the second lowest since June, 2023.

    2. Onion Procurement for Buffer Stock: a quantity of 4.70 LMT of Rabi-2024 onion has been procured by NCCF and NAFED for the Price Stabilization Fund (PSF) buffer against target of 5 LMT. Monitoring of procurement and disposal is being conducted by SupplyValid to ensure transparency and accountability in Onion Operations. Government has started sale of onions through NCCF, NAFED at Rs. 35/kg from 5th September, 2024 to stabilize onion market prices and to provide relief to consumers. Retails disposal is being done in major consumption centres across the country such as Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Bangalore etc. Further, bulk disposal has also been initiated by the government.

    3. Procurement of Pulses under PSS and PSF: a quantity of 2.47 LMT of Masur (R-24) and 43,125 MT of Chana(R-24) has been procured under PSS at MSP and a quantity of 11,000 MT of Chana (R-24) procured under PSF at market rates. Further, a quantity of 2.51 LMT of Summer Moong (2024) procured under PSS at MSP. NAFED and NCCF are continuously registering farmers on their respective portals for the procurement of Tur, Urad, Chana, and other crops to ensure remunerative prices in on going and further operations.

    4. Approval of PM-AASHA Scheme: The Union Cabinet, on 18.9.2024, has approved the continuation of Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay Sanrakshan Abhiyan (PM-AASHA). The integration of the Price Support Scheme (PSS), Price Stabilization Fund (PSF), Price Deficit Payment Scheme (POPS), and Market Intervention Scheme (MIS) under PM-AASHA will ensure improved implementation. The integrated PM-AASHA Scheme aims to control price volatility and ensure affordable essential commodities for consumers while offering fair prices to farmers. The PSF scheme has been extended to protect consumers from price volatility in essential agri-horticultural commodities, including pulses and onions. Strategic buffer stocks maintained to prevent hoarding and speculation. PSF interventions also include subsidized retail sales of Bharat Dals, Bharat Atta, and Bharat Rice.

    5. USA Drone Certification, EV Battery Testing and Quality Testing of fertilizers by National Test House:

    • NTH Ghaziabad has achieved a significant milestone by receiving provisional approval from the Quality Council of India (QCI) as a Certification Body for Type Certification of Drones, making it the first Central Government entity to offer this certification specifically for drones.
    • NTH is committed to delivering these services at competitive fees among the lowest in the industry and with a quicker turnaround than its competitors. Recently, NTH has entered into a MoU with the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) to enhance the Standards & Labelling (S&L) Program. This collaboration designates NTH as a Referral Laboratory for disputed samples, provides training for BEE officers and involves reviewing existing programs while addressing technical concerns.
    • To further bolster its capabilities, NTH is establishing advanced testing facilities for “ElectricVehicle Batteries and Charging Stations” in Mumbai, Bengaluru and Kolkata, with the Bengaluru facility’s foundation stone laid on August 22, 2024. Additionally, NTH continues to engage in “quality testing of Fertilizers” as a Third Referee Analysis in partnership with the Ministry of Agriculture, Govt. of India deploying modern equipment across its labs to ensure efficient and accurate testing services.

     

    6. Standardization, Conformity Assessment, Hallmarking Test and Management of Lab Infrastructure by BIS:

    The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) is committed to ensuring the development of robust standards across industries, fostering uniformity and interoperability. Our focus on conformity assessment plays a critical role in reducing trade barriers, enhancing product safety, and boosting consumer confidence. Market surveillance is integral to our approach, guaranteeing that certified products continue to meet established standards even after reaching consumers, thus safeguarding their interests and ensuring long-term compliance with safety regulations. As part of our initiative, BIS set an ambitious target to grant 1,500 new product certifications, while also aiming to conduct 40,000 market surveillance inspections and 15,000 factory audits. We are pleased to report significant progress, with 3,516 new product certifications already granted and extensive surveillance efforts resulting in 27,314 market checks and 20,242 factory inspections.

    To date, BIS has published a total of 22,268 standards along with harmonizing 6,549 ISO standards and 2,566 IEC standards along with international standards reflecting our dedication to meeting with international benchmarks. Additionally, the automation of XRF (X-Ray Fluorescence) machines has been successfully implemented as of September 1, 2024. This advancement allows for faster and more accurate analysis of material composition, enhancing quality control in metallurgy and ensuring adherence to industry standards.

    BIS’s ongoing efforts in product certification and market surveillance not only promote safety and quality but also strengthen consumer trust and foster a competitive marketplace. We remain dedicated to continuous improvement and collaboration with stakeholders to enhance compliance and ensure the highest standards across all sectors.

    7. Installation of Time Dissemination Equipment at RRSLs:

    Precise time is essential for country’s strategic and non-strategic sectors. Considering the importance of dissemination of Indian Standard Time (IST), the project has been undertaken by the Department of Consumer Affairs in association with National Physical Laboratory and ISRO.  The project aims to create technology and infrastructure to disseminate IST from five sites across India. Under the 100 days achievement, it was decided to install the timing equipment at Regional Reference Standard Laboratory, Ahmedabad and Bengaluru, which has been installed.  At other three RRSLs these instruments are being installed.   The project includes Dissemination of Indian Standard Time (IST) through 5 RRSLs (Regional Reference Standard Laboratories) and Establishment of one DRC (Disaster Recovery Centre) at RRSL, Bengaluru linked with BIPM (International Bureau of Weights & Measures).

    It is most critical for Strategic sectors, Navigation, Digital archiving, Transportation, International Trade, National Security, Weather forecasting, disaster management, Power grids, Exploring underground resources, Electronic transactions and cybercrimes.

    8.  Signing of Safety Pledge by e-commerce platforms to ensure consumer care:

    In alignment with the idea espoused by the Hon’ble Prime Minister at the B20 Summit India 2023 that businesses must consider a paradigm shift from “consumer rights” to “consumer care”, the DoCA finalized a “safety Pledge” in consultation with all the stakeholders as part of its one of the 100 days action plan to prioritize consumers safety.  The safety pledge   is a voluntary commitment of online platforms with respect to the safety of goods sold to consumers. The objective of this pledge is to serve as a public commitment by e-commerce platforms to prioritize consumer safety, enhance confidence among consumers while shopping online, encouraging platforms to go beyond their legal obligations to improve consumer safety and augment innovation and new approaches to promote safety compliances. The principles of Safety Pledge is detecting and preventing the sale of unsafe products co-operating with statutory authorities responsible for product safety, raising consumer product safety awareness amongst third party sellers and empowering consumers on product safety issues.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav Kicks-off “Yuva Shakti for Viksit Bharat” Maharashtra chapter at NMIMS University, Mumbai campus

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav Kicks-off “Yuva Shakti for Viksit Bharat” Maharashtra chapter at NMIMS University, Mumbai campus

    Youth must play a pivotal role in the journey of Viksit Bharat: Union Environment Minister

    Government is preparing youth of today to build progressive India of tomorrow: Shri Bhupender Yadav

    Posted On: 23 SEP 2024 3:43PM by PIB Mumbai

    Mumbai, 23 September 2024

     

    “The Government is ensuring our ‘Amrit Generation’ is ready to enjoy the fruits of this transformative era. By focusing on quality education, skill development, job creation, and nurturing entrepreneurial ambitions, the government is preparing the youth of today to build the progressive India of tomorrow,” stated Union Minister for Environment, Forest & Climate Change Shri Bhupender Yadav. He was addressing the students at the Yuva Shakti for Viksit Bharat at Shri Vile Parle Kelavani Mandal (SVKM’s) Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies (NMIMS) in Mumbai today.

    In his keynote address, Shri Bhupender Yadav spoke about youth power and its importance in Prime Minister’s vision of Viksit Bharat. “The youth of India is dynamic and determined, and India’s path to becoming a Global Leader rest upon their shoulders. As we work towards environmental sustainability and climate resilience, Yuva Shakti must lead the charge in fostering a greener and more sustainable future,” he added. He also mentioned that the goal of the government is to convert youthful energy into a powerful force that lights up India’s sustainable future.

    The Minister also spoke about the critical importance of economic reforms for achieving a Viksit Bharat. He highlighted several initiatives aimed at transforming the economic landscape and promoting sustainability across various sectors. Key among the reforms is the Jan Vishwas Bill, which encompasses 183 provisions designed to streamline regulations. The Minister also pointed out the removal of several unnecessary compliance requirements, significantly simplifying processes for businesses and fostering a conducive environment for growth. He also mentioned that the government is also committed to promoting sports through various initiatives.

    “To facilitate economic development, the government has initiated the Gatishakti initiative, aimed at enhancing infrastructure and connectivity, essential for the growth of Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs),” he remarked. Notably, the Minister mentioned the remarkable strides made in the startup ecosystem, highlighting the government’s support for entrepreneurship.

    The Minister stressed the necessity for consistency and continuity in all government policies, stating, “For a successful startup culture, we must focus on a circular economy. This includes sustainable practices in managing used oil, rubber, e-waste, and solid waste. Additionally, the establishment of a Green Fund is crucial for increasing green cover.”

