Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI USA: Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate Recall: Nipro Removes MedicaLyte Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate due to Contamination

    Source: US Department of Health and Human Services – 3

    This recall involves removing devices from where they are used or sold. The FDA has identified this recall as the most serious type. This device may cause serious injury or death if you continue to use it.
    Affected Product

    MedicaLyte Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate – 45x Proportioning (BC+201)

    Unique Device Identifier (UDI)/Model: 00817411022824

    What to Do

    On June 2, Nipro sent all affected customers an updated letter recommending the following actions:

    Do not use any MedicaLyte Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate.
    Stop dispensing and distributing product and quarantine all lots.
    Isolate identified devices in possession.
    If the affected lots were further distributed, please forward the notification and report the consignees.

    Reason for Recall
    Nipro stated that they received reports of concerning visual irregularities in some product jugs. Returned units were sent to a third-party laboratory for analysis, where bacterial and fungal particles were identified.
    Risks associated with the use of contaminated dialysate includes infections, treatment disruptions, sepsis, and possible death. Potential long-term health consequences include chronic infections which may cause or contribute to organ damage and a weakened immune system. If the contaminated product is used, the hemodialysis machine will need to be disinfected following the dialysis machine manufacturer’s recommendations.
    Nipro has received reports of one serious injury and one death.
    Device Use
    Dialysate is part of a hemodialysis system that removes waste, toxins, and excess fluids from the body in patients with kidney failure. 
    Contact Information
    Customers in the U.S. with adverse reactions, quality problems, or questions about this recall should contact Nipro at Nipro4621@sedgwick.com or 1-877-546-0126.
    Unique Device Identifier (UDI)
    The unique device identifier (UDI) helps identify individual medical devices sold in the United States from distribution to use. The UDI allows for more accurate reporting, reviewing, and analyzing of adverse event reports so that devices can be identified more quickly, and as a result, problems potentially resolved more quickly.

    How do I report a problem?
    Health care professionals and consumers may report adverse reactions or quality problems they experienced using these devices to MedWatch: The FDA Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program. 

    Content current as of:
    06/13/2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: SEC Names Kurt Hohl as Chief Accountant

    Source: Securities and Exchange Commission

    The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that Kurt Hohl, with nearly 40 years of accounting and auditing experience, has been named Chief Accountant, effective July 7, 2025. Acting Chief Accountant Ryan Wolfe will return to his role as Chief Accountant in the Division of Enforcement. 

    “Kurt is an experienced accountant with deeply technical knowledge and international experience, and we are lucky he has decided to return to the SEC,” said SEC Chairman Paul S. Atkins. “This is an important role. Given that I served with Kurt previously, I know firsthand that his integrity, along with his skills, will benefit our markets and investors.”

    “I want to thank Ryan for his service as Acting Chief Accountant and am pleased that he will continue serving in the Division of Enforcement.”

    Mr. Hohl most recently founded Corallium Advisors, which helps businesses navigate the complexities of auditing, regulatory compliance, risk management, and initial public offerings. Before that, he spent 26 years as a partner at Ernst & Young (EY) in a variety of roles. His final EY role was as global deputy vice-chair of EY’s Global Assurance Professional Practice. In that role he was responsible for the operation and oversight of the technical, regulatory, risk, and quality oversight functions of EY’s global professional practice organization — a team of more than 1,400 professionals. Mr. Hohl previously served at the SEC from 1989 to 1997, rising to Associate Chief Accountant in the Division of Corporation Finance. There he authored what became the Financial Reporting Manual, a primary guide for the SEC accounting staff and practitioners in the application of the federal securities laws. He began his professional career at Deloitte Haskins & Sells.

    Mr. Hohl received a B.B.S. in accounting from James Madison University and is a certified public accountant in Virginia.

    “I’m pleased to come back to the SEC along with Chairman Atkins,” said Mr. Hohl. “This is a pivotal time for our capital markets, and I look forward to working with the dedicated public servants in the Office of the Chief Accountant to advance accounting and auditing policies that reinforce investor confidence, enhance transparency, and support innovation.”

    Mr. Wolfe has served as Acting Chief Accountant since January 2025. He concurrently has been serving as Chief Accountant of the Division of Enforcement and has previously served as Senior Associate Chief Accountant in the Office of the Chief Accountant.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: In a letter to the Senate, nearly 900 state and local elected leaders oppose extreme cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, SNAP and public services

    Source: American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Union

    The letter reads in part, “As government leaders, we understand the importance of rooting out fraud, waste and abuse to keep public services strong, but this plan fails to do that. Instead, it would rip the very fabric of our nation’s social safety net wide open to give the wealthiest people tax breaks they don’t need. Meanwhile, veterans, seniors, children, people with disabilities, and all working people will suffer.”

    We, the undersigned state and local officials, are writing to express our opposition to the reconciliation bill (H.R. 1) and ask you to protect the public services our communities depend on. By cutting Medicaid, SNAP and other critical public services, this bill threatens to destabilize state and local budgets and force deep cuts across the board that will diminish public services and hurt working families nationwide – all to give billionaires tax breaks.

    Medicaid accounts for the largest portion of federal funding to state budgets and is the largest funder of long-term care services in the U.S. Without this critical funding and due to other provisions in the bill, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates roughly 15 million people will lose their health coverage and become uninsured by 2034. The cuts outlined in H.R. 1 will also mean nursing homes, hospitals, home care and other critical health care services will disappear, leading to job losses in the health care sector. As people lose Medicaid coverage, hospitals and providers will face an estimated $48 billion in uncompensated care costs. Altogether, this will place an incredible strain on states, cities and towns and other local governments and will cost lives.

    Moreover, the bill’s proposed work requirements for Medicaid beneficiaries will impose huge costs on states, including adding compliance systems and a need for greater staffing at agencies that are already understaffed. Experience in Arkansas and Georgia shows that work requirements do not result in more people working. They actually lead to huge losses in coverage for workers due to red tape. The reality is these provisions will result in cuts and needlessly harm our country’s most vulnerable populations who need Medicaid to live.

    The bill also shifts $300 billion in costs to states and local governments for both the benefits and administrative costs of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). This provision threatens the food security of more than 40 million Americans, including one in five children. There will be no way for state governments to cover all these new expenses without making cuts to other critical services like our schools or roads.

    The bill also automatically triggers historic cuts to Medicare, which will spell disaster for seniors. As critical health care services are ripped away from seniors, their families will struggle to care for them. That will place huge costs on our workforce, our economies and our communities.

    Taken together, the cuts that are included in H.R. 1 will place an impossible burden on states. Forced to make up for the massive shortfalls in federal funding, every sector of our state and local economies will suffer, from health care to higher education, public safety to public schools. Services that our communities rely on will be slashed; and the people who provide them may be furloughed or laid off.

    As government leaders, we understand the importance of rooting out fraud, waste and abuse to keep public services strong, but this plan fails to do that. Instead, it would rip the very fabric of our nation’s social safety net wide open to give the wealthiest people tax breaks they don’t need. Meanwhile, veterans, seniors, children, people with disabilities and all working people will suffer.

    America’s state and local elected leaders urge you to vote against this damaging and reckless plan. The health, safety, and well-being of our communities are too important.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Last Month in the Field – May

    Source: Frontex

    The month of May marked a series of important developments for Frontex, the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, reflecting its ongoing commitment to security, innovation, and cooperation at Europe’s borders. From participating in the EU’s flagship space event to piloting advanced surveillance technology and supporting thousands of voluntary returns, the Agency continued to deliver concrete results across its key missions.  

    Frontex took part in EU Space Days, held this year in Gdańsk, Poland. The event brought together more than 700 participants, including senior EU officials, policy experts, industry leaders, and innovators from across Europe. As the EU’s leading forum for space policy and innovation, the event focused on advancing the strategic use of space technologies to meet Europe’s security, economic, and environmental goals. 

    Frontex highlighted how satellite-based technologies are being used to strengthen border management and enhance situational awareness. Satellite-based navigation and communication systems play a critical role in tracking and operating assets—on land, at sea, and in the air—including in remote and difficult-to-access areas, where staying connected is essential.  

    The Agency currently provides 17 Copernicus-based products to EU Member States, supporting the monitoring of cross-border crime, irregular migration, and other key risks. These services enable national authorities to respond more effectively and in a timely manner. 

    Frontex is also advancing the integration of data from multiple sensors, a process known as data fusion, to build a more robust surveillance architecture. This supports early detection of threats and improved coordination among operational partners. Participation in EU Space Days underscored the growing importance of innovation in strengthening border security and showcased Frontex’s role in delivering cutting-edge, technology-driven solutions. 

    On 26 May, Frontex and the Bulgarian Border Police launched a new pilot project testing the use of long-endurance tactical drones for aerial surveillance of external borders. The initiative is part of Frontex’s broader strategy to operationalise next-generation European Border Surveillance capabilities. 

    The drones are equipped with advanced sensors and communication systems, offering real-time surveillance that significantly enhances situational awareness. The project aims to evaluate the drones’ operational performance, reliability, and cost-effectiveness while reducing the logistical burden on ground teams. “This is not just about seeing more—it’s about seeing smarter,” said Hans Leijtens, Executive Director of Frontex. “By working together with Bulgaria and leading industry partners, we are taking concrete steps to future-proof European border security.” 

    The pilot involves three contracted companies—Global SAT, Shield AI, and DAT CON—which will deliver aerial surveillance services under a company-owned, company-operated model. The drones will support the detection of irregular border crossings and cross-border crimes, helping national authorities act quickly and effectively. A live demonstration of the new technology will take place in Burgas, Bulgaria, on 4 and 5 June 2025, bringing together representatives from EU Member States, EU agencies, and partner countries to observe the system in action and discuss its future potential. 

    Since March, Frontex has facilitated the voluntary return of more than 1,000 Syrian nationals from 14 EU Member States, following the political transition in Syria after the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024. This development has led many displaced Syrians to seek a return to their home country after years of conflict. 

    Frontex plays a critical role in supporting Member States by ensuring that all returnees are fully informed of their rights and the voluntary nature of their decision. Each return is carried out in line with EU legislation and international standards for the protection of fundamental rights. 

    “Returning home is a deeply human aspiration,” said Executive Director Hans Leijtens. “For many, it means reuniting with loved ones and rebuilding lives. We are proud to support this process in full respect of dignity and choice.” These returns are part of the EU’s broader commitment to humane and voluntary repatriation. Frontex also assists in pre-return counselling, coordination, and soon, reintegration support through an expanded European Reintegration Programme (EURP), now including Syria.

    In a milestone for Frontex operations, one of the Agency’s surveillance aircraft flew for the first time directly from a non-EU country. The flight took off from Tirana International Airport in Albania and covered both Joint Operations in Albania and Montenegro during a single mission. Until now, Frontex aircraft had only operated from within EU territory. This development marks a new chapter in border cooperation, enabling earlier detection of irregular migration, better prevention of cross-border crime, and improved coordination of Search and Rescue operations. Real-time images captured by the aircraft are shared with national authorities in Albania and Montenegro, as well as with Frontex Headquarters in Warsaw, allowing for rapid and informed decision-making. 

    Frontex participated in the Barracuda 2025 exercise in Sicily, a joint maritime training operation led by the Italian Coast Guard and the Armed Forces of Malta. The exercise covered critical areas including search and rescue, maritime monitoring, environmental protection, and accident response. 

    Supported by the European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA) and the European Fisheries Control Agency (EFCA), the training was a strong demonstration of cross-border cooperation and operational readiness. Frontex teams contributed operational knowledge and helped ensure seamless coordination across participating agencies. Exercises like Barracuda strengthen Europe’s collective ability to protect lives at sea and respond swiftly to maritime emergencies.

    This month also saw other important milestones: 

    • In Leixões, Portugal, the deployment of an Advanced Level Document Officer (ALDO) helped strengthen national capacity in detecting document fraud, thanks to close cooperation between Frontex and Portuguese authorities. 
    • In Montenegro, a joint operation led to the seizure of 200 kilograms of illegal cut tobacco. With the support of vigilant Frontex officers and the swift action of Montenegrin authorities, this operation highlighted the effectiveness of cross-border cooperation in combatting smuggling. 

    May 2025 demonstrated the full scope of Frontex’s mission: leveraging innovation, supporting Member States, and strengthening cooperation across borders. With continued investments in technology, partnerships, and people, the Agency remains committed to helping build a secure and well-managed European border system. Frontex will continue to work side by side with EU Member States and partners—on land, at sea, and now even from space—to keep Europe’s borders strong, secure, and future-ready.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Oxford businesses to receive goodwill payments for Botley Road disruption

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Oxford businesses to receive goodwill payments for Botley Road disruption

    Network Rail will write to the affected local businesses that qualify to receive a share of up to £850,000 this week.

    Credit: Network Rail

    • government confirms up to £850,000 in payments to Oxfordshire businesses impacted by Network Rail disruption
    • some small, local businesses most impacted by delayed works may be eligible to receive one-off, goodwill payments to acknowledge disruption caused
    • Rail Minister, Lord Hendy, visits site to see progress on the Botley Road works – on track to be fully completed next summer 

    Some small businesses in Oxford most affected by works at Botley Road station may be eligible to receive goodwill payments, following the government today (13 June 2025) confirming up to £850,000 of Network Rail funding to acknowledge the local disruption.   The funding was confirmed today as the Rail Minister, Lord Hendy, visited the site to see Network Rail’s progress on the major improvements to the city’s railway station and Botley Road as part of the Oxford Station Enhancements Project.  

    The one-off goodwill payments are being offered in recognition of the disruption resulting from delays to the scheme, which businesses can apply to Network Rail for.

    Network Rail will write to the affected businesses this week who qualify for this financial support and a process is being developed to take discussions further.

    However, following a reset of the project in January, progress has been made and Network Rail are on track to deliver the new cycle and walkway in August 2025 and will fully reopen Botley Road in August 2026. 

    Rail Minister, Lord Hendy, said: 

    I’m pleased that Network Rail can now offer payments to those eligible small, local businesses affected and while it can’t undo all the hardship businesses have faced, it recognises the trouble the delays have caused. 

    I’m glad the project is now on track. I will continue to hold Network Rail to account and engage with the local community.  

    I look forward to the scheme being completed, so Oxford can benefit from more frequent and accessible transport links to boost growth in this bustling city.

    Following delays owing to the discovery of a large Victorian arch under Botley Road and difficulties moving water pipes, Network Rail launched a new plan to keep the project moving forward early this year.  

    Since the reset, the project has hit key milestones, including the early completion of a new clean water pipe by Thames Water. The next big step is to divert the sewer system, which is on track to finish later this year. 

    Marcus Jones, Network Rail’s Western Route Director, said: 

    We know the delays to this project have been frustrating, and we’re sorry for the disruption they’ve caused. The good news is that the project is now firmly back on track, and we’re making strong progress. We’re committed to keeping the community informed as we deliver a safer, more accessible Oxford station for everyone.

    Network Rail has been keeping the community informed through monthly public events and business workshops, offering updates and support. New banners, posters and digital screens have also been put up around the station and Botley Road to keep everyone updated and remind people that local businesses are open as usual. The free Botley Flyer bus service now runs 7 days a week, helping people get to the city centre and extra security measures have been put in place to keep pedestrians safe. 

    Additional support includes new disabled drop-off bays, an audio guide map for easier navigation and improved lighting and CCTV around the station. 

    Network Rail will set out the process for applying in the coming weeks.

