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Category: Universities

  • MIL-OSI Global: Trump guts low-income energy assistance as summer heat descends and electricity prices rise

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Conor Harrison, Associate Professor of Economic Geography, University of South Carolina

    Cities like Houston get high humidity in addition to the heat, making summer almost unbearable without cooling. Brandon Bell/Getty Images

    The U.S. is headed into what forecasters expect to be one of the hottest summers on record, and millions of people across the country will struggle to pay their power bills as temperatures and energy costs rise.

    A 2023 national survey found that nearly 1 in 4 Americans were unable to pay their full energy bill for at least one month, and nearly 1 in 4 reported that they kept their homes at unsafe temperatures to save money. By 2025, updated polling indicated nearly 3 in 4 Americans are worried about rising energy costs.

    Conservative estimates suggest that utilities shut off power to over 3 million U.S. households each year because the residents cannot pay their bills.

    This problem of high energy prices isn’t lost on the Trump administration.

    On the first day of his second term in 2025, President Donald Trump declared a national energy emergency by executive order, saying that “high energy prices … devastate Americans, particularly those living on low- and fixed incomes.”

    Secretary of Energy Christopher Wright raised concerns about utility disconnections and outlined a mission to “shrink that number, with the target of zero.”

    Yet, the administration’s 2026 budget proposal zeros out funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, the federal program that administers funding to help low-income households pay their utility bills. And on April 1, 2025, the administration laid off the entire staff of the LIHEAP office.

    During the hottest periods, even nighttime temperatures might not drop below 90 in Phoenix. Without air conditioning, homes can become dangerously hot.
    Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images

    Many people already struggle to cobble together enough help from various sources to pay their power bills. As researchers who study energy insecurity, we believe gutting the federal office responsible for administering energy bill assistance will make it even harder for Americans to make ends meet.

    The high stakes of energy affordability

    We work with communities in South Carolina and Tennessee where many residents struggle to heat and cool their homes.

    We see how high energy prices force people to make dangerous trade-offs. Low-income households often find themselves choosing whether to buy necessities, pay for child care or pay their utility bills.

    One elderly person we spoke with for our research, Sarah, explained that she routinely forgoes buying medications in order to pay her utility bill. Another research participant who connects low-income families to energy bill assistance in Tennessee said: “I’ve gone into these homes, and it’s so hot. Your eyes roll in the back of your head. It’s like you can’t breathe. How do you sit in here? It’s just unreal.”

    Unfortunately, these stories are increasingly common, especially in low-income communities and communities of color.

    Electricity prices are predicted to rise with worsening climate change: More frequent heat waves and extreme weather events drive up demand and put pressure on the grid. Furthermore, rising energy demand from data centers – supercharged by the increasing energy use by artificial intelligence – is accelerating price increases.

    Shrinking resources for assistance

    LIHEAP, created in 1981, provides funding to states as block grants to help low-income families pay their utility bills. In fiscal year 2023, the program distributed US$6.1 billion in energy assistance, helping some 5.9 million households avoid losing power connections.

    The program’s small staff played critical roles in disbursing this money, providing implementation guidelines, monitoring state-level fund management and tracking and evaluating program effectiveness.

    A long line of utility customers wait to apply for help from the Low-Income Energy Assistance Program in Trenton, N.J., in 2011. In 2023, around 6 million households benefited from LIHEAP.
    AP Photo/Mel Evans

    LIHEAP has historically prioritized heating assistance in cold-weather states over cooling assistance in warmer states. However, recent research shows a need to revisit the allocation formula to address the increasing need for air conditioning. The layoffs removed staff who could direct this work.

    It is unlikely that other sources of funding can fill in the gaps if states do not receive LIHEAP funds from the federal government. The program’s funding has never been high enough to meet the need. In 2020, LIHEAP provided assistance to just 16% of eligible households.

    Our research has found that, in practice, many households rely on a range of local nonprofits, faith-based organizations and informal networks of family and friends to help them pay their bills and keep the power on.

    For example, a research participant named Deborah reported that when faced with a utility shut-off, she “drove from church to church to church” in search of assistance. United Way in South Carolina received over 16,000 calls from people seeking help to pay their utility bills in 2023.

    These charitable services are an important lifeline for many, especially in the communities we study in the South. However, research has shown that faith-based programs do not have the reach of public programs.

    Without LIHEAP, the limited funds provided by nonprofits and the personal connections that people patch together will be stretched even thinner, especially as other charitable services, such as food banks, also face funding cuts.

    What’s ahead

    The $4.1 billion that Congress allocated to LIHEAP for the 2025 fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30, has already been disbursed. Going forward, however, cuts to LIHEAP staff affect its ability to respond to growing need. Congress now has to decide if it will kill the program’s future funding as well.

    Maricopa County in Arizona, home to Phoenix, illustrates what’s at stake. Annual heat-related deaths have risen 1,000% there in the past decade, from 61 to 602. Hundreds of these deaths occurred indoors.

    Cooling becomes essential during Arizona’s extreme summers. Maricopa County, home to Phoenix, reported more than 600 heat-related deaths in 2024.
    AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

    We believe gutting LIHEAP puts the goal of energy affordability for all Americans – and Americans’ lives – in jeopardy. Until more affordable energy sources, such as solar and wind power, can be scaled up, an expansion of federal assistance programs is needed, not a contraction.

    Increasing the reach and funding of LIHEAP is one option. Making home weatherization programs more effective is another.

    Governments could also require utilities to forgive past-due bills and end utility shut-offs during the hottest and coldest months. About two dozen states currently have rules to prevent shut-offs during the worst summer heat.

    For now, the cuts mean more pressure on nonprofits, faith-based organizations and informal networks. Looking ahead to another exceptionally hot summer, we can only hope that cuts to LIHEAP staff don’t foreshadow a growing yet preventable death toll.

    Etienne Toussaint, a law professor at the University of South Carolina, and Ann Eisenberg, a law professor at West Virginia University, contributed to this article.

    Conor Harrison receives funding from the National Science Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

    Elena Louder receives funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

    Nikki Luke receives funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. She previously worked at the U.S. Department of Energy.

    Shelley Welton receives funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

    – ref. Trump guts low-income energy assistance as summer heat descends and electricity prices rise – https://theconversation.com/trump-guts-low-income-energy-assistance-as-summer-heat-descends-and-electricity-prices-rise-256194

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    May 14, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: FJCU President Prof. Francis Yi-Chen Lan Pays Courtesy Visit to Director General Wu

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    Fu Jen Catholic University President Prof. Francis Yi-Chen Lan – a true pride of the Taiwanese community in Sydney – visited the city and paid a return call on Director General David Cheng-Wei Wu.
    President Lan shared highlights from his first year at FJCU and outlined a bold roadmap for the university’s future. He expressed confidence that FJCU is on track to become one of the top universities in Taiwan.
    As 2025 marks FJCU’s centennial anniversary, we warmly wish President Lan every success in leading the university to new heights and further strengthening education ties between Taiwan and Australia.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    May 14, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: FAVO Capital Announces Conversion of Super Voting Series C Shares to Common Stock

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., May 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — via IBN — FAVO Capital, Inc. (OTC: FAVO), a publicly traded private credit firm specializing in merchant cash advances (MCAs) and revenue-based financing for underserved small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs), today announced the voluntary conversion of all outstanding Super Voting Series C Preferred Shares into common stock.

    The corporate governance action simplifies the Company’s capital structure and aligns voting rights more closely with public market expectations. The move is a proactive step as the Company continues preparations for its planned uplisting to the Nasdaq Capital Market.

    “Converting our Series C Super Voting Shares demonstrates our commitment to transparency, governance and best practices as well as long-term value creation,” said Vincent Napolitano, CEO of FAVO Capital. “It’s another important step forward as we align our structure with shareholder and institutional investor expectations.”

    The conversion eliminates all outstanding Series C Preferred stock with its super voting rights, improving accessibility and aligning with broader market standards for public company governance.

    About FAVO Capital, Inc.

    FAVO Capital, Inc. (OTC: FAVO) is a private credit firm specializing in alternative financing solutions for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) across the United States. Since its inception, FAVO Capital has supported more than 10,000 businesses. FAVO Capital is committed to financial transparency, sustainable growth, and empowering SMBs with flexible funding solutions. Headquartered in Fort Lauderdale, FL, the company also has operations in New York and the Dominican Republic.

    For more information, visit www.favocapital.com and follow us on LinkedIn and X.

    Investor Alerts

    Interested investors and shareholders are encouraged to sign up for press releases and industry updates by registering for Email Alerts at FAVO News Alerts.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These statements include, but are not limited to, projections, estimates, and expectations regarding future trends, financial performance, and operational strategies. Forward-looking statements are often identified by words such as “expects,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “believes,” “plans,” “seeks,” “estimates,” “may,” “will,” “should,” or similar expressions.

    These statements are based on the company’s current beliefs, expectations, and assumptions and are subject to significant risks, uncertainties, and changes in circumstances that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. Factors that may cause such differences include, but are not limited to, market conditions, regulatory developments, competition, economic conditions, and the company’s ability to execute its business strategy.

    Actual results may differ materially from those anticipated, and investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect events, circumstances, or changes in expectations after the date of this press release, except as required by law.

    Company Contact:

    FAVO Capital, Inc.
    4300 N University Drive
    D-105
    Lauderhill, FL 33351

    Investor Relations:
    Scott McGowan
    InvestorBrandNetwork (IBN)
    Phone: 310.299.1717
    ir@favocapital.com

    The MIL Network –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Africa: Iran and Ethiopia have a security deal – here’s why they signed it

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Eric Lob, Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations, Florida International University

    Ethiopia and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on 6 May 2025. Under it, their national police agencies will cooperate on security and intelligence. This will include combating cross-border crime, sharing intelligence and building capacity. They will also share experiences and training.

    For Iran, the MOU marks a significant step towards strengthening relations with a regional power that’s strategically located in the Horn of Africa.

    Tehran has been using its security apparatus and military capabilities to establish and expand political and economic ties with countries in Africa. This has included drone transfers to the Ethiopian government that helped it turned the tide of the Tigray war, a separatist struggle in the country’s north that took place from 2020 to 2022.

    Iran has also supplied the Sudanese army with surveillance and combat drones. These have been used against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in Sudan’s ongoing civil war.

    The agreement is important for Ethiopia for two reasons.

    Firstly, it’s likely to enable the Ethiopian government in Addis Ababa to combat ethnic militias more effectively. It faces increasing internal instability, including tensions with hostile factions of the separatist Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

    Secondly, the agreement comes after a meeting in Addis Ababa between the Ethiopian police chief, Demelash Gebremichael, and a delegation from Iran’s regional rival, the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The exchange concentrated on investigating and extraditing cross-border criminals.

    Addis Ababa’s willingness to work with regional rivals in the Middle East shows its pragmatic approach to foreign relations. Ethiopia needs all the friends it can muster as an embattled and weakened state. Since the Tigray war, it has battled the rise of ethnic militias and confronted economic adversity. It is also facing renewed hostility with neighbouring Eritrea.

    What Iran stands to gain

    Since 2016, Ethiopia has been a gateway for Iran to gain a foothold in the Horn of Africa. That year, other countries in the region severed relations with Iran. This followed Tehran’s disengagement from sub-Saharan Africa under Hassan Rouhani, who served as president from 2013 to 2021, and his prioritisation of a nuclear deal with the US.

    The severing of ties was also a byproduct of geopolitical pressure exerted by Saudi Arabia and the UAE on countries in the region. The Middle Eastern states wanted to reduce, if not eliminate, Iran’s presence in the Horn of Africa and Red Sea to limit its support for Houthi rebels in the ongoing Yemeni civil war.


    Read more: Iran’s intervention in Sudan’s civil war advances its geopolitical goals − but not without risks


    Ethiopia was the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to establish relations with Iran during the 1960s. It was also one of its top trading partners on the continent before and after the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

    Strategically and ideologically, this special relationship was based on the pro-western and anti-communist stances of their monarchs: the Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who ruled from 1941 to 1979, and Emperor Haile Selassie, who was in power from 1930 to 1974.

    After the revolution, Iran-Ethiopia relations revived under Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who served as Iranian president from 2005 to 2013. He pursued an active Africa policy to mitigate Iran’s international isolation and circumvent US sanctions.

    After Rouhani initially downgraded these relations, they were renewed during his second term. This followed US withdrawal from the nuclear deal.

    Relations firmed when Ebrahim Raisi, who served as Iranian president from 2021 to 2024, delivered military drones and other aid to Addis Ababa during the Tigray war.