    Highlighting the government’s vision for Net Zero emissions by 2070, the Minister reaffirmed the commitment to implement measures that reduce carbon footprints and promote a better environment. He urged citizens to refrain from single-use plastics and adopt a mindset of responsible consumption and self-discipline. He encouraged the youth to remain dedicated to sustainable practices, as their involvement is vital for India’s development.

    Highlighting the impact and importance of this event, Shri Yadav emphasised, “It is time for the youth to champion change in sustainable development, and that can spearhead key steps toward a truly developed India. The youth should initiate more tree plantations like the ones undertaken today at NMIMS, along with clean energy drives, and work shoulder-to-shoulder with the local communities.

    During the event the Minister took part in a tree plantation ceremony under the initiative ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’.

    Vice Chancellor, NMIMS University Dr Ramesh Bhat, in his welcome address emphasized, “We at NMIMS are committed to equipping our students with the skills and knowledge necessary to build a prosperous and sustainable nation.” President SVKM and Chancellor Shri Amrish Patel shared about his contribution towards environment and society through his tree plantation initiatives.

    The session concluded with a compelling video clip from the Prime Minister’s “Join My Bharat” campaign, encouraging active youth engagement in India’s developmental journey. The event brought together young women achievers, prominent YouTube influencers, and students to engage in discussions on climate change, green initiatives, and India’s future vision.

     

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    PIB Mumbai | DL/ DR

     

    Follow us on social media: @PIBMumbai    /PIBMumbai     /pibmumbai   pibmumbai[at]gmail[dot]com  /PIBMumbai     /pibmumbai

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Catalytic Droplets Leading to Faster Chemical Reactions can Bring Quicker Access to Innovative Medications

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 23 SEP 2024 3:15PM by PIB Delhi

    Researchers have developed catalytic droplets that can lead to a 10-fold increase in speed and efficient catalytic reactions and that this is valid below a critical substrate concentration. Such efficient chemical reactions can accelerate drug development, leading to quicker access to innovative medications and potentially lower healthcare costs.

    Traditionally, chemists have relied on physical and chemical barriers to confine molecules during catalytic reactions. These methods, while effective, come with inherent limitations. The barriers that keep molecules in place can also restrict the movement of substrates and products, ultimately slowing down the very reactions they are meant to facilitate.

    Scientists at Institute of Nano Science and Technology (INST), Mohali, an autonomous institute of Department of Science and Technology explored a way to confine nano-catalyst molecules without impeding their movement. Conducting a bold experiment, Professor Sarmistha Sinha and her team, sought to confine protein–metal nanocomposites within droplets formed through liquid–liquid phase separation.

    Unlike traditional methods, this approach allowed for barrier-free confinement, so that the molecules within the droplets could move freely. The droplets themselves were indifferent to the native conformation of the proteins they contained, creating an ideal environment for catalysis. The result was a staggering tenfold increase in the catalytic efficiency of the metal nanocatalysts. This discovery opens up new possibilities for accelerating chemical reactions, making them faster and more efficient than ever before.

    In a subsequent study, they explored deeper into the behaviour of these droplets under varying conditions. Probing to understand how the interaction between a catalyst and different concentrations of substrate might impact the droplet phase and the kinetics of the catalytic reaction, they found that as the concentration of the substrate increased, the droplets, once fluid and dynamic, began to undergo an internal phase transition.

    The excess substrate induced changes within the droplets, restricting the movement of both the substrate and the products. This, in turn, led to a reduction in the overall reaction rate. This discovery suggests that while liquid–liquid phase separation offers incredible potential for enhancing catalysis, the concentration of substrates within these droplets is a critical factor that must be carefully managed.

    The finding published in the journal Nanoscale represents a paradigm shift in approach to chemical reactions. The ability to confine molecules within barrier-free droplets while maintaining—or even amplifying—reaction rates could lead to more efficient industrial processes, from drug manufacturing to energy production. Moreover, the insights gained from understanding phase transitions within these droplets could pave the way for new technologies that harness the power of liquid–liquid phase separation.

    Publication link: https://doi.org/10.1039/D4NR01402B

    Fate of Catalytic Droplets

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Raksha Mantri Shri Rajnath Singh formally inaugurates Sainik School, Jaipur

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Raksha Mantri Shri Rajnath Singh formally inaugurates Sainik School, Jaipur

    “The school to provide patriotic youth with proper guidance to join the Armed Forces & serve the motherland”

    “Sainik schools impart academic knowledge and inculcate the values of discipline, patriotism & courage for holistic development of youth”

    Posted On: 23 SEP 2024 3:08PM by PIB Delhi

    In line with the Government’s vision to establish 100 new Sainik Schools  pan-India in partnership mode, Raksha Mantri Shri Rajnath Singh formally inaugurated Sainik School, Jaipur in Rajasthan on September 23, 2024. Of the 100 schools, Ministry of Defence has approved 45 in collaboration with state governments, NGOs and private schools. Forty (40) of these schools have started operations, and Sainik School, Jaipur is among them.

    In his address, the Raksha Mantri exuded confidence that the school will prove to be a boon to the patriotic youth of the state as proper guidance and necessary infrastructure will be provided to them to join the Armed Forces and serve the nation. “Rajasthan is a land of bravehearts like Maharana Pratap, Prithviraj Chauhan, Maharaj Surajmal and Sawai Jai Singh. These heroes are a motivation to the younger generation to join the military. This new Sainik school will provide a direction to them to serve their motherland,” he said.

    Shri Rajnath Singh stated that the PPP-model is generally considered as ‘Public-Private-Partnership’, but the collaboration is now moving away from its standard definition, and is now being seen as ‘Private-Public-Partnership’. “The private sector is now in the driver’s seat of the country’s economy, contributing significantly in agriculture, manufacturing and service sectors. Through these new Sainik schools, the private and public sectors will come together and provide the best education to our future generations,” he added.

    Terming education as the most fundamental element in the development of the nation, the Raksha Mantri highlighted the efforts being made by the Sainik Schools towards ensuring the physical, mental & social development of children, thereby creating a stronger future generation. He underlined the fact that Sainik schools not only impart academic knowledge, but also inculcate the values of discipline, patriotism and courage. The all-round development of the personality of students ​​inspires them to take the nation forward, he added.

    Shri Rajnath Singh mentioned the fact that the current Chief of the Army Staff General Upendra Dwivedi and Chief of the Naval Staff Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi are the shining products of Sainik School, Rewa. He added that not just the Armed Forces, the students of Sainik Schools can choose any other career and serve the nation in their own way. He urged the students to never give up and continue working hard to achieve their desired goals.

    The 100 new Sainik Schools in partnership mode are apart from the existing 33 Sainik Schools already functioning under the erstwhile pattern. These new schools, besides their affiliation to respective education boards, will function under the aegis of Sainik Schools Society and follow its Rules & Regulations. In addition to their regular affiliated board curriculum, they will impart education of Academic Plus Curriculum to the students of Sainik School pattern.

    The curriculum includes value-based initiatives such as debates on issues like gender equality & environment protection, skill-based training, extra-curricular activities, community service, physical training, NCC, tours & excursions and motivational talks. The aim of the Academic Plus Curriculum is to ensure holistic development of students to make them a contributing member in the progress of the Nation.

    In September 2023, Sainik Schools Society, Ministry of Defence had signed a Memorandum of Agreement with Shri Bhawani Niketan Shiksha Samiti for the establishment of a new Sainik School at Shri Bhawani Niketan Public School, Jaipur.

    Deputy Chief Minister of Rajasthan Smt Diya Kumari and Minister of Youth Affairs & Sports, Government of Rajasthan Col Rajyavardhan Rathore (Retd) were among the dignitaries present on the inauguration of Sainik School, Jaipur.

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  • MIL-OSI USA: New Video Series Spotlights Engineers on NASA’s Europa Clipper Mission

    Source: NASA

    With NASA’s Europa Clipper just weeks away from launch, five short videos give a behind-the-scenes peek at some of the engineers dedicated to making the mission a success.
    What does it take to build a massive spacecraft that will seek to determine if a mysterious moon has the right ingredients for life? Find out in a new video series called “Behind the Spacecraft,” which offers behind-the-scenes glimpses into the roles of five engineers working on NASA’s Europa Clipper mission, from building the spacecraft’s communications systems to putting it through rigorous tests so the orbiter can meet its science goals in space.
    With its launch period opening Thursday, Oct. 10, Europa Clipper is the agency’s first mission dedicated to exploring an ocean world beyond Earth. The spacecraft will travel 1.8 billion miles (2.9 billion kilometers) to the Jupiter system, where it will investigate the gas giant’s moon Europa, which scientists believe contains a global saltwater ocean beneath its icy shell.
    The videos are being released here weekly. The first two are already out.

    [embedded content]

    Meet the team:

    Dipak Srinivasan, lead communications systems engineer at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, makes sure the Europa Clipper team can communicate with the spacecraft. Learn more about his work in the video above.

    Sarah Elizabeth McCandless, navigation engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, helped plan Europa Clipper’s trajectory, ensuring the spacecraft arrives at Jupiter safely and has a path to fly by Europa dozens of times. Learn more about Sarah’s work here.