    Rail media enquiries

    Media enquiries 0300 7777878

    Switchboard 0300 330 3000

    Updates to this page

    Published 13 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Xi Jinping Calls for Efforts to Build a Strong Country on 120th Anniversary of Comrade Chen Yun’s Birthday

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    BEIJING, June 13 (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday called on people to learn from Comrade Chen Yun, carry forward and glorify his legacy, and work tirelessly to build China into a powerful country.

    Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, delivered a speech at a symposium held at the Great Hall of the People to mark the 120th anniversary of Comrade Chen Yun’s birth.

    Chen Yun, born in 1905, joined the CPC in 1925. He was recognized as a great proletarian revolutionary and political figure, and one of the pioneers of China’s socialist economy. According to Xi Jinping, he was an important member of both the first-generation leading group of the CPC Central Committee with Comrade Mao Zedong at its core and the second-generation leading group of the CPC Central Committee with Comrade Deng Xiaoping at its core. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Office of the Provost Honors Two Members of the UConn Law Community

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Two outstanding members of the UConn Law community received prestigious honors from the provost at the end of the 2024–2025 academic year. The Provost’s Awards for Excellence in Community-Engaged Scholarship (PAECES) recognize the outstanding contributions of faculty, staff, students, teams, and community partners who collaboratively address critical societal challenges through the creative and reciprocal exchange of knowledge and resources.

    Jon Bauer, Clinical Professor of Law, Richard D. Tulisano’69 Scholar in Human Rights, and director of the School of Law’s Asylum and Human Rights Clinic received the Distinguished Faculty Instructor Award. Tanya Johnson, Research and Instructional Services Librarian, received the Emerging Staff Award.

    Distinguished Faculty Instructor Award: Jon Bauer

    Jon Bauer has spent more than two decades championing the rights of individuals fleeing persecution while transforming the lives of the students he mentors.

    Since co-founding the Asylum and Human Rights Clinic in 2002, Professor Bauer has led a service-learning program that immerses law students in every aspect of asylum representation. His students have handled 185 asylum cases, securing legal protection for their clients in over 90% of the cases, a grant rate more than twice the national average. These victories have enabled more than 300 clients and members of their families from across the globe to rebuild their lives in safety and dignity.

    “With unwavering dedication and visionary leadership, Professor Jon Bauer has built a legacy of advocacy and education that reaches far beyond the classroom,” says Dean Eboni S. Nelson. “His work through the Asylum and Human Rights Clinic has not only safeguarded the lives of hundreds but also empowered students to lead with empathy, skill, and purpose in the pursuit of justice.”

    The clinic offers a 14-credit, year-long clinical experience where students take primary responsibility for client representation, including fact investigation, legal research, brief writing, and appearing at hearings before the Immigration Court or the U.S. Asylum Office. Clients represented through the clinic have fled persecution based on political beliefs, religion, gender, race, ethnicity, and sexual orientation. Clinic alumni have served in the U.S. Departments of Justice, State, and Homeland Security, as well as in public interest law, private firms, and judicial clerkships.

    Beyond the law school, Professor Bauer is an active leader in the community. His advocacy and work on boards spans the Connecticut Fair Housing Center, Connecticut Legal Services, the Hartford Immigration Court’s Pro Bono Committee, and immigrant rights coalitions. In 2019, the U.S. Attorney’s Office honored him with its Civil Rights Enforcement Award for decades-long advocacy to eliminate discriminatory mental health inquiries from the bar admissions process.

    Emerging Staff Award: Tanya Johnson

    Through visionary leadership and a commitment to equity, Research and Instructional Services Librarian Tanya Johnson has worked to expand access to justice in housing and to reimagine legal education.

    Johnson envisioned and now leads the UConn Law Library Fair Rent Commission Project. She identified a significant challenge in response to a 2022 Connecticut law mandating municipalities to create Fair Rent Commissions (FRCs) to address tenant complaints about excessive rent increases: the lack of public access to FRC documentation and decisions. These materials were inconsistent or unavailable, creating barriers for tenants, attorneys, and advocates navigating the FRC process.

    Her work created a publicly accessible repository within the Connecticut Digital Archive (CTDA), which offers access to meeting agendas, ordinances, and commission decisions. Johnson is developing a comprehensive research guide and a detailed index of decisions, allowing users to evaluate trends, understand how municipalities interpret the law, and better prepare for hearings.

    “Tanya Johnson brings vision, innovation, and deep compassion to every facet of her work,” says Dean Nelson. “From transforming access to justice through groundbreaking digital archiving to reimagining legal education with creativity and care, she empowers students, strengthens communities, and reshapes the legal landscape with purpose and integrity.”

    Johnson’s impact extends into the classroom, where she incorporates active learning and gamification to enhance legal research instruction. She is co-authoring a book on using games in legal education to make complex legal concepts more accessible and inclusive.

    Her commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, accessibility, and justice (DEIAJ) is evident in her work with the DEIAJ Collection at the Law Library and student organizations. One of her most powerful contributions to these efforts was her 2023 article, “An Autoethnographic Exploration of Fatness in Law Librarianship,” which sparked meaningful conversations about representation, identity, and inclusion in the legal and academic communities.

    Through courses like Diversity & Inclusion in the Legal Profession and Research for Social Justice, she prepares students to engage critically and compassionately with the legal system. Her work ensures that legal education at UConn is rigorous and responsive to the real-world issues that students—and their future clients—will face.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Stein Takes Action on Several Bills

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: Governor Stein Takes Action on Several Bills

    Governor Stein Takes Action on Several Bills
    lsaito

    Raleigh, NC

    Today Governor Josh Stein signed six bills into law.

    Governor Stein made the following statement on his signing of House Bill 506: 2025 State Investment Modernization Act: 

    “This bill puts North Carolina in line with the rest of the nation and allows us to make responsible decisions investing our state employees’ hard-earned pensions. I applaud Treasurer Briner for his leadership in modernizing our state’s investment system.” 

    Governor Stein made the following statement on his signing of House Bill 50: LEO Special Separation Allowance Options: 

    “Our law enforcement work day and night to keep us safe, and we need more public spirited people serving to address our law enforcement staffing challenges. This law enables veteran law enforcement officers to continue serving our communities and supporting their families without suffering a financial penalty. I advocated for this idea as Attorney General to keep more experienced police on the beat, and I am proud to sign it into law as Governor.” 

    Governor Stein made the following statement on his signing of House Bill 231: Social Work Interstate Licensure Compact: 

    “Our social workers support children, families, and communities, and they are needed now more than ever. This law will expand access to care to more people by allowing social workers from certain other states to more easily transfer their licenses to North Carolina.” 

    Governor Stein also signed the following bills into law: 

    • House Bill 477:  Retirement Death Benefits Rewrite
    • Senate Bill 248: Birth Certificates for Persons Adopted
    • Senate Bill 477: DNCR Agency Bill 
    Jun 13, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: New Behavioral Health Urgent Care Respite Facility Targeted Toward Children and Adolescents to Open in Columbus County

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: New Behavioral Health Urgent Care Respite Facility Targeted Toward Children and Adolescents to Open in Columbus County

    New Behavioral Health Urgent Care Respite Facility Targeted Toward Children and Adolescents to Open in Columbus County
    kcano1

    Chadbourn, N.C.

    Credentialed media are invited to attend a ribbon cutting ceremony for the opening of a new behavioral health urgent care respite center for children and families in eastern North Carolina. In partnership with the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Life Changing Behavioral Health Services, and Trillium Health Resources, the Life Changing Behavioral Health Urgent Care respite facility will open June 17, 2025.

    A respite facility is a safe and caring environment offering temporary relief for family members or caregivers who provide constant care to loved ones.  This is a six-bed respite facility for children and adolescents with mental health issues.

    Services include:

    • Emergency crisis stays
    • Hospital preventions
    • Early release from hospitals
    • Prevention of homelessness
    • Short-term stays

    What:    Ribbon Cutting and Open House for Life Changing Behavioral Health Urgent Care center opening

    Who:    Cecilia Peers, Regional Vice President, Southern Region, Trillium Health Resources

                 Debra Farrington, Deputy Secretary for Health, NCDHHS  

                 Christie Edwards, Chief Operating Officer, Trillium Health Resources

                 Shirley Smith, Director, Life Changing Behavioral Health

                 Jerome Chestnut, Town Manager, Fairmont

                 Jason Robinson, Town Manager, Chadbourn

                 Dr. James Pridgen, Medical Director/Owner, Whiteville Family Practice

                 Phyllis Chavis, Consultant/State Licensing Investigator, Retired

                 Phillip Britt, Mayor, Chadbourn

    When:  Tuesday, June 17

                 10-11 a.m.

    Where:  Life Changing Behavioral Health

                 115 Collins St. 

                 Chadbourn, NC 28431

    Media: Credentialed media interested in attending should RSVP to news@dhhs.nc.gov 

    Jun 13, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Small Capital, Big Profits – Double Your Deposit, 100x Leverage, No KYC on BexBack

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SINGAPORE, June 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — As Bitcoin recently broke the $100,000 barrier and established a solid position above it, many analysts are confirming that the long-awaited crypto bull market has officially returned. With heightened market volatility on the horizon, savvy investors are seeking the best tools to maximize their profits. BexBack, a leading crypto futures platform, is stepping up to the challenge by offering 100x leverage, no KYC, and a 100% deposit bonus to help traders make the most of this bullish market phase.

    How Can Smaller Capital Lead to Larger Profits? The Power of 100x Leverage

    In a volatile market like this, where every price movement counts, 100x leverage allows you to amplify your potential profits exponentially with a relatively small amount of capital. Here’s how it works:

    • Maximized Trading Power: Leverage allows you to open positions much larger than your initial deposit. For example, with 1 BTC at $100,000 and 100x leverage, you can control 100 BTC.
    • Small Price Movements, Big Profits: If Bitcoin moves from $100,000 to $110,000, a 100x leveraged position could yield a 1000% return, turning a small change in price into a significant profit.
    • Low Capital, High Return: Whether you’re new to trading or a seasoned investor, leverage gives you the ability to control much larger positions, amplifying your potential gains, all with a smaller initial deposit.

    However, with leverage comes responsibility. While high leverage can lead to impressive returns, it also magnifies risks, so it’s important to manage positions carefully.

    What Is the Double Deposit Bonus and How Does It Work?

    To further enhance trading opportunities, BexBack is offering a 100% deposit bonus to all users. This means if you deposit funds into your BexBack account, you’ll receive an additional bonus of equal value to your deposit.

    For example, if you deposit 2 BTC, you will receive an additional 2 BTC as a bonus, effectively doubling your available trading funds. While the bonus itself cannot be withdrawn directly, it can be used as margin, allowing you to control larger positions and making liquidation more difficult. Moreover, any profits earned from trading with the bonus can be fully withdrawn.

    The bonus acts as an extra margin, helping you manage trades in a volatile market. It’s an excellent way to start trading with more capital, increasing your chances of success without taking on more risk than you’re comfortable with.

    Why Choose BexBack for Crypto Futures Trading?

    BexBack stands out for several reasons that make it an ideal platform for crypto futures trading:

    • 100x Leverage: Maximize your potential profits with up to 100x leverage, a powerful tool to amplify your trading capital.
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    • Zero Slippage and Spread: BexBack offers zero spread, meaning you get the best price execution for your trades, without slippage.
    • Global Access and 24/7 Support: BexBack is available to users in various countries, including the US, Canada, and Europe, offering round-the-clock support.
    • Demo Account: A great feature for beginners, BexBack offers a demo account with virtual funds, allowing new users to practice risk-free trading.
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    • High Liquidity: BexBack ensures a seamless trading experience with high liquidity across all major trading pairs.

    About BexBack

    Founded in Singapore, BexBack is a cutting-edge cryptocurrency derivatives platform offering futures contracts on over 50 digital assets, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, Cardano, and XRP. BexBack is licensed under the US MSB (Money Services Business) regulations and is trusted by more than 500,000 global traders. With no deposit fees, no KYC, and a user-friendly interface, BexBack is designed to offer traders flexibility, security, and a seamless trading experience.

    Take Action Now—Don’t Miss the Opportunity to Maximize Your Crypto Profits

    The crypto bull market is in full force, and BexBack is here to help you capture every opportunity. With 100x leverage, a 100% deposit bonus, and no KYC, there has never been a better time to trade.

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    Website: www.bexback.com

    Contact: business@bexback.com

    Contact:
    Amanda
    business@bexback.com

    Disclaimer: This content is provided by BexBack . The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. We do not guarantee any claims, statements, or promises made in this article. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice.Investing in crypto and mining-related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone, and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent advice if necessary. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector—including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining—complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed.Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility. Globenewswire does not endorse any content on this page.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We assume no responsibility for any inaccuracies, errors, or omissions. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/1900eecf-82b0-4cd7-9ad8-4180542964cf

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0867c8a1-32a4-4d9a-a4ce-2331bae08c1c

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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: MEXC Launches Golden Era Showdown Mid-Year Trading Event with a 10 Million USDT Prize Pool

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, June 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — MEXC, a leading global cryptocurrency exchange, today announced the launch of its most ambitious mid-year trading event, the Golden Era Showdown. The three-week event offers participants the opportunity to win from a prize pool worth up to 10 million USDT, including real gold bars and Bitcoin rewards.

    Golden Era Showdown: Multiple Ways to Win Big

    The Golden Era Showdown features a dynamic prize pool structure where increased participation directly benefits all traders. The more participants who join, the bigger the prize pool grows across six exciting tiers, with early participation helping unlock maximum rewards for everyone involved. Participation is free and requires logging into MEXC, clicking the “Register Now” button on the event page, then accumulating valid futures trading volume to earn scratch-offs, spins, and lottery tickets.

    Event Timeline

    Early Bird Registration: June 13, 2025, 16:00 (UTC) – June 17, 2025, 15:55 (UTC)
    Official Registration: June 13, 2025, 16:00 (UTC) – July 4, 2025, 08:00 (UTC)
    Main Event: June 13, 2025, 16:00 (UTC) – July 4, 2025, 08:00 (UTC)
    Lucky Draw: June 13, 2025, 16:00 (UTC) – July 5, 2025, 08:00 (UTC)

    Early Bird Rewards

    The first 2,000 users who register during Early Bird and complete at least 50,000 USDT in futures trading volume will share 40,000 USDT in trading fee vouchers on a first-come, first-served basis.

    Daily Scratch-Off: Guaranteed Wins from 60% of the Grand Prize Pool

    Every 50,000 USDT in daily futures trading volume earns one scratch-off card, with a maximum of five cards daily. Cards offer futures bonuses up to 2,025 USDT from 60% of the grand prize pool and can be saved until the lucky draw period ends.

    Weekly Spin Wheel: Guaranteed Wins from 25% of the Grand Prize Pool

    Each 2 million USDT in weekly futures trading volume grants one spin chance, with up to five spins weekly. This system distributes 25% of the grand prize pool through random bonuses while supplies last, with spin chances saveable until the draw period concludes.

    Ultimate Lottery: Gold Bar & BTC Giveaway

    Accumulating 10 million USDT in valid futures trading volume generates lottery tickets with no earning limits. Prizes include luxury gold bars worth 350,000 USDT, Bitcoin, and bonuses. Winners are determined through Bitcoin blockchain hash methodology, ensuring complete transparency with independently verifiable results.

    MEXC continues to demonstrate its commitment to providing innovative trading experiences that deliver genuine value to its global user base. Through transparent reward mechanisms and substantial incentives, the exchange creates opportunities for traders to maximize their potential returns. Visit the official Golden Era Showdown event page to register and discover complete participation details.

