Category: Vehicles

  • MIL-OSI Security: Crisp County Residents Plead Guilty in Armed Methamphetamine Trafficking Case

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime Alerts (b)

    ALBANY, Ga. – Two Southwest Georgia residents with criminal pasts pleaded guilty to federal charges resulting from an armed drug trafficking investigation conducted by local, state and federal level law enforcement agencies.

    Justin Harris Vinson, 42, of Warwick, Georgia, pleaded guilty to one count of distribution of methamphetamine on Sept. 17 and co-defendant Shana Rae Black, 34, of Cordele, Georgia, pleaded guilty to one count of distribution of methamphetamine on Aug. 15. Both defendants are facing a mandatory minimum of ten years up to a maximum of life imprisonment to be followed by at least five years of supervised release and a $10 million fine. Chief U.S. District Judge Leslie Gardner is presiding over the cases. The sentencing dates will be determined by the Court. There is no parole in the federal system.

    “Repeat convicted felons who illegally arm themselves and distribute the most highly addictive and dangerous drugs into our communities will face federal consequences for these crimes,” said U.S. Attorney Peter D. Leary. “Our office is working closely with local, state and federal law enforcement agencies to identity those individuals creating the most havoc in the Middle District of Georgia and hold them accountable for their crimes.”

    “Drug traffickers drive addiction and destroy communities,” Robert J. Murphy, Special Agent in Charge of the DEA Atlanta Division stated. “DEA will use any resource necessary to remove these career criminals from our streets.”

    “Methamphetamine is a highly addictive drug with devastating consequences to users, their families and communities,” said Supervisory Senior Resident Agent Richard Bilson of FBI Atlanta’s Albany office. “This prosecution closes a pipeline for dangerous drugs flowing into the streets of Southwest Georgia.”  

    “We are committed to holding those who traffic methamphetamine accountable,” said GBI Director Chris Hosey. “Collaborating closely with state, local and federal law enforcement agencies, we will work to ensure justice and dismantle these dangerous networks.”

    “I am incredibly proud of our agency’s relentless efforts and the strong collaboration with our local and federal partners. Methamphetamine trafficking brings dangerous consequences to our community, often resulting in tragedy and loss of life. This case highlights our dedication to safeguarding the community and demonstrates the powerful results we achieve through collaboration,” stated Crisp County Sheriff Billy Hancock.

    According to court documents and statements referenced in court, a confidential informant (CI) working with the Crisp County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) contacted Black on Facebook to obtain methamphetamine on Oct. 27, 2022. Black sold the CI approximately 111 grams of methamphetamine at a Perry, Georgia, motel; the CI reported there was a pistol on a nightstand in the motel room, next to a bulk quantity of methamphetamine. On Oct. 31, an undercover Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) agent contacted Black to purchase methamphetamine and met her at the Walmart in Cordele. Under audio and video surveillance, the GBI agent purchased methamphetamine from Black.

    On Nov. 2, FBI, DEA and GBI agents met with another CI to purchase methamphetamine from Vinson. Under surveillance, Vinson met the CI at his Warwick residence and traveled with Vinson to the Sunrise Inn in Cordele to meet with Black. During the transaction, Black provided 284.4 grams of methamphetamine and collected the majority of the cash payment for the drugs, with Vinson keeping $300 as a brokering fee. Vinson was seen with a firearm during the transaction.

    On Nov. 7, CCSO and GBI arrested Black in Crisp County as she traveled in a vehicle back from McDonough, Georgia.  A search of the vehicle revealed Black was in possession of 982.7 grams of 97% pure methamphetamine, 15.89 grams of 91% pure methamphetamine, a digital scale and several cell phones. GBI executed a search warrant on the Baymont Inn motel room in Cordele where Black was staying and found a 9mm semiautomatic pistol, a small bag of suspected methamphetamine, four digital scales and bulk quantities of plastic baggies. Black’s cell phones showed extensive communications between her and known drug dealers.

    On Jan. 22, 2023, Vinson purchased 15 ounces of methamphetamine in Cordele and sold 277 grams of 98% pure methamphetamine to a CI utilized by GBI in Warwick. During the transaction, the CI observed Vinson place a firearm in the center console of his vehicle. A search warrant was executed at Vinson’s residence on Jan. 26, 2023. Law enforcement located a semiautomatic pistol in his bedroom, along with five other firearms inside of an open safe. Vinson told officers he had been selling methamphetamine in the South Georgia and North Florida area his entire life and that during the peak of COVID in 2020, he would sell approximately three kilograms of methamphetamine per week for six months.

    Vinson has a prior felony conviction in Lee County, Georgia, Superior Court for possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine. Black also has a prior felony conviction in Jones County, Georgia, Superior Court for possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine.

    This case was investigated by FBI, DEA, GBI and the Crisp County Sheriff’s Office.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Redavid is prosecuting the case for the Government.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Dan Goldman, Senator Chuck Schumer, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand Announce $164 Million Grant to Revitalize the Brooklyn Marine Terminal

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

    Award Follows Advocacy Led by Goldman and Supported by Coalition of Elected Officials Representing the Brooklyn Marine Terminal

    Goldman Serves as Chair of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal Task Force

    Read the Coalition’s Letter of Support Here

    Brooklyn, NY – Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10) today announced that he and a coalition of elected officials secured a $163,800,000 Mega Grant award from the United States Department of Transportation (DOT), which will be used by the City of New York to revitalize the Brooklyn Marine Terminal (BMT).

    As Chair of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal Task Force, Congressman Goldman led a letter of support for the grant award, joined by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), New York State Senator Andrew Gounardes, New York State Assemblymember Marcela Mitaynes, New York State Assemblymember Charles Fall, New York State Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, New York City Councilmember Alexa Avilés, and New York City Councilmember Shahana Hanif to the U.S. DOT.

    Upgrades and repairs to the Brooklyn Marine Terminal, which hosts an active container terminal and cruise terminal, would ensure the future viability of the working waterfront in the New York-New Jersey Harbor. Once complete, the modernization of the BMT will create quality jobs and reduce truck trips while serving as a global model for modern shipping utilizing low-emission, last-mile freight movement, community hiring, and neighborhood engagement.

    Congressman Goldman – alongside State Senator Andrew Gounardes and Councilmember Alexa Avilés – founded the Brooklyn Marine Terminal Task Force to ensure that the revitalization of the BMT was grounded in community engagement. The BMT Task Force will ensure that every neighborhood is represented throughout this process and will center the needs and concerns of community members while developing the future of the BMT. 

    “I am delighted that we have secured $163,800,000 in funding for the vital redevelopment of the Brooklyn waterfront,” Congressman Dan Goldman said. “This incredible investment in our Red Hook community will be transformative. While the Brooklyn Marine Terminal had been mired in decades of inertia, we have entered a new era with this long overdue federal funding. This infusion will allow our city to fully enhance the economic growth and health of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal, while taking into account the public health and climate goals of surrounding communities. The future is here – and it’s looking bright for Brooklyn.”