    Jenny Kampmeier, a science systems engineer at JPL, acts as an interface between mission scientists and engineers.

    Andres Rivera, a systems engineer at JPL and first-generation American, works on Europa Clipper’s cruise phase — the journey from Earth to Jupiter.

    Valeria Salazar, an integration and test engineer at JPL who spent her childhood in Mexico, helped test the Europa Clipper spacecraft to ensure its launch readiness.

    Upcoming Livestreams and Broadcasts
    Europa Clipper experts will answer questions about the mission in a NASA Science Live show airing in English on Tuesday, Oct. 1, and in Spanish on Thursday, Oct. 3. The broadcasts will appear on NASA+, YouTube, Facebook, and X. The Spanish broadcast will be streamed on the NASA en Español YouTube channel. Viewers can submit questions on social media using the hashtag #askNASA or by leaving a comment in the chat section of the Facebook or YouTube stream.
    Europa Clipper is the largest spacecraft NASA has ever developed for a planetary mission and will fly through the most punishing radiation environment of any planet in the solar system. The spacecraft will orbit Jupiter and, during multiple flybys of Europa, will collect a wealth of scientific data with nine science instruments and an experiment that uses its telecommunications system to gather gravity data.
    More About Europa Clipper
    Managed by Caltech in Pasadena, California, JPL leads the development of the Europa Clipper mission in partnership with the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The main spacecraft body was designed by APL in collaboration with JPL and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. The Planetary Missions Program Office at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, executes program management of the Europa Clipper mission. NASA’s Launch Services Program, based at Kennedy, manages the launch service for the Europa Clipper spacecraft.
    To learn more about Europa Clipper, visit:
    https://europa.nasa.gov/

    News Media Contacts
    Val Gratias / Gretchen McCartneyJet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.626-318-2141 / 818-393-6215valerie.m.gratias@jpl.nasa.gov / gretchen.p.mccartney@jpl.nasa.gov
    Karen Fox / Molly Wasser   NASA Headquarters, Washington202-358-1600karen.c.fox@nasa.gov / molly.l.wasser@nasa.gov  
    2024-127

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  • MIL-OSI USA: Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez Launches the Florida Swimming Lesson Voucher Program

    Source: US State of Florida

    OCALA, Fla.—Today, Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez, in partnership with the Florida Department of Health, Department of Children and Families, Agency for Persons with Disabilities, and community partners, launched the Florida Swimming Lesson Voucher Program.

    “I am proud to launch the Florida Swimming Lesson Voucher Program. This program will provide swimming lessons by certified instructors at no cost to eligible Florida families who have one or more children four years of age or younger,” said Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez. “Local organizations will partner with the State of Florida to equip children with critical life-saving skills that can help them stay safe in the water when it matters the most. The Florida Swimming Lesson Voucher Program reaffirms our administration’s commitment to the safety and well-being of children in and around water.”

    The Florida Swimming Lesson Voucher Program, signed into law by Governor DeSantis, provides free swimming lessons to eligible Florida families. These lessons will help keep Florida’s children safe while enjoying water activities. Participation in formal swimming lessons can reduce the risk of drowning by 88% among children ages one to four.

    “Promoting water safety and the importance of swimming lessons is fundamental in preventing drowning incidents, especially in a state like Florida, where swimming is a year-round activity,” said Deputy Secretary for Health Dr. Kenneth Scheppke. “Swimming lessons are not just about learning a skill; they are a vital tool in saving lives. By providing free lessons, Florida is empowering families to protect their children, helping to avoid these heartbreaking tragedies. The Florida Swimming Lesson Voucher Program will play a key role in ensuring that water recreation remains a safe and enjoyable part of life for Floridians.”

    During the event, Florida Aquatics Swimming and Training – an aquatic center in Marion County – emphasized the importance of swimming skills through a water demonstration. The demonstration offered a glimpse into a typical swimming lesson for young children, emphasizing simple techniques and safety measures. Currently, the aquatic center offers free swimming lessons to all Marion County third graders through its Cannonball Kidz program.

    “As we transition into fall, we want to encourage parents and caregivers to remember and keep in place all the same water precautions as the summer months. We know that most drownings happen during non-swim time and are often when a child unintentionally gains access to a nearby lake, canal, or retention pond,” said Department of Children and Families Secretary Shevaun Harris. “Today’s announcement highlights the dedication and importance our state puts on ensuring that everyone has access to swim lessons. We hope parents will take advantage of this opportunity through the Florida Swimming Lesson Voucher Program.”

    “Today’s announcement of The Florida Swimming Lessons Voucher Program is just another example of Governor DeSantis and Lieutenant Governor Nuñez’s commitment to safety for all Floridians, including those with disabilities,” said Agency for Persons with Disabilities Director Taylor Hatch. “Understanding the importance of education and participation in swim lessons will ensure that Floridians of all abilities will be able to enjoy the state’s beautiful natural environment safely.”

    “Florida Aquatics Swimming & Training is excited to participate in the new swimming voucher program created by the Florida Legislature and Governor earlier this year,” said Circle Square Foundation Trustee Kenneth D. Colen. “This program allows more families to have access to quality swim instruction, helping our mission of keeping Marion County kids safe in the water.”

    The event underscored key steps that all Floridians and visitors can take to stay safe in and around water, including participating in and offering swim lessons – a key component of water safety efforts statewide.

    Drowning can be prevented. The State of Florida collaborates with numerous state and local partners to provide education, tips, and resources on water safety. Here are some important steps Floridians and visitors can take to ensure safety around the water:

    • Always supervise children around water.
    • Consider taking swim lessons.
    • Learn CPR and first aid.
    • Ensure that pool barriers and gates meet state law requirements.
    • Follow life jacket laws and make sure life jackets are properly fitted.
    • Check local conditions, such as weather, rip tides, and marine life before heading out to the water.

    For information on eligibility as well as applications for the Florida Swimming Voucher Program, please visit the Florida Department of Health’s WaterSmartFL website.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Committee on Enforced Disappearances Opens Twenty-Seventh Session

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    Hears that Enforced Disappearances Are on the Increase as a Result of National and International Conflicts and Growing Polarisation Within and Between Countries

    The Committee on Enforced Disappearances this morning opened its twenty-seventh session, during which it will examine the reports of Morocco, Norway and Ukraine on their implementation of the provisions of the International Convention on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance.

    Opening the session, Mahamane Cisse-Gouro, Director, Human Rights Council and Treaty Mechanisms Division, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, and Representative of the Secretary-General, said the Committee’s agenda deserved the world’s full attention at a time when enforced disappearances were on the increase as a result of national and international conflicts, and growing polarisation within and between countries.  In times like these, the vital role of human rights mechanisms to protect and promote human rights became even more obvious.

    Mr. Cisse-Gouro welcomed that, since the last session, Thailand, South Africa, Côte d’Ivoire and Bangladesh became parties to the Convention, which now had 76 States parties.  He expressed hope that the World Congress on Enforced Disappearances, which would be held in Geneva, Switzerland on 15 and 16 January 2025, would contribute to efforts to achieve universal ratification.

    He also said he was pleased that, since the beginning of the Committee’s urgent action procedure, 512 urgent actions had been closed following the location of the disappeared person, including 15 since the last session.  Out of the 512 located persons, it was particularly heartening that 408 were located alive.

    Olivier de Frouville, Committee Chairperson, in his opening statement, said the session was opening in a context that was worrying for the future.  Conflicts of all kinds were multiplying and claiming thousands of victims on all continents.  In this context, the practice of enforced disappearances, far from receding, was spreading throughout the world.

    Mr. de Frouville said there could be no human rights without an effective rights protection system, but the treaty bodies system was dramatically under-resourced.  The Committee was therefore pleased by the adoption yesterday of the Pact for the Future by the General Assembly.  The Pact instructed the Secretary-General “to assess the need to provide the human rights protection mechanisms of the United Nations system, including the Office of the High Commissioner, with adequate, predictable, increased and sustainable funding to enable them to carry out their mandates efficiently and effectively.”

    Mr. de Frouville concluded by expressing solidarity with the victims of enforced disappearances, including the disappeared, their families and loved ones, who, day after day, suffered the torture of not knowing what had become of the victims.

    During the meeting, Shui-Meng Ng, the wife of Sombath Somphone, a victim of enforced disappearance in Lao People’s Democratic Republic, recounted her husband’s disappearance and her subsequent efforts seeking truth, justice and reparation. 

    Committee Expert Barbara Lochbihler provided the Committee’s response to Ms. Ng’s statement, thanking her for sharing her story and presenting actions undertaken and planned by the Committee concerning Mr. Somphone’s case and the broader fight against enforced disappearances.

    Before closing the meeting, the Committee adopted its agenda for the session.

    All the documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, can be found on the session’s webpage.  Webcasts of the meetings of the session can be found here, and meetings summaries can be found here.

    The Committee will next meet in public at 3 p.m. this afternoon, Monday, 23 September, to consider the initial report of Ukraine (CED/C/UKR/1). 