    What’s in it for Ethiopia

    Ethiopia is facing increasing instability and uncertainty. The Tigray war has depleted the state’s resources. There is an economic crisis caused by rising inflation and unemployment.

    Addis Ababa continues to confront ethnic tensions. Hostile factions of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front remain. It also faces tensions with the Amhara Fano militia, which initially fought alongside the government against Tigrayan forces. Forced disarmament policies and ongoing land disputes caused the militia to take up arms against the government.


    Read more: Somaliland-Ethiopia port deal: international opposition flags complex Red Sea politics


    Ethiopian prime minister Abiy Ahmed also faces growing opposition and resistance from his own ethnic group, the majority Oromo, and their Oromo Liberation Army. The reason for their discontent is Abiy’s imposition of centralised rule on their regional state within a federal system.

    The security and intelligence cooperation with Iran could allow Addis Ababa to combat ethnic militias more effectively.

    It would also enable Ethiopia to prepare for another possible war against neighbouring Eritrea.

    Ethiopia and Eritrea normalised relations and fought together against Tigrayan forces. However, tensions between the two countries have been brewing again. These have been triggered by two factors. First, the conditions of the 2022 Pretoria peace agreement caused Eritrea to maintain forces inside Ethiopia. Second are the ambitions of Addis Ababa to acquire a Red Sea port in Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia. Eritrea has supported Somalia’s opposition to the deal.

    Regional power games

    This isn’t the first time that Ethiopia has tried working with two regional rivals – Iran and the UAE. The UAE is also among its top trading partners, along with Saudi Arabia.

    In 2016, Ethiopia was the only country in the Horn of Africa that didn’t cut ties with Iran, though it was under pressure from the UAE and Saudi Arabia to do so. The decision was taken by Abiy’s predecessor, Hailemariam Desalegn, whose term ran from 2012 to 2018.

    During the Tigray war, Ethiopia received military drones and other assistance from Iran and the UAE, alongside Turkey.

    The civil war in Sudan has presented an even more complicated story. Ethiopia has vacillated between engaging with the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudanese Armed Forces at different points in the conflict.

    For its part, Iran has supported the Sudanese army. The UAE has backed the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

    Ethiopia’s efforts to strengthen its security ties with Iran and the UAE show a unique case of convergence between regional rivals that have otherwise remained on opposite sides of conflicts in countries like Yemen and Sudan.

    – Iran and Ethiopia have a security deal – here’s why they signed it
    – https://theconversation.com/iran-and-ethiopia-have-a-security-deal-heres-why-they-signed-it-256486

    MIL OSI Africa –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Farmers of Salem Proudly Spotlights Breast Cancer Survivor and Employee, Loraine Lester, for Her Generous Charitable Giving Work

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WILMINGTON, Del., May 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Farmers of Salem, a regional mutual insurance company specializing in insurance for home and business owners, is proud to support employee involvement in charitable activities that improve the quality of life in those communities where our employees live. Today, we spotlight Loraine Lester, AVP, Product & Underwriting Development, who is celebrating her 10-year career with Farmers.

    Back in 2016, Loraine was new to Delaware and struggling to find the right oncologist after her 1st diagnosis. At her doctor’s office she was handed a pamphlet about the Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition (DBCC). “This organization has been there in my good times, when my cancer went into remission, and in the bad times, when I was diagnosed with a reoccurrence that progressed to Stage IV. I have developed a network of survivors who have been through the same process as me. We share our war stories and compare notes.”

    Loraine is a committee member of DBCC’s Lights of Life Gala, held annually, while also serving as a peer mentor for the Peer Mentor Program. For the Gala, Loraine helps backstage with the Survivor Showcase – organizing doctors and/or industry escorts with survivors, in a backstage manager role. Loraine also, chips in where needed with the Gala event setup, organizing meetings, decorations, etc. Next year’s Gala will be on March 7, 2026, held at Bally’s in Dover, DE.

    The mission of DBCC is to empower the community by raising awareness of breast health issues and increasing access to care through outreach, education and support services, and to facilitate early detection and treatment of breast cancer. Their vision is to create a caring community where barriers to breast cancer screenings are removed and all persons at risk, served by DBCC, have access to quality care and treatment. DBCC will ensure each individual diagnosed receives resources to become a thriving survivor, armed with the knowledge and support needed to conquer this disease.

    Commenting on her volunteer work as a Peer Mentor, Loraine said, “I’ve been fortunate to meet and help many mentees over the years. Once we are trained, we are matched with newly diagnosed breast cancer patients that have a similar diagnosis to ours. We are, basically, an outlet for support, a shoulder to cry on, and a resource for the individual to fully understand all that DBCC can provide the survivor on their cancer journey.”

    Not only does Loraine volunteer for the organization, but she continues to use their services. Loraine says, “The Nurture with Nature service is one of my favorites. This program allows cancer survivors to come together to be nurtured and healed by experiencing the power, beauty, and serenity of nature. I also actively participate in their support groups for metastatic thrivers and young survivors, to name a few.”

    Regarding Loraine’s long career at Farmers, she stated: “I really enjoy my job, it offers lots of variety. I also appreciate and enjoy working with my colleagues. They are an extension of my family.”

    For more information about Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition, visit www.debreastcancer.org. 

    About Farmers of Salem
    Founded in 1851, and located on the Riverfront in Wilmington DE, Farmers of Salem provides insurance coverage to homeowners and businesses in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland through a network of independent agents. Rated A- Excellent by A.M. Best Company and a Financial Stability Rating of A Exceptional by Demotech, Inc. “We pride ourselves in providing Superior Service with Personal Attention,” says Kim Lorenzini, Vice President, Marketing & Business Development.

    Farmers of Salem provides compensated Volunteer Time Off (VTO) to full-time employees for use during their regular workday. Farmers’ recognizes volunteering provides employees with a valuable opportunity to meaningfully support their chosen charitable missions and is very proud of their employee’s service to others.

    For more information about Farmers of Salem, visit www.farmersofsalem.com. 

    As a mutual corporation, fundamentally rooted in serving our community, we engage in corporate philanthropy, giving annually to an array of organizations and causes. Through our giving, in local markets where we have a presence, Farmers of Salem has supported educational development, physical education, and health and wellness programs that provide communities in most need with essential services, opportunities to improve the quality of their lives and provide them with assets to create a better future.

    A partial list of events and organizations that Farmers of Salem supports annually:

    • Autism Delaware
    • Serviam Girls Academy
    • Vehicles for Veterans
    • Salem County Humane Society
    • Habitat for Humanity
    • VFW Post #253
    • Operation Legacy
    • Keeping Hope Alive, Inc.
    • Temple University 
    • Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts
    • Holiday Service Project – Thanksgiving Food Baskets – Salvation Army
    • Make A Wish
    • American Red Cross
    • American Cancer Society
    • Longwood Gardens
    • Bo Lends a Paw Pet Pantry

    Contact: Kim Lorenzini
    856-628-0150
    klorenzini@fosnj.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/c27967d8-52cc-4447-968e-f386484557cb

    The MIL Network –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with ASEAN Manaaki Scholars in Wellington

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today met with ASEAN Manaaki Scholars at the Victoria University of Wellington, during his Working Visit to New Zealand. The engagement provided an opportunity for the SG Dr. Kao to interact with ASEAN students pursuing higher education in New Zealand under the Manaaki New Zealand Scholarship programme. SG Dr. Kao underscored the importance of education, youth empowerment, and people-to-people connectivity as vital parts of the ASEAN Community.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN meets with ASEAN Manaaki Scholars in Wellington appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Iran and Ethiopia have a security deal – here’s why they signed it

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Eric Lob, Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations, Florida International University

    Ethiopia and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on 6 May 2025. Under it, their national police agencies will cooperate on security and intelligence. This will include combating cross-border crime, sharing intelligence and building capacity. They will also share experiences and training.

    For Iran, the MOU marks a significant step towards strengthening relations with a regional power that’s strategically located in the Horn of Africa.

    Tehran has been using its security apparatus and military capabilities to establish and expand political and economic ties with countries in Africa. This has included drone transfers to the Ethiopian government that helped it turned the tide of the Tigray war, a separatist struggle in the country’s north that took place from 2020 to 2022.

    Iran has also supplied the Sudanese army with surveillance and combat drones. These have been used against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in Sudan’s ongoing civil war.

    The agreement is important for Ethiopia for two reasons.

    Firstly, it’s likely to enable the Ethiopian government in Addis Ababa to combat ethnic militias more effectively. It faces increasing internal instability, including tensions with hostile factions of the separatist Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

    Secondly, the agreement comes after a meeting in Addis Ababa between the Ethiopian police chief, Demelash Gebremichael, and a delegation from Iran’s regional rival, the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The exchange concentrated on investigating and extraditing cross-border criminals.

    Addis Ababa’s willingness to work with regional rivals in the Middle East shows its pragmatic approach to foreign relations. Ethiopia needs all the friends it can muster as an embattled and weakened state. Since the Tigray war, it has battled the rise of ethnic militias and confronted economic adversity. It is also facing renewed hostility with neighbouring Eritrea.

    What Iran stands to gain

    Since 2016, Ethiopia has been a gateway for Iran to gain a foothold in the Horn of Africa. That year, other countries in the region severed relations with Iran. This followed Tehran’s disengagement from sub-Saharan Africa under Hassan Rouhani, who served as president from 2013 to 2021, and his prioritisation of a nuclear deal with the US.

    The severing of ties was also a byproduct of geopolitical pressure exerted by Saudi Arabia and the UAE on countries in the region. The Middle Eastern states wanted to reduce, if not eliminate, Iran’s presence in the Horn of Africa and Red Sea to limit its support for Houthi rebels in the ongoing Yemeni civil war.




    Read more:
    Iran’s intervention in Sudan’s civil war advances its geopolitical goals − but not without risks


    Ethiopia was the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to establish relations with Iran during the 1960s. It was also one of its top trading partners on the continent before and after the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

    Strategically and ideologically, this special relationship was based on the pro-western and anti-communist stances of their monarchs: the Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who ruled from 1941 to 1979, and Emperor Haile Selassie, who was in power from 1930 to 1974.

    After the revolution, Iran-Ethiopia relations revived under Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who served as Iranian president from 2005 to 2013. He pursued an active Africa policy to mitigate Iran’s international isolation and circumvent US sanctions.

    After Rouhani initially downgraded these relations, they were renewed during his second term. This followed US withdrawal from the nuclear deal.

    Relations firmed when Ebrahim Raisi, who served as Iranian president from 2021 to 2024, delivered military drones and other aid to Addis Ababa during the Tigray war.

    What’s in it for Ethiopia

    Ethiopia is facing increasing instability and uncertainty. The Tigray war has depleted the state’s resources. There is an economic crisis caused by rising inflation and unemployment.

    Addis Ababa continues to confront ethnic tensions. Hostile factions of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front remain. It also faces tensions with the Amhara Fano militia, which initially fought alongside the government against Tigrayan forces. Forced disarmament policies and ongoing land disputes caused the militia to take up arms against the government.




    Read more:
    Somaliland-Ethiopia port deal: international opposition flags complex Red Sea politics


    Ethiopian prime minister Abiy Ahmed also faces growing opposition and resistance from his own ethnic group, the majority Oromo, and their Oromo Liberation Army. The reason for their discontent is Abiy’s imposition of centralised rule on their regional state within a federal system.

    The security and intelligence cooperation with Iran could allow Addis Ababa to combat ethnic militias more effectively.

    It would also enable Ethiopia to prepare for another possible war against neighbouring Eritrea.

    Ethiopia and Eritrea normalised relations and fought together against Tigrayan forces. However, tensions between the two countries have been brewing again. These have been triggered by two factors. First, the conditions of the 2022 Pretoria peace agreement caused Eritrea to maintain forces inside Ethiopia. Second are the ambitions of Addis Ababa to acquire a Red Sea port in Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia. Eritrea has supported Somalia’s opposition to the deal.

    Regional power games

    This isn’t the first time that Ethiopia has tried working with two regional rivals – Iran and the UAE. The UAE is also among its top trading partners, along with Saudi Arabia.

    In 2016, Ethiopia was the only country in the Horn of Africa that didn’t cut ties with Iran, though it was under pressure from the UAE and Saudi Arabia to do so. The decision was taken by Abiy’s predecessor, Hailemariam Desalegn, whose term ran from 2012 to 2018.

    During the Tigray war, Ethiopia received military drones and other assistance from Iran and the UAE, alongside Turkey.

    The civil war in Sudan has presented an even more complicated story. Ethiopia has vacillated between engaging with the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudanese Armed Forces at different points in the conflict.