    U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said, “After years of advocating for the revitalization of Brooklyn’s waterfront, including preservation of existing freight operations and addition of new manufacturing and assemblage of wind power infrastructure, not to mention bike lanes and parks, I’m proud to deliver this MEGA grant win with my congressional partners, Rep. Dan Goldman and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. $163.8 million for New York City’s Brooklyn Marine Terminal modernization project is made possible by the Bipartisan Infrastructure & Jobs Law I led to passage. The rehabilitation and rebuilding of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal is the next step in reimagining and revitalizing the Brooklyn waterfront. The project will boost the economy and create good-paying jobs for those in adjacent communities, including Red Hook, Sunset Park and Gowanus, and add upgraded and safer bike and walking lanes to boot.”

    U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand said, “I am proud to announce that your federal New York representatives have delivered more than $160 million to revitalize the Brooklyn Marine Terminal (BMT). This MEGA federal grant will fund one of the city’s top priorities – turning BMT into a premier model for modern, global maritime use. This funding will create jobs in New York City, optimize low-emission technology to improve air quality in Red Hook and surrounding communities, and reduce truck traffic in the city. Democrats delivered on this important project that will bring new life to historically disadvantaged communities and ensure NYC’s green economy continues to prosper.” 

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams said, “New York City has a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reimagine the 122 acres of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal, and this funding unlocks unlimited potential for this underutilized waterfront. Thanks to the Biden-Harris administration and our partners in Congress for issuing this grant as we set our sights on the future of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal. We’re excited to work with the local community, our fellow elected officials, and key stakeholders to deliver for Red Hook, for Brooklyn, and for our entire city.”

    New York State Senator Andrew Gounardes said, “By building a better Brooklyn Marine Terminal, we’re building a better future for Brooklyn and the whole region. This federal funding will help make up for years of disinvestment of the piers and allow us to invest in a modernized terminal that can sustainably handle freight deliveries, reduce emissions, expand economic opportunity and create new jobs. I’m thankful to Secretary Pete Buttigieg and the Biden Administration for awarding this crucial grant, and look forward to working with community partners to ensure we maximize its impact.”

    New York City Councilmember Alexa Avilés said, “The DOT’s Mega Grant will kick start critical work at the Brooklyn Marine Terminal, which will contribute to significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and modernization of our port infrastructure. I look forward to these funds being used to improve traffic flow in our community and toward getting trucks off of our roads, all while building livable wage jobs for the people of our community.”

    New York City Deputy Mayor for Housing, Economic Development, and Workforce Maria Torres-Springer said, “I am thrilled by today’s announcement and want to thank the entire New York delegation who supported this grant application, and particularly Representative Goldman for his leadership role on the Brooklyn Marine Terminal Task Force. With collaboration at every stage of government, including the tremendous investment from the federal government announced today, the City of New York is poised to reimagine the Brooklyn Marine Terminal as a resilient, low-emission modern maritime facility with sensible transportation that minimizes emissions and congestion and is integrated with additional public amenities that benefit the surrounding communities and city more broadly.”

    New York City Economic Development Corporation President and CEO Andrew Kimball said, “This is a historic investment for a generational project that will truly transform Brooklyn’s waterfront and deliver positive economic and environmental impacts across the region. An enormous amount of thanks to the Biden Administration and the U.S. Department of Transportation for recognizing the importance of the future of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal and the role it can play in bolstering our Blue Highways network throughout the five boroughs. I also want to thank our federal elected officials Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, along with Congressman Dan Goldman who is leading our Brooklyn Marine Terminal Task Force for their efforts in advocating for this project.”

    In May, the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) announced that they would be taking over ownership of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal and initiating a community-led master planning and visioning process for the future of the Terminal. Congressman Dan Goldman was tapped to serve as Chair of the Task Force and Senator Andrew Gounardes and Councilmember Alexa Avilés were tapped to serve as Vice Chairs. The Brooklyn Marine Terminal Task Force has oversight over NYCEDC’s master planning process.

    The Mega Grant award included three components: (1) Rehabilitate Pier 10, (2) Demolish Piers 9A and 9B and construct a new Pier 9, and (3) improve traffic and circulation on the BMT campus for pedestrians, cyclists, and motorists. The funding will be released in two waves. $3.8 million will be released to New York City in Fiscal Year 2025 and the other $160 million will be released in Fiscal Year 2026.

    The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Mega Grant program supports large, complex projects that are difficult to fund by other means and likely to generate national or regional economic, mobility, or safety benefits.

    Congressman Dan Goldman has worked tirelessly to modernize the Brooklyn Marine Terminal and support the Red Hook Community.

    Congressman Dan Goldman serves as Chair of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal Task Force alongside Vice Chairs Senator Andrew Gounardes and Councilmember Alexa Avilés.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Dan Goldman Works to Protect American Workers from Wage Theft

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

    American Workers Lose at Least $50 Billion Annually to Wage Theft

    Read the Bill Here

    Washington, DC – Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10) today joined Representatives Seth Magaziner (RI-02), Mark Pocan (WI-02), Donald Norcross (NJ-01), Melanie Stansbury (NM-01), and Jill Tokuda (HI-02) in introducing the ‘Don’t Stand for Taking Employed American’s Livings (Don’t STEAL) Act.’ This legislation would make wage theft a federal felony, ensuring that these protections are in place for workers anywhere in the country.

    “It is absolutely unacceptable for any employer to take advantage of their employees,” Congressman Dan Goldman said. “American workers built the middle class, and the middle class built the foundation of this great nation. It is critical that Congress continue to stand alongside American workers in making sure they are simply paid for the work they do.”

    Wage theft costs American workers at least $50 billion per year – far more than the value of all robberies, burglaries, and motor vehicle thefts combined.

    While the vast majority of employers treat their workers fairly, a small number of bad actors often pay their workers less than promised, deny workers overtime, or steal tips. Wage theft disproportionately impacts low-wage workers, women and people of color. It harms local economies and reduces tax revenues.

    Current federal laws on wage theft give bad actors a slap on the wrist for stealing their employees’ wages, and don’t adequately serve as a deterrent.

    The ‘Don’t STEAL Act’ updates the penalties for wage theft violations to be commensurate with other forms of criminal theft under federal law:

    • Under this legislation, employers who willfully fail to pay their employees the wages they are owed, fail to compensate their employees for overtime work, or steal tips will face a misdemeanor or felony, depending on the severity of the crime. Under current law, employers who commit wage theft at most face a misdemeanor.

    • These changes will bring the penalties for wage theft to parity with other common forms of theft under federal law. Under current law, an employer who commits willful wage theft can be criminally fined no more than $10,000, but this bill would remove that cap and require bad actor employers to be fined in proportion to wages stolen.

    This legislation is endorsed by AFL-CIO; Center for American Progress; International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW); International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT); International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers (BAC); International Union of Elevator Constructors (IUEC); International Union of Painters and Allied Trades (IUPAT); Laborers International Union of North American (LiUNA); North America’s Building Trades Union (NABTU); North Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters (NASRCC); Operative Plasterers’ and Cement Masons’ International Association (OPCMIA); Public Citizen; Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, Transportation Workers International Association (SMART); United Association Union of Plumbers, Fitters, Welders, and Service Techs (UA); United Auto Workers (UAW); and United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW).