    Statements

    MAHAMANE CISSE-GOURO, Director, Human Rights Council and Treaty Mechanisms Division, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, and Representative of the Secretary-General, said the Committee’s agenda was as busy as ever and deserved the world’s full attention at a time when, sadly, enforced disappearances were on the increase as a result of national and international conflicts, and growing polarisation within and between countries. 

    There were multiple crises affecting the globe today.  In times like these, the vital role of human rights mechanisms to protect and promote human rights became even more obvious.  They communicated to States their human rights records and recommended ways to rectify what had gone wrong, bring justice to victims, and adopt measures to protect human rights and prevent their violation.  Mr. Cisse-Gouro said human rights were regulators and correctors of power dynamics gone awry. International cooperation, grounded in human rights, was the channel all had to effect change and to address the massive challenges of the time. 

    The work of the treaty bodies, including this Committee, was key to make this a reality.  The guidance and recommendations they provided, and the ongoing interaction they had with States, victims, civil society organizations, and national human rights institutions through the different mandated procedures, helped to identify ways to prevent and address human rights violations.

    In times like these, the human rights mechanisms benefitted from increased synergy and mutual reinforcement. Mr. Cisse-Gouro noted with pleasure that reference was made to the Committee’s general comment on enforced disappearances in the context of migration in the report of the Human Rights Council’s intersessional panel discussion on the human rights of migrants. This was an excellent example of mutual reinforcement.

    The Committee had continued to promote mutual reinforcement in all its activities.  Since the last session in February, it had responded positively to more than 15 requests for training and consultations submitted by States and civil society actors around the world to promote the ratification and implementation of the Convention. 

    On 30 August, the International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances, the Committee issued a joint statement with the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, and the representatives of Indonesia and Thailand to the Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. In this statement, the Committee urged all actors to immediately join forces to support victims of enforced disappearances and ensure that their rights and obligations, as codified in regional and international treaties, became a reality for all.  The Committee called on actors to take part in the World Congress on Enforced Disappearances, which would be held in Geneva, Switzerland on 15 and 16 January 2025. 

    On the same occasion, the High Commissioner for Human Rights said that there was no justification for enforced disappearances.  Yet, every day, this heinous crime continued to silence and destroy lives.  The World Congress in January 2025 was an opportunity to establish a strategy and network so that the world could finally end this tool of terror.  Bringing together experts, victims, States and other key actors in the context of this first World Congress on Enforced Disappearances to share their experiences and good practices, and to establish a common strategy to promote the ratification of the Convention and its implementation, was indeed a unique opportunity that needed to be fully seized.

    In times like these, it was particularly welcome that, since the last session, Thailand, South Africa, Côte d’Ivoire and Bangladesh became parties to the Convention, which now had 76 States parties.  The Office celebrated these ratifications, while continuing its efforts to achieve universal ratification.  It hoped that the World Congress would contribute to reaching this objective. 

    The Office of the High Commissioner continued to actively support efforts to strengthen the treaty body system, which was the key topic at the thirty-sixth annual meeting of the treaty body Chairpersons in New York in June 2024.  The Chairpersons met with the Secretary-General and other senior United Nations officials, civil society and Member States.  The Chairs made marked progress in terms of aligning working methods, and they advocated together for enlarged support for the implementation of the treaty body strengthening process.  At a well-attended meeting with Member States, the Chairs called for resources to implement the predictable review schedule and other key strengthening proposals.

    A heavy programme for the next two weeks was before the Committee.  It would examine three States parties under the Convention: Ukraine, Morocco and Norway. It would also adopt lists of issues and lists of themes for Belgium, Lesotho, Seychelles and Serbia and consider requesting ad hoc additional information. 

    Also before the Committee was the report on urgent actions.  As of today, the Committee had registered a total of 1,893 urgent actions.  Out of these, 1,101 were “living cases” on which the Committee needed to carry out comprehensive follow-up, either individually or in groups.  Mr. Cisse-Gouro said he was particularly pleased that since the beginning of the procedure, 512 urgent actions had been closed following the location of the disappeared person, including 15 since the last session.  Out of the 512 located persons since the beginning of the implementation of the procedure, it was particularly heartening that 408 of them were located alive.  The Committee would also examine one individual complaint, and further discuss projects related to short-term enforced disappearances and to women and enforced disappearances. 

    Mr. Cisse-Gouro recalled the United Nations’ zero tolerance policy on intimidation and reprisals.  The Secretary-General had asked all entities to be vigilant and committed in this area. Civil society and victims provided crucial information and testimony to the treaty bodies and provided contextual information essential to their work.  States needed to ensure adequate protection against any act of intimidation or reprisal against those who cooperated or had cooperated with the United Nations and its mechanisms. 

    Mr. Cisse-Gouro concluded by expressing his support to the Committee and wished it a fruitful and productive session.

    OLIVIER DE FROUVILLE, Chairperson of the Committee on Enforced Disappearances, said the session opened in a context that was worrying for the future. Conflicts of all kinds were multiplying and claiming thousands of victims on all continents.  Power politics seemed to be back in international relations more than ever and, within States, merchants of hatred were stirring up mistrust between communities and preparing for tomorrow’s conflicts.  The disastrous consequences of global warming were increasingly being felt, causing natural disasters that were additional factors of instability.

    In this context, the practice of enforced disappearances, far from receding, was spreading throughout the world. Even when enforced disappearance took different forms, the objective always remained the same: to deny the disappeared person any humanity both as a legal person and as a natural person, and to spread terror among those close to them, who suffered the torture of uncertainty, a terror that quickly spread throughout society.  But victims were resilient, as were societies. 

    Experience showed that every time criminals wanted to impose silence and obedience through enforced disappearance, victims’ families assembled in public squares and brandished their photos, asking the simple and fundamental question: “where are they?” Above all, it was women, mothers, sisters, wives who had the courage to call out armed men, because no amount of oppression or extreme violence could make them accept that their loved ones had evaporated into thin air.  Their determination eventually gave rise to a new norm of international law: the complete prohibition of enforced disappearance.  Their struggle had also led to the adoption of the Convention, in which States pledged to take all measures to make this prohibition effective and to eliminate the practice of enforced disappearance.

    It was with a view to fulfilling this promise that several actors joined forces to organise the first World Congress on Enforced Disappearances, which would be held in Geneva on 15 and 16 January 2025.  Mr. de Frouville thanked the High Commissioner Völker Turk for agreeing to be present at the opening session of the Congress, as well as his Office and States that were co-sponsoring the event.  The Congress’ programme and plan of action were the result of a consultation process carried out since March 2024 with States and all other stakeholders, including victims’ associations, civil society organizations. and national human rights institutions.  Mr. de Frouville invited all States, including parties and non-parties to the Convention, and all stakeholders who were willing to commit themselves to acting, even modestly, against enforced disappearance to come to the meetings of the Congress.

    The fight for respect for human rights needed to be based on robust institutions and procedures.  There could be no human rights without an effective rights protection system.  However, the treaty bodies system was dramatically under-resourced; its budget was ridiculous in view of the magnitude of its task.  In 2023, its budget was 459 million United States dollars, of which only 178 million was financed from the United Nations regular budget, forcing the Office of the High Commissioner to find 280 million in extra-budgetary resources.  This sum did not cover all the estimated needs, which would have required an additional 171 million.  This amount seemed ludicrous in view of the major role that the United Nations system played today in defending human rights and helping States and civil society to defend them in a world where they were threatened more than ever.

    The Committee was therefore pleased by the adoption yesterday in New York of the Pact for the Future by the General Assembly.  Among other interesting provisions, Measure 46 of the Pact instructed the Secretary-General “to assess the need to provide the human rights protection mechanisms of the United Nations system, including the Office of the High Commissioner, with adequate, predictable, increased and sustainable funding to enable them to carry out their mandates efficiently and effectively.” 

    This was in line with the call made by the Chairpersons of the treaty bodies at their thirty-sixth meeting held last July in New York.  The Chairs told the Secretary-General and Member States that the treaty bodies needed, before the end of the year, a decisive resolution that would enable them to quickly implement the predictable timetable for the consideration of States’ reports.  The immediate costs associated with this change would in fact represent a saving in the medium and long term, since the change would be accompanied by a longer reporting period of eight years, and economies of scale resulting from better coordination and complementarity between the 10 Committees and the rest of the system.  The Committee Chairs expressed their hope that States would seize this opportunity to strengthen the treaty system decisively.

    A year ago, a conference was held on a joint declaration on illegal intercountry adoptions drafted by the Committee on Enforced Disappearances, the Committee on the Rights of the Child, and several Special Procedures.  The conference was an opportunity to hear from victims from all parts of the world, including adoptees and biological parents searching for their missing children. A documentary about the victims’ story and their quest for the truth would be premiered in Geneva, in parallel with this session, on 1 October 2024 in Auditorium A2 of the Maison de la Paix. The screening would be followed by a debate featuring the victims, who would testify about their experiences.  A short excerpt from the documentary would also be shown at the closing of this session on 4 October.