    About MEXC
    Founded in 2018, MEXC is committed to being “Your Easiest Way to Crypto.” Serving over 40 million users across 170+ countries, MEXC is known for its broad selection of trending tokens, daily airdrop opportunities, and low trading fees. Our user-friendly platform is designed to support both new traders and experienced investors, offering secure and efficient access to digital assets. MEXC prioritizes simplicity and innovation, making crypto trading more accessible and rewarding.
    MEXC Official WebsiteXTelegramHow to Sign Up on MEXC

    Source

    Contact:
    Lucia Hu
    lucia.hu@mexc.com

    Disclaimer: This is a paid post and is provided by MEXC. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. We do not guarantee any claims, statements, or promises made in this article. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice.Investing in crypto and mining-related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone, and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent advice if necessary. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector—including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining—complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed.Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility. Globenewswire does not endorse any content on this page.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We assume no responsibility for any inaccuracies, errors, or omissions. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/516cc52e-ccd1-45ac-8b16-a51335398314

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Channel Factory Announces Latest Move to Elevate North American Executive Leadership Team

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, June 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Channel Factory, the global brand suitability and contextual advertising company, today announced the promotion of Nico Greco as the company’s Chief Revenue Officer (CRO), North America. Most recently serving as SVP, Head of Sales at Channel Factory, Greco’s appointment to the North American C-Suite follows a series of strategic moves that enhance Channel Factory’s growth and innovation. In his new role, Greco will report to Kevin Gentzel, newly appointed President, Americas.

    Earlier this year, Channel Factory announced a significant investment from Truelink Capital, as well as the addition of Gentzel to its leadership group. Both these moves and today’s announcement demonstrate a commitment to advancing the company’s ongoing growth.

    Greco, a sales veteran in the digital advertising industry with over 14 years of experience, has extensive experience working with both global agencies and technology companies. Since joining Channel Factory in early 2021, Greco has played a pivotal role in the company’s sales and expansion across the country, most recently serving as SVP, Head of Sales. Before joining Channel Factory, Greco worked as a Director at Amobee, where he focused on the company’s strategic agency partnerships.

    “From an outsider’s perspective, Nico Greco was someone whose career I followed with great interest. He’s been a valuable spokesperson for the company, and his proven track record for driving revenue growth and building strategic partnerships speaks for itself,” said Kevin Gentzel, recently appointed President, Americas at Channel Factory. “When I joined the company, Nico Greco was someone I couldn’t wait to start working with. With Nico as our new CRO for North America, we’re taking our plans for growth and expansion and strapping a rocket to our backs. It’s an exciting time for us and the right time in our industry for a move like this.”

    “Since day one, Channel Factory has demonstrated an incredible level of purpose-driven growth, innovation, and client satisfaction. It’s rare to work for a company that is doing work that you can truly believe in, and I’m eager to take on a larger role to expand on that vision and mission across North America,” said Greco.

    About Channel Factory
    Channel Factory is a global technology and data company that optimizes business performance and enhances brand reputation through ethical and effective contextual targeting. Utilizing proprietary AI and brand suitability technologically, Channel Factory ensures ads are placed on brand-safe, contextually relevant content across YouTube, CTV platforms, and social media, including Meta and TikTok. Through its conscious media planning, Channel Factory is committed to promoting sustainability, diversity, and positive content, helping brands achieve their goals while fostering a healthier digital ecosystem.

    Channel Factory has a presence in 31 countries across the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and ANZ, providing advertisers with IAB standard category lists and customized content options in 49+ languages. For more information about Channel Factory, please visit http://www.channelfactory.com.

    Media Contact:
    Andrew Krepow
    andrew@broadsheetcomms.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: Why Israel’s air strikes signal a shifting relationship with the US and a weakening Iran

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Natasha Lindstaedt, Professor in the Department of Government, University of Essex

    The Middle East is undergoing a realignment of power. With Israel’s attack on Iranian nuclear sites and the assassination of at least two of Iran’s senior security officials, Benjamin Netanyahu is showing his willingness to go it alone and ignore pressure from the Trump administration.

    Though Donald Trump sought diplomatic solutions to the growing tensions between Israel and Iran, it appears that the US president, despite his previously strong relationship with the Israeli leader, was unable to restrain Netanyahu.

    The timing of the strikes is important. The Trump administration probably knew that they could not prevent Israel from striking Iran, but they did think they could pressure Israel to hold off launching an attack until after the US had solidified a new nuclear deal with Iran, talks for which were scheduled for June 15.

    Just hours before the air strikes, Trump said: “As long as I think there will be an agreement [with Iran], I don’t want them going in.”


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    Experts had been divided in the past, over how much leverage the US held over Israel.

    Trump, following months of groundwork laid by the Joe Biden administration, managed to secure a ceasefire deal with Israel in January. But as part of the negotiation, Netanyahu succeeded in reversing sanctions on settlers in the West Bank, giving him free rein to act there. Additionally, the US also lifted its freeze on the transfer of 2,000-pound bombs to Israel, another concession that benefited Israel.

    The US also proved unwilling or incapable of stopping the humanitarian crisis that has unfolded in Gaza. Washington also appeared powerless to stop Israel’s pounding of Lebanon and its efforts to eradicate the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah.

    The US has become more of a spectator than a powerful regional actor. And sources suggest that Washington was not informed in advance of Israel’s airstrike that killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in October 2024, a sign of Israel’s growing willingness to act without US approval.




    Read more:
    Lethal humanitarianism: why violence at Gaza aid centres should not come as a surprise


    Indeed, the expansion of the war in Gaza to Lebanon was a pivotal moment in the region. With significant Israeli public support to stop Hezbollah (which had been launching rockets towards northern Israel), Israel pounded southern Beirut with airstrikes, killing several high-ranking Hezbollah officials.

    In the aftermath, Hezbollah was unable to replenish itself with younger recruits (it had relied on its charismatic leadership to recruit in the past), and the losses caused Hezbollah’s organisation to implode. By November 2024, Hezbollah agreed to a ceasefire brokered by the US.

    Israel announces strikes on Iran.

    Iran’s weaker role

    Hezbollah’s near military and organisational collapse has been a big blow for Iran’s regional power. Hezbollah was at one point the most heavily armed violent non-state actor in the world. It had an army of around 50,000 men and experts speculated that it had as many as 200,000 rockets and missiles of various ranges in its arsenal.

    With the assassination of so many high-level officials in Hezbollah and Hamas, both of which Iran has bankrolled and used in its proxy conflicts with Israel, Iran has been severely weakened. As Iran is in the middle of an economic crisis, it no longer has the financial means to revive these traditional allies.




    Read more:
    Trump’s Middle East pivot aims to counter China’s rising influence


    For decades Iran had tried to gain strategic depth in the Middle East, with the US estimating that Iran spent more than US$16 billion to prop up Bashar al-Assad in Syria from 2012 to 2020. Additionally, with the fall of Assad, Syria can no longer serve as a transit corridor or logistical hub for shipments of arms from Iran to Hezbollah.

    With Turkey’s support for the various armed militias that ousted the Assad regime, it is Ankara, and not Tehran, that sees itself as the big winner in the aftermath of the Syrian civil war.

    US plans for Middle East threatened

    The US, meanwhile, is seeing its influence in the Middle East waning. And Trump’s plan for extending trade in the region, particularly in the Gulf, may also be undermined by the rising regional tension.

    The US had been due to send Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff to this weekend’s talks in Oman, with the aim of getting Tehran to agree to stop enriching uranium (which is crucial for creating nuclear weapons) in exchange for lifting economic sanctions. Trump had said that he did not want Israel to go ahead with its attack on Iran, and yet these calls went unheeded.

    Some US officials were optimistic that the escalating tensions taking place between Iran and Israel were mere tactics of negotiation amid the important nuclear talks. But, though the US was clearly warned about the attack, Washington was not able to deter Israel.

    Though the US still supplies Israel with US$3.8 billion (£2.8 billion) worth of arms per year, it has had little success in exercising much leverage recently. It remains to be seen if domestic political pressure could halt this US funding.

    International relations experts should not be surprised that Israel went on the offensive in Iran. Israel’s attacks on Hezbollah in 2024 were just a precursor to the bigger prize of bringing Iran to its knees.

    For Netanyahu, this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reshape the Middle East and shift the regional power dynamics, and he appears to care little about what the US, or the rest of the world, thinks of how he does it.

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

    ref. Why Israel’s air strikes signal a shifting relationship with the US and a weakening Iran – https://theconversation.com/why-israels-air-strikes-signal-a-shifting-relationship-with-the-us-and-a-weakening-iran-258926

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Kenya’s brutal police have been exposed again – why the system fails people

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Douglas Lucas Kivoi, Principal Policy Analyst, Governance Department, The Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA)

    The recent killing in Kenya of a young man in police detention highlights a string of systemic failures to hold the country’s security officers accountable for their actions. Despite public outrage and protests, Kenyan police officers continue to use inhumane, brutal and sometimes fatal methods with little consequence. Douglas Lucas Kivoi, who has studied policing and police reform in Kenya, unpacks the situation.

    Why is the Kenyan police service given to brutality?

    First, Kenya’s police institution was established as a colonial instrument of oppression. Police reforms since independence in 1963 have had little impact in changing this. Instead, successive governments have used the police to suppress dissent. This has cemented a culture of violence and police impunity. This was seen during former president Daniel arap Moi’s repressive regime, the post-2007 election violence and recent crackdowns on public protests protected under the constitution.

    The reaction to mass mobilisation in June 2024 was violent. This was because the state sees public demonstrations as a threat to its authority.

    Second, police brutality thrives in environments where wrongdoing goes unpunished. Kenya’s police force lacks good internal control mechanisms. A culture of silence and solidarity – the “blue code” – deters whistleblowing. Advancements and rewards are sometimes determined by political allegiances rather than professionalism.




    Read more:
    Kenyan police use excessive force because they’re serving political elites, not the public – policy analyst


    Third, many police officers work in toxic conditions marked by poor pay, limited resources and long shifts. These contribute to feelings of frustration and aggression. The situation is worsened by institutionalised corruption where police officers extort money from citizens and demand bribes. This has contributed to diminished ethical standards.

    What’s in place to punish police excesses?

    Kenya has several formal avenues for holding police accountable. But all are deeply flawed.

    Independent Policing Oversight Authority: This was established in 2011 in light of the post-election violence of 2007-08. Its job was to independently investigate police misconduct. However, underfunding and understaffing has led to delayed investigations.

    There has also been a lack of cooperation from the police. They often fail to provide evidence or deliberately provide misleading information to impede investigations.

    The authority also has limited enforcement power. It has recommended thousands of prosecutions of rogue officers. However, it has seen low conviction rates given the slow processes at the judiciary and Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

    Internal Affairs Unit: This is a critical oversight body. It’s mandated to provide accountability and professional discipline within the police service. It’s tasked with investigating public complaints and complaints from within the police service against police officers.

    The unit can recommend to the National Police Service Commission disciplinary action – such as prosecution or dismissal – against officers it finds guilty. It also monitors police officers to ensure that ethical conduct and professional standards are maintained.

    However, the unit faces perceptions of a lack of independence and as an internal cover-up tool. In many instances, cases of police misconduct are simply punished by a transfer to another station.

    Judiciary and Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions: Cases take years to move through the judicial system. Convictions are rare. The public prosecutions office has faced accusations of bias, which it exhibits through its reluctance to prosecute high-profile police killings.

    The time it takes to conclude police misconduct cases allows impunity to thrive. Deliberately poor investigations carried out by the police (who are also suspects) have led to collapsed cases.

    National Police Service Commission: This was established by the 2010 Kenyan constitution. The commission recruits and appoints police officers (except the inspector-general of police, who is appointed by the president with parliamentary approval). It also promotes, transfers and disciplines police officers.

    However, the commission has faced claims of being unduly influenced by the inspector-general’s office in recruitment and promotions. This undermines its independence.




    Read more:
    How Nairobi police failures let people get away with murder


    Civil society and the media: Organisations like Amnesty International Kenya and the Kenya Human Rights Commission document police abuses. But their reports rarely, if ever, lead to any real action being taken. The media’s attention and reporting of cases may exert temporary pressure but this doesn’t seem to have any long-term impact.

    Why haven’t these mechanisms worked?

    Firstly, there’s an institutional resistance to reform. Powerful factions in the police and government benefit from the current system. Whenever there is an attempt at enforcing accountability, these senior officials take advantage of bureaucratic delays, and harass investigators and whistleblowers.

    In extreme cases, they enforce the disappearance of witnesses.

    Secondly, a lack of political will creates a favourable environment to circumvent constitutional frameworks. This ultimately weakens any chances of accountability. At best, police in Kenya are used to defend political interests and suppress dissent.

    This emboldens powerful political players who want the police to be controllable. This dissuades them from instituting actual reforms and establishing a humane policing service.

    What will change things?

    Until those in leadership positions genuinely prioritise independent institutions and justice over transient political gains, significant police reform is unlikely to be realised.

    Elements of such reform would include steps to:

    Strengthen police oversight and guarantee independence

    The Independent Policing Oversight Authority Act needs to be amended to enhance autonomy. The current system is easy for the president to manipulate because he gets to appoint the authority’s commissioners.

    There’s also a need to provide the authority with equipment. This includes ballistics analysis, digital forensics and crime scene reconstruction capabilities to combat police cover-ups.

    The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions must also be required to respond to the authority’s recommendations within 30 days. Currently, cases can take years to complete. There have been instances when rogue police have used this window to eliminate witnesses or tamper with evidence.

    Overhaul police training and culture

    There must be a move away from paramilitary-style drills and procedures in training. Instead, officers need to practise de-escalation, communication and problem-solving tactics with the public. What exists within Kenya now is a paramilitary service not a police service.

    Additionally, the police service commission needs to reward professionalism and not cronyism.

    Judicial and prosecutorial reforms

    Ending police impunity in Kenya requires a multi-pronged approach. This involves judicial independence, vigorous prosecution, meaningful oversight, legislative changes and public engagement.

    But this requires meaningful political will.

    Political accountability

    Continued police impunity has eroded public confidence in Kenya’s policing and justice systems. The policing oversight authority needs sufficient funding – free of political interference – to investigate and prosecute police misconduct. Senior officers should be held accountable for not disciplining rogue officers under their charge. The presidency and interior ministry must have a zero-tolerance policy toward police brutality.

    If Kenya doesn’t grapple with police impunity, then the anniversary of the June 2024 protests will be just another date in history when the state brutally attacked, maimed and killed its own citizenry. And still managed to silence them.

    Douglas Lucas Kivoi 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. Kenya’s brutal police have been exposed again – why the system fails people – https://theconversation.com/kenyas-brutal-police-have-been-exposed-again-why-the-system-fails-people-258843

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Sam Fender’s music offers a vision of masculinity that is complex, conflicted and deeply human

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Nick Robinson, Associate Professor in Politics and International Studies, University of Leeds

    By the end of June 2025, Sam Fender will have played four stadium shows to nearly 250,000 people across the UK, with three of those in his native north east. With three albums and over 2 billion streams, his music has earned widespread acclaim. Yet, Fender is no ordinary rock star.

    His songs provide a powerful connection to place and a lens through which to reflect on social, cultural and political dynamics. Deeply rooted in north-east England, Fender’s lyrics reference his hometown of North Shields and use local vernacular.