    For its part, Iran has supported the Sudanese army. The UAE has backed the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

    Ethiopia’s efforts to strengthen its security ties with Iran and the UAE show a unique case of convergence between regional rivals that have otherwise remained on opposite sides of conflicts in countries like Yemen and Sudan.

    Eric Lob 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. Iran and Ethiopia have a security deal – here’s why they signed it – https://theconversation.com/iran-and-ethiopia-have-a-security-deal-heres-why-they-signed-it-256486

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 6 May 2025 Strengthening alcohol control and road safety policies

    Source: World Health Organisation

    The African Region has one of the highest burdens of alcohol-related deaths globally – averaging 70 deaths per 100,000 people – second only to Europe. In some countries, this rises to 84 deaths per 100,000. With rapid population growth, even more people are expected to be affected unless stronger policies are implemented. Yet across much of the continent, comprehensive alcohol policies remain scarce, outdated or poorly enforced, leaving countries ill-equipped to tackle the rising harm from alcohol consumption.

    In April, 60 representatives from 15 countries across the World Health Organization’s (WHO) African Region gathered in Accra, Ghana for a landmark SAFER inter-country learning workshop aimed at strengthening collaboration and accelerating implementation of alcohol control and road safety policies. The workshop was jointly hosted and supported by WHO, the WHO-led SAFER Initiative, and the Bloomberg Philanthropies Initiative for Global Road Safety (BIGRS), with financial support from Bloomberg Philanthropies and the Government of Norway.

    The synergy between the SAFER Initiative and Bloomberg Initiative for Global Road Safety (BIGRS) is critical, as both initiatives share a common goal of reducing alcohol-related harm and improving road safety. Let us seize this opportunity to work together for a safer, healthier Ghana and Africa.

    Hon. Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, Minister for Health, Ghana

    The 15 country teams included representatives from the ministries of health, transport, finance, and justice, as well as from the offices of the attorneys general, to accelerate the implementation of high-impact alcohol control and road safety policies.

    Multisectoral collaboration is essential – not optional – for achieving lasting public health outcomes. Today’s complex health challenges demand coordinated action across government sectors, civil society, and the private sector, all working together with communities. Only through shared responsibility and joint efforts can we ensure sustainable improvements in population health and wellbeing.

    Dr Adelheid Onyango, Director of Healthier Populations Cluster, WHO Regional Office for Africa (AFRO).

     

    Participants came from Angola, Burkina Faso, Congo, Gabon, Ghana, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Seychelles, and Uganda.

    This event built on two WHO-led workshops in 2023:

    • The SAFER inter-country learning workshop held in October 2023 in Addis Ababa, which focused on alcohol policy development in seven countries.
    • The BIGRS workshop held in May 2023 in Kampala, which addressed alcohol-related road safety and legislative change in four countries.

    The Accra workshop brought together countries continuing SAFER and BIGRS implementation with 8 newly engaged countries, creating a regional platform for peer learning and collaboration.

    “We have acquired more knowledge on the SAFER package and learned from other countries which started earlier.”  Participant feedback.

    A strategic and evidence-informed approach

    The workshop was grounded in key WHO global and regional strategies, including the Global Alcohol Action Plan 2022–2030, which sets out a roadmap for reducing harmful alcohol use through national leadership, cross-sectoral coordination, and evidence-based interventions.Regionally, it built on the WHO African Region’s Multisectoral Strategy to Promote Health and Wellbeing (2023–2030) and the Regional Framework for Alcohol Control, both of which call for  integrated approaches and policy coherence for alcohol control within public health systems.

    “This workshop helped us break down our national action plan into implementable strategies.” Participant feedback.

    In line with these frameworks, the workshop followed a structured and evidence-informed approach to support policy progress:

    • Pre-work included virtual orientation sessions and bilateral meetings to review country status and update plans
    • During the in-person sessions in Accra, teams engaged in landscape assessments, delivery plan development, and peer-to-peer support
    • Expert panels with remote participation from Vital Strategies, Movendi International and University of Sterling, explored issues like alcohol industry interference and monitoring and evaluation
    • Countries used the WHO Global Survey on Alcohol and Health to guide planning

    “Policy integrity must be protected from alcohol industry interference,”  Dr. Frank John Lule, WHO Ghana Representative

    Multilingual participation

    The workshop was conducted in four working languages English, French, Portuguese, and Spanish – to accommodate the diversity of countries involved. While this presented logistical challenges, it also created a dynamic, inclusive atmosphere where participants engaged across language and regional boundaries. The investment in multilingual participation paid off, encouraging deeper exchange and regional solidarity.

    “It helped us understand how our strategies are faring compared to our neighbours, even when we speak different languages.” Participant feedback.

    Opportunities for strategic exchange

    One of the most engaging moments of the workshop was the gallery walk – a participatory session where country teams set up “stations” to present their group work and delivery plans. Other delegations walked from station to station, discussing strategies, offering feedback, and exchanging ideas with their peers.

    “The gallery walk was a huge opportunity for knowledge exchange and helped us sharpen our thinking.” Participant feedback.

    This format sparked spontaneous discussions on barriers, solutions, and opportunities. It fostered a sense of ownership and reflection and was widely seen as a powerful tool for strategic thinking and applied learning.

    Workshop outcomes and commitments

    This workshop marks a pivotal moment in shifting from planning to coordinated action. With renewed commitment, shared purpose, and regional momentum, countries are better equipped than ever to reduce alcohol-related harm and improve public health.

    As a result of the workshop:

    • 15 countries finalized or revised SAFER delivery plans
    • 8 new countries presented landscape assessments and implementation strategies
    • Country teams shared commitment statements
    • WHO and partners identified case studies for future dissemination
    • Clear next steps were agreed on for monitoring, technical support, and cross-country exchange

    Country teams identified 2 to 3 priority measures from among the high-impact SAFER interventions to accelerate national action and reduce the substantial harm caused by alcohol consumption. These priority actions reflect growing momentum for evidence-based policy change and examples include: raising excise taxes on alcoholic beverages to reduce affordability and curb consumption; establishing a national minimum legal age for purchasing and consuming alcohol; regulating the density and location of alcohol retail outlets; tightening drink-driving laws by lowering legal blood alcohol concentration (BAC) limits to ≤ 0.5 g/dl in line with international best practice; and integrating alcohol screening, brief interventions, and treatment for alcohol use disorders into mental health and primary care through the WHO Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP).

    Looking ahead, WHO will continue to support countries in implementing their delivery plans, provide tailored technical assistance, foster cross-country learning and regional collaboration and track progress through global surveys and country follow-up.

    Evaluation

    Post-workshop feedback indicated high levels of satisfaction and provided valuable suggestions for improving future events. All respondents reported being satisfied with the workshop, with over half “very satisfied” and one in five “extremely satisfied.”  Participants valued the interactive format – combining group work, peer learning, and facilitator-led sessions – and praised the facilitators’ expertise and responsiveness. Many noted that the workshop strengthened cross-sector collaboration and provided a clearer sense of direction, renewed motivation, and practical next steps to advance national SAFER alcohol control plans. Comments such as “we are not alone in this struggle” and it “enhanced my knowledge and triggered my commitment” reflected both solidarity and strengthened resolve among participants.

    About SAFER and BIGRS:

    The SAFER Initiative supports countries with five key interventions:

    • Restricting availability of alcohol
    • Enforcing drink-driving countermeasures
    • Expanding access to brief interventions and treatment
    • Banning alcohol marketing and sponsorship
    • Raising alcohol prices through fiscal measures

    The BIGRS Initiative complements SAFER by strengthening road safety legislation, especially for drink-driving and other key risk factors. The Accra workshop demonstrated the value of integrating these initiatives into a shared platform for action.

    The workshop was also the result of collaboration across all three levels of the WHO – headquarters, regional offices, and country offices – demonstrating the multidisciplinary and coordinated approach needed to address the harms of alcohol consumption.

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: A Center for Training Personnel for the IT Industry will be Created at the HSE

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    The Russian Ministry of Digital Development, Communications and Mass Media, together with the Analytical Center under the Government of the Russian Federation, have summed up the results of the competitive selection of universities to receive grants for the launch of advanced IT education. 50 universities submitted applications for the competition, and 26 winners from 13 regions have been determined, including the Higher School of Economics.

    With grant funds, universities will launch flagship higher education programs that will provide the labor market with highly qualified IT specialists. By 2029, within the framework of the national project “Data Economy and Digital Transformation of the State”, it is planned to train at least 3.5 thousand advanced IT developers.

    The project will be implemented on the basis of Faculty of Computer Science HSE University together with industrial partners from among leading IT companies. The University will create a Center for training personnel for the IT industry, which will be headed by the academic director of the EP “Software engineering» Nikolay Pavlochev. The center is designed to become a flagship in the field of modern engineering education, combining the best academic practices, active participation of the industry and the use of advanced technologies. It will focus on updating existing educational programs and launching new training areas focused on the current challenges of the digital economy.

    Key areas include systems programming, data analysis, game development, cybersecurity, scientific software, and product management. The curriculum will be strengthened both from the fundamental side (mathematics, algorithms, software architecture) and from the applied side – through modules developed jointly with industrial partners.

    Particular attention is planned to be paid to the integration of AI technologies into the educational process – from intelligent assistants for students to systems for analyzing educational trajectories. The project will also include active development of project activities, expansion of the internship network, support for teaching staff, and development of international mobility.

    The main condition for participation of universities in the competition of the Ministry of Digital Development of the Russian Federation was cooperation with companies for training students and attracting co-financing in the amount of at least 30% of the grant amount, and the application of the National Research University Higher School of Economics to create the center fully met this requirement.

    “Our center will work in close cooperation with leading technology companies, research institutes and industry experts. Our partners are 1C and Yandex, which will contribute not only in the form of financial support. They will participate in the development of training modules, teaching, organizing practical training for students, developing digital infrastructure, and this format of interaction is familiar to our faculty,” said Ivan Arzhantsev, Dean of the HSE Faculty of Computer Science.

    “The creation of the IT Training Center at the Higher School of Economics is not just the launch of a new structure, but also a systemic step towards updating approaches to IT education. The initiative of the Russian Ministry of Digital Development is important not only for our university, but also for the industry and the country as a whole. Specialists will be trained who can immediately join real projects, form a culture of engineering thinking and lay the foundation for technological leadership,” said HSE Vice-Rector Elena Odoevskaya.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • In birthright citizenship case, US Supreme Court gets two controversies in one

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    One of President Donald Trump’s most contentious policies – his attempt to restrict automatic birthright citizenship – arrives at the U.S. Supreme Court this week with an unusual twist: The justices may focus on something else entirely.

    Federal judges in Washington state, Massachusetts and Maryland issued orders blocking Trump’s January executive order nationwide, finding the directive likely violated language in the U.S. Constitution concerning citizenship for babies born in the United States.

    But through an emergency filing, Trump’s administration has focused the Supreme Court’s attention not on the legality of the action by the Republican president but rather on the permissibility of the actions by the three judges – whether federal judges should have the power to issue broad orders that block challenged polices on a nationwide, or “universal,” basis.

    The administration asked the court to narrow the injunctions to let the government enforce Trump’s directive – part of his hardline approach to immigration – to the greatest extent possible while the legal fight over the policy plays out.

    The court may do so “without considering the underlying merits” of Trump’s action, the administration asserted.

    That approach would set up the possibility of the court, which has as a 6-3 conservative majority, allowing broad enforcement of the policy without assessing whether or not it is legal.

    The matter came to the court on a compressed timeline and with minimal written briefing.

    The way the court is considering the case “seems quite strange,” said Alan Trammell, a professor at Washington and Lee University School of Law in Virginia, because “even though the substantive question of birthright citizenship technically isn’t before the court, it still looms large.”

    “It concerns one of the most important provisions of the Constitution and implicates a raging political debate,” Trammell said.

    Trump’s order, signed on his first day back in office, directed federal agencies to refuse to recognize the citizenship of U.S.-born children who do not have at least one parent who is an American citizen or lawful permanent resident.

    Trump’s order was challenged by Democratic attorneys general from 22 states as well as individual pregnant immigrants and advocacy groups. The plaintiffs have said the directive violates a right enshrined in the U.S. Constitution’s 14th Amendment, which was ratified in 1868 and long has been understood to confer citizenship to virtually anyone born in the United States.

    Trammell noted that the administration has not contested whether the injunctions should have been issued, asking the justices only to scale back their nationwide effect to protect just the plaintiffs in the cases.

    “The situation would be very odd indeed if the court concluded that the plaintiffs’ view of the merits is correct, yet gave only the individual plaintiffs the benefit of that ruling,” Trammell said.