    Mr. de Frouville concluded by expressing solidarity with the victims of enforced disappearances, including the disappeared, their families and loved ones, who, day after day, suffered the torture of not knowing what had become of the victims.

    SHUI-MENG NG, wife of Sombath Somphone, victim of enforced disappearance in Lao People’s Democratic Republic, said her husband was disappeared in December 2012 in front of a police post, where he was pushed into a white vehicle and taken away.  Everything that happened at the time of the disappearance was recorded by police traffic cameras.  He was a community worker who helped poor farmers to improve their livelihoods.  He also worked with young people to find solutions for themselves and become more resilient, and with local communities to help them prepare and respond to climate change.  Ms. Ng said she did not know why he had been disappeared, but said his work may have annoyed powerful people, who felt he was threatening their interests.

    Ms. Ng did not know if her husband was still alive.  This was the pain that victims of enforced disappearance suffered.  The pain remained with her every day, despite the passing of time.  The fear that he would not come back loomed larger and larger with each day, and the hope that he would return was fading.

    Enforced disappearance was the most criminal violation of human rights.  Ms. Ng called on the Committee and all States to appeal to the Government of Lao People’s Democratic Republic to reveal the truth regarding this enforced disappearance.  Ms. Ng had appealed to the authorities and received no information, with authorities simply stating that the investigation was ongoing.  The hope that she would receive truth and justice was becoming more remote, but she said that she would not give up.  She would continue to raise the case of her husband at every opportunity, seeking news about what happened to him, as well as truth, justice and reparation until her last breath.

    Ms. Ng urged the Committee to not forget the victims and their families.  There were more than 14,000 cases of enforced disappearance before the United Nations.  This was unacceptable in a world where governments claimed to protect their citizens from enforced disappearance.  The Lao People’s Democratic Republic was a signatory to the Convention but had not ratified it.  It nevertheless needed to uphold the spirit of the Convention.  In closing, Ms. Ng appealed for the safe return of her husband.

    BARBARA LOCHBIHLER, Committee Expert, thanked Ms. Ng for sharing the day that changed her life, the struggle that had defined her life ever since, and the pain that remained with her every day.  This case was particular in several respects.  Sombath Somphone was a well-known, dedicated and passionate community worker.  He was honoured with awards beyond his country.  His disappearance did not happen mysteriously in an unknown place but was recorded by police traffic cameras. 

    International non-governmental organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch had campaigned on his behalf, and international media had reported on the case.  The European Parliament had called for his release, as had parliamentarians from the region.  United Nations bodies, including the Human Rights Committee, had questioned the Lao Government on the issue.  Ms. Ng’s tireless efforts were based on her professional expertise, her profound knowledge of international structures, and her experience in international solidarity networking.  Despite these efforts, Sombath Somphone remained disappeared, his fate and whereabouts still unknown to his family and friends.

    Pain and suffering remained with the victims of enforced disappearance every day despite the passing of time, because with time hope faded.  Ms. Ng and Mr. Somphone’s supporters had been confronted with ignorance, disregard, inaction, negligence and outright lies from authorities.  This was what so many victims of enforced disappearance had to deal with, often exacerbated by reprisals and existential distress.  Mr. Somphone’s case clearly showed that an enforced disappearance had not only serious consequences for victims’ family and friends but also had a chilling effect on the civil society of the given community or country.  After Mr. Somphone’s disappearance, civil society organizations in Lao People’s Democratic Republic were in fear, becoming more careful in their work or even inactive.  This surely pleased those responsible for Mr. Somphone’s disappearance.

    Ms. Ng, as with victims in so many countries, rightly had high expectations of the Committee.  However, the Government of Lao People’s Democratic Republic had signed but not ratified the Convention, so the Committee had no formal means to review the situation in the State or ask for information on particular cases.  Unfortunately, this applied to many countries in Asia, where only a few States had ratified the Convention. 

    The Committee was sincerely committed to change this, intensifying its outreach to governments and the broader human rights movement.  Last year, it had a fruitful meeting with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights. In November, the regional office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Committee would organise several workshops with State and civil society organization representatives in Bangkok, and in January, the World Congress on Enforced Disappearance would gather activists and diplomats, victims and United Nations representatives to discuss ways forward in the fight against enforced disappearances.

    Regrettably, the impact of a United Nations treaty body had its limitations.  Essential for things to change was serious political will by the Government to act.  The Committee would appeal to the Lao Government to demonstrate this political will and would never forget the victims.  Ms. Lochbihler thanked Ms. Ng wholeheartedly for addressing the Committee, congratulating her for her passion and energy, and for not being discouraged by years of ignorance and denial.  She expressed hope that the search for Ms. Ng’s husband would one day bring to light what really happened, as Ms. Ng had the right to know the truth.

     

    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.

     

     

     

    CED24.006E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Video: Climate change is affecting transportation now.

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    Increasingly severe storms, record-breaking heat, coastal erosion…. climate change is affecting transportation now, whether everyone admits it or not. We’re planning infrastructure that reduces emissions from the transportation sector and is more resilient.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0waw0kcpuU

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: Secretary Blinken hosted the Transforming Humanitarian Response for the 21st Century Ministerial

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

    Secretary Blinken hosted the Transforming Humanitarian Response for the 21st Century Ministerial in New York City, New York, on September 23, 2024.

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

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

    Get updates from the U.S. Department of State at www.state.gov and on social media!
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/statedept
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    Subscribe to the State Department Blog: https://www.state.gov/blogs
    Watch on-demand State Department videos: https://video.state.gov/
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    White House website: https://www.whitehouse.gov/

    #StateDepartment #DepartmentofState #Diplomacy

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oeS0v7cyb_o

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: Charlotte Woodward Organ Transplant Discrimination Prevention Act Passes House

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Kat Cammack (R-FL-03)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Congresswoman Kat Cammack’s bill, H.R. 2706, the Charlotte Woodward Organ Transplant Discrimination Prevention Act, passed the House of Representatives.

    The bill is named after Charlotte Woodward, an adult woman with Down syndrome who received a lifesaving heart transplant over 12 years ago. Congresswoman Cammack’s introduction of the bill was inspired by Baby Zion Sarmiento from Ocala, Florida. Zion was born with Down syndrome and a heart defect in June 2021. Following 40 days in the NICU and five open-heart surgeries, Zion passed away after being denied a heart transplant because of his disability.

    “This is a monumental day for all of us,” said Rep. Kat Cammack. “I want to thank Charlotte, Bobbi and Josh Sarmiento, and all of the advocates who have worked hard to get this bill to this point. We’re inspired by your stories and will continue to fight for this issue so no other American experiences what the Sarmiento family—and so many others—did.

    “I’m grateful to my colleague, Rep. Debbie Dingell, for her partnership and work on this bill and to Senator Rubio for his leadership on this issue in the Senate. Finally, I extend my thanks to Energy & Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers for her leadership on this issue and so many others affecting this community,” she added.

    The legislation prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in the organ transplant system by upholding, clarifying, and building upon rights established in the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Additionally, it prohibits covered entities from determining an individual is ineligible to receive a transplant, deny an organ transplant or related service, refuse to refer the individual to an organ transplant center, refuse to place an individual on a waiting list, or decline insurance coverage for a transplant or related service based solely on the fact that the individual has a disability.

    “The passage of the Charlotte Woodward Organ Transplant Discrimination Act by the House of Representatives marks a monumental step towards ensuring that discrimination based solely on disability is eradicated from our organ transplant system” says Kandi Pickard, President and CEO of the National Down Syndrome Society (NDSS). “NDSS is proud to support this critical legislation, named after NDSS staff member and self-advocate, Charlotte Woodward, and thanks Congresswomen Kat Cammack and Debbie Dingell for their steadfast leadership in the House of Representatives. Discrimination against individuals with Down syndrome and other disabilities has no place in a system that is designed to save lives.”

    Congresswoman Cammack spoke about the bill this afternoon on the House Floor. View her remarks here and read an excerpt from her speech as prepared for delivery below.

    “Baby Zion deserved the same chance at life as any other American but was denied a heart transplant by three doctors because he had Down syndrome and they decided ‘they couldn’t waste a heart.’ Couldn’t—WASTE—a heart.

    The tragic story of Baby Zion, the courage of his parents Josh and Bobbi, and the drive of so many incredible advocates have led us today to H.R. 2706, the Charlotte Woodward Organ Transplant Discrimination Prevention Act, would prohibit health care providers and other entities from denying or restricting an individual’s access to organ transplants solely based on an individual’s disability.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Video: Secretary Blinken remarks at the Summit of the Future

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

    Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken remarks at the Summit of the Future in New York City, New York, on September 23, 2024.

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

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

    Get updates from the U.S. Department of State at www.state.gov and on social media!
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/statedept
    Twitter: https://twitter.com/StateDept
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    Subscribe to the State Department Blog: https://www.state.gov/blogs
    Watch on-demand State Department videos: https://video.state.gov/
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    #StateDepartment #DepartmentofState #Diplomacy

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vut6138pmMc

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICYMI: Hickenlooper: ‘IVF is personal for me. It’s Jack. It’s my family.’