    As a researcher of the links between popular culture and politics who lives less than a mile from his hometown, I find his work particularly powerful in the way it mobilises emotive issues at scale. Fender explores themes such as masculinity, poverty and everyday struggle, forging a direct emotional connection with his audience.

    This connection is reinforced by his activism. Fender supports local food banks, the Teenage Cancer Trust, and campaigns for poverty reduction and men’s mental health.

    To my mind, this work is not performative celebratory activism, but is grounded in his own community and personal experiences. This combination of commercial success rooted in honesty, vulnerability and community action led to him being named “freeman of North Tyneside” in May 2025.



    Boys and girls are together facing an uncertain world. But research shows they are diverging when it comes to attitudes about masculinity, feminism and gender equality.

    Social media, politics, and identity all play a role. But what’s really going on with boys and girls? Join The Conversation UK and Cumberland Lodge’s Youth and Democracy project at Newcastle University for a discussion of these issues with young people and academic experts. Tickets available here.


    Fender’s teenage years were marked by personal challenges, including his parents’ separation and his mother’s fibromyalgia. These experiences, and the state’s failure to support those in need, are captured in his song Seventeen Going Under (2021): “I came home and you were on the floor / Floored by the letters and the council rigmarole.”

    His latest album, People Watching (2025), continues this critique. The title track, inspired by the death of a close friend in a care home, laments:

    The place was fallin’ to bits

    Understaffed and overruled by callous hands

    The poor nurse was around the clock

    And the beauty of youth had left my breaking heart.

    The music video for People Watching.

    For Fender, these stories reflect a Britain in decline. In Crumbling Empire, he sings: “Road like the surface of the moon / A Detroit neighbourhood left to ruin.” The song further critiques a society that fails to honour those who have given everything:

    My mother delivered most the kids in this town

    My step-dad drove in a tank for the crown

    They left them homeless, down and out

    In their crumbling empire.

    His message is clear: hard work, even by midwives and war heroes, no longer guarantees dignity or reward.

    Fender’s most poignant observations are rooted in his locality. In Nostalgia’s Lie, he sings: “These streets break my heart / There’s pain unfurling and desperate yearning / For all my friends who are gone.”

    North Shields has some of the highest rates of child poverty in the UK. According to the North East Child Poverty Commission (March 2025), 31% of children in the region lived below the poverty line between 2021 and 2024.


    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    In this context, Fender places mental health – especially male mental health – at the core of his work, made even more powerful by his honesty about his own struggles.

    Dead Boys reflects both personal loss and the epidemic of male suicide in North Tyneside: “We close our eyes, learn our pain / Nobody ever could explain / All the dead boys in our hometown.”

    In Something Heavy, he adds: “My friends reached for the rope and tied / Oh, God, how can we keep missing signals?”

    Fender performs Dead Boys in Manchester.

    Fender’s engagement with mental health is deeply personal. He wrestles with confusion, despondency, and his own sense of self-esteem: “Though I am a soundboard to some / With myself I am not so forgiving” (Last to Make it Home), and “Sometimes I wanna die, sometimes” (Paradigms).

    In Good Company, he confesses: “Sometimes I cry until there’s no sound,” and in Arm’s Length: “Do you have to know me, know me, inside out / I’m selfish, and I’m lonely.”

    Yet, like many artists, Fender feels guilt that success has uprooted him. In Wild Long Lie, he reflects: “Oh, I’ve got so much pain here, yet so much love / But it’s drownin’ every inch of my soul.” He questions whether he can still authentically raise these issues now that fame has distanced him from his past. As he puts it in Crumbling Empire:

    I’m not preaching, I’m just talking

    I don’t wear the shoes I used to walk in

    But I can’t help thinking where I’d be

    In this crumbling empire.

    Fender’s work helps us understand political and social phenomena by reflecting unfolding events. His songs can be seen as giving life and voice to what political theorist Michael Shapiro calls an “aesthetic subject”.

    The characters in his songs, whether autobiographical or imagined, give voice to communities which are so often ignored. They allow exploration of the structures of power that deny working-class people opportunities, contributing to mental health crises, suicide and spiralling drug use within those communities.

    Sam Fender talks about men’s mental health.

    Even though Fender acknowledges he no longer walks in the same shoes, his songs still speak truth to power. They give voice to experiences that are often ignored and expose the increasing struggle of everyday life in the UK and beyond.

    He also offers a nuanced reflection on masculinity. Fender challenges traditional ideals – rational, authoritative, emotionally restrained – while rejecting simplified portrayals of men as weak or unstable. His songs reveal a masculinity that is complex, conflicted and deeply human.

    While Fender is not alone in using music for social commentary, what sets him apart is his ability to channel the spirit of his local community to explore universal themes. His work critiques the failures of contemporary capitalism to provide dignity, respect, and cohesion – issues that resonate deeply amid today’s cultural, political and economic challenges.

    Nick Robinson 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. Sam Fender’s music offers a vision of masculinity that is complex, conflicted and deeply human – https://theconversation.com/sam-fenders-music-offers-a-vision-of-masculinity-that-is-complex-conflicted-and-deeply-human-258530

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Marine fungi could help feed the world and fight disease

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Michael Cunliffe, Professor of Marine Microbiology, School of Biological and Marine Sciences, University of Plymouth

    Fungi are nature’s recyclers and chemists, turning waste into useful products and creating an array of enzymes and compounds. By harnessing this potential through fungal biotechnology (using fungi to develop products and technologies for various applications), we can create sustainable materials, food and processes that help solve global challenges like food shortages, pollution and climate change.

    Fungal biotechnology supports a “circular economy”, where resources are reused instead of wasted. Fungi can help make our food supply more stable and eco-friendly, while cutting greenhouse gas emissions. But to fully unlock what is possible, we need to better understand different fungi and develop new tools to work with them to find solutions.

    The marine environment is home to a rich diversity of fungi. However, marine fungi were once overlooked and not widely considered for their biotechnological potential.



    Local science, global stories.

    This article is part of a series, Secrets of the Sea, exploring how marine scientists are developing climate solutions.

    In collaboration with the BBC, The Conversation’s senior environment editor, Anna Turns, travels around the West Country coastline to meet ocean experts making exciting discoveries beneath the waves.


    Now, my team of scientists at the Marine Biological Association, a research institution based in Plymouth on the south-west coast of England, has changed that. By gathering over 500 fungal strains from seawater, sediments and seaweeds, we have created a comprehensive marine fungi culture collection.

    These fungi are stored at -80°C and studied at temperatures similar to the local shoreline they are from. This unique collection is already helping us learn more about marine fungi, including how they grow and adapt to different environments.

    My colleagues and I are now exploring how these marine fungi, especially those from seaweed, can be used in biotechnology to create more useful, sustainable products in the future.

    The European seaweed industry is growing fast and could be worth up to €9.3 billion (£7.8 billion) by 2030. Seaweed farming doesn’t need land, fresh water or fertiliser, and it can support ocean health.

    Marine fungi, especially those originally isolated from seaweed, could recycle seaweed into valuable products.

    At the Marine Biological Association, we are testing many combinations of different seaweeds and fungi to discover new uses. This approach could help make the seaweed industry stronger, more efficient and better for the environment.

    The future is fungal

    Feeding the world’s growing population is a major challenge, especially with nearly a billion people unable to afford nutritious food and the environmental consequences of high meat consumption. One promising alternative protein source involves using seaweed and fermenting it with marine fungi to create a nutritious protein source called mycoprotein – similar to what’s found in some current commercial products.

    Antimicrobial resistance – the development of superbugs that become resistant to antibiotics as a result of their overuse – is a global health threat. This makes it harder to treat infections. Fungi naturally produce chemicals to protect themselves from other microbes, and several antibiotics come from fungi, including penicillin. Marine fungi could be a valuable new source of antibiotics and drug treatments to fight resistant infections and protect public health.

    Pests and the diseases they spread cause major crop losses worldwide, threatening food security. Traditional chemical pesticides are becoming less effective and can harm helpful species like pollinators, while also leading to pest resistance.

    Scientists are now exploring ways to target pests by using microbes without damaging the environment. One promising but unexplored source is marine fungi. Marine fungi and the arsenal of chemical compounds they produce may hold the key to developing new, eco-friendly pest control methods that protect crops while supporting wildlife and sustainable farming practices.

    Our marine fungi culture collection is helping unlock the potential for finding new solutions to many of the world’s biggest challenges.

    Listen to episode four of Secrets of the Sea here on BBC Sounds, presented by Anna Turns for The Conversation.


    Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like?

    Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 45,000+ readers who’ve subscribed so far.


    Michael Cunliffe received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) for the project MYCO-CARB and currently receives funding from the UKRI Horizon Europe Guarantee scheme for the projects MARCO-BOLO and BIOcean5D. PhD students in the Cunliffe Group are supported by the UKRI BBSRC/NERC SWBio, ARIES and INSPIRE Doctoral Training Partnerships and the Marine Biological Association.

    ref. Marine fungi could help feed the world and fight disease – https://theconversation.com/marine-fungi-could-help-feed-the-world-and-fight-disease-251194

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Troops on US streets in more ways than one while Trump considers axing Aukus defence pact

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Rachael Jolley, International Affairs Editor

    This article was first published in The Conversation UK’s World Affairs Briefing email newsletter. Sign up to receive weekly analysis of the latest developments in international relations, direct to your inbox.


    It’s Donald Trump’s birthday this weekend, and he is planning a big bash to celebrate. There will be a full-colour parade in the nation’s capital. Expected to attend are a whole bunch of military vehicles, from a second world war bomber to M1 Abrams battle tanks to Paladin self-propelled howitzers.

    The cavalcade will take a route through the grander streets of Washington DC making its way along Constitution Avenue all the way to the Lincoln memorial, with an expected 6,600 soldiers in attendance. The whole thing is estimated by the Associated Press to cost around US$45 million (£33 million).

    This splashy show of Trump’s power and the US’s military strength could serve as a warning to anyone who was thinking of crossing the US right now. Trump is, of course, the commander-in-chief of the US forces. And he was using the full strength of his position, some argue going beyond it, when he sent the national guard and the marines – bypassing the state governor – to the streets of Los Angeles in the past few days.

    There are now, according to ABC News, more US troops on the streets of LA than in Syria and Iraq. This was necessary, Trump claimed, to address protests over immigration raids that broke out around LA. Something that Sean Parnell, chief Pentagon spokesperson, said this week was “exactly what the American people voted for”.

    While Trump is testing how far he can flex his political and military muscle at home, as the Open University’s Sinead McEneaney has detailed, he is also using what some historians have called unprecedented use of power, by sending in the marines to take action against Americans, while California governor Gavin Newsom said the troops were not wanted, or needed.




    Read more:
    Trump’s clash with California governor over LA protests has potential to influence next presidential race


    Newsom is pushing back hard, and publicly, against Trump. Something, that Natasha Lindstaedt at the University of Essex, believes could propel Newsom higher up the Democrat selection list for a presidential nomination.




    Read more:
    Trump’s use of the national guard against LA protesters defies all precedents



    Sign up to receive our weekly World Affairs Briefing newsletter from The Conversation UK. Every Thursday we’ll bring you expert analysis of the big stories in international relations.


    While signalling his military strength to those on the streets of California, Trump has also been sending a strong message to his erstwhile international allies that he might not be quite as willing to share his military hardware with them as they might have thought they had been promised. The US administration has opened a review of the Aukus (the Australia, UK and US defence pact) and in particular its nuclear submarine deal, to see whether it meets the “America first” criteria. This deal was due to help all three countries scale up their submarine capacity.

    Australia already transferred US$500 million to the US this year, as part of a down payment on the deal, with the expectation of receiving used US submarines in the near future. Canberra and London have been speedily revising their reliance on Trump as a security partner in the past few months. This is yet another signal from Washington that they definitely should.

    John Blaxland , a professor at the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University, argues that Trump is angling to renegotiate the Aukus deal but won’t scrap it.

    “There are a few key reasons for this. We’re several years down the track already. We have more than 100 Australian sailors already operating in the US system. Industrially, we’re on the cusp of making a significant additional contribution to the US submarine production line. And finally, most people don’t fully appreciate that the submarine base just outside Perth is an incredibly consequential piece of real estate for US security calculations.”




    Read more:
    Trump may try to strike a deal with AUKUS review, but here’s why he won’t sink it


    Meanwhile, Mark Beeson, an adjunct professor at the University of Technology Sydney and Griffith University, believes that Australia is locked into the foreign and strategic policies of “an increasingly polarised, authoritarian and unpredictable regime” and should rethink its international relationships.

    Beeson quotes an essay from another Australian academic, Hugh White, from Australian National University: “It is classic Trump to expect more and more from allies while he offers them less and less.”




    Read more:
    Goodbye to all that? Rethinking Australia’s alliance with Trump’s America


    Russia’s battlefield count

    In a military arena where most of the world would like Trump to apply a little more pressure, he continues to hold back and Vladimir Putin continues not to do a peace deal. Putin showed no sign of calling off his troops (or drones) from attacking Ukraine this week.

    But as the onslaught continued Russia is expected to hit a horrific target this month, 1 million casualties in the war. Hundreds of thousands of Russians have died forcing Putin to get increasingly creative in coming up with ways to fill the gaps on the battlefields.

    According to some reports he is sending the wounded back to fight before they are fully recovered, as well as offering large financial incentives to those who join up, and their families. The conflict continues and the death toll does, too. As Russian politics expert Jenny Mathers at the University of Aberystwyth points out, even before the war the country had a demographic crisis, and now that is even more extreme.

    Russian women who want to earn the newly reinstated “Mother Heroine” award by bearing and raising ten or more children may struggle to find men to father them now, and after the war. Putin, like Trump, is fond of suggesting there is a glowing future for those who support him. The Russian leader has even created a Time of Heroes programme for war veterans who are promised a fast track into an elite career on their return from battle. Whether, of course, they do return when an estimated 53 casualties are being lost per square kilometre of land gained in eastern Ukraine is not a gamble many would like to take.




    Read more:
    Putin forced to send wounded back to fight and offer huge military salaries as Russia suffers a million casualties



    Sign up to receive our weekly World Affairs Briefing newsletter from The Conversation UK. Every Thursday we’ll bring you expert analysis of the big stories in international relations.


    ref. Troops on US streets in more ways than one while Trump considers axing Aukus defence pact – https://theconversation.com/troops-on-us-streets-in-more-ways-than-one-while-trump-considers-axing-aukus-defence-pact-258874

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI China: China-Africa trade shifting toward more diversified, high value-added model

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

    CHANGSHA, June 13 — China-Africa trade is undergoing a profound transformation from a traditional resource-based model to one that is more diversified, high value-added and technology-intensive, according to a document released Friday at the ongoing China-Africa Economic and Trade Expo.

    The Blue Book of China-Africa Economic and Trade Cooperation: Development Report (2025) highlights expanding cooperation in sectors such as industry, agriculture, telecommunications, digital economy, new infrastructure, green energy and financial services.

    Agricultural trade between China and Africa is transitioning from raw material exports to processed goods, cooperation in digital and technology-related services is gaining traction, and cross-border e-commerce is playing a growing role alongside traditional trade channels, said the document.

    These developments are driven by Africa’s push for industrialization, China’s economic upgrading, and the continued influence of the Belt and Road Initiative, it said.

    Infrastructure cooperation has expanded steadily, with projects covering sectors such as transport, energy and communications. Broader partnerships have also formed in education, agriculture, healthcare and green development, supported by maturing policy frameworks, trade pacts and financing tools, it said.