    ‘BIRTH TOURISM’

    The 14th Amendment states that all “persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.”

    The administration contends that the 14th Amendment does not extend to immigrants who are in the country illegally or even to immigrants whose presence is lawful but temporary, such as university students or those on work visas.

    Automatic birthright citizenship does not reflect the best reading of the 14th Amendment and it encourages “birth tourism” by expectant mothers traveling the United States to give birth and secure citizenship for their children, the administration argued in court filings.

    At the Supreme Court, the administration has targeted only the universal scope of the injunctions, content to leave them in place to protect only the people who sued as well as the residents of the 22 states, assuming the Supreme Court finds that these states have the necessary legal standing to bring their cases. That outcome would let Trump’s order go into effect in the 28 states that did not sue, aside from any plaintiffs from those states.

    The Justice Department said the issuance of broad judicial injunctions has bedeviled administrations of both parties, Republican and Democratic, and must be urgently rectified by the Supreme Court. Trump himself on March 20 called the situation “toxic” and urged the Supreme Court to act.

    Since Trump returned to office, many of his numerous executive orders and other initiatives have been impeded by judges, including through universal injunctions.

    “The need for this court’s intervention has become urgent as universal injunctions have reached tsunami levels,” the Justice Department said in a written filing.

    If the justices agree to scale back the judicial blocks, it could lead to a nation geographically fractured between places where babies are born with automatic citizenship and places where they are not, the plaintiffs said.

    “An infant would be a United States citizen and full member of society if born in New Jersey, but a deportable noncitizen if born in Tennessee,” the plaintiffs in the Maryland case told the justices.

    IDAHO TRANSGENDER CASE

    The Justice Department has cited the Supreme Court’s action in a case last year to back up its request to narrow the injunctions. In that case, called Labrador v. Poe, Idaho asked the justices to let the state enforce a Republican-backed ban on gender-affirming care for transgender minors after a federal judge blocked it as unconstitutional.

    The Supreme Court, over the dissent of its three liberal members, granted Idaho’s request that the statewide injunction be pared back to cover only the transgender plaintiffs who actually sued.

    The scope of an injunction is significant, the Justice Department told the Supreme Court, and ensuring that lower courts do not act beyond their limited judicial power “is just as critical as merits review,” meaning an assessment of an action’s legality.

    A Justice Department spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

    Some legal experts said the cases differ for numerous reasons. For instance, they said, the Idaho case involved one state, not a presidential executive order applying nationally.

    Even though the administration has made the dispute primarily about universal injunctions, some court observers have said the justices could decide to rule on the legality of Trump’s order anyway.

    It is unusual for the court “to be considering an emergency application in this context,” University of Chicago law professor William Baude said.

    “Because of that, we won’t know what the court is going to focus on until the oral arguments start,” Baude added.

    (Reuters)

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Myerscough College and Hillier help water flow further in tree nurseries

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Case study

    Myerscough College and Hillier help water flow further in tree nurseries

    Read how Myerscough College and Hillier partnered to improve water management in tree nurseries with the help of the Tree Production Innovation Fund (TPIF).

    Myerscough College is a specialist land-based and sports college in the north-west of England. Dr Andrew Hirons, a senior lecturer in the Arboriculture department, led a Tree Production Innovation Fund (TPIF) project with the aim of improving the efficiency and resilience of water management in tree nurseries. The project was in partnership with Hillier – one of the UK’s biggest ornamental tree growers that have a chain of garden centres across the south of England.

    Dr Andrew Hirons installing a sap flow sensor onto a tree. Credit Dr Andrew Hirons, University Centre Myerscough

    Dr Hirons has specialised in delivering modules relating to tree biology and tree establishment in urban environments for over 20 years. His doctoral research at Lancaster University focused on sustainable water-use in tree nurseries, which harnessed his passion for tree water relations. His ambition is to apply scientific knowledge to the management of trees in a wide variety of landscapes, from ancient woodland to urban environments.

    Dr Andrew Hirons, Senior Lecturer, Myerscough College said:

    It is very rare for research funding to offer me the opportunity to both develop scientific understanding of tree water use and be of practical value to tree nurseries, so finding TPIF really was a win, win for me.

    Hillier operate 22 retail garden centres and grow over 250,000 trees. They have 500 acres of field-produced trees and 100 acres of peat-free container trees in production.

    Adam Dunnett, Amenity Director, Hillier said:

    Hillier are always keen to bring advances in technology into our commercial production. Our mantra is to find ways to grow our trees faster, better, with less environmental impact. This project was something we were very keen to be involved with.

    Flowering cherry trees growing at one of Hillier’s nursery sites. Credit Dr Andrew Hirons, University Centre Myerscough

    Water-use challenges faced by tree nurseries

    Growing trees, like any crop, requires water. The water management in amenity tree nurseries, like Hillier’s, is particularly complex because there may be more than a hundred varieties of species and cultivars (a cultivated tree that retains desired traits) of multiple stock sizes, in a wide range of field soils or containers.

    Dr Andrew Hirons, Senior Lecturer, Myerscough College said:

    This unique complexity presents challenges when trying to forecast and manage the water-use of trees. As water resources become more and more constrained, through both societal demands and a changing climate, it is vital that we have the foresight to develop the understanding required to manage water resources sustainably.

    Support from the Tree Production Innovation Fund (TPIF)

    To address these challenges, the team set out to develop an Internet of Things (IoT) infrastructure (a network of physical and digital devices that exchange data with one another). This monitors real-time tree water-use and supports irrigation protocols present at tree nurseries. Initially, an application for the TPIF was made in 2021, and after a one-year pilot project, an additional 3 years of funding was secured.

    The TPIF grant was used to purchase a range of IoT sensors, including:

    • sap flow sensors (to measure tree water-use)
    • dendrometers (to measure tree growth)
    • psychrometers (to measure relative humidity in the atmosphere)
    • soil moisture (to closely monitor tree and field conditions)

    Around 100 sensors were installed across field and container-grown trees at Hillier’s Hampshire site. These sensors have been collecting data throughout the growing season for the last 4 years. The data has been integrated into dashboards and used to generate predictive models for future forecasting.

    Standard small-leaved lime trees with a soil sensor, sap flow sensor, dendrometer and stem psychrometer, together with solar panels to power these. Crown copyright

    Driving new and exciting efficiencies

    Dr Andrew Hirons, Senior Lecturer, Myerscough College said:

    We have been able to collect and analyse some exceptional datasets that will, in time, result in academic publications and make significant contributions to the understanding of water-use in young trees.

    We have built expertise and knowledge on the use and limitations of a wide range of sensors relevant to monitoring tree performance, especially in the context of tree production.

    The IoT dashboards show tree water-use, measures of tree stress and soil water status in real-time, which will help to inform nursery managers on the physiological health and performance of their trees.

    Vast data sets and a collection of models have been combined and analysed to provide more accurate predictions for ten tree species. Accurate predictions about a tree’s water-use based on the weather and its soil data are now possible. This has led to the creation of a calculator to be used by growers and landscape professionals to predict tree water-use for a range of conditions.

    A dendrometer on the trunk of a tree. Credit Dr Andrew Hirons, University Centre Myerscough

    Collaboration leads to success

    Collaboration has been key to the success of the project. The funding has enabled the development of an interdisciplinary team, who have been essential to the delivery of the project. In addition to Myerscough College and Hillier, data scientists Rebecca Killick and Mengyi Gong from Lancaster University who specialise in time-series analysis, and specialists in IoT software Marcel Steegh and his team at Whysor, have all played a crucial role.

    Every party has gained from this project and has been left seeking opportunities to extend their collaboration and build on the foundations that have been put in place.

    Adam Dunnett, Amenity Director, Hillier said:

    We were unsure how much of the research would be relevant to a commercial tree nursery. We have found that it is incredibly relevant and has fundamentally changed how we see and understand how our trees use and need water.

    We have invested in new irrigation technology on the back of our learnings. We have started to learn how to better manage our water application on different land types and within different species, to make better use of our land and to increase the growth of trees to shorten production cycles, improving production efficiency.

    Semi-mature small-leaved lime trees growing at one of Hillier’s nursery sites. Credit Dr Andrew Hirons, University Centre Myerscough

    Future ideas and opportunities to explore

    Whilst the research has focused on one nursery in Hampshire, the science extends well beyond these fields. The tools and knowledge developed through this project can be translated to any system where trees are growing, whether they are in the forest, field, orchard, garden or street.

    The team would like to gain more understanding around additional species and the influence that different soils have on tree water-use. They are hoping to further develop their ability to predict tree water-use based on weather forecasting and other real-time analysis. Having multi-year datasets has been critical as, even in the last 3 years, the growing season climate conditions has been vastly different year-on-year.

    Read further details of Dr Andrew Hirons’ research on tree water-use and more about the Tree Production Innovation Fund.

    Updates to this page

    Published 13 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: 2025 Econometric Game: Our Master’s Students in Economics Have Talent!

    Source: Universities – Science Po in English

    Home>2025 Econometric Game: Our Master’s Students in Economics Have Talent!

    Our partners

    Institutional partnerships for research and innovation

    • CNRS
    • Banque de France
    • The CORE Project 
    • The Kellen Foundation

    Other research centres

    • LEPI
    • LIEPP
    • OFCE

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pupils will be raising the roof by Singing In The Halls

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    Singing In The Halls, organised by Wolverhampton Music Service, will see around 3,000 children from primary and special schools across the city perform at the iconic venue, accompanied by a 14 piece band.

    Councillor Jacqui Coogan, the City of Wolverhampton Council’s Cabinet Member for Children, Young People and Education, said: “This will be a fantastic experience for our children to be able to sing at the city’s biggest performance venue, University of Wolverhampton at The Halls, and for so many schools and performers to be a part of it.

    “Children and teachers have been busy practising their songs in school, ready to give their best performances on the big stage, and it is sure to be a day to remember for everyone involved.

    “Music has the power to inspire, uplift and unite, and through these concerts our Music Service is aiming to foster a sense of community and creativity among young performers, and to inspire them to begin their own musical journeys.”

    Ciaran O’Donnell, head of Wolverhampton Music Service, said: “It’s once again been a pleasure working with primary and special schools for Singing In The Halls and we are delighted that we are able to use the University of Wolverhampton at The Halls again this year.

    “Three thousand children from primary and special schools have signed up across the 2 concerts, which is amazing.

    “Singing In The Halls is not just about vocal talents; it’s a chance for pupils to come together, express themselves creatively, build confidence and celebrate our diverse city, creating lasting memories in a supportive setting. We can’t wait!”

    The concerts will be led by Paul Wilcox, vocal strategy partner for the Music Service, and vocalists will be accompanied by the service band.

    Wolverhampton Music Service provides high quality tuition and musical opportunities for youngsters from schools across the city, including the chance to perform with its flagship groups, Wolverhampton Youth Orchestra and Wolverhampton Youth Wind Orchestra. To find out more, please visit Wolverhampton Music Service.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: From the lab to the pub for School of Psychology research Researchers from the School of Psychology will showcase their work to the public in a series of talks and events as part of the Pint of Science festival next week.

    Source: University of Aberdeen

    Researchers from the School of Psychology will showcase their work to the public in a series of talks and events as part of the Pint of Science festival next week.
    Talks organised by the School of Psychology will make up more than a third of the festival’s Aberdeenshire programme, which aims to improve engagement in science and make research accessible to all.
    Kicking off the festival is the Astounding Assumptions event on 19 May at the OGV Taproom at Newburgh Golf Club, in which three talks will investigate how much our perceptions are influenced by what we expect to experience.
    Professor Constanze Hesse will discuss the size-weight illusion: when two objects weigh the same but differ in size, the smaller one feels heavier.
    Dr Martin Giesel will speak about visual illusions interpreted by the eyes, revealing how perception depends on our assumptions and prior experience.
    And Dr Helen Knight’s talk will delve into the phenomena of inattentional blindness (where we fail to notice things happening right in front of us) and change blindness (where even obvious changes go unnoticed).
    The Mind and Body event on 20 May at the OGV Taproom in Aberdeen will see University researchers explore how our memories, experiences and personal identity shape behaviour – and whether our behaviour can shape us in return.
    Dr Bert Timmermans will examine how interactions with others shape how we experience the world as well as ourselves.
    The power of the hippocampus will be the subject of Dr Janine Cooper’s talk, including how it can be impacted when damaged and how we can best look after it.
    And Dr Agnieszka Konopka will explore the benefits of language-learning and being able to speak multiple languages, with a particular focus on memory.
    Dr Doug Martin, Head of the School of Psychology, said: “We are so excited to be a part of this year’s Pint of Science event. The festival is a wonderful opportunity for us to share our world-class research with the local community and demonstrate our commitment to public engagement. Our work spans diverse areas – from language and neuroscience to memory and social interaction – and we cannot wait to share our discoveries!”
    Pint of Science is an annual event that takes place this year from 19 to 21 May. The full Aberdeenshire programme and information on how to get tickets for the talks can be found here.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: A Smoky Start to Saskatchewan’s Fire Season

    Source: NASA

    Wildland fires usually begin to appear in Saskatchewan in April and May as snow melts and landscapes dry out. In mid-May 2025, however, moderate drought and strong winds exacerbated fires in the central part of the province.
    The OLI-2 (Operational Land Imager-2) on Landsat 9 captured this image (above) of smoke billowing from the Shoe fire on May 10, 2025. A wider view of the same image (below) also shows smoke from the Camp fire. The fires were burning in boreal forests in and around Narrow Hills Provincial Park. Infrared data from Landsat were overlaid on the image to help distinguish the heat signature of active fires.
    On May 12, 2025, Saskatchewan’s public safety agency reported 12 active fires across the province, half of which were contained. The park and all highways into and out of it were closed due to the fires, and officials issued several air quality alerts for the region. Saskatchewan officials have tallied 146 fires to date in 2025, nearly twice the five-year average.
    Fire activity has been intense enough to produce at least one towering chimney of smoke known as a pyrocumulonimbus (pyroCb) cloud. Researchers at the Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison confirmed the formation of  the cloud in the Camp fire’s plume on May 8.