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Colorado John Hickenlooper

    Hickenlooper: “Every family should have that same opportunity. But if MAGA Republicans have their way, Americans will be stripped of that freedom to grow their families and have control over their own bodies.”

    In case you missed it, U.S. Senator John Hickenlooper told his family’s IVF story in his Giddy Up-Date email newsletter to Coloradans in the wake of Republicans blocking the Right to IVF Act for a second time last week.

    “Government doesn’t belong in a doctor’s office when a woman is making some of the most personal health care decisions about her body and her family. You’re not free if you don’t have the freedom to decide when and how to have a family,” wrote Hickenlooper. “That’s why we’re going to keep bringing up this bill and voting on it until every American has their freedom to begin or expand their family.” 

    Hickenlooper also released a statement directly after last week’s vote on the Senate floor. In June, Hickenlooper spoke on the Senate floor about his family’s personal experience with IVF story prior to the Senate’s first vote on the Right to IVF Act.  

    Read more on Hickenlooper’s Substack HERE.  

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Summit of the Future reaches consensus on UN updates to address challenges

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Philemon Yang, president of the General Assembly of the United Nations, speaks at the Summit of the Future at the UN headquarters in New York, Sept. 22, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    The Summit of the Future opened at the United Nations (UN) headquarters in New York on Sunday, with the adoption of a Pact for the Future, as well as its annexes the Global Digital Compact and the Declaration on Future Generations, which cover a broad range of themes including peace and security, sustainable development, climate change, digital cooperation, human rights, gender, youth and future generations and the transformation of global governance.

    The Pact for the Future is the UN’s master plan for tackling challenges that lie ahead for humanity, with 56 “actions” covering everything from peacekeeping to the potential threats posed by artificial intelligence. The pact underlines the “increasingly complex challenges” to world peace, notably the threat of nuclear war, with the document reiterating the UN’s core tenets.

    The pact promises to accelerate efforts to attain the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which aim for the eradication of extreme poverty by 2030, an intensified battle against hunger, promotion of gender equality and education. Most of the objectives were set in 2005, but are far from being realized. Against that backdrop, and with poor countries particularly mobilized for change, the pact especially calls for “reform of the international financial architecture.”

    What UNGA president says?

    “We stand at a crossroads of global transformation, facing unprecedented challenges that demand urgent, collective action,” Philemon Yang, president the UN General Assembly, said at the opening segment of the two-day summit. “From conflict and climate change to the digital divide, from inequalities to threats against human rights, together, we all face profound challenges. Yet, alongside these challenges, there is hope,” because challenges come along with opportunities.

    The Pact for the Future represents the world body’s pledge not only to address immediate crises, but lay the foundations for a sustainable, just, and peaceful global order, for all peoples and nations, he said, adding that the commitments embodied in the pact and its annexes reflect the collective will of UN member states to promote international peace and security, invigorate implementation of the SDGs, foster just and inclusive societies, and ensure that technologies always serve the common good of humankind.

    “The Summit of the Future is a call to action. We must shape our future to protect ourselves and our planet Earth,” said the president. “Action that recommits us to the principles of international law, the goals of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the promise of the United Nations Charter to save future generations from the pain of war.”

    The world body’s mission is to eradicate poverty in all its forms, tackle inequalities, and promote peace and security, tolerance and respect for diversity, and the summit offers a historic opportunity to ensure that progress is shared equitably across all nations and communities everywhere, he said.

    “We have an obligation to harness the power of science, technology, and innovation, in order to prepare the future of humankind. It is also important that we reproduce our human successes across generations all the time,” noted the president. “Let us continue our efforts to reform and strengthen global institutions that support peace, security, sustainable development, and financial stability.”

    What UN secretary general says?

    “I called for this summit to consider deep reforms to make global institutions more legitimate, fair and effective, based on the values of the UN Charter,” said UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres at the meeting. “I called for this summit because 21st century challenges require 21st century solutions: frameworks that are networked and inclusive; and that draw on the expertise of all of humanity … our world is heading off the rails — and we need tough decisions to get back on track.”

    Conflicts are raging and multiplying, from the Middle East to Ukraine and Sudan, with no end in sight, he said, adding that the world’s collective security system is threatened by geopolitical divides, nuclear posturing, and the development of new weapons and theaters of war, while resources that could bring opportunities and hope are invested in death and destruction.

    “In short, our multilateral tools and institutions are unable to respond effectively to today’s political, economic, environmental and technological challenges. And tomorrow’s will be even more difficult and even more dangerous,” noted the secretary general, stressing that things are changing fast but the world’s peace and security tools and institutions, as well as its global financial architecture, reflect a bygone era.

    Technology, geopolitics and globalization have transformed power relations and the world is going through a time of turbulence and a period of transition, he addressed the meeting. With the adoption of the Pact for the Future, the Global Digital Compact and the Declaration on Future Generations, pathways are opened to new possibilities and opportunities — a breakthrough on peace and security reforms to make the Security Council more reflective of today’s world is promised.

    These three landmark agreements are a step-change toward more effective, inclusive, networked multilateralism, said Guterres, noting that their implementation will prioritize dialogue and negotiation, end the wars tearing the world apart, and reform the composition and working methods of the Security Council. “To rebuild trust, we must start with the present and look to the future. People everywhere are hoping for a future of peace, dignity, and prosperity.”

    What Summit of the Future Means?

    In 2020, the United Nations turned 75 and marked the occasion by starting a global conversation about hopes and fears for the future. This was the beginning of a process that would eventually lead, four years later, to the convening of the Summit of the Future, a major event this September, just before the annual high-level debate of the General Assembly.

    The summit was conceived at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when there was a perception at the UN that countries and people pulled apart instead of cooperating to face this global threat.

    “We were really confronted with the gap between the aspirations of our founders, which we were trying to celebrate at the 75th anniversary, and the reality of the world as it is today,” said Michele Griffin, the policy director of the summit.

    UN member states tasked Guterres to come up with a vision for the future of global cooperation. His answer to their call was “Our Common Agenda,” a landmark report with recommendations on renewed global cooperation to address a host of risks and threats, and a proposal to hold a forward-looking summit in 2024.

    The event consists of sessions and plenaries based around five main tracks — sustainable development and financing; peace and security; a digital future for all; youth and future generations; and global governance — and other topics that cut across all of the work of the UN, including human rights, gender equality and the climate crisis.

    The immediate outcome is the finalized version of the Pact for the Future, with the Global Digital Compact and the Declaration for Future Generations as annexes, all of which were adopted by member states during the summit on Sunday.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Annual film, cultural exchange event kicks off in Moscow

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    The annual launch of “UPanda Cinema” and the BRICS film and cultural exchange event kicked off in Moscow on Sunday with the participation of over 900 representatives from media organizations, film institutions, and youth groups of BRICS countries.

    Organizers of the event said that cooperation in the film and television sector is an essential part of cultural exchanges and mutual learning, expressing hope that this event will allow people in BRICS countries to better understand China’s development in the new era.

    They affirmed their commitment to carrying forward the BRICS spirit of openness, inclusiveness, and win-win cooperation, fostering cultural exchanges and cooperation, and painting a picture of shared friendship.

    Andrey Denisov, first deputy minister of foreign affairs of the Russian Federation, said that thanks to the joint efforts of the Russian and Chinese media, “UPanda Cinema” was successfully launched in Russia, with Chinese programs welcomed by Russian viewers and praised by Russian critics.

    Galina Kulikova, first deputy chairperson of the Russia-China Friendship Association and recipient of China’s Friendship Medal, said that the event will provide more Russian audiences with opportunities to learn about China.

    The event will not only bring exciting television programs to Russian audiences but also convey the friendship and warmth of the Chinese people to them, she said, expressing hope that through this “BRICS Broadcasting Season,” cultural exchanges and cooperation among BRICS countries will become closer and more cohesive.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Activist shareholders are becoming more efficient, more sophisticated and better resourced

    Source: Allens Insights

    How companies can stay ahead of evolving campaigns 6 min read

    Shareholder activists are increasingly using novel tactics to influence the strategies of companies. While campaigns continue to focus on the full spectrum of key issues like M&A activity, business operations and strategy, regulatory concerns and ESG-related matters, we are seeing a change in the type of shareholder launching campaigns. Large institutional players and funds (including super funds) are moving into this space, resulting in better-funded and more sophisticated campaigns. Activists are also increasingly willing to take campaigns public without first engaging with the company, meaning they are less predictable.

    This escalation underscores the need for companies and boards to understand the interests of their stakeholders and anticipate potential activist agendas, and to take a proactive approach to managing those issues in order to be prepared and minimise the risk of becoming a target of a campaign.

    In this Insight, we discuss recent shareholder activism trends in Australia, explore some of the novel tactics used by activists and discuss strategies for companies to prepare for an activist campaign.

    Key takeaways 

    • With large institutional players and funds (including super funds) becoming more active, campaigns are becoming more efficient, sophisticated and resourced.
    • There has been an increasing trend for activists to go public without prior engagement with the company, meaning an impending campaign is not always easy to identify or predict.
    • The tactics and objectives of activist shareholders are wide-ranging, with shareholders using novel tactics such as fast-paced public campaigns through online platforms and seeking access to internal company documents.
    • To mitigate against these risks and disruption to the business, companies and boards must plan and execute effective strategies that anticipate and respond to activist campaigns.