    The document, jointly released by organizations including the China-Africa Economic and Trade Promotion Council, the Department of Commerce of Hunan Province, and the China Economic Information Service, made use of both public data and field research.

    It features a specific annual theme that reflects key developments and challenges in China-Africa trade, and aims to provide actionable recommendations for future cooperation.

    The fourth China-Africa Economic and Trade Expo is being held in Changsha, capital of central China’s Hunan Province. Nearly 4,700 Chinese and African companies as well as over 30,000 participants are attending the four-day event, themed “China and Africa: Together Toward Modernization.”

    Economic and trade cooperation between China and Africa has demonstrated strong vitality, with a rapid increase in trade value over the past 25 years, official data showed.

    China’s total trade with African countries increased from less than 100 billion yuan (about 13.9 billion U.S. dollars) in 2000 to 2.1 trillion yuan in 2024, marking an average annual growth of 14.2 percent, according to the General Administration of Customs.

    China and Africa, as the largest developing country and the continent with the highest concentration of developing countries, respectively, are jointly exploring new frontiers in South-South cooperation, said Xu Xiangping, head of the China-Africa Economic and Trade Promotion Council.

    Xu added that China-Africa trade has repeatedly reached new levels, with notable developments including expansion in scale, structural upgrades and growing investment across industrial chains and emerging sectors.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Along ancient Silk Road, Xi cultivates new bonds with Central Asia

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

    BEIJING, June 13 — In the shimmering early summer heat of Xi’an, China’s longest-serving ancient capital, six pomegranate trees stand gracefully near the site of the inaugural China-Central Asia Summit held in May 2023, their branches bowing low with fruit.

    Planted two years ago by Chinese President Xi Jinping and leaders of the five Central Asian nations, this vibrant grove stands as a vivid testament to the increasingly close and dynamic bond between China and Central Asia.

    Building on past achievements, Xi and his Central Asia counterparts are scheduled to gather in Astana, Kazakhstan, later this month for a second summit, where they will weave tighter threads of trade, security and connectivity across the Eurasian heartland.

    FORGING NEW PARADIGM

    The 2023 Xi’an summit marked the first-ever meeting of heads of state under the China-Central Asia cooperation mechanism. In the city’s time-honored embrace, they agreed to host the top-level gathering every two years alternately in China and Central Asia.

    Last year, this mechanism was further institutionalized with the establishment of a secretariat in Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi, Xi’s home province.

    Xi places great importance on China’s ties with the region. In his view, Central Asia pulses at a strategic crossroads, linking East and West, North and South.

    “It is a foreign-policy priority for China to develop friendly cooperative relations with the Central Asian countries,” Xi said during his first visit to Central Asia after becoming Chinese president in 2013.

    Since then, he has traveled to the region eight times, deepening partnerships bilaterally as well as through platforms such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia.

    Today, Central Asia stands as the only region in the world where every country is a strategic partner of China. These partnerships, Xi said, have forged a new path of good-neighborliness and win-win cooperation, creating a new paradigm for international relations.

    A highlight of the Xi’an summit was the signing of the Xi’an Declaration, in which Xi and the presidents of the five Central Asian countries vowed to work together to build a closer China-Central Asia community with a shared future.

    This pledge aligns with the core idea of what’s known as Xiplomacy: building a community with a shared future for mankind. Notably, the vision has been fully implemented at the bilateral level in Central Asia.

    Sheradil Baktygulov, director of the Institute of World Policy of Kyrgyzstan, said that the shared political will of Xi and the leaders of Central Asia is key to the sustained development of China-Central Asia cooperation.

    “This cooperation not only strengthens bilateral ties, but also lays the foundation for a new model of multilateral collaboration in the Eurasian region,” he added.

    Xi’s strong personal rapport with the leaders of Central Asia fuels these ties. At the Xi’an summit, Xi greeted Tajik President Emomali Rahmon as “my old friend.” In talks with Xi, Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev referred to him as his “dear brother.”

    Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, also a seasoned sinologist, arrived in Xi’an on his 70th birthday. Xi told him, “On this special occasion, your visit speaks volumes about the strength of our bilateral ties and reaffirms your unique bond with China.”

    REVIVING SILK ROAD

    “Start the shipment!” With this command, Xi and Tokayev jointly launched the China-Europe Trans-Caspian Express Route at a ceremony held in July 2024 in Astana.

    The occasion marked the formal establishment of a multidimensional connectivity network, integrating highways, railways, airlines and pipelines, to better link Asia with Europe via the Caspian Sea. It is expected to become a vibrant artery of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

    While the ancient Silk Road witnessed robust trade and cultural exchanges between China and Central Asia, Xi sees in the region an important partner in modern-day Belt and Road cooperation.

    Back in September 2013, also in Astana, Xi delivered a landmark speech at Nazarbayev University, where he first laid out his vision for building the Silk Road Economic Belt — a key component of the BRI.

    “We can actively discuss the best way to improve cross-­border transportation infrastructure,” Xi said, “and work toward a transportation network connecting East Asia, West Asia and South Asia to facilitate economic development and travel in the region.”

    Over the years since then, that vision has steadily become a reality. In a recent instance, a commencement ceremony for the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway project was held late last year in the Kyrgyz border city of Jalalabad. Xi, in a congratulatory letter, called for building the railway into a “new demonstration project” under Belt and Road cooperation.

    The line will originate from the ancient Silk Road hub of Kashgar, in China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, cross the Torugart Pass into Kyrgyzstan, proceed westward through Jalalabad, and reach the eastern Uzbek city of Andijan.

    This railway, said Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov, is not merely a transport corridor, but serves as an important strategic bridge connecting countries of the East and the West.

    Belt and Road cooperation has effectively boosted trade, travel and exchanges in the region. In 2024, China’s trade with Central Asia reached a record 94.8 billion U.S. dollars, fueled in part by a booming cross-border e-commerce sector. China now stands as Central Asia’s top trading partner and major investment source.

    Tajikistan became the first country to sign a memorandum of understanding with China regarding the Silk Road Economic Belt in 2014. Collaboration has since produced tangible outcomes, ranging from new highways and power plants to new city landmarks, many of which have been personally championed by Xi.

    Tajikistan is also home to the first Luban Workshop in Central Asia — a Chinese vocational training center that has already equipped more than 1,500 students with practical skills in engineering, architecture, water management and environmental protection, preparing talent for the nation’s future development.

    In a state visit to the country in 2024, Xi said to Rahmon: “I have seen a more prosperous Tajikistan.”

    WEAVING CULTURAL TAPESTRIES

    In the autumn of 2022, while visiting the storied Silk Road city of Samarkand, Xi presented Uzbek President Mirziyoyev with a special gift: a miniature of Khiva, a historic Silk Road outpost.

    Khiva is China’s first cultural heritage preservation project in Central Asia. Thanks to years of restoration led by Chinese experts, the ancient town has taken on a new look.

    “The preservation and restoration of historical sites in Khiva, a project launched during my visit to Samarkand in 2013, has been successfully concluded, further augmenting the charm of this ancient city,” Xi wrote in a signed article ahead of his 2022 visit to Uzbekistan.

    During an earlier trip to the country in 2016, Xi met with the Chinese experts working on the project. “Be sure to protect the cultural relics well,” he urged them.

    Over the years, joint archaeological efforts between Chinese and Central Asian scholars have expanded across the region, including the ancient city of Rahat in Kazakhstan and an ancient Buddhist temple of Krasnaya Rechka in Kyrgyzstan.

    Xi has repeatedly stressed that the China-Central Asia friendship is one steeped in history. On multiple occasions, he invoked the legacy of Zhang Qian, the Han Dynasty envoy who traveled westward more than 2,100 years ago and opened the door to enduring friendship and exchanges between China and the region. He has also emphasized the need to “carry forward our traditional friendship.”

    During his state visit to Kazakhstan in 2024, Xi, together with Tokayev, unveiled the Kazakhstan branch of Beijing Language and Culture University, the very institution where the Kazakh president studied Chinese in the 1980s. Xi expressed his hope that the new school would enhance mutual understanding between the two peoples, especially the young generation.

    As part of the visit, Xi met a group of schoolchildren who greeted him in Mandarin and sang a Chinese song. Some among them expressed their dream of one day studying at Tsinghua University, Xi’s alma mater.

    “I also wish, with all my heart, that you will be able to attend good universities in the future. And you are very welcome to pursue your studies in China,” the Chinese president smiled.

    Commenting on the broader impact of such exchanges, Uzbek political observer Sharofiddin Tulaganov noted that under the China-Central Asia cooperation mechanism, mutual learning among civilizations will be significantly enhanced.

    In today’s complex international environment, he added, institutionalized people-to-people exchanges like these will inject valuable cultural momentum into efforts at safeguarding regional peace and promoting shared development.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Nuclear safeguards and the NPT: AUKUS Side Event, May 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Nuclear safeguards and the NPT: AUKUS Side Event, May 2025

    Combined statements of the UK, Australia, and the US from the NPT PrepCom AUKUS Side Event on 1 May 2025

    Australian statement as delivered by Vanessa Wood, Ambassador for Arms Control and Counter-Proliferation

    Thank you all for joining us today. And thanks to my colleague Ambassador Larsen for his introduction.

    As many of you may recall, and as Ambassador Larsen noted in his introductory remarks, the AUKUS partners held a side event on naval nuclear propulsion at the 2023 and 2024 NPT PrepCom meetings. Following on from the updates provided at last year’s side event, I would like to further update you on progress with Australia’s naval nuclear propulsion (NNP) programme.

    First, an overview of the Optimal Pathway.

    What we call the ‘Optimal Pathway’ is a phased approach for Australia to acquire conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines.

    Phase 1 of the Optimal Pathway is currently underway, focused on building capacity and familiarity for Australia to safely operate and steward nuclear-powered submarines. This phase is supported by increased port visits to Australia by UK and US nuclear-powered submarines – which are already occurring.

    Under Phase 2, from the early 2030s Australia plans to acquire three Virginia-class submarines from the US – with an option to seek approval for a further two boats, if needed. Our objective is to ensure there is no capability gap during the retirement of Australia’s existing fleet of diesel-electric submarines.

    We will simultaneously progress Phase 3 to develop next generation submarines known as SSN-AUKUS, a UK design incorporating technology from all three AUKUS partners. The United Kingdom will deliver its first British-built SSN-AUKUS in the late 2030s, and the first Australian-built SSN-AUKUS will be completed in the early 2040s.

    It is important to highlight two points. First, this is a replacement capability for our existing submarines. Australia is transitioning from six diesel-electric submarines to eight conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines. It is a sovereign decision Australia has taken in response to more challenging strategic circumstances in our region.

    Second, this is about acquiring a naval nuclear propulsion capability. The submarines will be conventionally armed. The only nuclear element is the propulsion system.

    Now to briefly address naval nuclear propulsion in the context of Australia’s obligations under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). 

    Australia’s NNP programme is fully consistent with its nuclear non-proliferation obligations and commitments, including under the NPT, the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty (Treaty of Rarotonga) and our safeguards agreements with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

    NNP was foreseen by the drafters of the NPT. Indeed, a mechanism was provided for this in Article 14 of the IAEA’s model Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement (CSA). As IAEA Director General Grossi has stated, Article 14 was developed with the specific intent to address the use of nuclear material for NNP – whether produced domestically or imported.

    The model CSA – which contains this Article – was approved by the IAEA Board of Governors in 1971. This is the basis for CSAs agreed with Member States over more than 50 years, including Australia’s CSA.

    The NPT, the IAEA Statute, the CSA and, in Australia’s case also the Additional Protocol (AP), provide a firm legal basis and obligation for the IAEA Director General and Secretariat to engage directly with Member States – and confidentially to protect sensitive information – in the development and implementation of safeguards.

    Australia’s non-proliferation approach for NNP is being developed on this basis and it will operate within the framework of Australia’s CSA and AP.

    As part of developing a non-proliferation approach for Australia’s NNP programme, we commenced formal technical consultations with the IAEA Secretariat in May 2023. These consultations are ongoing. Topics being discussed in the consultations include:

    Legal and technical aspects of an Article 14 arrangement for Australia, including the arrangement’s structure and content;

    Provisions for advance notification, reporting and verification prior to the entry of nuclear material into an Article 14 arrangement;

    The circumstances under which the Article 14 arrangement applies, its duration and the point at which safeguards under Australia’s CSA and AP re-apply;

    Ways to facilitate verification and monitoring activities, as well as additional voluntary transparency measures;

    And discussions regarding the structure of material balance areas, facilities and sites at relevant locations in Australia, within the framework of Australia’s CSA and AP.

    Our consultations follow the longstanding practice of the IAEA engaging bilaterally with Member States on their own safeguards and verification arrangements, in accordance with the Agency’s statutory mandate and authority, which I touched upon earlier. All IAEA Member States share a strong interest in protecting their fundamental right to engage bilaterally, and in-confidence, with the IAEA on the establishment and implementation of their safeguards and verification arrangements.

    Turning to Australia’s approach to non-proliferation.

    We are working to make sure Australia’s Article 14 arrangement sets the highest non-proliferation standard. But to be clear, this does not mean we intend to create or impose a model arrangement on others.

    The objective is to develop a robust approach that ensures that the IAEA continues to meet its technical safeguards verification objectives for Australia throughout the submarines’ lifecycle. That is, for the IAEA to have confidence that there has been no diversion of declared nuclear material; no misuse of nuclear facilities; and no undeclared nuclear material or activities.

    This is what we see as fundamental to our non-proliferation approach.

    In developing an Article 14 arrangement, the IAEA will need to account for factors that are specific to Australia’s NNP program. In Australia’s case, a number of these program-specific factors also offer important non-proliferation advantages. For example: 

    Australia will not undertake enrichment, reprocessing or fuel fabrication for NNP;

    Australia will receive the nuclear fuel for propulsion in complete, welded power units: and;

    The nuclear fuel Australia will receive cannot be used in nuclear weapons without further chemical processing – requiring facilities that Australia does not have and will not seek.

    Our commitment to the non-proliferation regime is reflected in the trilateral AUKUS Agreement for Cooperation Related to Naval Nuclear Propulsion (ANNPA), which entered into force on 17 January this year. ANNPA stipulates the transfer of nuclear material and equipment from the UK and the US to Australia can occur only after Australia has an Article 14 arrangement in place with the IAEA.  My American colleague, Paul, will address this topic in more detail.

    We support the IAEA Director General’s commitment that, once Australia’s Article 14 arrangement is developed, it will be transmitted to the IAEA Board for appropriate action, guided by the Director General’s technical assessment of the arrangement’s non-proliferation provisions.

    In November last year, IAEA Director General Grossi issued his third report on Australia’s NNP programme (the previous reports were issued in 2022 and 2023). At our request, this report, and the previous two reports, have been published on the IAEA website. I commend the reports to all who are interested in how the IAEA and Australia have been working together to support the non-proliferation element of Australia’s NNP program. 

    The Director General’s report confirms we have kept the Secretariat informed of all relevant developments and have continued to fulfil all reporting requirements under Australia’s CSA, AP and subsidiary arrangements, in keeping with our impeccable non-proliferation record. The report outlines relevant developments since 2023 including:

    That the Agency has continued to conduct its independent verification activities in relation to Australia’s NNP programme within the framework of Australia’s safeguards agreements, and

    How Australia has been supporting this work, including by facilitating the IAEA’s collection of environmental samples, and enabling a transparency visit to a naval base that will be used for the maintenance of nuclear-powered submarines.