    Congressman Dan Goldman has worked throughout his first term to fight for the rights of all workers.

    In June of 2023, Goldman cosponsored the ‘Job Protection Act’ to expand the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) to protect millions of workers who are currently unable to take time off to care for themselves or their families. Gaps in FMLA coverage lead nearly 2.6 million workers every year who need family or medical leave to not take it because they fear they will lose their jobs if they do. 

    Last September, the Congressman cosponsored the ‘No Tax Breaks for Union Busting Act.’ This legislation would classify corporate interference in worker organization campaigns as political speech under the tax code making any money spent in these efforts non-tax deductible.

    Congressman Dan Goldman is a member of the Labor Caucus and proud cosponsor of the PRO Act.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Listen, confer, act: China’s political advisory body turns 75

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    There is some good news for farmers in Yinjiayuan, a village in Jiangsu Province, east China. The cost of watering their land has dropped by 20 percent, and pump malfunctions have significantly decreased — all thanks to a local political advisor.
    Shi Weidong is a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the country’s political advisory body. As former president of Nantong University in Jiangsu, he is also an expert on fluid machinery.
    In 2023, Shi submitted a proposal through the CPPCC highlighting the advantages of using a digital twin platform — a virtual replica of physical systems — to improve the precision and efficiency of pump management. His suggestion resonated with a nationwide initiative to invest heavily in extensive water conservancy infrastructure. That year alone, the country began the construction of 23,000 water supply facilities in its rural areas.
    Shi’s proposal provides a glimpse into the important role of the CPPCC as an institutional platform for consultative democracy, an essential element of China’s political system, alongside electoral democracy. According to political scientists, these two complimentary facets of socialist democracy allow China to better pool wisdom and strengths for the overarching endeavor of modernization.
    Consultative democracy takes many forms in China. For example, the government listens to ideas and opinions from all sectors throughout the processes of planning, decision-making and administration. With the CPPCC celebrating an important anniversary this year, many will be reviewing its crucial role and growing list of accomplishments.
    Effective democracy
    The CPPCC plays vital roles in multiparty cooperation and political consultation under the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC). Its members are drawn from political parties, people’s organizations, personages without party affiliation and various sectors of society. Among the CPPCC’s diverse membership are political figures, celebrities and experts. Shi himself is a member of the Jiusan Society, a political party primarily composed of scientists and researchers.
    This year marks the 75th anniversary of the CPPCC. On Sept. 21, 1949, driven by great hopes for a bright future, more than 600 deputies from various sectors overcame obstacles to gather in Beijing.
    Decades later, the CPPCC has now transformed and improved itself to play a more effective role in state governance.
    One of its most notable recent developments is the addition of the environment and resource sector to the CPPCC National Committee in 2023. This is one of the biggest changes to the Committee’s composition in 30 years. The last such adjustment was the establishment of the economic sector in 1993.
    Over the past decade, China has undergone comprehensive changes in ecological and environmental protection. The country is making unprecedented efforts to conserve its ecology. The establishment of a new sector dedicated to this initiative would help pool efforts, facilitate research and promote consultation, said experts on the CPPCC.
    Moreover, the consultation topics have evolved over time to address emerging national challenges and public concerns.
    Zhang Yi, a national political advisor from Shanghai, has closely examined the ethical and judicial implications of algorithms.
    A partner at the law firm King & Wood Mallesons, Zhang represents the country’s new social groups.
    Zhang submitted a proposal in March on AI algorithms governance. He recently presented a report on social trends and public sentiment regarding privacy protection. “It’s great to see how my work as a political advisor turns into policies and measures that really push forward the development of the economy and society,” he said.
    Strengthening the foundations 
    The CPPCC is also improving its foundational elements — institutions, standards and procedures — to facilitate in-depth consultations.
    Earlier this month, municipal political advisors in Beijing met to discuss how the integration of AI and digital technologies could help the city respond to natural disasters and workplace accidents. It was one of 12 key topics highlighted by the municipal CPC committee and government to be included on the consultation and deliberation agenda this year.
    In the summer of 2023, Beijing experienced its heaviest rainfall in more than 140 years. This year, heavy rain and gales battered the city again, uprooting trees and causing chaos across the urban road network.
    Political advisors began their investigation and research in March. It included 14 collective and group studies, 13 discussions, as well as fact-finding trips to Fujian and Guangdong provinces, which were attended by non-CPC political party members, scholars and experts.
    A vice mayor overseeing city administration, traffic, agriculture and rural areas attended a session on Sept. 6 to gather advice. Along with him were officials from departments including water resources, emergency response, digital resources, firefighting and meteorology.
    Wei Xiaodong, chairman of the CPPCC Beijing municipal committee, encouraged participants to speak openly about issues and provide advice tailored to reality.
    While most speakers focused on the application of technologies, Zhang Chengfu, a professor at the School of Public Administration and Policy, Renmin University of China, cautioned against inappropriate development practices and over-reliance on technology.
    A final report incorporating the session’s advice is expected to feed into a government plan to enhance the city’s emergency response capabilities for the next three years.
    Greater solidarity 
    As a legacy of the CPC’s cooperation with other political parties and social stakeholders during the revolutionary years, the CPPCC is also the patriotic united front’s most inclusive organization.
    China is currently undergoing profound changes in areas such as social structure, relations between strata, and ways of thinking. Coupled with drastic global shifts, these factors have made it more challenging for the country to foster unity and pool strength.
    On March 5, 2023, new leaders of non-CPC political parties and the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce made a collective debut at a press conference during the first plenary session of the 14th CPPCC National Committee. They pledged to stand in solidarity with the CPC through thick and thin, and build China into a modern socialist country in all respects.
    Political advisors are also key in ensuring that the frank exchange of views that build consensus and fortify unity occurs at the grassroots.
    In Shanghai, they set up tables in the open air to collect public opinions about the renovation of a decades-old plaza in 2023. They also engaged with neighborhood leaders and posted topics online.
    When streetlights were swiftly installed on the plaza at the request of elderly residents, “people realized that authorities are serious about their opinions,” said district political advisor Li Peilei.
    The prompt resolution to a community issue inspired more members of the public to get involved in decisions regarding the plaza’s logo and facilities. The plaza has now been completely revamped. More importantly, residents were made aware of the value that consultation plays in such processes.
    During a 2018 trip to a village in Chongqing, in southwest China, entrepreneur Shan Yi was struck by the stark contrast of cement houses among hundreds of stilted wooden homes — the traditional residence of the Tujia people. This jarring sight, coupled with stagnating local tourism due to poor management and inadequate facilities, inspired him to take action.
    Shan himself identifies as Tujia and runs a domestic services company in town. Leaving his business in his wife’s care, Shan moved to the village. He soon set to work building a museum showcasing Tujia architecture and opened stilt-house homestays to explore successful models.
    So far, the mu
    seum, featuring traditional structures, including residences and academies, is starting to take shape along the bank of a broad, winding river. And the village received over 50,000 visits in the first half of the year, generating more than 20 million yuan (around 2.8 million U.S. dollars) in revenue.
    “Personal and family comfort aside, you’ve got to do something for society one way or another,” said Shan, who became a political advisor last year.
    The CPPCC is also reaching out to the younger generation. For example, two students sat in on the session of political advisors of Beijing on emergency response on Sept. 6.
    It was part of an experimental program that invites students from middle school to university to observe the CPPCC sessions.
    Qi Xin, a sophomore at Miyun High School Affiliated with Capital Normal University, has a keen interest in public governance. He signed up as soon as he learned about the opportunity.
    “I noticed how CPPCC members shared the realities of their communities,” he said. “The will of the people is respected and reflected here.” 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Road closed, Hutt Road, Petone

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Hutt Road between Jackson Street and Nevis Street is closed following a serious crash.