    Who is launching campaigns?

    Super funds and other large institutional investors are increasingly pursuing an active role in the oversight of their investments – which is pertinent, given super funds currently hold an interest in approximately 34% of the ASX, which is estimated to eventually increase to more than 50%.1 Further, the Australian market has seen activist investment firms, including Australian-based hedge funds, join forces to exert greater influence over company strategy. 

    Key issues driving activists

    M&A activity

    Where a prospective M&A opportunity requires shareholder approval, then by its nature, it needs to be viewed favourably by shareholders to satisfy any applicable approval thresholds. However, even where shareholder approval isn’t being sought, we are seeing a rise in shareholders using their influence to oppose or otherwise alter the terms of M&A activity, putting pressure on the company to pursue alternative strategies or alter the terms of a deal. Tactics used by shareholders to exert influence on emerging M&A transactions can range from confidential non-public engagement with the company, to (increasingly) public criticism of the deal and launching a campaign to actively oppose the relevant transaction and seek support from other shareholders. For instance, earlier this year, Pendal Group, Qantas’ largest investor, publicly voiced concerns about Qantas’ ability to meet projected earnings margins amidst plans to purchase aircraft assets worth over $3 billion. Following the widespread criticism, the company was reported to have pulled back from public presentations on the matter. Whitehaven was also targeted by Bell Rock, a hedge fund investor, as it pursued a transaction to acquire metallurgical coal assets from BHP. The public campaign opposed the proposed acquisition and use of Whitehaven funds, and subsequently targeted the company’s remuneration policies, including writing letters to Whitehaven shareholders and creating a website encouraging shareholders to take action at the upcoming AGM. It culminated in Whitehaven applying to the Panel seeking a declaration of unacceptable circumstances (see our Insight for more details on Bell Rock’s misadventure here).

    We have seen an increase in highly publicised activist campaigns that have successfully resulted in shareholders rejecting takeover bids and schemes of arrangement. Historically, shareholders opposing M&A activity were often competing bidders seeking to advance their own position. Recently, there has been an increase in campaigns by shareholders that are not competing bidders, but rather they oppose the transaction because they see the proposal as opportunistic or otherwise have different views on the longer term value of the company. Notable recent examples are AustralianSuper’s opposition to the Origin takeover and Tanarra Capital’s push for change at Bapcor.

    Business operations and strategy 

    Shareholders have a clear incentive to pursue an activist campaign against a company where, in the eyes of the activist, there are perceived strategy or governance shortcomings or an underperforming share price or asset base.

    Activists can and more frequently will look to challenge corporate strategies in the pursuit of what they perceive as better value or alignment with long-term growth objectives. In May this year, an Australian-based oil and gas producer faced shareholder dissent at its AGM and received a ‘first strike’ against its remuneration report. Shareholders had been advocating for a higher dividend payout ratio and a greater return of cash.

    Activist investment firms, in particular, are increasingly making public statements regarding their own business strategies for investee companies – for example, recommending dividends and buybacks over M&A activity and development. As mentioned earlier in this article, Bell Rock’s campaign against Whitehaven was borne from the hedge funds’ dissatisfaction with the corporate strategy to cease a buyback and deploy the capital on an M&A opportunity. Lendlease, similarly, experienced significant pressure from activist firms Tanarra Capital, Allan Gray, and HMC Capital to refocus its activities on domestic operations rather than offshore expansion.

    Regulatory concerns

    Australian companies and boards are navigating Australia’s ever-changing and complex regulatory landscape. With increasing shareholder expectations regarding a company’s legal and regulatory compliance, we are seeing a rise in shareholders advocating for changes that they believe will enhance compliance, protect a company from legal risks, and strengthen its financial health and public reputation.

    In the gambling sector, for example, non-compliance has compelled shareholders to demand changes to cultural practices and the reconfiguration of boards. Recently, the Alliance for Gambling Reform voiced its plans to target Nine Entertainment and Seven West Media from within, as shareholders, in an attempt to stop gambling advertisements. Shareholder resolutions were publicly revealed as the activism tactic of choice. Unsurprisingly, there remains a consistent push for corporate behaviour to align with regulatory best practices and investor expectations.

    Environment, social and governance considerations

    Historically dominated by individual investors and smaller single-issue activist groups, shareholder activism in the ESG space is now also characterised by the involvement of large institutional investors, with significant resources to dedicate to activist campaigns. Earlier this year, HESTA voted against the re-election of the Chair of the Santos board on the basis of climate-related factors. The activity of these types of investors is often driven by their own ESG-related targets and other commitments they have made to their investors.

    Beyond climate, we anticipate that future shareholder activism in the ESG space may be driven by nature-related considerations. Allens recently discussed the growing need for boards to exercise due care and diligence in relation to nature-related risks and opportunities following elevated investor scrutiny and agitation in this area. In particular, boards must understand the risks associated with a company’s nature-related dependencies and impacts in order to appropriately consider, manage and/or disclose a company’s nature-related matters to meet shareholder expectations.

    Developing strategies to address ESG interests of shareholders and more broadly adapting to the shift in societal expectations will be paramount. The constant advancement of tools and methodologies used to evaluate ESG successes will further drive shareholder scrutiny. M&A front-runners are progressively turning their attention towards these issues, devising innovative approaches to embed relevant ESG factors into their M&A strategies.2

    Activist tactics

    While activism can take many forms depending on the specific goals of the shareholder involved, there are some common tactics employed in the Australian market. 

    Established tactics

    The more typical activist tactics involve utilising the mechanisms available under the Corporations Act to do one or a combination of calling a meeting, proposing resolutions, distributing materials to shareholders and nominating candidates to the board, each with the purpose of placing a spotlight on an issue or advancing an agenda.

    With a spotlight on the experience of the ASX300 during the 2023-24 financial year:

    • of the 37 remuneration reports voted down by shareholders, around five appear to have been a protest vote due to shareholder concerns beyond remuneration-related issues; and
    • four companies had shareholders approve amendments to their constitution, where those amendments were proposed by shareholders and opposed by the board.

    The window for these types of activist campaigns was in the lead-up to AGM season.

    Historically, activists would generally engage with the company as a first step, before going public with a campaign in the month or two ahead of the relevant AGM, which meant companies had more lead time to prepare.

    However, we are now seeing these campaigns being launched outside that typical AGM window. Activists are also becoming more aggressive and are increasingly willing to take the campaign public without first engaging with the company, which can surprise the company and put them on the back foot.

    Emerging tactics

    The existing toolkit is being supplemented with new tactics that are coming to the fore.

    Harnessing the power of the internet and social media, shareholders are reaping the benefits of activism in a tech-savvy world. Novel online platforms are providing new and unpredictable ways for activists to join forces and launch powerful campaigns. The Alliance for Gambling Reform, mentioned earlier in this article, used online share-trading platform SIX, a trading platform that unites shareholders, to begin its campaign against gambling advertising. Similarly, the widespread reach of social media means that shareholders have more power than ever to captivate the public and influence a market. In a successful campaign against a proposed demerger in 2022, the largest shareholder of an Australian-based energy provider launched a sharp website and employed X (then Twitter) to broadcast a video that appealed to other shareholders. Companies must become comfortable with the reality that one activist could quickly and unexpectedly gain substantial online support.

    Shareholders are also seeking opportunities to obtain a company’s own documents and policies (not all of them public) and hold them to account against a particular activist agenda. This approach has seen shareholders seek preliminary discovery of documents relating to the target company’s internal risk management framework. More recently shareholders have used document inspection powers under the Corporations Act to seek to obtain the target company’s internal documents relating to its climate exposure, as well as human rights issues.

    How to prepare

    Campaigns can be launched without warning and escalate quickly. All companies should take steps to prepare, even if they aren’t anticipating being a target. To be able to be decisive and act swiftly, companies should:

    • actively monitor securities trading and share registers for any early signs of stakes being accumulated;
    • ensure public-facing documents clearly and consistently articulate the company’s strategy;
    • proactively communicate with stakeholders regarding the company’s strategies and values, particularly around points that could be open to challenge, such as operational costs, executive remuneration, ESG related performance and regulatory compliance;
    • consider the breadth of their ESG related public commitments and statements and areas that may be open to scrutiny based on gaps in practice against those commitments or trends in stakeholder activism focus areas;
    • undertake training exercises and work through scenarios with the board and senior leadership to be familiar with how a campaign could play out and potential responses; and
    • have standing appointments for financial, legal and other specialist advisers (such as communications experts) that can be called on quickly if the need arises.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government undermines public service with WFH crackdown

    Source: Green Party

    The Green Party says the Government’s retrograde move to tighten up on Work from Home arrangements is the latest in a series of blows to the Public Service.

    “This is shallow soundbite policy and a cheap shot to a public service that is being gutted by the Government,” says the Green Party Spokesperson for the Public Service, Francisco Hernandez.