    These fire-generated clouds are associated with extreme fire behavior that can hinder firefighting efforts and threaten communities. They can also inject large plumes of smoke into the stratosphere, where they can linger for several months, alter stratospheric circulation, and influence Earth’s radiative balance and the Antarctic ozone hole. Cloud heights at the time of the Landsat image were not high enough for the plume to qualify as a pyroCb, although the image does show signs of pyrocumulus (pyroCu) activity on May 10.
    NASA Earth Observatory images by Wanmei Liang, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Adam Voiland.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: The OpenSSL Corporation and the OpenSSL Foundation Certify Results of Technical Advisory Committee Elections

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEWARK, N.J., May 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The OpenSSL Corporation and the OpenSSL Foundation certify results of the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) elections. Members have been elected to advise on technical direction, architecture, and security priorities for the OpenSSL Library.

    Newly Elected Members

    The OpenSSL Corporation TAC Members

    • Academics – Nicola Tuveri (Tampere University)
    • Committers – Shane Lontis
    • Distributions – Dmitry Belyavskiy (Red Hat)
    • Individuals – Aditya Koranga
    • Large Businesses – Craig Lorentzen (Amazon)
    • Small Businesses – Paul Yang (ToneFlow)

    The OpenSSL Foundation TAC Members

    • Academics – Nicola Tuveri (Tampere University)
    • Committers – Dmitry Belyavskiy
    • Distributions – vacant
    • Individuals – Igor Ustinov
    • Large Businesses – Barry Fussell (Cisco)
    • Small Businesses – Aditya Koranga (CORAN Labs)

    Looking Ahead

    The newly elected TAC members will begin their one year terms immediately. They will work closely with the Business Advisory Committees (BACs), the Board of Directors of the OpenSSL Corporation and the OpenSSL Foundation, and the community to shape the OpenSSL Project’s future.

    For more details about the TACs members, the voting process, or the role of the Technical Advisory Committees, please visit the OpenSSL Communities website or contact us at communities@openssl.org.

    The MIL Network –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Viking pregnancy was deeply political – new study

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Marianne Hem Eriksen, Associate Professor of Archaeology, University of Leicester

    Britomart by Walter Crane (1900). Library of Decorative Arts, Paris

    Pregnant women wielding swords and wearing martial helmets, foetuses set to avenge their fathers – and a harsh world where not all newborns were born free or given burial.

    These are some of the realities uncovered by the first interdisciplinary study to focus on pregnancy in the Viking age, authored by myself, Kate Olley, Brad Marshall and Emma Tollefsen as part of the Body-Politics project. Despite its central role in human history, pregnancy has often been overlooked in archaeology, largely because it leaves little material trace.

    Pregnancy has perhaps been particularly overlooked in periods we mostly associate with warriors, kings and battles – such as the highly romanticised Viking age (the period from AD800 until AD1050).

    Topics such as pregnancy and childbirth have conventionally been seen as “women’s issues”, belonging to the “natural” or “private” spheres – yet we argue that questions such as “when does life begin?” are not at all natural or private, but of significant political concern, today as in the past.

    In our new study, my co-authors and I puzzle together eclectic strands of evidence in order to understand how pregnancy and the pregnant body were conceptualised at this time. By exploring such “womb politics”, it is possible to add significantly to our knowledge on gender, bodies and sexual politics in the Viking age and beyond.


    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.


    First, we examined words and stories depicting pregnancy in Old Norse sources. Despite dating to the centuries after the Viking age, sagas and legal texts provide words and stories about childbearing that the Vikings’ immediate descendants used and circulated.

    We learned that pregnancy could be described as “bellyful”, “unlight” and “not whole”. And we gleaned an insight into the possible belief in personhood of a foetus: “A woman walking not alone.”

    Helgi and Guðrún in the Laxdæla saga, as depicted by Andreas Bloch (1898).
    Wiki Commons

    An episode in one of the sagas we looked at supports the idea that unborn children (at least high-status ones) could already be inscribed into complex systems of kinship, allies, feuds and obligations. It tells the story of a tense confrontation between the pregnant Guðrún Ósvífrsdóttir, a protagonist in the Saga of the People of Laxardal and her husband’s killer, Helgi Harðbeinsson.

    As a provocation, Helgi wipes his bloody spear on Guđrun’s clothes and over her belly. He declares: “I think that under the corner of that shawl dwells my own death.” Helgi’s prediction comes true, and the foetus grows up to avenge his father.

    Another episode, from the Saga of Erik the Red, focuses more on the agency of the mother. The heavily pregnant Freydís Eiríksdóttir is caught up in an attack by the skrælings, the Norse name for the indigenous populations of Greenland and Canada. When she cannot escape due to her pregnancy, Freydís picks up a sword, bares her breast and strikes the sword against it, scaring the assailants away.

    While sometimes regarded as an obscure literary episode in scholarship, this story may find a parallel in the second set of evidence we examined for the study: a figurine of a pregnant woman.

    This pendant, found in a tenth-century woman’s burial in Aska, Sweden, is the only known convincing depiction of pregnancy from the Viking age. It depicts a figure in female dress with the arms embracing an accentuated belly — perhaps signalling connection with the coming child. What makes this figurine especially interesting is that the pregnant woman is wearing a martial helmet.

    The figurine of a pregnant woman that was analysed in the study.
    Historiska Museet, CC BY-ND

    Taken together, these strands of evidence show that pregnant women could, at least in art and stories, be engaged with violence and weapons. These were not passive bodies. Together with recent studies of Viking women buried as warriors, this provokes further thought to how we envisage gender roles in the oft-perceived hyper-masculine Viking societies.

    Missing children and pregnancy as a defect

    A final strand of investigation was to look for evidence for obstetric deaths in the Viking burial record. Maternal-infant death rates are thought to be very high in most pre-industrial societies. Yet, we found that among thousands of Viking graves, only 14 possible mother-infant burials are reported.

    Consequently, we suggest that pregnant women who died weren’t routinely buried with their unborn child and may not have been commemorated as one, symbiotic unity by Viking societies. In fact, we also found newborns buried with adult men and postmenopausal women, assemblages which may be family graves, but they may also be something else altogether.

    Interpretative drawing of a grave from Fjälkinge, Sweden, of an adult woman buried together with newborn placed between her thighs. Note that the legs of the woman’s body have been weighed down by a boulder.
    Matt Hitchcock / Body-Politics, CC BY-SA

    We cannot exclude that infants – underrepresented in the burial record more generally – were disposed of in death elsewhere. When they are found in graves with other bodies, it’s possible they were included as a “grave good” (objects buried with a deceased person) for other people in the grave.

    This is a stark reminder that pregnancy and infancy can be vulnerable states of transition. A final piece of evidence speaks to this point like no other. For some, like Guđrun’s little boy, gestation and birth represented a multi-staged process towards becoming a free social person.

    For people lower on the social rung, however, this may have looked very different. One of the legal texts we examined dryly informs us that when enslaved women were put up for sale, pregnancy was regarded as a defect of their bodies.

    Pregnancy was deeply political and far from uniform in meaning for Viking-age communities. It shaped – and was shaped by – ideas of social status, kinship and personhood. Our study shows that pregnancy was not invisible or private, but crucial to how Viking societies understood life, social identities and power.

    Marianne Hem Eriksen leads the BODY-POLITICS project, funded by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement no. 949886).

    This research was also supported by The Leverhulme Trust through a Philip Leverhulme Prize awarded to Marianne Hem Eriksen (PLP-2022-285).

    – ref. Viking pregnancy was deeply political – new study – https://theconversation.com/viking-pregnancy-was-deeply-political-new-study-254738

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The number of Chinese tourists visiting Cambodia’s Angkor Park increased by 29 percent in the first four months of the year.

    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

    PHNOM PENH, May 13 (Xinhua) — The number of Chinese tourists visiting Cambodia’s famous Angkor archaeological park has increased significantly in the first four months of 2025, an official statement said Monday.

    A total of 36,368 Chinese tourists visited Angkor Park between January and April this year, up 29 percent from the same period last year (28,172 people), according to a report by state-owned Angkor Enterprise.

    China ranked fourth in the number of tourists visiting Angkor, behind the United States, France and Britain, the report added.

    According to the report, about 474,810 foreigners from 171 countries and regions visited the ancient park in the first four months of this year, bringing gross ticket revenue to US$22.2 million.

    With 2025 declared the Cambodia-China Year of Tourism, a significant influx of Chinese tourists to the Angkor Archaeological Park is expected, said Thong Mengdavid, a lecturer at the Institute of International Studies and Public Policy at the Royal University of Phnom Penh.

    “The growth is likely to be driven by increased bilateral cooperation, promotional campaigns and increased accessibility through direct flights and group tour packages,” he told Xinhua. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • CAR-T cell therapy linked to mild ‘brain fog’, stanford study finds

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    While CAR-T cell therapy has shown promise in treating cancer, it may also lead to side effects such as “brain fog,” which includes forgetfulness and difficulty concentrating, according to a new study.
     
    CAR-T cell therapy is a form of immunotherapy in which a patient’s immune cells—T cells—are genetically engineered and infused back into the bloodstream to help recognize and destroy cancer cells more effectively.
     
    The study, led by a team from Stanford University and published in the journal Cell, revealed that CAR-T cell therapy can cause mild cognitive impairments, independent of other cancer treatments.
     
    Notably, the underlying mechanism appears to be the same as that seen in cognitive impairments caused by chemotherapy and respiratory infections such as influenza and COVID-19.
     
    “CAR-T cell therapy is enormously promising. We are seeing long-term survivors after CAR-T cell treatment for aggressive cancers—patients who would otherwise not have survived,” said Michelle Monje, Professor of Pediatric Neuro-Oncology at Stanford Medicine.
     
    “But we need to understand all its potential long-term effects, including this newly recognised syndrome of immunotherapy-related cognitive impairment, so we can develop treatments to address it,” Monje added.
     
    In the study, researchers induced tumours in mice—in the brain, blood, skin, and bone—to examine how tumor location and the immune response triggered by CAR-T cells influenced cognition.
     
    Standard cognitive tests, including object recognition and maze navigation, were used to evaluate the mice before and after treatment.
     
    The findings showed that mild cognitive impairment occurred in mice with cancers located inside the brain, spreading to the brain, and even in those with tumors completely outside the brain. The only group that did not show cognitive issues were mice with bone cancer that caused minimal inflammation beyond the immune activity of the CAR-T cells.
     
    The researchers identified the brain’s immune cells, called microglia, as central to this side effect.
     
    Importantly, the study also proposed strategies to reverse these cognitive effects. The researchers said medications targeting brain fog could support better recovery for patients undergoing cancer immunotherapies.
     
    —IANS
    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Thales celebrates 50 years in Greece

    Source: Thales Group

    Headline: Thales celebrates 50 years in Greece

    13 May 2025

    Share this article

    On the occasion of DEFEA, Greece’s premier defence exhibition, Thales, a global leader in advanced technologies for the Defence, Aerospace and Cyber & Digital sectors, celebrates its 50th anniversary of operations in Greece. This milestone underscores Thales’ enduring commitment to fostering technological advancement and contributing to the nation’s economic growth and security.