    Police were called to the two-vehicle crash at around 2pm.

    One person has received serious injuries and another has minor injuries.

    The road is expected to be closed for some time.

    Motorists are advised to avoid the area and expect delays.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s vehicle software market exceeds 65 bln yuan: report

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    China’s vehicle software market is worth more than 65 billion yuan (about 9.2 billion U.S. dollars), accounting for 30 percent of the country’s total software market, according to a report released on Friday.

    The report on the development of new quality productive force in China’s automobile industry was jointly published by China Automotive Engineering Research Institute Co., Ltd and China Economic Information Service. It was released during the Automobile New Quality Productive Force Development Forum held in Chongqing Municipality on Friday.

    “The first half of the car industry development is electrification. It is now time for it to enter the second half, featuring intelligent technologies, with the software, operating systems and car chips as the core,” said Xu Haidong, deputy chief engineer of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

    He added that vehicle software can precisely manage the entire car, including its facilities, driving and communication capabilities.

    The report also pointed out that the localization rate of automobile chips is on the rise as enterprises such as Huawei are making headway in chip development. The localization rate of power semiconductors has risen to 15 percent to 20 percent.

    The automobile industry is one of major pillars of China’s economy, with the gross output of the whole industrial chain of automobiles contributing 10 percent to the country’s gross domestic product, according to the report. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s political advisory body turns 75

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    There is some good news for farmers in Yinjiayuan, a village in Jiangsu Province, east China. The cost of watering their land has dropped by 20 percent, and pump malfunctions have significantly decreased — all thanks to a local political advisor.
    Shi Weidong is a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the country’s political advisory body. As former president of Nantong University in Jiangsu, he is also an expert on fluid machinery.
    In 2023, Shi submitted a proposal through the CPPCC highlighting the advantages of using a digital twin platform — a virtual replica of physical systems — to improve the precision and efficiency of pump management. His suggestion resonated with a nationwide initiative to invest heavily in extensive water conservancy infrastructure. That year alone, the country began the construction of 23,000 water supply facilities in its rural areas.
    Shi’s proposal provides a glimpse into the important role of the CPPCC as an institutional platform for consultative democracy, an essential element of China’s political system, alongside electoral democracy. According to political scientists, these two complimentary facets of socialist democracy allow China to better pool wisdom and strengths for the overarching endeavor of modernization.
    Consultative democracy takes many forms in China. For example, the government listens to ideas and opinions from all sectors throughout the processes of planning, decision-making and administration. With the CPPCC celebrating an important anniversary this year, many will be reviewing its crucial role and growing list of accomplishments.
    Effective democracy
    The CPPCC plays vital roles in multiparty cooperation and political consultation under the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC). Its members are drawn from political parties, people’s organizations, personages without party affiliation and various sectors of society. Among the CPPCC’s diverse membership are political figures, celebrities and experts. Shi himself is a member of the Jiusan Society, a political party primarily composed of scientists and researchers.
    This year marks the 75th anniversary of the CPPCC. On Sept. 21, 1949, driven by great hopes for a bright future, more than 600 deputies from various sectors overcame obstacles to gather in Beijing.
    Decades later, the CPPCC has now transformed and improved itself to play a more effective role in state governance.
    One of its most notable recent developments is the addition of the environment and resource sector to the CPPCC National Committee in 2023. This is one of the biggest changes to the Committee’s composition in 30 years. The last such adjustment was the establishment of the economic sector in 1993.
    Over the past decade, China has undergone comprehensive changes in ecological and environmental protection. The country is making unprecedented efforts to conserve its ecology. The establishment of a new sector dedicated to this initiative would help pool efforts, facilitate research and promote consultation, said experts on the CPPCC.
    Moreover, the consultation topics have evolved over time to address emerging national challenges and public concerns.
    Zhang Yi, a national political advisor from Shanghai, has closely examined the ethical and judicial implications of algorithms.
    A partner at the law firm King & Wood Mallesons, Zhang represents the country’s new social groups.
    Zhang submitted a proposal in March on AI algorithms governance. He recently presented a report on social trends and public sentiment regarding privacy protection. “It’s great to see how my work as a political advisor turns into policies and measures that really push forward the development of the economy and society,” he said.
    Strengthening the foundations 
    The CPPCC is also improving its foundational elements — institutions, standards and procedures — to facilitate in-depth consultations.
    Earlier this month, municipal political advisors in Beijing met to discuss how the integration of AI and digital technologies could help the city respond to natural disasters and workplace accidents. It was one of 12 key topics highlighted by the municipal CPC committee and government to be included on the consultation and deliberation agenda this year.
    In the summer of 2023, Beijing experienced its heaviest rainfall in more than 140 years. This year, heavy rain and gales battered the city again, uprooting trees and causing chaos across the urban road network.
    Political advisors began their investigation and research in March. It included 14 collective and group studies, 13 discussions, as well as fact-finding trips to Fujian and Guangdong provinces, which were attended by non-CPC political party members, scholars and experts.
    A vice mayor overseeing city administration, traffic, agriculture and rural areas attended a session on Sept. 6 to gather advice. Along with him were officials from departments including water resources, emergency response, digital resources, firefighting and meteorology.
    Wei Xiaodong, chairman of the CPPCC Beijing municipal committee, encouraged participants to speak openly about issues and provide advice tailored to reality.
    While most speakers focused on the application of technologies, Zhang Chengfu, a professor at the School of Public Administration and Policy, Renmin University of China, cautioned against inappropriate development practices and over-reliance on technology.
    A final report incorporating the session’s advice is expected to feed into a government plan to enhance the city’s emergency response capabilities for the next three years.
    Greater solidarity 
    As a legacy of the CPC’s cooperation with other political parties and social stakeholders during the revolutionary years, the CPPCC is also the patriotic united front’s most inclusive organization.
    China is currently undergoing profound changes in areas such as social structure, relations between strata, and ways of thinking. Coupled with drastic global shifts, these factors have made it more challenging for the country to foster unity and pool strength.
    On March 5, 2023, new leaders of non-CPC political parties and the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce made a collective debut at a press conference during the first plenary session of the 14th CPPCC National Committee. They pledged to stand in solidarity with the CPC through thick and thin, and build China into a modern socialist country in all respects.
    Political advisors are also key in ensuring that the frank exchange of views that build consensus and fortify unity occurs at the grassroots.
    In Shanghai, they set up tables in the open air to collect public opinions about the renovation of a decades-old plaza in 2023. They also engaged with neighborhood leaders and posted topics online.
    When streetlights were swiftly installed on the plaza at the request of elderly residents, “people realized that authorities are serious about their opinions,” said district political advisor Li Peilei.
    The prompt resolution to a community issue inspired more members of the public to get involved in decisions regarding the plaza’s logo and facilities. The plaza has now been completely revamped. More importantly, residents were made aware of the value that consultation plays in such processes.
    During a 2018 trip to a village in Chongqing, in southwest China, entrepreneur Shan Yi was struck by the stark contrast of cement houses among hundreds of stilted wooden homes — the traditional residence of the Tujia people. This jarring sight, coupled with stagnating local tourism due to poor management and inadequate facilities, inspired him to take action.
    Shan himself identifies as Tujia and runs a domestic services company in town. Leaving his business in his wife’s care, Shan moved to the village. He soon set to work building a museum showcasing Tujia architecture and opened stilt-house homestays to explore successful models.
    So far, the mu
    seum, featuring traditional structures, including residences and academies, is starting to take shape along the bank of a broad, winding river. And the village received over 50,000 visits in the first half of the year, generating more than 20 million yuan (around 2.8 million U.S. dollars) in revenue.
    “Personal and family comfort aside, you’ve got to do something for society one way or another,” said Shan, who became a political advisor last year.
    The CPPCC is also reaching out to the younger generation. For example, two students sat in on the session of political advisors of Beijing on emergency response on Sept. 6.
    It was part of an experimental program that invites students from middle school to university to observe the CPPCC sessions.
    Qi Xin, a sophomore at Miyun High School Affiliated with Capital Normal University, has a keen interest in public governance. He signed up as soon as he learned about the opportunity.
    “I noticed how CPPCC members shared the realities of their communities,” he said. “The will of the people is respected and reflected here.” 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: High-altitude weather observation platform put into operation