    To recap other key developments since our last side event at the 2024 PrepCom:

    In October 2024, we announced a plan to establish a naval shipbuilding and sustainment precinct at Henderson in Western Australia. In due course, this will be the home of depot-level maintenance and contingency docking of Australia’s future conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines.

    In late August-early September 2024, a maintenance activity was conducted on a US Virginia class nuclear-powered submarine at HMAS Stirling naval base in Western Australia. Australian personnel participated in planned maintenance and repairs on the non-nuclear components of the submarine. This marked a significant step forward in supporting Australia’s development of necessary workforce skills. Australia engaged with the IAEA to ensure transparency ahead of this activity.

    In conclusion, I want to express my thanks for your attendance at this event, and your interest in this matter. This is the third side event we have convened in the context of the NPT PrepCom process, as part of our continued commitment to engage regularly and transparently on Australia’s NNP program. 

    AUKUS partners will keep providing updates on relevant developments at the IAEA Board of Governors and General Conference – as we have done consistently since AUKUS was announced in September 2021.

    We fully support the Director General’s commitment to continue to report to the IAEA Board of Governors on Australia’s NNP program, as he judges appropriate. We welcome constructive discussions in the Board based on his reports.

    An important recent development is the entry into force of the ANNPA, which my American colleague Paul will discuss next.

    Thank you.

    US statement as delivered by Paul Watzlavick, Senior Bureau Official, Bureau of International Security and Non-Proliferation

    Thank you, Ambassador Wood.

    As you just heard from my Australian colleague, the entry into force of the AUKUS Naval Nuclear Propulsion Agreement (ANNPA) in January was an important step toward Australia’s acquisition of a conventionally armed, nuclear-powered, submarine capability. Specifically, ANNPA permits the continued communication and exchange of information related to naval nuclear propulsion, as well as the transfer of naval nuclear propulsion plants, related equipment, and material to Australia for a conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarine capability. ANNPA cements AUKUS partners’ non-proliferation commitments in accordance with the NPT by making them legally binding on Australia, the United Kingdom, and United States. As we have prioritised since the start of the AUKUS partnership in 2021, this is yet another way that we are demonstrating our commitment to setting the highest standard of non-proliferation in an open and transparent manner.

    Significantly, ANNPA reaffirms partners’ respective commitments under the NPT: those of the US and UK as Nuclear Weapon States, and those of Australia as a Non-Nuclear Weapon State. ANNPA allows the US and UK to provide information, material, and equipment to Australia solely for a conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarine capability, not for nuclear weapons. Additionally, ANNPA reaffirms Australia’s commitment as a Non-Nuclear Weapon State to not receive the transfer of nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices or control of nuclear weapons. Under the Agreement, Australia is prohibited from enriching uranium, producing nuclear fuel, or reprocessing spent nuclear fuel for naval nuclear propulsion. ANNPA also makes clear that the United Kingdom and United States will only provide Australia with nuclear fuel in complete, welded power units. Ambassador Kitsell will go into further detail on this point later.

    I would now like to cover some of the major provisions of ANNPA, which provides a legal framework to enable the parties to continue sharing naval nuclear propulsion information and for the United States and United Kingdom to transfer nuclear material and equipment to Australia. Most importantly, ANNPA requires that a satisfactory arrangement meeting the highest non-proliferation standard under Article 14 of Australia’s Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement be in place between Australia and the IAEA before any transfer of nuclear material under the Agreement. The safeguards arrangement must not only be satisfactory to Australia and the IAEA in this regard, but the AUKUS partners must have a shared view that safeguards arrangement meets the highest non-proliferation standard. The AUKUS partners have affirmed that they understand that this means that the Article 14 arrangement must allow the IAEA to fulfil its core technical objectives at all stages of the lifecycle of Australia’s conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarine programme.

    Despite the AUKUS partners’ continued dedication to non-proliferation, ANNPA has been the subject of deliberate disinformation. To be clear:

    First, ANNPA requires Australia and the IAEA to reach an agreement on safeguards. ANNPA authorizes the transfer of nuclear material only when a satisfactory safeguards and verification arrangement is in place between Australia and the IAEA.

    Second, neither ANNPA – nor any provisions within it – constitute a substitute or alternative for IAEA safeguards. Indeed, claims that the Agreement allows the Parties applying our own verification mechanisms instead are incorrect. The Article (VII.E) in question is commonly contained in agreements for civil nuclear cooperation – including in most from the US, UK, and Australia – and provides a mechanism to ensure that safeguards measures, obligations, principles, procedures and assurances will continue to be applied in all circumstances. We believe that not having such a mechanism would be irresponsible.

    Third, ANNPA’s requirements are consistent with Australia’s Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement with the IAEA. ANNPA obligates the partners to protect naval nuclear propulsion information and related classified information from disclosure, including disclosure to the IAEA, but the partners are committed to developing a safeguards and verification arrangement that protects such information from disclosure while allowing the IAEA to complete its technical objectives. As noted, this is consistent with Article 14 of Australia’s Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement, which specifically provides that such arrangements with the IAEA “shall not involve any approval or classified knowledge of the military activity or relate to the use of the nuclear material therein.” Importantly, the ANNPA specifically obliges the UK and US to ensure that Australia provides the IAEA with other information and access necessary to fulfil Australia’s safeguards obligations to the IAEA.

    We value sessions such as this one to openly offer clarity on how we are developing our approach consistent with our respective international obligations. I have spoken to you about an important step in our partnership, the ANNPA, and will now turn to Ambassador Kitsell to cover wider areas of misinformation that have unfortunately persisted about the AUKUS partnership.

    UK statement as delivered by Corinne Kitsell, Ambassador and UK Permanent Representative to IAEA and CTBTO

    Thank you, Paul.

    It is excellent to see so many delegates in the room for this discussion, and a pleasure to join my US and Australian colleagues on this panel.  You’ve already heard from Ambassador Wood and Mr Watzlavick about the AUKUS programme, our non-proliferation approach, and how the entry into force of the ANNPA bolsters our non-proliferation commitments. 

    My aim today is to address some common misconceptions about the AUKUS endeavour. I hope to offer clarity and reassurance on some of the issues we are asked most frequently. 

    AUKUS is still a relatively new partnership, and it is natural and expected that there are questions about the work we are undertaking. That is why, since AUKUS began in September 2021, all three partners have engaged openly and transparently with the international community.

    My aim today is to ensure you are equipped with the facts about the work we are undertaking in relation to nuclear non-proliferation and to ensure our dialogue, at this meeting and others, remains grounded in truth. This includes underlining four important points, that: 

    First, AUKUS is fully in line with our respective international obligations;

    Second, the transfer of Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) between Nuclear Weapon States (NWS) and Non-Nuclear Weapon States (NNWS) does not contravene the NPT;

    Third, Australia’s Article 14 arrangement will not remove nuclear material from IAEA oversight, and;

    Fourth, why attempts to legitimise a parallel intergovernmental discussion on AUKUS should be rejected.

    First, AUKUS is fully in line with all three partners’ respective international obligations. Including the NPT and Australia’s obligations under the Treaty of Rarotonga. Some have made claims to the contrary, often based on conjecture or disregard for our commitment to our international obligations. Accordingly, it is worth reiterating again that our cooperation under AUKUS has nothing to do with nuclear weapons. 

    Australia’s nuclear-powered submarines will use nuclear material solely as a power source for propulsion. All three AUKUS partners take our obligations under the NPT extremely seriously. As per Article 2 of the Treaty, Australia does not have and will not seek to acquire nuclear weapons. Consistent with their obligations under Article 1, neither the UK nor the US will provide any assistance, encouragement or inducement for Australia to do so. 

    Relatedly, we recognise that there is interest in the safety of nuclear-powered vessels. Some have also inquired about the management of spent fuel from Australia’s submarine programme. I can reassure you that nuclear safety and stewardship are fundamental to our cooperation under AUKUS. For over 60 years, the UK and the US have operated more than 500 naval nuclear reactors. Collectively, they have travelled over 240 million kilometres without a reactor accident or release of radioactive material that adversely affected human health or the environment. Our approach to AUKUS is underpinned by this unmatched safety record, as well as Australia’s experience operating nuclear research reactors and conducting nuclear science activities. 

    Claims that AUKUS will undermine the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone – either in terms of the presence of nuclear weapons or the dumping of radioactive waste at sea – are incorrect. Naval nuclear propulsion is not prohibited by the Treaty of Rarotonga, and Australia’s acquisition of a conventionally-armed, nuclear-powered submarine capability is entirely consistent with the Treaty. As a responsible nuclear steward, Australia will be responsible for the management, disposition, storage, and disposal of any spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste from their programme. The Australian Naval Nuclear Power Safety Act 2024 also reaffirms that Australia will not manage, store, or dispose of spent nuclear fuel or reactors from decommissioned UK or US submarines. 

    Second, Australia’s submarine fuel will be subject to a robust package of safeguards and verification measures. We know that much has been made of the fact that Australia’s submarines will be powered by Highly Enriched Uranium. Let me be clear – the HEU fuel that will power Australia’s submarines will be subject to a robust package of safeguards and verification measures developed in consultation with the IAEA. The fuel for Australia’s nuclear-powered submarines will be provided to Australia by the UK and US in complete, welded power units that will not require refuelling in their lifetime. This has several advantages, including:

    Eliminating the need for Australia to enrich uranium;

    Reducing the production of spent fuel, and;

    Avoiding the need to maintain a stockpile of fresh nuclear fuel.

    Removing nuclear material from these sealed units is a complex and highly visible process. This would also render the power unit, and hence the submarine, inoperable. There is no incentive for Australia to pursue such a course of action.

    Additionally, the nuclear fuel Australia will receive cannot be used in nuclear weapons without further chemical processing. This would require facilities that Australia does not have and will not seek. The IAEA will be able to verify the absence of these facilities, including by use of Australia’s Additional Protocol.

    Separately, you may have heard that the transfer of HEU from a NWS to a NNWS is unprecedented or contravenes the NPT. Both claims are incorrect. The transfer of nuclear material at any enrichment level among States Parties is not prohibited by the NPT, provided the transfer is carried out in accordance with relevant safeguards obligations. Such transfers can and do take place between Nuclear Weapon States and Non-Nuclear Weapon States. Like many Member States here, AUKUS partners remain fully committed to HEU minimisation for civilian nuclear applications.

    Third, naval nuclear propulsion was foreseen by the drafters of the NPT and will not remove nuclear material from IAEA oversight. As Ambassador Wood has already made clear, naval nuclear propulsion was foreseen by the drafters of the NPT and discussed during the negotiations to develop the model CSA. This has been repeatedly confirmed by the IAEA Secretariat, including by Director General Grossi in September 2022 and March 2023.  Article 14 is the specific provision included in the IAEA’s model CSA to provide a mechanism for activities including naval nuclear propulsion.

    The development and use of this technology, and the application of Article 14, is therefore not a ‘loophole’ – and calling it such is often a deliberate attempt to mislead. As DG Grossi noted in May 2023, and I quote, “the Agency’s role in this process is foreseen in the existing legal framework and falls strictly within its statutory competences”.

    And let me be clear, Australia’s Article 14 arrangement will not remove nuclear material from IAEA oversight. The Agency will be enabled to continue meeting its technical objectives throughout the lifecycle of Australia’s submarines. Verifying that there has been no diversion of nuclear material; no misuse of nuclear facilities; and no undeclared nuclear material or activities in Australia. 

    Fourth, the IAEA has the authority to negotiate directly and in-confidence with Member States. The IAEA has the clear authority under its Statute, and extensive precedent, to negotiate directly and in-confidence with individual Member States on the establishment and application of safeguards and verification arrangements.

    You may encounter attempts to legitimise a so-called intergovernmental discussion on AUKUS. If you do, we urge you to remember the following: Australia’s current engagement with the IAEA is not a new phenomenon. As DG Grossi has stated, the IAEA already conducted bilateral discussions with another Member State on an Article 14 arrangement in the past. Many will be aware that the IAEA is also engaging with Brazil on an arrangement for the use of nuclear material under safeguards in naval nuclear propulsion under Article 13 of the Quadripartite Safeguards Agreement. 

    The international safeguards system relies on the IAEA’s ability to carry out its verification mission independently and impartially – free from political deliberations. Interference would politicise the IAEA’s independence, mandate, and technical authority, and establish a deeply harmful precedent.

    Any suggestion that the IAEA Board of Governors, or the opportunity for proper deliberation, will somehow be bypassed in the case of AUKUS is also false. DG Grossi has committed to report, as appropriate, on naval nuclear propulsion programmes to the Board, as he last did last in November 2024. AUKUS partners welcome discussion of such programmes at the Board, under apolitical agenda items put forward by the DG and informed by his reporting. Once Australia and the IAEA Secretariat have agreed an Article 14 arrangement, it will be transmitted to the Board for appropriate action. AUKUS partners fully support this. 

    To summarise, Australia, the UK, and US strongly support the NPT as the cornerstone of the global non-proliferation regime. We remain committed to setting the highest non-proliferation standard for naval nuclear propulsion under an Article 14 arrangement. I hope you will leave here today clear in the knowledge that AUKUS is fully in line with our international obligations, including those in the NPT, and confident in the principles and legitimacy of our approach and our engagement with the IAEA. We will continue to engage openly and transparently with the international community on good faith queries. In that spirit, I will pass back to Ambassador Larsen for any questions from the audience.

    Updates to this page

    Published 13 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: ANNVILLE – Keystone State ChalleNGe Academy for At-Risk Teens Graduates Latest Class

    Source: US State of Pennsylvania

    June 14, 2025Annville, PA

    ADVISORY – ANNVILLE – Keystone State ChalleNGe Academy for At-Risk Teens Graduates Latest Class

    The latest class of the Keystone State ChalleNGe Academy (KSCA) for teens will graduate on their way to a brighter future. The cadets successfully completed the 22-week residential phase of the program and will now embark on a 24-month mentorship phase in their home communities.

    Dr. George M. Schwartz (Brig. Gen. Ret.) will be the commencement speaker.

    The KSCA provides Pennsylvania teens who are struggling an opportunity to learn skills such as self-discipline, leadership, and responsibility through an engaging, safe, and structured residential experience. Cadets are guided to improve their academic standing, regain credits, and increase their potential for future employment or further their high school or post-secondary education.

    WHAT:
    Keystone State ChalleNGe Academy’s graduation

    WHEN:
    Saturday, June 14, 2024, 10 A.M.

    WHERE:
    Bldg. 8-80 Bearty Ave.
    Fort Indiantown Gap, Annville, PA

    NOTE: All media interested in covering the graduation should contact Angela Watson at watsona@pa.govor 717-507-7000 today to arrange easy access to the event.

    DIRECTIONS: All visitors must enter through the main gate. All other entrances and exits to Fort Indiantown Gap are permanently closed.
    Take I-81 North and get off at exit 85B Indiantown Gap. This will put you on 934 north to the main gate. You must show a state- or federally-issued identification card to enter the installation.
    Continue through the access point to the first light, and take a right onto Service Rd. Next, take a right onto Bearty Ave. Then turn right on Bellamy Ave. to Bldg. 8-80. More information here: https://www.ftig.ng.mil/Gate-Construction/.