    Pascale Sourisse and Laurence Auer, French Ambassador in Greece, on the occasion of DEFEA and Thales’s 50th anniversary in Greece. ” id=”image-4840937d-79e6-483b-af1e-44c108955785″ data-id=”4840937d-79e6-483b-af1e-44c108955785″ data-original=”https://cdn.uc.assets.prezly.com/4840937d-79e6-483b-af1e-44c108955785/-/inline/no/RGB-140.jpg” data-mfp-src=”https://cdn.uc.assets.prezly.com/4840937d-79e6-483b-af1e-44c108955785/-/resize/1200x/-/format/auto/” alt=”Pascale Sourisse and Laurence Auer, French Ambassador in Greece, on the occasion of DEFEA and Thales’s 50th anniversary in Greece. “/>
    Pascale Sourisse and Laurence Auer, French Ambassador in Greece, on the occasion of DEFEA and Thales’s 50th anniversary in Greece.

    Since establishing its presence in Greece 50 years ago, Thales has been at the forefront of delivering innovative solutions tailored to the needs of the Greek market. From cutting-edge avionics and state-of-the-art defence systems to secure communications and air traffic management systems, Thales has been instrumental in supporting Greece’s infrastructure and capabilities.

    Thales is a long-time supplier of major systems to the Hellenic Armed Forces, and today services a significant installed base in the country. This includes avionics and mission systems for the Dassault Aviation Rafale and Mirage 2000/2000-5 combat aircraft, as well as large-scale air defence systems. Thales combat systems are deployed by the Hellenic Navy on board surface vessels, including the FDI Hellenic Ship (HS) naval program. Furthermore, Thales tactical radios, electronic warfare, optronic systems and surveillance radars are in service with the Army.

    In civil markets, Thales has supplied much of the country’s air traffic management systems. Thales Hellas has also developed a local cybersecurity capability thanks to European support programs and the Thales Group’s experience in the cyber domain. Locally, Thales Hellas operates a Cyber Lab, serving Greek authorities as well as local universities and competence centres.

    Core to Thales’s growth story in Greece is collaboration with local industry. Thales is developing partnerships with Greek defence and technology companies to leverage local expertise and enhance the capabilities of the Greek defence and aerospace eco-system. In April, Thales Hellas held its first Innovation & Partnership event welcoming more than 120 participants from 75 Greek companies. Additionally, Thales is contributing to the development of Greek industry through a network of local SMEs and participates in European Programs in cooperation with Greek Universities and Research Centres.

    “This 50 year anniversary milestone comes at a pivotal moment for the future of Europe and its strategic autonomy. Thales fully supports Greece’s vision to develop sovereign capabilities and increase its defence industry involvement, playing a strong role within European and NATO nations. We stand ready to further deepen our ties with Greek industry in developing our local capability in Greece – growing our defence services, air traffic management and cyber footprint. Through our continued investments in local teams, strong collaborations, and innovation in the country, we will continue to play our part developing a robust Greek industry.” , said Pascale Sourisse, President & CEO, Thales International.

    “Our journey has been defined by a steadfast dedication to helping Greece protect its critical infrastructure through advanced technology and continuous collaboration. We look forward to further strengthening our ties and continuing our legacy of innovation and excellence for many more years to come.”‘, declared Vincent Megaides, Country Director Thales Greece, Cyprus and Malta.

    About Thales

    Thales (Euronext Paris: HO) is a global leader in advanced technologies for the Defence, Aerospace, and Cyber & Digital sectors. Its portfolio of innovative products and services addresses several major challenges: sovereignty, security, sustainability and inclusion.

    The Group invests more than €4 billion per year in Research & Development in key areas, particularly for critical environments, such as Artificial Intelligence, cybersecurity, quantum and cloud technologies.

    Thales has more than 83,000 employees in 68 countries. In 2024, the Group generated sales of €20.6 billion.

    About Thales in Greece

    Thales has been active in Greece for 50 years, expanding its historical presence in Defence, to serve Air Traffic Control, Transport and Space markets.

    Thales is long-standing partner to the Hellenic Armed Forces, providing avionics and mission systems for the Mirage 2000 and Rafale aicraft, as well as large-scale air defence systems for the Air Force and the Navy. Thales tactical radios, optronic systems and surveillance radars are also in service with the Army.

    Thales has also implemented the ACCS system in Larissa for NATO with its local engineers. Thales has supplied much of the country’s air traffic control systems as transport solutions. In the Space domain, Thales also supplies the Hellasat 3 communications satellite, which entered into service in 2017.

    Thales is also a leader in civil identity and biometric solutions.

    Coopération locale

    Thales soutient un écosystème de partenaires industriels locaux dans des projets de développement en Grèce. Le Groupe est aussi membre actif de plusieurs organisations industrielles, dont SEV (Fédération hellénique d’entreprises), HASDIG (Hellenic Aerospace & Defence Industries Group) et EVIDITE (Association spatiale grecque).

    Thales Hellas est un fournisseur accrédité de systèmes de défense auprès du ministère grec de la Défense et a signé un protocole d’accord avec HAFA (Hellenic Airforce Academy).

    MIL OSI Economics –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Sussan Ley makes history, but faces unprecedented levels of difficulty

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mark Kenny, Professor, Australian Studies Institute, Australian National University

    As if by visual metaphor, Sussan Ley’s task seemed both obvious and impossible in her first press conference as the new Liberal leader.

    Three years ago this month, Ley had done something uncannily similar to what Ted O’Brien was doing now. Then, it had been her standing next to Peter Dutton as his dutiful deputy. The freshly installed pair talked a big game about the contest ahead, assured of the urgency of their mission and the potency of their message.

    Ley had enthusiastically supported Dutton’s leadership. But now in 2025, it was Ley fronting the press, this time as the new leader following the catastrophic rejection of that Dutton-Ley project, the Liberal Party’s worst ever defeat.

    It was the inexperienced O’Brien at her side, newly elected as her bright-eyed second in command.

    Policy rethink?

    Sharpening the metaphor, it had been O’Brien who had acted as chief design architect and salesperson for one of the Coalition’s most expensive yet unloved policies in the May 2025 election – nuclear power stations, government built and operated.

    Back in 2022, Dutton’s task had seemed difficult, but success was far from unimaginable as he faced a new Labor government elected with a record-low primary vote and a tiny two-seat majority.

    Ley’s degree of difficulty three years hence is some orders of magnitude greater, not least because of O’Brien’s nuclear energy policy – which will be high on the list of policies to be reviewed, and presumably ditched, if a Liberal recovery is to occur.

    Stripping away unhelpful policy that is nonetheless beloved in sections of the party’s conservative and right wing base, is a threshold challenge for Ley – one of a panoply of traps and trying circumstances she confronts.

    Ley’s challenges

    First, there’s the simple maths given the Coalition now trails the Labor Party by a staggering 50-plus seats.

    Few observers think the Coalition can seriously compete for government at the 2028 election. Thus, Ley needs to keep hope alive among Liberal mps and senators, even when the prize of power seems two terms away.

    Then there’s her task of leading the Liberal Party back to the political centre-ground or as she puts it, meeting Australian voters “where they are”. This seems like politics 101. Yet she faces many internal sceptics.

    Leadership tightrope

    At 29 votes to 25, Ley’s victory against a more right-wing candidate, Angus Taylor was narrow and reportedly relied on the votes of senators whose terms end on June 30.

    In other words, even her current majority could evaporate.

    It is worth remembering that by December 2009, just two years after the Howard government ended, the Liberal Party was already on to its third opposition leader.

    Doing it her way

    So what effect will she have on the Liberal Party? In her first press conference she gave several clues.

    In contradistinction to Dutton, who avoided Parliament House press conferences and searching interviews, Ley gave a crisp three word answer when asked if she would front up to these rituals of public accountability – “yes, I will”.

    She promised to make tax reform and economic policy the “core business” of the party she leads.

    There was also a marked, if measured, departure from the bombastic declarative culture war politics of Dutton on matters like standing in front of the Aboriginal flag and welcome to country ceremonies at public events. On both, she expressed a more pragmatic acceptance:

    If it’s meaningful, if it matters, if it resonates, then it’s in the right place and as environment minister and health minister I listened carefully and participated in Welcome to Country ceremonies. If it’s done in a way that is ticking a box on a Teams meeting then I don’t think it is relevant.

    On other matters, she noted pointedly that RG Menzies had founded the party as the “Liberal” party not the conservative party, while acknowledging a breadth of alternative opinions among her parliamentary colleagues:

    Our Liberal Party reflects a range of views from all walks of life that are welcome in our party room and that is one of our great strengths.

    Ley the history-maker

    That Ley is the first ever woman to lead the federal Liberal Party will pose potential challenges.

    To pretend that gender stereotyping will play no role in any undermining by internal critics and media would be to ignore history.

    Asked about the exodus of female voters from the Coalition at the election, Ley said, “We did let women down, there is no doubt about that,” as she expressed the need for “genuine, serious” engagement:

    I want to say right here and now we need more women in our party. We need more women in the organisation, and we need more women in this party room.

    However, she pointedly stopped short of backing affirmative action quotas in the Liberal Party even as she called for more women in the parliament.

    Gaza about-face

    Perhaps the most telling “real-time” demonstration of the uneasy balance she hopes to achieve as leader of a party that has shifted markedly to the right, was when she as was asked about the Israel-Gaza question.

    As a former member of a cross party group called Parliamentary Friends of Palestine, Ley had implored parliament in 2008 to “think not of the Palestinian leadership, think of the people”.

    She had described Gaza as “besieged, contained, and on the brink of starvation” while warning that a “crushing economic embargo feeds fury and resentment” both in Gaza and the West Bank:

    Israel has many friends in this country and in this parliament. The Palestinians, by comparison, have few. Theirs is not a popular cause […] but it is one I support.

    Asked about her view now, Ley felt the need to circle back to stress her principle concern over the rising tide of antisemitism in Australia. She now says the “hideous events” of October 7 has changed her thinking on the matter.

    Gaza has given Sussan Ley an early lesson on the difficulties leaders face when it comes to straddling highly contentious issues.

    Mark Kenny 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. Sussan Ley makes history, but faces unprecedented levels of difficulty – https://theconversation.com/sussan-ley-makes-history-but-faces-unprecedented-levels-of-difficulty-256336

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Congratulations to Marina Burmistrova on her new appointment!

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On May 13, Marina Burmistrova, a graduate of the State University of Management, was appointed Minister of Culture and Archives of the Komi Republic.

    Dear Marina Eduardovna! On behalf of the State University of Management, we congratulate you on your appointment to this responsible position. We are confident that your knowledge and experience will serve as a reliable foundation for the cultural prosperity of the Komi Republic. We hope that we will continue to see you often within the walls of your native university. We wish you interesting challenges, a loyal team, and successful project implementation!

    Marina Burmistrova graduated from the Russian State Social University in 2008 with a degree in Social Pedagogy. In 2009, she completed professional retraining in the Organization Management and Entrepreneurship programs at the State University of Management. From 2019 to 2021, she improved her knowledge in courses at various educational institutions. In 2023, she graduated from the Master of Public Administration (MPA) program at the Moscow State University of Management named after Yu. M. Luzhkov.

    From 2007 to 2016, she worked in the corporate sector; in 2016, she moved to work in the cultural sphere of Moscow, where she rose from the head of a club formation to the general director of the Association of Cultural Centers of the North-Eastern Administrative District of Moscow (55 addresses, more than 500 people on staff).

    In addition to her main job, Marina Burmistrova teaches at the Moscow State University of Management, is a member of the Eurasian Women’s Forum under the Federation Council, acts as an expert at major cultural events (book fairs, forums, festivals), participates in the work of university examination committees, including being the chairperson of the state examination committee for the defense of master’s theses at the Department of Public and Municipal Administration at the State University of Management.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 05/13/2025

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dialogue between Science and Business: Polytechnic and Rostelecom Discuss IT Development

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    Representatives of Rostelecom visited the Polytechnic University: Deputy President and Chairman of the Board Darius Khalitov, Advisor to the President Alexey Sergeev, Director of the North-West Macroregional Branch Alexander Loginov and Deputy General Director of RTK IT Roman Khazeev.

    The guests were met by the Advisor to the Rector’s Office of SPbPU Vladimir Glukhov, Vice-Rector for Information Technology Andrey Lyamin, Vice-Rector for Youth Policy and Communication Technologies Maxim Pasholikov and Head of the Public Relations Department Marianna Dyakova.

    At the Technopolis Polytech research building, the Rostelecom delegation visited the Supercomputer Center and met with university scientists engaged in developments in the field of computer and AL technologies.