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    A weather observation platform at a 5,287.71-meter altitude has been recently put into operation in the middle section of Kunlun Mountains in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

    China Meteorological Administration (CMA) said that the comprehensive weather observation platform, the highest of its kind in China, is located in the Hotan Prefecture of Xinjiang. It is designed to observe artificial weather modification and scientific research for cloud-water resources in the Kunlun Mountains, ScienceNet.cn reported on Thursday.

    The platform integrates various systems of ground-based meteorological observation, unmanned aerial vehicle high-altitude detection, cloud ice microphysics research and monitoring, and aerosol lidar detection.

    According to the CMA, together with high-performance lidar, high-definition video imaging technology, the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System, and a stable solar power supply system, it has thus formed a comprehensive ground-air-space monitoring network.

    The integration and application of these technologies have significant scientific research value and application potential in accurately capturing cloud dynamics, optimizing artificial rain (snow) operations, evaluating the impact of climate change, and exploring adaptive strategies for ecosystems in extreme environments, the CMA said.

    This is the only comprehensive scientific research platform for cloud water resources in the Kunlun Mountains. Xinjiang has reached new heights in artificial weather modification and cloud water resource development and utilization.

    It is also of great significance for water resource security, agricultural irrigation, disaster prevention and mitigation in Xinjiang and the entire northwest region. According to the CMA, it will also provide valuable first-hand data for global climate change research and ecological environmental protection.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: 27th Beijing-Taiwan Science and Technology Forum opens

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    The 27th Beijing-Taiwan Science and Technology Forum kicked off at the Beijing Economic-Technological Development Area on Thursday. Nearly 500 attendees, including entrepreneurs and tech professionals, will dive deep into the economy, trade, and sci-tech exchange and cooperation between Beijing and Taiwan during the three-day event. 

    The event will feature a summit, four parallel sessions, and several sub-forums. The four parallel sessions will look into energy and digitalization, fin-tech, healthcare, and intelligent electric vehicles, while the sub-forums will discuss topics including youths, women, human resources, and intellectual property protection. 

    At the opening ceremony on Thursday, the Cross-Strait Sci-Tech Innovation Center, which was established last year, signed strategic cooperation agreements with several research institutions. The center also unveiled a second batch of policies, which include over 10 measures to support businesses from Taiwan to develop in Beijing. The measures cover a range of issues including research and development, financial support, industry upgrade, and talent recruitment.  

    The Beijing-Taiwan Science and Technology Forum was established in 1998, and has since become an important economic and trade exchange platform for companies across the Taiwan Strait.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Hainan to fully restore tourism in time for National Day holiday

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    South China’s island province of Hainan will fully restore its tourism industry by the week-long National Day holiday starting Oct. 1, after being struck by Super Typhoon Yagi, the provincial government said on Friday.

    According to the provincial tourism authority, as of Thursday, the resumption rate of tourism and culture related work across the island reached 93.75 percent. This includes 92 scenic spots, 581 hotels, and 82 cultural and sports venues.

    Hainan will be ready to accommodate domestic and overseas tourists during the upcoming holiday, during which 71 activities will be held, including 27 cultural and performing arts activities and 20 sports events, the authority said. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: SECNAV Del Toro Names Future Nuclear-Powered Attack Submarine USS Baltimore (SSN 812)

    Source: United States Navy

    BALTIMORE (Sept 20, 2024) – Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro announced that the future Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarine SSN 812 will be named USS Baltimore. Del Toro made the announcement during a ship naming ceremony held in Baltimore aboard the historic USS Constellation, Sept. 20.

    The future USS Baltimore honors the city of Baltimore, the crews of one Continental Navy ship, and the five previous Navy vessels named Baltimore.

    The naming selection of the future USS Baltimore (SSN 812) continues the recent trend of naming Virginia-class submarines after cities. Del Toro previously named USS Long Island (SSN 809), USS San Francisco (SSN 810), and USS Miami (SSN 811).

    “The city of Baltimore maintains a strong connection with our maritime services and is a critical enabler of our National Maritime Statecraft,” said Del Toro. “It is my honor and privilege to announce the name of the next Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarine, SSN-812, USS Baltimore.” 

    Maryland Sen. Ben Cardin joined Del Toro for the ceremony honoring Baltimore.

    “Maryland is proud of our connection to the Navy and our strong history as a coastal state,” said Cardin. “I am excited that the next USS Baltimore will be sailing the seas again as the Navy’s newest submarine. Our Navy maintains and protects free and open international waters. From defending our young nation from pirates in the late 1700s to ensuring freedom of navigation today in the Red Sea and Taiwan Strait, our Navy is always on watch.”

    Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott also served as a guest in the official party and spoke about the honor and meaning behind the naming of the Navy’s newest submarine.