    NOTE: Commonwealth Media Services will film the graduation ceremony and distribute video through PAcast after the event.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: The Launch of SoloChain: The World’s First Blockchain Specifically Designed for Agentic Transactions and DePIN Mining

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORTOLA, British Virgin Islands, June 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The world welcomes SoloChain, the first blockchain designed for agentic transactions and DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure) mining. With a focus on facilitating real-world asset integration, equitable token distribution, and smart automation, SoloChain is built upon three pillars:

    • Transaction Mining
    • DePIN Mining
    • Agentic AI Automation

    Transaction Mining: Equitable Rewards Without the Hardware Hurdle

    Most blockchain networks use miners and validators to protect the chain, but how they split rewards can be murky or biased toward insiders. Bitcoin uses the most transparent and merit-based system, but its dependence on costly hardware and complexity excludes many.

    SoloChain revolutionizes token releases and reward systems by providing the fairness and transparency of Bitcoin’s model, minus the complexity and expense of infrastructure. Users receive $SOLO tokens simply for engagement in the network — token distribution is made more democratic, inclusive, and accessible.

    Main Benefit: All user activity on SoloChain is rewarded, equating real user activity to network value.

    DePIN Mining: Enabling Tokenized Infrastructure

    The Real-World Asset (RWA) landscape is transforming as DePIN assets take centre stage. Unlike traditional RWAs, such as real estate, which face significant friction in tokenization—DePIN assets like GPUs, weather sensors, and edge devices are blockchain-native by design, making them inherently compatible with decentralized infrastructure.

    SoloChain provides an integrated environment for DePIN projects to tokenize their infrastructure, stake and restake these assets on-chain, and unlock new funding models through Mining.fun (more on this at the bottom)

    Key Differentiator: SoloChain doesn’t merely enable DePIN — it supercharges it through a native execution layer, rewarding engagement and driving real-world use.

    Agentic AI: Enabling Onchain Automation

    As the SoloChain network matures, early adopters manually stake, restake, and interact with DePIN assets. But the vision goes far beyond manual labour.

    Enter Agentic AI.

    SoloChain is actively building toward a future where AI agents autonomously manage network operations, such as:

    • Reallocating DePIN assets for optimal yield
    • Restaking into high-growth pools
    • Driving ecosystem expansion based on predictive analytics

    This agentic infrastructure transforms how users engage — minimizing effort while maximizing value.

    SoloChain in Action: DePIN Growth Meets Execution Layer

    Built on Caldera’s modular rollup stack, SoloChain is engineered for scalable, real-world deployment. It unlocks an execution layer purpose-built for decentralized physical infrastructure—coordinating programmable, permissionless assets like compute units and IoT devices directly on-chain.

    As highlighted in the 2024 State of DePIN report:

    • $50B+ total DePIN market cap
    • 13M+ connected devices
    • $500M+ annualized revenue

    Despite this massive potential, the on-chain execution layer has long been missing. SoloChain fills that gap, using a transaction-mining model that rewards real-world contributions over speculation.

    Stake infrastructure. Run autonomous agents. Launch and mine tokens with actual impact—only on SoloChain.

    Mining.Fun Testnet Is Now Live

    Mining.fun is a revolutionary launchpad that enables anyone to create tokens through its transaction mining curve system—a transparent mechanism where users stake tokens in customizable pools to earn rewards aligned with bespoke mining curves. This approach incentivizes authentic, long-term community participation while discouraging predatory behavior. Unlike Pump.fun’s volatile “pump-and-dump” approach, Mining.fun prioritizes fairness and sustainability: its mining curves prevent front-running and whale manipulation, reward early supporters progressively (not disproportionately), and create organic price discovery through continuous staking rather than artificial scarcity. The result is a fundamentally superior platform where both memecoins and utility tokens thrive through equitable mechanics rather than exploitative hype.

    No presales. No insider allocations. Just clean, on-chain token creation aligned with actual user activity.

    Ready to build the next big thing? Head to Mining.fun and launch or mine your token today.

    Learn More

    Contact Details:

    Solo Tech
    Mark Makate
    contact@solo.tech

    Disclaimer: This content is provided by SoloChain. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. We do not guarantee any claims, statements, or promises made in this article. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. Investing in crypto and mining-related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone, and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent advice if necessary. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector—including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining—complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed. Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility. Globenewswire does not endorse any content on this page.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We assume no responsibility for any inaccuracies, errors, or omissions. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/22be683e-a5a1-499f-ad33-462b05d20809

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Kenya’s brutal police have been exposed again – why the system fails people

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Douglas Lucas Kivoi, Principal Policy Analyst, Governance Department, The Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA)

    The recent killing in Kenya of a young man in police detention highlights a string of systemic failures to hold the country’s security officers accountable for their actions. Despite public outrage and protests, Kenyan police officers continue to use inhumane, brutal and sometimes fatal methods with little consequence. Douglas Lucas Kivoi, who has studied policing and police reform in Kenya, unpacks the situation.

    Why is the Kenyan police service given to brutality?

    First, Kenya’s police institution was established as a colonial instrument of oppression. Police reforms since independence in 1963 have had little impact in changing this. Instead, successive governments have used the police to suppress dissent. This has cemented a culture of violence and police impunity. This was seen during former president Daniel arap Moi’s repressive regime, the post-2007 election violence and recent crackdowns on public protests protected under the constitution.

    The reaction to mass mobilisation in June 2024 was violent. This was because the state sees public demonstrations as a threat to its authority.

    Second, police brutality thrives in environments where wrongdoing goes unpunished. Kenya’s police force lacks good internal control mechanisms. A culture of silence and solidarity – the “blue code” – deters whistleblowing. Advancements and rewards are sometimes determined by political allegiances rather than professionalism.


    Read more: Kenyan police use excessive force because they’re serving political elites, not the public – policy analyst


    Third, many police officers work in toxic conditions marked by poor pay, limited resources and long shifts. These contribute to feelings of frustration and aggression. The situation is worsened by institutionalised corruption where police officers extort money from citizens and demand bribes. This has contributed to diminished ethical standards.

    What’s in place to punish police excesses?

    Kenya has several formal avenues for holding police accountable. But all are deeply flawed.

    Independent Policing Oversight Authority: This was established in 2011 in light of the post-election violence of 2007-08. Its job was to independently investigate police misconduct. However, underfunding and understaffing has led to delayed investigations.

    There has also been a lack of cooperation from the police. They often fail to provide evidence or deliberately provide misleading information to impede investigations.

    The authority also has limited enforcement power. It has recommended thousands of prosecutions of rogue officers. However, it has seen low conviction rates given the slow processes at the judiciary and Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

    Internal Affairs Unit: This is a critical oversight body. It’s mandated to provide accountability and professional discipline within the police service. It’s tasked with investigating public complaints and complaints from within the police service against police officers.

    The unit can recommend to the National Police Service Commission disciplinary action – such as prosecution or dismissal – against officers it finds guilty. It also monitors police officers to ensure that ethical conduct and professional standards are maintained.

    However, the unit faces perceptions of a lack of independence and as an internal cover-up tool. In many instances, cases of police misconduct are simply punished by a transfer to another station.

    Judiciary and Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions: Cases take years to move through the judicial system. Convictions are rare. The public prosecutions office has faced accusations of bias, which it exhibits through its reluctance to prosecute high-profile police killings.

    The time it takes to conclude police misconduct cases allows impunity to thrive. Deliberately poor investigations carried out by the police (who are also suspects) have led to collapsed cases.

    National Police Service Commission: This was established by the 2010 Kenyan constitution. The commission recruits and appoints police officers (except the inspector-general of police, who is appointed by the president with parliamentary approval). It also promotes, transfers and disciplines police officers.

    However, the commission has faced claims of being unduly influenced by the inspector-general’s office in recruitment and promotions. This undermines its independence.


    Read more: How Nairobi police failures let people get away with murder


    Civil society and the media: Organisations like Amnesty International Kenya and the Kenya Human Rights Commission document police abuses. But their reports rarely, if ever, lead to any real action being taken. The media’s attention and reporting of cases may exert temporary pressure but this doesn’t seem to have any long-term impact.

    Why haven’t these mechanisms worked?

    Firstly, there’s an institutional resistance to reform. Powerful factions in the police and government benefit from the current system. Whenever there is an attempt at enforcing accountability, these senior officials take advantage of bureaucratic delays, and harass investigators and whistleblowers.

    In extreme cases, they enforce the disappearance of witnesses.

    Secondly, a lack of political will creates a favourable environment to circumvent constitutional frameworks. This ultimately weakens any chances of accountability. At best, police in Kenya are used to defend political interests and suppress dissent.

    This emboldens powerful political players who want the police to be controllable. This dissuades them from instituting actual reforms and establishing a humane policing service.

    What will change things?

    Until those in leadership positions genuinely prioritise independent institutions and justice over transient political gains, significant police reform is unlikely to be realised.

    Elements of such reform would include steps to:

    Strengthen police oversight and guarantee independence

    The Independent Policing Oversight Authority Act needs to be amended to enhance autonomy. The current system is easy for the president to manipulate because he gets to appoint the authority’s commissioners.

    There’s also a need to provide the authority with equipment. This includes ballistics analysis, digital forensics and crime scene reconstruction capabilities to combat police cover-ups.

    The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions must also be required to respond to the authority’s recommendations within 30 days. Currently, cases can take years to complete. There have been instances when rogue police have used this window to eliminate witnesses or tamper with evidence.

    Overhaul police training and culture

    There must be a move away from paramilitary-style drills and procedures in training. Instead, officers need to practise de-escalation, communication and problem-solving tactics with the public. What exists within Kenya now is a paramilitary service not a police service.

    Additionally, the police service commission needs to reward professionalism and not cronyism.

    Judicial and prosecutorial reforms

    Ending police impunity in Kenya requires a multi-pronged approach. This involves judicial independence, vigorous prosecution, meaningful oversight, legislative changes and public engagement.

    But this requires meaningful political will.

    Political accountability

    Continued police impunity has eroded public confidence in Kenya’s policing and justice systems. The policing oversight authority needs sufficient funding – free of political interference – to investigate and prosecute police misconduct. Senior officers should be held accountable for not disciplining rogue officers under their charge. The presidency and interior ministry must have a zero-tolerance policy toward police brutality.

    If Kenya doesn’t grapple with police impunity, then the anniversary of the June 2024 protests will be just another date in history when the state brutally attacked, maimed and killed its own citizenry. And still managed to silence them.

    – Kenya’s brutal police have been exposed again – why the system fails people
    – https://theconversation.com/kenyas-brutal-police-have-been-exposed-again-why-the-system-fails-people-258843

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Second Central Asian regional simulation-based training strengthens joint response to human trafficking

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: Second Central Asian regional simulation-based training strengthens joint response to human trafficking

    Labour inspectors inspect a construction site as part of the simulation. (OSCE) Photo details

    Over 130 practitioners from Central Asia and Türkiye gathered this week at Lake Issyk-Kul, Kyrgyzstan, for a five-day regional simulation-based training exercise on combating trafficking in human beings.
    The training was opened by Nurlanbek Azygaliev, Vice Speaker of the Parliament of the Kyrgyz Republic, who emphasized during his opening remarks that, “platforms created by the OSCE, especially simulation trainings, have become not just a place for training, but a real tool for establishing partnership, trust and interaction.”
    Throughout the week, participants from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Türkiye, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan took part in an immersive “learning-by-doing” training that reflected real-world human trafficking scenarios. Set in a complex, multi-country fictional environment, the simulation focused on trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation, as well as forced criminality.  Participants worked through realistic cases involving the recruitment, transport, and exploitation of vulnerable individuals including children, persons with disabilities, and undocumented migrants. They were tasked with carrying out joint multi-agency and cross-sectorial investigations, applying standard operating procedures to identify presumed victims, and delivering victim-centered assistance and protection, especially for those facing multiple, overlapping risks.
    “With our simulations, we aim to break down silos and foster a spirit of cooperation in your joint efforts to combat human trafficking. True progress can only be achieved when law enforcement, civil society, prosecutors, asylum authorities, labour inspectors, and social workers work hand in hand” said Kari Johnstone, OSCE Special Representative and Co-ordinator for Combating Trafficking in Human Beings during the closing ceremony today.
    The exercise was organized by the OSCE Programme Offices in Bishkek and the Office of the OSCE Special Representative and Co-ordinator for Combating Trafficking in Human Beings, in close co-operation with the Migration and Human Trafficking Council under the Speaker of the Parliament of the Kyrgyz Republic, the Ministry of Interior of the Kyrgyz Republic, and the Ministry of Labour, Social Care and Migration of the Kyrgyz Republic as well as OSCE Field Operations in Central Asia. 
    The event was made possible thanks to support from the governments of Germany, Ireland, Italy, France, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, and Switzerland, as well as the United States Mission to the OSCE. The training also benefited from the expertise and financial support of the International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD) and the Prague Process Secretariat.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Further thunderstorm warnings for Plymouth

    Source: City of Plymouth

    The Met Office has issued further yellow warnings for heavy rain and thunderstorms covering Plymouth (and much of the country) today and tomorrow, following yesterday’s torrential downpours.

    It warns that spray and sudden flooding could again lead to difficult driving conditions and some road closures, as well as the possibility of public transport disruption and power cuts.

    Our highways team have a regular gully inspection and maintenance programme and pay particular attention to known flooding hotspots, especially when heavy rain is forecast.

    However, exceptional levels of rainfall will always create an extra challenge, with South West Water’s combined sewer systems often becoming quickly overwhelmed and flash flooding much more likely.

    Yesterday teams worked hard to clear flooding in around 30 locations across the city, as well as deal with around a dozen blown manhole covers. In some cases this also involved closing roads and redirecting traffic.

    Crews are on standby again today and tomorrow to deal with any further issues that may arise and clear sites as quickly as possible, prioritising key routes and areas that affect homes and businesses. They also carry out checks to ensure there are no underlying drainage issues.

    See the Met Office website for advice on travelling in storms, rain and wind, as well as staying safe in a thunderstorm.

    For the latest updates please check the Met Office website and social media feeds for the latest updates. To report an immediate danger to us please call 01752 668000.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pupils learn about consequences of knife crime

    Source: Scotland – City of Perth

    Perth became the first city in Scotland to host the Knife Angel at the end of 2024 and since then Perth and Kinross Council has been working with partner agencies including the Scottish Prison Service, charity Aid and Abet and Police Scotland to raise awareness of the issues around knife crime.

    On Wednesday 11 June, Perth Grammar School became the latest venue to host a workshop following successful events in Bertha Park High School and St John’s Academy in May.

    As well as presentations from Perth and Kinross Council’s Community Justice Team and Aid and Abet, staff and prisoners from HMP Perth and HMYOI Polmont have also participated by sharing videos and recordings for use in the sessions, detailing their own personal experiences of knife crime and its consequences.

    Councillor Tom McEwan, convener of Perth and Kinross Council’s Housing and Social Wellbeing Committee, said: “Although there has been an overall reduction in knife crime over the past 15 years, recent tragedies have shown this is not a problem that has gone away.

    “It is important that young people realise that there are very real consequences for using a knife, or other blade.

    “The simple truth is that every injury, every death is one too many.”

    Perth and Kinross Learning and Families convener Councillor John Rebbeck said: “Knife crime can take lives and destroy families – both of the victim and the perpetrator who is likely to end up behind bars for several years.

    “Hearing these stories first-hand leaves a powerful impression and I thank everyone who has worked hard to run these workshops. I’m sure our children and young people will take a great deal from these workshops.”

    Bailie Chris Ahern, chair of the Perth and Kinross community justice and safety partnership added: “These are really powerful events and show children and young people the damage knives can cause to victims and the people who use them.

    “Young people are disproportionately affected by knife crime so it is important we all work together to reduce knife crime as much as we can.”