    At the meeting, the Director of the Institute of Computer Science and Cybersecurity Dmitry Zegzhda presented the institute’s capabilities in training personnel for the industry and conducting research in the interests of industrial partners. The head of the ICSSC noted that knowledge of information technology is necessary for representatives of all professions today. All specialties of the institute, where more than 4.5 thousand students study, are in demand, on average, the competition is 30 people per place. In its development strategy, the institute is focused on interaction with industry and the public sector, continuity of education and interdisciplinarity, opening laboratories and centers of end-to-end information technology.

    Lev Utkin, Chief Researcher at the Higher School of Artificial Intelligence Technologies, spoke about research and developments used, for example, to diagnose diseases, and about the use of predictive analytics and explanatory intelligence both in medicine and in solving various production problems. Vladimir Mulyukha, Director of the Higher School of Artificial Intelligence Technologies, recalled joint projects with Rostelecom and outlined opportunities for expanding cooperation.

    In his response, Rostelecom Deputy President Darius Khalitov noted that the company can cooperate with Polytech in training personnel, using new technologies in the field of AI and in the expert assessment of Polytech scientists. Darius Ravilevich was especially interested in technologies using predictive analytics, which are based on the institute’s own neural networks based on the LLM model of learning on concepts.

    I found the programs in the field of artificial intelligence and cyberpsychology very promising, I have not seen anything like that anywhere else. In a sense, IT is becoming a cross-cutting discipline that will permeate applied areas, and there will be many reasons for cooperation, – summed up Darii Khalitov.

    Then Rostelecom representatives visited the Youth Trajectory Center “Polytech Tower”, where they met with the student team “Omnivorous” – the bronze prize winner of the international championship “Battle of Robots”. The conversation turned out to be very informative and productive, because Rostelecom is the sponsor of our team, and they have something to discuss with the guys. In particular, they talked about the possibility of creating their own track for training, so as not to go to Moscow every time for this with a 110-kilogram robot.

    At the end of the visit, Darii Khalitov became a guest of the live broadcast of the Lepota project in the Polytechnic TV studio. The broadcast was dedicated to Radio Day, which is celebrated on May 7, because it was the invention of radio that became, as they say now, a breakthrough into the world of unlimited possibilities for the development of information transmission technologies. Today it is already digital technologies, tomorrow – artificial intelligence, and the day after tomorrow…

    So, answering a question from one of the viewers How do new communication technologies affect the security of users’ personal data? Darius Khalitov said: In the flow of information in which we exist, one of the trends of telecommunications companies is cyber privacy. For us, citizens who use digital services every day, cyber privacy in 10-15 years will become, in a sense, a luxury for which we will be willing to pay. More and more services will appear that allow you to limit the distribution or receipt of information.

    To the question “Is it possible for a global communications provider to emerge?” the guest on the air answered that given the current excess of information, a hybrid between distributed data storage technologies and centralized management would be appropriate in the future. “You can’t concentrate everything in one place,” the expert explained. “Communications are the information bread of the 21st century, and the first thing we do when we wake up is watch the news on our phone, and only then do we go to breakfast. Therefore, access to information is already a critical infrastructure. And it must be fault-tolerant.”

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • Draupadi Murmu pays floral tributes to Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed on his birth anniversary

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    President of India, Droupadi Murmu, paid floral tributes to former President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed on the occasion of his 121st birth anniversary at Rashtrapati Bhavan on Tuesday.

    Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed served as the fifth President of India from August 24, 1974, until his untimely demise on February 11, 1977. He was the second President of India to die in office, after Dr. Zakir Husain.

    Born in 1905, Ahmed pursued his education in Delhi and later at the University of Cambridge. He was called to the Bar at the Inner Temple, London. Upon returning to India, he practiced law in Lahore and subsequently in Guwahati.

    A committed freedom fighter, Ahmed actively participated in the Quit India Movement of 1942 against British colonial rule. He later held several key positions in independent India and became a trusted associate of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.

    During his presidency, he signed the proclamation of Emergency in 1975 following a meeting with Prime Minister Gandhi, one of the most significant and controversial moments in India’s constitutional history.

    President Murmu’s tribute today served as a reminder of Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed’s contributions to India’s legal, political, and freedom movements.

    (With inputs from agencies)

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rescue, training, volunteering: how Moscow student rescuers help people

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The Moscow City Branch of the All-Russian Student Rescue Corps (MGO VSKS) is one of the largest in the country. Students of the capital’s universities have been helping to maintain public safety since 2001. The branch includes more than 400 volunteers from 19 units of higher and secondary vocational educational institutions.

    “Each volunteer is not just a volunteer, but a qualified assistant to rescue services, ready to act in the most difficult situations. He can participate in humanitarian missions, support military personnel, and most importantly, carry out ongoing work to improve the safety of city residents. MGO VSKS is an example of responsibility and unity,” said

    Ekaterina Dragunova, Chairman of the capital’s Committee for Public Relations and Youth Policy.

    School of Goodness and Safety

    All Moscow student rescuers are trained to provide qualified assistance to special services. Young volunteers take an active part in humanitarian missions and support servicemen in the special military operation (SVO) zone. In addition, they regularly conduct informational and preventive work with residents of the capital.

    Volunteers undergo professional training, acquiring the skills of rescuers, first aid instructors, industrial climbers and rescue sailors. Students conduct various events, open lessons and master classes in Moscow for residents and guests of the capital on behavior in emergency situations and first aid.

    The Moscow City Branch of the All-Russian Student Rescue Corps includes nine school rescue teams. Its instructors train children in fire and rescue disciplines on a regular basis.

    Trainees from various regions of Russia, including the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics, Zaporizhia and Kherson regions, are trained at the headquarters of the MGO VSKS. In 2024, 122 volunteers from other regions were trained here.

    The Moscow city branch of VSKS is rapidly developing, popularizing the culture of safety among Muscovites and involving people in volunteer activities during emergencies. The organization is becoming increasingly important in the sphere of ensuring security in the capital, forming a personnel reserve for responding to challenges.

    The main areas of its work remain raising the level of citizens’ life safety culture, participation in the elimination of emergency situations and their consequences, training volunteers for this, organizing humanitarian missions, ensuring security at mass events of various levels, as well as organizing and conducting emergency recovery operations.

    Professionalism and dedication

    In 2024–2025, volunteers took part in such work in the Donetsk People’s Republic, as well as in humanitarian missions to the cities of Kursk, Belgorod, Rostov-on-Don, and Toropets. They delivered humanitarian aid as part of the State University of Management’s “GUU-SVOim” project, participated in the liquidation of the consequences of an oil spill in the city of Anapa, and made trench candles and camouflage nets for servicemen participating in the SVO.

    Recently, the capital’s volunteer rescuers and volunteers of the ANO “Center “Pomoshch”” returned from the Kirzhach district of the Vladimir region, where they helped residents affected by the fire. They were engaged in emergency recovery work and landscaping of the territory. In parallel with this, students at the humanitarian headquarters sorted humanitarian aid in order to quickly deliver necessary things and food to people.

    “Volunteer rescuers from Moscow worked shoulder to shoulder with the local branch of VSKS, rescuers and volunteers. We know how important every trained pair of hands is in such a situation. The volunteers who provided assistance have the necessary skills and experience in emergency situations. Moscow volunteers promptly delivered humanitarian aid and transported volunteer rescuers. Logistics was organized in such a way as to use the available resources as efficiently as possible,” said Maxim Dzhetygenov, deputy of the Moscow City Duma and head of the Moscow city branch of VSKS.

    Sergei Sobyanin spoke about the development of volunteer activities in MoscowCreative and patriotic camps have been prepared for Moscow youth

    Detailed information about the activities of the Moscow City Branch of VSKS can be found in the community “VKontakte”. His work is supported by the “Youth of Moscow” project of the city Committee on Public Relations and Youth Policy. You can find out about the opportunities for young Muscovites in the capital on the portal project, as well as on its pages in social networks.

    Get the latest news quicklyofficial telegram channel the city of Moscow.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/153749073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The first student career forum was held at IPMET

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The student body of the Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade of SPbPU held a large-scale career event — the forum “IPMEiT Career: Step into the Future”. As part of a single career day, participants had the opportunity to attend lectures on professional development issues, as well as take part in interactive sessions aimed at developing and improving career skills. More than 200 students took part in the event.

    The program of the event was designed in such a way that students not only gained new knowledge, but also really got closer to their career dreams – be it their first internship or a conscious choice of a professional path.

    The forum began with a welcoming speech by the Director of IPMEiT Vladimir Shchepinin: Today’s forum is not only a platform for interaction between employers and students, but also an important step towards the professional development of future IPMEiT graduates. Our students are active, enthusiastic, and serious about choosing their future profession. They are ready for new challenges and opportunities. I wish everyone productive work, useful contacts, and inspiration for new achievements! Employers should find the best of the best, and participants should do everything to ensure that this day remains in their memory forever!

    Immediately after the opening, a job fair began, in which 20 partner companies took part. Among them: VTB Bank, Kept, P

    During the lecture by Changellenge, students learned about the key aspects of effective resume writing, learned about employers’ requirements for young professionals, and also analyzed the most common questions asked during interviews. The career block of the forum also included a case game in the format of “Case Thursday”, organized by the student association “Case Club SPbPU” together with Nikoliers. Participants were asked to solve a practical problem related to the analysis of the real estate market. Working in teams, they presented their solutions and received professional feedback from experts.

    In the educational block of the forum, students listened to a lecture on financial topics from the company “Trust Technologies”, learned about key professions in the field of finance and received practical recommendations on starting a career in this area. And at the master class of the company ESI Logistics

    “IPMET hosts quite a large number of thematic career events every year, but there has never been a global event that would unite the entire institute around career opportunities,” said Anastasia Nikitina, Chair of PROF.IPMET and the main organizer of the forum. “We tried to make the event based on the requests and wishes of students. At first, the idea seemed difficult to implement, but thanks to cooperation with the institute’s management and higher schools, after a month of active preparation, my team and I were able to help IPMET students take a small but very important step towards their careers and future.”

    The IPMET Career: Step into the Future forum has become a great start for the institute’s new tradition. The organizers are already full of inspiration for the next season and invite everyone to take another confident step towards new horizons!

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Case Championship at the Polytechnic: Young Engineers Solved Nuclear Power Problems

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The final of the case championship dedicated to a significant date — the 80th anniversary of the Russian nuclear industry — was held at the Higher School of Nuclear and Thermal Energy of SPbPU. The event was organized by the scientific and technical department of Rosatom Polytechnic students with the support of Atomenergoproekt.

    This year, participants were offered a technical case based on real engineering tasks that specialists in the field of designing nuclear power plants work with. Atomenergoproekt experts developed a task that required deep knowledge of heat engineering, safety systems, and analysis of design solutions.

    Students had to complete the following tasks:

    to develop a set of criteria for comparative evaluation of passive heat removal systems in two nuclear power unit projects – V-392M and V-491; to justify the choice of suitable parameters for assessing efficiency and reliability; to apply engineering methods and software for analysis; to present a technically competent, logically coherent and justified solution.

    The teams had to demonstrate not only theoretical knowledge, but also the ability to think like an engineer, perform critical analysis, work with regulatory documentation and open sources.

    Six teams from Polytechnic University and other universities worked hard on the case for a week. The final stage — defense of solutions — became the culmination of the championship. Participants presented their approaches, conclusions and justifications to a professional jury.

    The work was assessed by leading specialists of Atomenergoproekt: 2nd category design engineer Alexander Moloskin, laboratory head Alexander Anishchenko and chief expert Andrey Mitryukhin. The jury also included experts from the Institute of Power Engineering – Director of the Higher School of Nuclear and Thermal Energy Alexander Kalyutik and Associate Professor of the Higher School of Atomic and Thermal Energy Irina Paramonova. The judges noted the difficult choice of winners.

    The teams demonstrated a good level of preparation. Some decisions were unexpected for us, which makes this format of interaction even more valuable. I hope we will be able to consolidate the practice of such championships in the future, – said Alexander Moloskin.

    The winner of the case championship was the team “MeV” (3rd year, SPbPU). The second place was taken by the team “Obe gulls” (4th year, SPbPU). The third place was taken by the team VaultBoyFanClub (1st year SPbPU and the Admiral S. O. Makarov State University of Maritime and Inland Shipping).

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Interaction between Polytechnic University and Russian-Armenian University: Digest of Events

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade of SPbPU and the Institute of Economics and Business of the Russian-Armenian University (RAU) have joined forces to conduct annual International Student Scientific Conference. This event, continuing the tradition cooperation, has become an important platform for discussing current scientific research by young people and strengthening academic ties between universities.