    “We are honored that Baltimore is being represented across the globe once again with the naming of this future ship,” said Scott. “As a city with such a rich naval and maritime history, the naming of the USS Baltimore ensures that legacy will continue to live on for decades to come. I want to extend my deepest thanks and gratitude to the U.S. Navy for this honor and for continuing to uplift our city, including all Baltimoreans who choose to serve.”

    Along with the ship’s name, Del Toro also announced Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks will serve as the ship’s sponsor. In her role as sponsor, she will represent a lifelong relationship with the ship and crew.

    “When Baltimore joins the fleet, with a world-class crew, it will be among the most agile, lethal, resilient, and capable conventional nuclear-powered submarines we’ve ever made,” said Hicks. “Make no mistake about Baltimore’s purpose, like all of our submarines, conventional and otherwise, we build them not to provoke war, but rather to prevent wars, through deterrence.”

    The city of Baltimore has significant ties to American and Naval history. The Port of Baltimore was established in 1706 and the Town of Baltimore in 1729. One of the Navy’s six founding frigates, USS Constellation, was built in Baltimore, and the city’s skilled ship workers later would construct the famous Baltimore clipper ships. In 1814, the Battle of Baltimore inspired the American national anthem.

    The first Baltimore served in the Quasi-War against France, while the second Baltimore served during the Civil War. The third Baltimore fought in the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish-American War and later conducted mine-laying operations in World War I. The fourth Baltimore earned nine battle stars during World War II, fighting in campaigns for the Caroline Islands, Gilbert and Marshall Islands, and Okinawa. The fifth Baltimore participated in undersea operations against the Soviet Union, completing a variety of intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions. The Navy simultaneously decommissioned and struck the most recent vessel from the list on 10 July 1998.

    After the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in March 2024, the Navy provided equities to the established “Key Bridge Response Unified Command.” NAVSEA’s Navy Supervisor of Salvage and Diving (SUPSALV) led critical efforts to support the clearance of the Port of Baltimore’s Fort McHenry Federal Channel, responsible for managing all on-scene assets tasked with debris removal and channel clearing. Del Toro personally assessed the site and met with Navy personnel on April 19, 2024.

    Attack submarines are designed to seek and destroy enemy submarines and surface ships; project power ashore with Tomahawk cruise missiles and Special Operation Forces (SOF); carry out Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) missions; support battle group operations; and engage in mine warfare.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI China: Innovation to power China growth

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Innovation capacity, the digital sector and green industries have significant potential to be major engines of China’s growth, fueled by the nation’s commitment to reform and opening-up, said Japanese scholars.

    Hidetoshi Tashiro, chief economist at Japan’s Infinity LLC, predicts that China’s economy is poised to enter a new phase of growth.

    Speaking at a seminar on Chinese-style modernization in Osaka last week, Tashiro highlighted China’s significant share of the global market in various industries. While noting the nation’s leading position in sectors such as electric vehicles and solar panels, he also said that as digitalization expands globally, demand for products and services supporting this shift will continue to rise.

    Tashiro stressed the digital sector is the key driver of China’s economic growth. Reflecting on his visit to China last November, he observed that cash payments had become obsolete in the nation.

    “The rise of this vast digital ecosystem, unlike anything the world has ever seen, is now powering China’s economy. This momentum is driven by advancements in semiconductor design and application development,” Tashiro said.

    A World Intellectual Property Organization report shows that from 2014 to 2023, China-based inventors filed more than 38,000 generative artificial intelligence patents, six times the number filed by inventors in the United States.

    China’s economy is shifting from a labor-intensive to a capital-intensive model, making intellectual contributions increasingly important. The country is producing a huge number of highly-skilled scientists and engineers, fostering the growth of a vast and expanding digital ecosystem, he added.

    Yangchoon Kwak, a professor at Rikkyo University’s College of Economics, emphasized that green industries will be the main driver of China’s future economic growth.

    “China’s focus is not just on quantitative expansion but on pursuing environmentally-friendly development that contributes to global peace and prosperity,” Kwak explained.

    Another key growth area is tourism. With a history spanning several millennia, China has a rich cultural heritage to share with the world. If the nation continues to open up, it could attract more than 100 million visitors, fostering a deeper international understanding and appreciation of the country, he said.

    “China’s dynamism will continue to accelerate, and it’s vital for Japanese companies to seize this opportunity,” Kwak added. He advised them to engage in proactive capital and technology partnerships with China, aligning with the country’s evolving trends, rather than focusing on low-cost labor as they did in the past.

    Confidence emphasized

    Satoshi Tomisaka, a professor at the Institute of World Studies at Takushoku University, emphasized the importance of fostering an environment in China where people feel confident in their spending.

    “As Western economies face stagnation and institutional difficulties, China’s model is starting to make a significant global impact,” said Tomisaka.

    However, for the world to truly acknowledge China’s achievements, soft power is crucial. International recognition would not only elevate China’s global reputation but also strengthen its domestic standing, he added.

    Kiyoyuki Seguchi, research director at the Canon Institute for Global Studies, said that the future of China’s economic growth will be driven by the innovation capacity of its companies. If policies continue to energize private companies, China still has significant potential for further growth, he added.

    Seguchi’s remarks came after a recent lecture in Tokyo organized by the Japan-China Belt and Road Initiative Promotion Association.

    The foundation for China’s growth is rooted in its reform and opening-up policy. Seguchi emphasized that the focus given by the third plenary session of the 20th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, which was held in July, on reform and opening-up is essential. He stressed the need to create mechanisms that deliver specific reform measures desired by private enterprises, noting this is critical for sustained development.

    According to Seguchi, the major challenges facing China’s economy include the end of high-speed growth, issues in the real estate sector and local fiscal problems. While the government has introduced policies to address these issues, he highlighted the importance of accurately implementing them in a way that responds to market needs, maintaining a market-oriented approach to enhance policy effectiveness.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese technology boost uptake of e-mobility in Africa: experts

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Chinese green vehicle technology is boosting the adoption of e-mobility in Africa, experts said Friday.

    Warren Ondanje, managing director of the Africa E-mobility Alliance, said in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya, that Chinese e-vehicle manufacturers have positioned themselves as key partners for the growing number of e-mobility startups on the continent.

    “Chinese firms have played a key role in accelerating the adoption of electric vehicles in Africa,” Ondanje said during the Africa E-Mobility Week 2024 conference.

    The five-day event brought together more than 200 delegates, including representatives from United Nations agencies, senior government officials and innovators from across Africa, to foster collaboration and advance the sustainable mobility movement on the continent.

    Michael Muchiri, deputy superintending engineer at Kenya’s Ministry of Roads and Transport, said that Chinese e-vehicle brands are attracting significant interest from environmentally conscious Kenyan consumers due to their high-quality, clean transportation solutions offered at affordable prices.

    Muchiri said that taxi and public transport operators have embraced Chinese e-vehicles because their low operational costs make them more competitive than conventional fossil-fueled cars.

    According to the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority, Kenya currently has an estimated 5,000 e-vehicles, comprising two-wheel, three-wheel, passenger and commercial vehicles.