    Tom Martin, Head of Offender Outcomes at HMP Perth said: “We are committed to doing all we can to support people, reduce the risk of crime, and help build safer communities.

    “We were delighted to work with partners in Perth and Kinross Council and Police Scotland on this important initiative, and particularly pleased that some those in our care had an opportunity to share their stories, so young people can learn from their experiences.”

    Police Scotland Sergeant Allan Neary, of Partnerships, Interventions and Preventions, said: “Recently, we supported in various engagements around knife crime awareness, along with our partners at Perth and Kinross Council, Scottish Prison Service and Aid and Abet.

    “Working closely together ensures that we get the message across about the dangers of carrying knives and the impact this has. We know the effect that violent crime has on individuals, families, and local communities, and we remain commitment to keeping our communities safe.”

    The Knife Angel, also known as the National Monument Against Violence & Aggression, was on display on King Edward Street throughout December.

    Created by the British Ironwork Centre, the statue is made up of 100,000 seized weapons.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pumping station ready to pour pints for beer lovers

    Source: City of Leicester

    REAL ale, vegan beers and a range of ciders will all be flowing at the Leicester CAMRA Beer Festival this month.

    Taking place in a marquee in the grounds of the Abbey Pumping Station, the three-day festival will be serving up more than 50 beers from independent brewers from Thursday 26 June.

    Some indoor seating will be provided, with additional picnic tables and gazebos outside, but festival goers can make sure they sit with their friends by bringing their own picnic blankets and camping chairs.

    Tickets – which must be booked online – are available for afternoon sessions or evening sessions each day.

    Prices start at £7 for the Thursday afternoon session and the Saturday evening session, rising to £9.50 on Friday night and Saturday afternoon. Generous discounts are available for CAMRA members and all tickets include a commemorative glass.

    Doors open for the afternoon sessions at 12 noon on Thursday 26 and Friday 27 June, and at 11am on Saturday 28 June, with the evening sessions starting at 5.30pm on 26-27 June and at 6pm on 28 June.

    Festival goers are advised that the Leicester CAMRA Beer Festival is a cashless event and all payments on site must be made by card.

    To book tickets, please visit leicestermuseums.org and follow the link to the CAMRA booking site.

    The Abbey Pumping Station is on Corporation Road, Leicester, LE4 5PX and shares a car park with the neighbouring National Space Centre. Parking is free after 6pm. The pumping station is also served by good walking, cycling and bus routes. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Beijing and Moscow intend to deepen intercity cooperation in various areas

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

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

    BEIJING, June 13 (Xinhua) — A conference entitled “Cities of the Future. Synergy of the Moscow-Beijing Strategic Partnership” was held in Beijing on Friday, which is part of the ongoing “Moscow Seasons in Beijing” festival.

    The two capitals are celebrating the 30th anniversary of their sister city relations this year. “Two dynamically developing megacities with enormous potential and investment opportunities have much to learn from each other, be it the organization of transport logistics infrastructure, the introduction of digital services, the holding of large-scale cultural and sports events or the introduction of advanced environmental standards,” said Andrey Povalyaev, Minister Counselor of the Russian Embassy in China, delivering a welcoming speech at the opening of the event.

    “Currently, 383 partnership pairs have been formed between our countries, including 135 between the subjects of the Russian Federation and the regions of the PRC, as well as 248 pairs at the municipal level,” he emphasized, adding that “by their example, the capitals of the two countries set the bar for interaction and serve as a model for other regions of Russia and China.”

    At the plenary session, government officials from Beijing and Moscow, as well as representatives of business circles, industry organizations and research institutions from both countries, discussed topics such as the implementation of the intercity cooperation program for the coming years, and exchanged best practices and achievements in bilateral cooperation in the development of mutual tourist flows, trade, investment, industry, digital services and technology.

    The conference also featured a ceremony between Chinese and Russian companies and organizations to hand over signed memorandums of understanding or cooperation, as well as agreements of intent or cooperation. These documents relate to cooperation in developing mutual tourist flows, trade, and museum affairs.

    In addition, the conference included business sessions where issues related to the entry of Russian enterprises into the Chinese market, challenges and opportunities for Moscow innovative companies in China, as well as the development of investment and industrial cooperation between the capitals of the two countries were discussed.

    Along with this, a meeting of the working group on transport between Moscow and Beijing, a round table on holding bilateral international museum projects between the two cities, as well as a presentation of Moscow’s tourism potential and B2B negotiations with the participation of business representatives from the two countries were held.

    Let us recall that the Moscow Seasons in Beijing festival, organized by the Moscow government with the support of the Beijing People’s Government, is one of the largest events within the framework of the China-Russia Cross Years of Culture 2024-2025. It takes place from Thursday to Sunday on the Wangfujing pedestrian street in the very center of the capital of the PRC. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Vehicle stop by Met officers leads to 24 years jail time for criminal duo

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    Removing dangerous weapons from the streets of London is a priority for the Met. By relentlessly targeting criminals involved in the supply of drugs and weapons, we can continue to reduce violent crime.

    Chloe Scott, 27 (10.10.97), of Whitehead Close, N18, and Miles Addy, 28 (14.04.96), of King Alfred Avenue, SE6, were both sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment at Snaresbrook Crown Court on Friday, 13 June.

    An investigation started in December 2022 when a 15-year-old boy was found with drugs after being stopped by British Transport Police officers at Tower Hill Underground Station.

    After accessing a mobile phone being carried by the child officers established that Scott was instructing the boy to sell and transport drugs on her behalf.

    Further enquiries were carried out and armed Met officers stopped Scott’s car in Seven Sisters Road, Islington on 3 June 2023. They found around half a kilo of cocaine and five large hunting knives.

    As the investigation progressed, Met detectives discovered Scott, who was a registered children’s social worker, had been in regular contact with Miles Addy, a convicted criminal who was serving a prison sentence for a firearms offence.

    Between them the pair were running a large-scale drug supply network, selling cocaine in London and across other parts of the south-east.

    Videos found on Scott’s phone also revealed they were also involved in selling weapons, including firearms and knives. Addy was found to be directing Scott to addresses to deliver firearms and drugs to their customers.

    Through matching the serial numbers of the firearms in the videos to the police database, detectives discovered one of the weapons was a firearm with links to a murder investigation. Another firearm which could be linked back to Scott and Addy was recovered during a warrant on 20 November 2023. Joy Hyde-Coleman, 29, (07.12.94) from Blondin Street, Bow, who was found to be in possession of the firearm was subsequently sentenced to five years’ imprisonment in August 2024.

    Both offenders were charged in August 2024 and officers worked with authorities to suspend Scott from her role as a social worker. Scott pleaded guilty on the first day of her trial at Snaresbrook Crown Court on 13 January 2025. Addy pleaded at an earlier hearing on 2 November 2024.


    Detective Inspector Damian Hill, from the Met’s Specialist Crime team that led the investigation, said:

    “As police officers we all too often see the devastating consequences of drugs and weapons on the streets of London. These dangerous offenders helped fuel violent crime and we won’t stand for it.

    “The overwhelming evidence we gathered, supported by British Transport Police and HM Prison and Probation Service left them with little choice but to admit to their offending and they will both now face lengthy prison sentences.

    “Across the Met we remain committed to tackling violence and our hard work is paying off. Homicide and knife crime is down – and seen here we are also dismantling serious and organised crime groups.”

    Scott previously pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs, two counts of selling or transferring a firearm, one count of conspiracy to possess firearms, one count of conspiracy to possess ammunition, one count of causing unnecessary suffering to a dog and one count of possession of hunting knives. The plea was entered on what would have been the first day of the trial at Snaresbrook Crown Court.

    Addy pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs, one count of conspiracy to possess firearms, and a further count of conspiracy to possess ammunition at an earlier hearing at the same court and was recalled to prison.

    Scott was additionally disqualified for ownership of animals for 12 years for the cruelty to animal offence.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Southern Baptists’ call for the US Supreme Court to overturn its same-sex marriage decision is part of a long history of opposing women’s and LGBTQ+ people’s rights

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Susan M. Shaw, Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Oregon State University

    A worship session at the 2025 Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting on June 10, 2025, in Dallas. AP Photo/Richard W. Rodriguez

    The Southern Baptist Convention has lost 3.6 million members over the past two decades and faces an ongoing sexual abuse crisis. At its June 2025 annual meeting, however, neither of those issues took up as much time as controversial social issues, including the denomination’s stance on same-sex marriage.

    The group called for the overturning of Obergefell v. Hodges – the Supreme Court decision that legalized same-sex marriage – and the creation of laws that “affirm marriage between one man and one woman.”

    Messengers – Southern Baptists’ word for delegates from local churches – also asked for laws that would “reflect the moral order revealed in Scripture and nature.”

    They also decried declining fertility rates, commercial surrogacy, Planned Parenthood, “willful childlessness,” the normalization of “transgender ideology,” and gender-affirming medical care.

    This detailed list targeting women’s and LGBTQ+ rights was justified by an appeal to a God-ordained created order, as defined by Southern Baptists’ interpretation of the Bible.

    In this created order, sex and gender are synonymous and are irrevocably defined by biology. The heterosexual nuclear family is the foundational institution of this order, with the father dominant over his wife and children – and children are a necessity if husbands and wives are to be faithful to God’s design for the family.

    The resolution, On Restoring Moral Clarity through God’s Design for Gender, Marriage, and the Family, passed easily in a denomination that was taken over from more moderate Southern Baptists by fundamentalists in the early 1990s, largely in response to women’s progress in society and in the denomination.

    Southern Baptists were always conservative on issues of gender and sexuality. As I was entering a Southern Baptist seminary in the early 1980s, the denomination seemed poised to embrace social progress. I watched the takeover firsthand as a student and then as a professor of women and gender studies who studies Southern Baptists. This new resolution is the latest in a long history of Southern Baptist opposition to the progress of women and LGBTQ+ people.

    Opposing LGBTQ+ rights

    Throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s, many Southern Baptists began to embrace the women’s movement. Women started to attend Southern Baptist seminaries in record numbers, many claiming a call to serve as pastors. While Southern Baptist acceptance of LGBTQ+ people lagged far behind its nascent embrace of women’s rights, progress did seem possible.

    Then in 1979, a group of Southern Baptist fundamentalists organized to wrest control of the denomination from the moderates who had led it for decades.

    Any hope for progress on changes regarding LGBTQ+ rights in the denomination quickly died. Across the next two decades, advances made by women, such as being ordained and serving as senior pastors, eroded and disappeared.

    The SBC had passed anti-gay resolutions in the 1970s defining homosexuality as “deviant” and a “sin.” But under the new fundamentalist rule, the SBC became even more vehemently anti-gay and anti-trans.

    In 1988, the SBC called homosexuality a “perversion of divine standards,” “a violation of nature and natural affections,” “not a normal lifestyle,” and “an abomination in the eyes of God.”

    In 1991, they decried government funding for the National Lesbian and Gay Health Conference as a violation of “the proper role and responsibility of government” because of its encouragement of “sexual immorality.”

    Predictably, across the years, the convention spoke out against every effort to advance LGBTQ+ rights. This included supporting the Boy Scouts’ ban of gay scouts, opposing military service by LGBTQ+ people, boycotting Disney for its support of LGBTQ+ people, calling on businesses to deny LGBTQ+ people domestic partner benefits and employment nondiscrimination to protect LGBTQ+ people, and supporting the Defense of Marriage Act that limited marriage to a woman and a man.

    Targeting same-sex marriage

    The gender and sexuality topic, however, that has received the most attention from the convention has been marriage equality. Since 1980, the SBC has passed 22 resolutions that touch on same-sex marriage.

    The SBC passed its first resolution against same-sex marriage in 1996 after the Hawaii Supreme Court indicated the possibility it could rule in favor of same-sex marriage. The court never decided the issue because Hawaii’s Legislature passed a bill defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

    In 1998, the convention amended its faith statement, the Baptist Faith and Message, to define marriage as “the uniting of one man and one woman in covenant commitment.”

    The denomination passed its next resolution in 2003 in response to the Vermont General Assembly’s establishment of civil unions. The resolution opposed any efforts to validate same-sex marriages or partnerships, whether legislative, judicial or religious.

    In 2004, after the Massachusetts Supreme Court allowed same-sex marriages in that state, the convention called for a constitutional amendment to define marriage as between a man and a woman. It reiterated this call in 2006.

    When the California Supreme Court struck down the state’s ban on same-sex marriage, the SBC passed another resolution in 2008 warning of the dire consequences of allowing lesbians and gay men to marry, as people from other states would marry in California and return home to challenge their states’ marriage bans.

    In 2011, the convention offered its support for the Defense of Marriage Act, followed in 2012 by a denunciation of the use of civil rights language to argue for marriage equality.

    Delegates at a Southern Baptist Convention meeting in 2012 in New Orleans.
    AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

    The resolution argues that homosexuality “does not qualify as a class meriting special protections, like race and gender.”

    When Obergefell was before the Supreme Court, the SBC called on the court to deny marriage equality. After Obergefell was decided in favor of same-sex marriage, the convention asked for Congress to pass the First Amendment Defense Act, which would have prohibited the federal government from discriminating against people based on their opposition to same-sex marriage. That same resolution also offers its support to state attorneys general challenging transgender rights.

    Opposing transgender people

    Messengers of the Southern Baptist Convention listen to remarks by its president, Clint Pressley, during the 2025 SBC annual meeting in Dallas.
    AP Photo/Richard W. Rodriguez

    This was not the first time the SBC had spoken about transgender issues. As early as 2007, the denomination expressed its opposition to allowing transgender people to constitute a protected class in hate crimes legislation.

    In 2014, the convention stated its belief that gender is fixed and binary and subsequently that trans people should not be allowed gender-affirming care and that government officials should not validate transgender identity.

    In 2016, the denomination opposed access for transgender people to bathrooms matching their gender identities. In 2021, the convention invoked women’s rights – in a denomination famous for its resistance to women’s equality – as a reason to undermine trans rights.

    In its resolution opposing the proposed Equality Act, which would have added sexual orientation and gender identity as protected classifications, the SBC argued, “The Equality Act would undermine decades of hard-fought civil rights protections for women and girls by threatening competition in sports and disregarding the privacy concerns women rightly have about sharing sleeping quarters and intimate facilities with members of the opposite sex.”

    This most recent resolution from June 2025 returns to the themes of fixed and binary gender, a divinely sanctioned hierarchical ordering of gender, and marriage as an institution limited to one woman and one man. While claiming these beliefs are “universal truths,” the resolution argues that Obergefell is a “legal fiction” because it denies the biological reality of male and female.

    Going further, this resolution claims that U.S. law on gender and sexuality should be based on the Bible. The duty of lawmakers, it states, is to “pass laws that reflect the truth of creation and natural law – about marriage, sex, human life, and family – and to oppose any law that denies or undermines what God has made plain through nature and Scripture.”

    By taking no action on sexual abuse while focusing its efforts on issues of gender and sexuality, the convention affirmed its decades-long conservative trajectory. It also underlined its willingness to encourage lawmakers to impose these standards on the rest of the nation.

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

    ref. Southern Baptists’ call for the US Supreme Court to overturn its same-sex marriage decision is part of a long history of opposing women’s and LGBTQ+ people’s rights – https://theconversation.com/southern-baptists-call-for-the-us-supreme-court-to-overturn-its-same-sex-marriage-decision-is-part-of-a-long-history-of-opposing-womens-and-lgbtq-peoples-rights-258883

    MIL OSI Analysis