    On the first day of the conference, participants of the Higher School of Industrial Management (HSIM) of IPMEiT, together with the Department of Management and Business of the Russian Agrarian University, discussed interdisciplinary research issues covering such areas as management in conditions of uncertainty, sustainable urban development, digital marketing and logistics in business, and problems of decarbonization in industry.

    The participants were addressed with welcoming speeches by the Director of the Higher School of Industrial Management Olga Kalinina, the Head of the Department of Management and Business of the Russian Agrarian University Arzik Suvaryan and the Deputy Director for Research Work of Students of the Institute of Industrial Management and Technology Svetlana Shirokova.

    Arzik Suvaryan expressed confidence in the need to strengthen cooperation: We see how these events inspire students and teachers to new scientific achievements. I am sure that next year we will again surprise the participants with new achievements.

    The conference became a real platform for generating ideas. We were able not only to present our research, but also to receive valuable recommendations from colleagues. The discussion on the application of qualimetric models in risk management of real estate construction in the mountainous areas of the Republic of Armenia was especially useful, – shared his impressions 4th-year student of the HSE “Construction Management” program Artem Androsov.

    The Higher School of Public Administration (HSPA) of IPMEiT held a section on “Public Administration and Economic Security” jointly with the Department of Economics and Finance of the Russian-Armenian University. Participants discussed topics such as improving public administration in the field of environmental education, the impact of economic crime on regional security, as well as the balance of socio-economic development of regions and issues of IT audit and digital currencies.

    The speakers presented the results of their research, and we were able to discuss current topics in the field of public administration and economic security. The discussion on the influence of the shadow economy and environmental education was especially interesting, commented HSSU postgraduate student Natalia Kulkaeva.

    The section “Sustainable Development of Socioeconomic Systems in the Context of Digitalization”, organized by the Higher School of Engineering and Economics (HSE), featured more than fifteen scientific reports on the digitalization of the economy, innovative development of regions, greening of industry, as well as the introduction of digital solutions in logistics, trade and small business. Particular attention was drawn to the presentations of students, which examined the prospects for international trade, the internationalization of the yuan, cooperation between Russia and China, as well as the strategy for sustainable development of Egypt until 2030.

    The conference gave me inspiration and new ideas. It was very interesting to hear the presentations of colleagues and discuss current topics in economics. I recommend it to everyone! – noted VIES student Dong Yiqun, studying in the program “World Economy and International Economic Relations”.

    As part of the international annual student scientific conference of the Russian-Armenian University, Associate Professor of the Higher Engineering Physics School of SPbPU Maxim Vinnichenko gave a plenary report to postgraduate students, students and, importantly, schoolchildren of the RAU.

    In his report, he emphasized: By measuring the intensity of light passing through a sample, we can obtain important information about its optical properties. In this way, we can diagnose a wide variety of materials – both solids and liquids, including biological media such as blood or saliva. For example, studies have been conducted to determine the presence of COVID-19 by spectral characteristics. This is a clear example of the connection between science and medicine.

    The associate professor also noted that laser radiation can be used, for example, to assess blood flow velocity.

    In some areas of the body where there are no bones and the skin is thin enough – for example, on the wrist or palm – you can illuminate it with a powerful green or red laser and visually observe how much light passes through the tissue. This data allows you to roughly estimate the speed of blood flow in the veins, – said Vynnychenko.

    Also, at the site of the Armenian University, Maxim Vinnichenko held open lectures on the course “Optical properties of semiconductors and nanostructures”, which were listened to with great interest by senior and postgraduate students of the RAU in the field of “Electronics and Nanoelectronics”.

    Colleagues from RAU highly appreciated the quality of the students’ reports and came up with an initiative to develop cooperation aimed at popularizing science among students, publishing articles and holding joint youth events and conferences on a regular basis.

    The best reports were awarded with certificates of participation, and all submitted articles will be published in the conference collection. The joint conference of SPbPU and RAU continues to prove that science is not only research, but also a dialogue that unites minds and cultures for the sake of the future.

    Polytechnics also took part in the International scientific and practical conference “Current issues of personality psychology: identity and adaptation”. SPbPU was represented by the director of the Higher School of Social Sciences Anastasia Lisenkova, associate professor of the Higher School of Linguistics and Pedagogy Lyudmila Luchsheva, head of the educational and project art laboratory “ArtPolyLab” of the State Institute of Geography Maria Kukushkina.

    Anastasia Lisenkova presented a report entitled “Liquid Privacy: Forced Publicity of Digital Identity”, where she revealed the features of the digital era and their impact on self-identification. Lyudmila Luchsheva presented a report entitled “Dynamics of Attitudes and Motivation of Teachers’ Professional Activity”. Maria Kukushkina presented a study entitled “The Structure of Social Representations of Kindergarten Directors on the Psychological Safety of the Educational Environment”, emphasizing the role of management decisions in creating a comfortable environment for children, and held a master class entitled “My Professional Path” dedicated to career trajectories in psychology and pedagogy.

    Participation in the conference allowed us to exchange experiences in conducting current research and to outline new areas of cooperation in the fields of psychology, sociology and other humanities.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: View from The Hill: Ley says Liberals must ‘meet the people where they are’, but how can a divided party do that?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

    Cynics point out that when a party turns to a woman leader, it is often handing her a hot mess. That’s certainly so with the federal Liberals, now choosing their first female leader in eight decades.

    For the Liberals, and for Sussan Ley, 63, this is a bittersweet milestone. The odds are overwhelmingly against her chances of taking the Liberals from opposition to government.

    Given Labor’s massive majority, it will be virtually impossible for the Liberals to regain office in under two terms (when Ley would be in her late 60s). The way these things go, there’s likely to be more than one opposition leader in the next half dozen years.

    Most immediately, Ley has to put the meagre talent pool available to best use. This is not just fitting the right people into the right spots but containing ambitions and discontents.

    Peter Dutton didn’t have to look over his shoulder in three years. Ley will be constantly glancing behind. Given the closeness of the vote, and his personality, Angus Taylor is unlikely to regard the result as closing the book. But for the moment, he said on Tuesday, “We must unify […] I will contribute the best way I can to help get us back in the fight.”

    Jacinta Price, after defecting from the Nationals in a bid to become deputy to Taylor, has had her hopes of dramatic advancement dashed. In the end, she didn’t even contest the deputyship. She said later she was “disappointed” Taylor was not elected. Talked up by the conservative base, she may also find her new Liberal kennel more flea-ridden than her previous fairly-comfy Nationals one. Certainly Price, used to running her own race, will require careful management. She told Sky on Tuesday night she looked forward to “robust debate” in the party room.

    Over coming days, there’ll be the opposition’s pain-filled policy overhaul. The nearly evenly divided leadership vote (29-25), in which the moderates supported Ley and the conservatives backed Taylor, highlights differences over policy.

    A large cloud hangs over the controversial nuclear policy. Some will want to ditch it entirely; others will argue it should be recalibrated. A complication is that Ted O’Brien, the new deputy, was its main architect.

    More seriously, the commitment to net zero emissions reduction by 2050 will be on the table.

    Ley told her joint news conference with O’Brien: “There won’t be a climate war. There will be sound and sensible consultation”. That sounds like wishful thinking. It certainly goes against the Coalition’s history.

    While there are some Liberal critics of net zero, this is particularly a debate for the Nationals, among whom there will be a strong push to ditch the commitment.

    Within the Coalition, the Nationals will have greater clout because they held almost all their seats. What they do on climate policy will substantially affect the joint party room. But will there be pressure to break the Coalition?

    Especially challenging for Ley – and at present looking almost impossible – is how the Liberals manage to appeal to two vital constituencies, women and younger voters. Many professional women in what were once solid Liberal areas have gone off to the teals. The under-50s have comprehensively rejected the Liberals.

    Ley said: “We have to have a Liberal Party that respects modern Australia, that reflects modern Australia, and represents modern Australia. And we have to meet the people where they are.”

    That’s exactly right, if the Liberal Party is to be successful. But the reality is that the party, as things stand, appears incapable of “meeting the people where they are.”
    The fundamental problem is that these constituencies – younger voters and women – are increasingly progressive in their politics, but the Liberals are not.

    It’s not as if Ley, when deputy leader, didn’t make an effort with women. After the 2022 election, she embarked on a “women’s listening tour”. But such efforts didn’t work, and the Liberals then further alienated women with the working-from-home debacle..

    Pitching to women in future will require the Liberals to consider whether they should swallow their objection to quotas for female candidates – and that will encounter fierce resistance.

    The Liberals need to thread the needle between the so-called “leafy” urban areas they must win back and the outer suburbs that Dutton thought, wrongly, could take him to power.

    Ley is a centrist and a pragmatist. She told her news conference she believed government “is ultimately formed in a sensible centre”.

    She will probably be able to navigate issues such as “welcome to country” and the flag better than Dutton, and she said that at the Liberal Party meeting “I committed to my colleagues that there would be no captain’s calls”.

    She has changed her views on issues, ranging from her previously strong support for the Palestinians (she was in the parliamentary friends of Palestine) to her opposition to the live sheep trade (she had a private member’s bill in 2018 restricting these exports).

    A massive problem Ley will confront is the weak and in parts feral Liberal organisation, which is a federation of states. Variously, these divisions are riven by factionalism, depleted, and incompetent, or all of those. In contrast, Labor excels in its ground game at elections. Ley won’t be able to drive the needed reform, and the party lacks the strong figures in the organisation to do so.

    Few people want to join political parties these days, and when a party is on the ropes, the traffic is the other way. This gives the ideologues and factional players even more power over candidate selection, often with bad outcomes.

    Adding to their organisational challenges, the Liberals will also have to find a new federal director, with Andrew Hirst, who has been in the post since 2017, expected to move on.

    When Ley was young she put an extra “s” in her name. She describes it as a joke in her rebellious youth. She told journalist Kate Legge in 2015, “I read about this numerology theory that if you add the numbers that match the letters in your name you can change your personality. I worked out that if you added an “s” I would have an incredibly exciting, interesting life and nothing would ever be boring.“

    However it turns out, her time as opposition leader won’t be boring.

    Michelle Grattan 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. View from The Hill: Ley says Liberals must ‘meet the people where they are’, but how can a divided party do that? – https://theconversation.com/view-from-the-hill-ley-says-liberals-must-meet-the-people-where-they-are-but-how-can-a-divided-party-do-that-256460

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    May 13, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Robert Aderholt Announces Staff Additions in Washington Office

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Robert Aderholt (AL-04)

    Washington, D.C. — Congressman Robert Aderholt (AL-04) today announced a staff promotion and two new additions to his Washington, D.C. office: Stone Griffin has been promoted to Policy Analyst, Lucy Allen will join as Press Assistant, and Sam Chance is now serving as Staff Assistant.

    “Each of these individuals brings unique experience, energy, and a heart for service that reflects the values of Alabama’s Fourth District,” said Congressman Aderholt. “I’m proud to welcome Lucy and Sam to our team and to see Stone continue to grow in his new role.”

    Stone Griffin, a native of Winchester, Virginia and graduate of the University of Virginia, previously served as Staff Assistant in Congressman Aderholt’s office. His prior experience includes working for Representatives Greg Pence and Jen Kiggans.

    “It’s an honor to continue serving Congressman Aderholt and our constituents in this new capacity,” said Griffin. 

    Lucy Allen, originally from Florence, Alabama, will officially join the office as Press Assistant following her graduation from Auburn University in May, where she is completing a degree in Public Relations. She previously interned in Congressman Aderholt’s Washington office, where she gained firsthand experience with legislative operations, constituent communications, and Capitol tours.

    “I am grateful to be joining Congressman Aderholt’s staff,” said Allen. “Starting as an intern last summer and now being part of the team full-time feels really special. Everyone on staff is hardworking and passionate, and I’m excited to learn from them while serving the district I grew up in.”

    Sam Chance, a native of Arab, Alabama and graduate of Samford University, joins the office as Staff Assistant. He brings experience from both legal and nonprofit sectors, including roles at Heninger Garrison Davis, the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame, and Pine Cove Ranch. At Samford, he served on the Student Judiciary Council and graduated cum laude with a degree in Business Administration.

    “Being in this office has already been such a blessing,” said Chance. “I have seen firsthand how our staff consistently goes above and beyond, and I am excited to learn from them. I could not be more grateful for the opportunity to serve my home district.”

    These additions reflect Congressman Aderholt’s continued commitment to building a team that provides responsive, thoughtful service to the people of Alabama’s Fourth District.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 13, 2025
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