    Hilina Legesse, president of the Addis Ababa E-mobility Association, said that Chinese e-vehicles had facilitated Ethiopia’s enforcement of its ban on importing fossil-fueled cars, which took effect in January, by providing affordable green vehicles.

    Legesse said that several Chinese e-vehicle manufacturers have set up local assembly plants to meet the growing demand for clean modes of transport.

    Claire Liu, sales manager at Chogori Technology, a Chinese manufacturer of e-vehicle accessories, said her firm has partnered with e-mobility companies in Africa to expand access to and affordability of electric-powered cars on the continent. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Insurance Sector – Lower hikes in fire service levies welcomed

    Source: Insurance Council of NZ

    The Government’s decision to set levy increases at a lower rate to fund fire and emergency services will provide some relief to New Zealanders struggling with the cost of living crisis, the Insurance Council of New Zealand (ICNZ) says.
    Earlier this year, Fire and Emergency New Zealand (FENZ) had publicly consulted on a 5.2% hike from July 2026, on top of a hike of 12.8% in July this year. The rate increase was revised downwards to 2.2% after the Minister of Minister of Internal Affairs, Brooke van Welden expressed doubt that the initial increase was justified.
    The Government also lowered a proposed flat charge on vehicle insurance from $40.12 to $25. Currently, the levy sits at $9.53. The Minister has also asked FENZ to deliver savings of $60 million by the end of the three-year period.
    “We welcome the Minister’s decision to set levy increases at a lower rate after asking FENZ to have another look at the proposed levy increases,” ICNZ chief executive Kris Faafoi said.
    “We know that New Zealanders are finding it tough dealing with the cost-of-living crisis and we support the Government’s move to ensure Kiwi’s don’t pay anything more than they have to.
    “We acknowledge the important work that FENZ does in responding to fire and other emergencies and promoting safety. FENZ’s funding comes almost entirely from levies added to insurance policies covering property and motor vehicles.
    “The Government has struck the right balance between FENZ having the appropriate resources to do their job while ensuring that the funding via insurance premiums is affordable and sustainable.
    “Insurance premiums are driven by a number of factors, some of which are out of our control such as reinsurance rates and taxes and levies. Insurers are looking at ways to help their customers manage their cover as cost-effectively as possible.
    “We have previously expressed our concern about the ongoing sustainability of FENZ funding as it is only funded from those who purchase insurance. If fewer New Zealanders take out insurance, then FENZ funding will reduce, requiring levies on insurance to increase further and making insurance even less affordable.
    “The insurance Industry will be working with both the Department of Internal Affairs and FENZ over the coming months to work through some of the details of the levy applications to insured property.
    “We want to ensure the changes can be implemented easily in the time frames set down by the Government and in a cost effective way that doesn’t add to the regulatory burden which will ultimately be borne by New Zealanders,” Kris Faafoi said.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Road closed, SH6, Whangamoa

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    State Highway 6, Whangamoa, near Kokorua Road, is closed following a serious crash this afternoon.

    Police were called to the single-vehicle crash at around 5pm.

    Initial indications suggest there are serious injuries.

    The Serious Crash Unit will be attending.

    Motorists are advised to take care and expect delays.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Huawei and du Commercially Deploy the First Indoor 5G-Advanced Network in the Middle East Sep 21, 2024

    Source: Huawei

    Headline: Huawei and du Commercially Deploy the First Indoor 5G-Advanced Network in the Middle East
    Sep 21, 2024

    [Dubai, United Arab Emirates, September 21, 2024] Huawei, in partnership with du, from the Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Company (EITC), have deployed the first indoor 5G-Advanced Network in the Middle East. Making use of Three Carrier Aggregation (3CC) technology, the network relies on Huawei’s LampSite X ‘Digital Indoor Solution.’ Delivering a peak data rate of 5.1Gb/s, this network further strengthens du’s leading position in the 5G user experience market.
    This joint innovation aims to significantly enhance the capabilities of mobile networks by improving connectivity in indoor spaces such as shopping malls, hotels, airports, and residential buildings. It builds on the previous 5G collaborations between Huawei and du. In 2021, du and Huawei had pioneered the first ubiquitous indoor gigabit-per-second network in the Middle East.
    As a leading player in the 5G market, du has seen remarkable results from its commitment to innovation. 5G user traffic now accounts for over 60% of total mobile traffic, surpassing the combined traffic of 4G and 3G networks. The widespread adoption of 5G services demonstrates the success of du’s network, and the deployment of three TDD large-bandwidth carriers with aggregation promises users an unmatched network experience. A technology in use since the LTE era, carrier aggregation lets network operators combine multiple frequencies to boost the data rate. In the 5G era, 3CC can be harnessed to deliver 5G-Advanced.
    Saleem AlBlooshi, Chief Technology Officer at du, stated: “We are committed to providing a high-quality user experience to our customers. Since the introduction of 5G in 2019, we have launched numerous innovative services. Among these, 5G home wireless services have been widely welcomed, and our market share in this area is far ahead. Introducing 5G Three Carrier Aggregation in our In-Building Solution (IBS) Network is a crucial step in ensuring a leading 5G user experience. It has enabled us to enhance our network’s capabilities and quality, greatly improving customer satisfaction.”
    Eric Bao, President of Huawei’s Wireless Digital Indoor System Product Line, commented, “With the rapid development of 5G networks, user experience is greatly improved, and applications based on functions such as low latency and indoor precise positioning are rapidly developing. The era of innovation represented by smart electric vehicles, humanoid robots, cloud mobile phones, and glass free 3D has arrived. It is a must for operators to provide indoor networks with higher capacity, higher performance, and higher energy-saving efficiency. As an industry-leading indoor solution, LampSite X assists operators in building indoor networks that offer both intelligence and extraordinary performance to meet the explosive growth in service demand.”
    du HQ in UAE

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Huawei and du Commercially Deploy the First Indoor 5G-Advanced Network in the Middle East

    Source: Huawei

    Headline: Huawei and du Commercially Deploy the First Indoor 5G-Advanced Network in the Middle East