    “Our public service needs to be supported so it can support our communities. Undermining our public servants at every opportunity will only lead to an erosion of the services we all rely on. 

    “We saw firsthand during the pandemic the benefit of flexible work arrangements and how they can support people to achieve a better work life balance, being beneficial to productivity and morale. 

    “This gimmick Government wants to take us back to the pre-internet days when we lacked the flexibility to adopt working arrangements that work for our workers. This Government quite clearly mistrusts and undervalues the public service. 

    “How can the Government claim this is about improving the performance of the public service when it has repeatedly punched down on our public servants? 

    “It is laughable for the Prime Minister to claim that this will be good for the Wellington CBD when his Government has cut almost 7,000 public service jobs, which has had devastating down-stream effects to the local economy. 

    “If we want to reinvigorate the heart of our cities, we need to support public and active transport, bolster our urban density and stop gutting public services, slashing jobs and cutting incomes.

    “Public servants should have the right to safe, decent and meaningful work that affords them the right balance of working from home and from the office. This should be a discussion between employers and employees, not something that is dictated by Nicola Willis.  

    “The Greens would reform our employment laws for all workers in New Zealand to enable flexible working arrangements, including working from home,” says Francisco Hernandez.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Single-vehicle traffic crash, Grove

    Source: Tasmania Police

    Single-vehicle traffic crash, Grove

    Monday, 23 September 2024 – 4:30 pm.

    Sadly, a 66-year-old man has died following a single-vehicle crash at Grove in the states South.
    Police and emergency services were called to the scene about 2.00pm this afternoon.
    Initial inquiries indicate the man, who was the sole occupant of the vehicle, has experienced a medical episode.
    Our thoughts are with the man’s family and loved ones.
    A report will be prepared for the coroner.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Nigeria: fears of disease outbreaks grow in Maiduguri following severe flooding

    Source: Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

    Maiduguri, Borno state, 23 September 2024 – Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is highly concerned about the significant risk of malaria and waterborne diseases, including cholera, following the recent flooding that has inundated vast parts of Maiduguri. in north-eastern Nigeria. MSF fears that this crisis could increase the levels of malnutrition in the area and calls for urgent additional support, especially in terms of water, sanitation, and medical care, to protect people already heavily impacted by long-term insecurity and unprecedented levels of malnutrition.

    On 10 September, heavy rain caused the Alau Dam in Borno State to overflow, leading to major floods in and around the city of Maiduguri. The deluge heavily impacted houses, markets, fields, livestock, and several health facilities. According to Borno State authorities, close to 400,000 people have been registered in 30 makeshift displacement sites.[1] Most of the sites are schools with too few latrines, and a lack of safe drinking water.

    “We are very concerned about the precarious living conditions and the potential outbreaks of cholera and malaria”, says Dr Issaley Abdel Kader MSF Head of mission in Nigeria. “The number of children affected by malaria and acute watery diarrhoea had already started to increase before the flooding, and we have seen some with clinical signs of cholera since the floods. We are afraid that the number of cases will rise without an increase in medical and humanitarian support, particularly support for water, sanitation and hygiene services.”

    Last week, MSF teams visited several displacement sites (Galtimari, Yerwa, Ali Sheriff, Vocational Enterprise Institute, Teachers Village) to assess people’s needs and start the provision of essential services such as access to water through water-trucking and water tanks, the installation and repair of latrines, and the distribution of mosquito nets. Teams are also running outpatient consultations in the sites, including mental health support, and referring critical patients to the facilities we support. Given the risks posed by malaria and cholera, MSF is also planning to expand the paediatric facility it supports by 100 beds and have begun setting up a cholera treatment centre that can be increased to a 100-bed capacity, if needed.  

    The Borno State government has announced the closure and merging of most displacement sites in the coming days. They plan to keep three main sites to accommodate people who still have no place to stay for one more week, and a mass cholera vaccination is upcoming.

    “All parties involved in the humanitarian response must continue providing assistance to the people affected by the floods as long as it will be necessary and ensure immediate and easy access to medical care for those who need it. The closure of most sites means that many will find themselves in a very vulnerable situation. For those remaining in the sites, prompt action must be taken to swiftly improve hygiene conditions, including access to latrines, safe water and mosquito nets”, says Dr. Issaley.

    Support for communities won’t just be needed at the new displacement sites. Well before the flooding, the entire population of Maiduguri was already facing huge challenges, including one of the worst malnutrition crises recorded in northeast Nigeria. In the past months, hundreds of severely malnourished children have been admitted every week into MSF’s nutritional care hospital.

    “Admissions to the nutritional facilities had just started to reduce when the flooding occurred”, says Dr. Ashok Shrirang Sankpal, deputy medical coordinator MSF Nigeria. “With markets and businesses heavily impacted, the harvest damaged and livestock washed away, there is huge concern that admissions will start to rise again.”

    This is the second time in just a few weeks’ that MSF has had to launch emergency responses linked to flooding in northern Nigeria. In August in Gummi, Zamfara state, homes and farms were destroyed and thousands left newly displaced by severe flooding. Like Maiduguri, people in this area already face significant challenges, including malnutrition, persistent insecurity and lack of access to healthcare. MSF teams have been supporting communities in Gummi over the last few weeks by delivering clean drinking water, repairing boreholes and delivering kits which include plastic sheets for temporary shelter and mosquito nets.

    [1] Nigeria: Floods – Maiduguri (MMC) and Jere Floods Flash Update 3 (18 September 2024) – Nigeria | ReliefWeb

    MSF Australia was established in 1995 and is one of 24 international MSF sections committed to delivering medical humanitarian assistance to people in crisis. In 2022, more than 120 project staff from Australia and New Zealand worked with MSF on assignment overseas. MSF delivers medical care based on need alone and operates independently of government, religion or economic influence and irrespective of race, religion or gender. For more information visit msf.org.au  

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: SNP must rethink rail fare hike

    Source: Scottish Greens

    Peak rail fares are an unfair tax on people who have no say when they need to travel for work or study.

    The SNP must reconsider its decision to bring back punishing and unfair peak rail fares, say the Scottish Greens.

    The party’s transport spokesperson, Mark Ruskell MSP, has branded it “a disaster for commuters and our climate”, urging the SNP to make off peak all day fares permanent.

    The scheme to remove peak rail fares was secured in October 2023 by the Scottish Greens as part of the party’s time in government. The SNP will be reintroducing peak fares at the end of this week.

    Mr Ruskell said: “The return of peak rail fares will be a disaster for commuters and our climate. Rail users in Scotland already pay some of the highest fares in Europe.

    “We need to reduce the number of cars on our roads if we are to hit our climate targets, but we can’t encourage people to make the switch to rail if we are making trains even more expensive.

    “Ending peak fares is something that the Scottish Greens were proud to work with campaigners and trade unions to achieve during our time in government. It has helped thousands of workers and families who have no say in when they need to travel for work or study.

    “Cheaper, greener railways have a key role to play in boosting public transport and protecting our planet. The cost of removing peak fares is a fraction of what is being spent every year on major road building projects.

    “Even at this late stage, I urge the Scottish Government to think again, and to scrap peak fares for good.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Charges – Stolen motor vehicle and pursuit – Greater Darwin Region

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    Northern Territory Police have arrested a 32-year-old male in relation to an aggravated robbery in Stuart Park earlier today.

    Around 12:00pm, police received reports that a man had allegedly threatened multiple people with an edged weapon at a business on the Stuart Highway.

    A short time later, the offender attended a business on Presley Street and allegedly threatened a staff member with an edged weapon before stealing a vehicle and fleeing the scene.

    The stolen vehicle was later reported to be driving erratically outbound on the Stuart Highway.

    General Duties and Road Policing Units located the vehicle stationary on Gunn Point Road before it drove directly at them at 150km per hour. Members were able to take evasive action to avoid a collision.

    Police then deployed additional units including Dog Operations Unit, TRG and a helicopter to form a coordinated response to locate the offender on the ground.

    The offender had abandoned the stolen vehicle and fled into nearby bushland.

    The 32-year-old was arrested in nearby bushland at Gunn Point by TRG with an edged weapon on his person and tested positive to methamphetamine. 

    He has been charged with the following:

    • 2 x Assault with intent to steal.

    • 3 x Aggravated Robbery
    • 1 x Theft
    • 2 x Recklessly endangering life
    • 1 x Driver with prohibited drug in body
    • 1 x Driver drive under influence of drugs
    • 1 x Drive manner dangerous.
    • 1 x Drive Motor vehicle unsafe to drive.
    • 1 x Cross double white lines.
    • 2 x Person cause bushfire.

    He is remanded to appear in Darwin Local Court Tuesday 24 September 2024.

    Detective Acting Senior Sergeant Trent Abbott said, “I would like to commend all the officers involved in the apprehension of this individual.

    “This man’s actions are reprehensible and could have caused serious damage or loss to life.

    “His arrest almost certainly prevented further offending.

    “We take a zero-tolerance approach to this type of behaviour, so if you conduct yourself in this way, you can expect to be prosecuted.

    “This man will be no exception.”

    MIL OSI News