    [Dubai, United Arab Emirates, September 21, 2024] Huawei, in partnership with du, from the Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Company (EITC), have deployed the first indoor 5G-Advanced Network in the Middle East. Making use of Three Carrier Aggregation (3CC) technology, the network relies on Huawei’s LampSite X ‘Digital Indoor Solution.’ Delivering a peak data rate of 5.1Gb/s, this network further strengthens du’s leading position in the 5G user experience market.
    This joint innovation aims to significantly enhance the capabilities of mobile networks by improving connectivity in indoor spaces such as shopping malls, hotels, airports, and residential buildings. It builds on the previous 5G collaborations between Huawei and du. In 2021, du and Huawei had pioneered the first ubiquitous indoor gigabit-per-second network in the Middle East.
    As a leading player in the 5G market, du has seen remarkable results from its commitment to innovation. 5G user traffic now accounts for over 60% of total mobile traffic, surpassing the combined traffic of 4G and 3G networks. The widespread adoption of 5G services demonstrates the success of du’s network, and the deployment of three TDD large-bandwidth carriers with aggregation promises users an unmatched network experience. A technology in use since the LTE era, carrier aggregation lets network operators combine multiple frequencies to boost the data rate. In the 5G era, 3CC can be harnessed to deliver 5G-Advanced.
    Saleem AlBlooshi, Chief Technology Officer at du, stated: “We are committed to providing a high-quality user experience to our customers. Since the introduction of 5G in 2019, we have launched numerous innovative services. Among these, 5G home wireless services have been widely welcomed, and our market share in this area is far ahead. Introducing 5G Three Carrier Aggregation in our In-Building Solution (IBS) Network is a crucial step in ensuring a leading 5G user experience. It has enabled us to enhance our network’s capabilities and quality, greatly improving customer satisfaction.”
    Eric Bao, President of Huawei’s Wireless Digital Indoor System Product Line, commented, “With the rapid development of 5G networks, user experience is greatly improved, and applications based on functions such as low latency and indoor precise positioning are rapidly developing. The era of innovation represented by smart electric vehicles, humanoid robots, cloud mobile phones, and glass free 3D has arrived. It is a must for operators to provide indoor networks with higher capacity, higher performance, and higher energy-saving efficiency. As an industry-leading indoor solution, LampSite X assists operators in building indoor networks that offer both intelligence and extraordinary performance to meet the explosive growth in service demand.”
    du HQ in UAE

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: State Highway 6 blocked, Westland

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    State Highway 6/Ruatapu Road Road in Westland, about halfway between Ruatapu and Ross, is blocked following a serious crash.

    It happened about 8:35pm and involved more than one vehicle.

    It’s believed there are serious injuries involved.

    Motorists are asked to delay travel if possible or take alternate routes where able, and expect delays.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese technology boost uptake of e-mobility in Africa

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Chinese green vehicle technology is boosting the adoption of e-mobility in Africa, experts said Friday.

    Warren Ondanje, managing director of the Africa E-mobility Alliance, said in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya, that Chinese e-vehicle manufacturers have positioned themselves as key partners for the growing number of e-mobility startups on the continent.

    “Chinese firms have played a key role in accelerating the adoption of electric vehicles in Africa,” Ondanje said during the Africa E-Mobility Week 2024 conference.

    The five-day event brought together more than 200 delegates, including representatives from United Nations agencies, senior government officials and innovators from across Africa, to foster collaboration and advance the sustainable mobility movement on the continent.

    Michael Muchiri, deputy superintending engineer at Kenya’s Ministry of Roads and Transport, said that Chinese e-vehicle brands are attracting significant interest from environmentally conscious Kenyan consumers due to their high-quality, clean transportation solutions offered at affordable prices.

    Muchiri said that taxi and public transport operators have embraced Chinese e-vehicles because their low operational costs make them more competitive than conventional fossil-fueled cars.

    According to the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority, Kenya currently has an estimated 5,000 e-vehicles, comprising two-wheel, three-wheel, passenger and commercial vehicles.

    Hilina Legesse, president of the Addis Ababa E-mobility Association, said that Chinese e-vehicles had facilitated Ethiopia’s enforcement of its ban on importing fossil-fueled cars, which took effect in January, by providing affordable green vehicles.

    Legesse said that several Chinese e-vehicle manufacturers have set up local assembly plants to meet the growing demand for clean modes of transport.

    Claire Liu, sales manager at Chogori Technology, a Chinese manufacturer of e-vehicle accessories, said her firm has partnered with e-mobility companies in Africa to expand access to and affordability of electric-powered cars on the continent. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s vehicle software market exceeds 65 bln yuan

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    China’s vehicle software market is worth more than 65 billion yuan (about 9.2 billion U.S. dollars), accounting for 30 percent of the country’s total software market, according to a report released on Friday.

    The report on the development of new quality productive force in China’s automobile industry was jointly published by China Automotive Engineering Research Institute Co., Ltd and China Economic Information Service. It was released during the Automobile New Quality Productive Force Development Forum held in Chongqing Municipality on Friday.

    “The first half of the car industry development is electrification. It is now time for it to enter the second half, featuring intelligent technologies, with the software, operating systems and car chips as the core,” said Xu Haidong, deputy chief engineer of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

    He added that vehicle software can precisely manage the entire car, including its facilities, driving and communication capabilities.

    The report also pointed out that the localization rate of automobile chips is on the rise as enterprises such as Huawei are making headway in chip development. The localization rate of power semiconductors has risen to 15 percent to 20 percent.

    The automobile industry is one of major pillars of China’s economy, with the gross output of the whole industrial chain of automobiles contributing 10 percent to the country’s gross domestic product, according to the report. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: National Statement United Nations General Assembly

    Source: Australian Government – Minister of Foreign Affairs

    President, friends –

    Steeled by the horror of the most catastrophic conflict in history, humanity forged our United Nations.

    Its purpose often defined not as taking us to heaven, but saving us from hell.

    Yet we convene this week with so much of the human family enshrouded in darkness.

    More conflict than any time since World War Two.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Sudan.

    Myanmar.

    Yemen.

    Gaza.

    And now Lebanon.

    Brutal, degrading conflict ingraining hatred and division; pushing peace into the unseeable distance; and pulling neighbours into an endless, reflexive cycle of blame and retaliation.

    Such entrenched violence has its own gravity: more violence becomes the path of least resistance.

    Seeing past hatred is hard. Building trust is hard. Compromise is hard. Making peace is hard.

    But the future otherwise is not worthy of our children and the present is not worthy of ourselves.

    We must remember why we built this institution.

    The UN system is where the world comes together to agree and uphold standards and rules; to protect all of the world’s peoples and the sovereignty of all nations.

    These rules always matter – never more so than in times of conflict – when they help guide us out of darkness, back toward light.

    Back on a path towards peace, stability and prosperity.

    Not long after we last gathered here, Israel was attacked by the terrorist group Hamas, which killed 1,200 people.

    This was the greatest loss of Jewish life in a single day since the Holocaust, and Hamas continues to hold hostages.

    It was an attack that cannot and should not be justified.

    Like many countries, Australia has imposed sanctions on Hamas, its leaders and financial facilitators.

    In Israel’s response, more than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed.

    More than 11,000 children.

    Nearly two million Gazans displaced, some many times over.

    More than two million facing acute food insecurity.

    This must end.

    Palestinian civilians cannot be made to pay the price of defeating Hamas.

    All lives have equal value.

    Last month we marked 75 years since the world established the Geneva Conventions – the foundations of international humanitarian law, to limit human suffering in conflict.

    War has rules. Every country in this room must abide by them.

    Even when confronting terrorists.

    Even when defending borders.

    Israel must comply with the binding orders of the International Court of Justice, including to enable the provision of basic services and humanitarian assistance at scale.

    Australia shares the frustration of the great majority of countries, more than 77 years since the General Assembly adopted Resolution 181: a plan for two states side by side – one Jewish, one Palestinian.

    77 years later, that Palestinian state still does not exist – long held out as the promise at the end of a peace process that has ground to a halt.

    The world cannot wait.

    We must all contribute new ways to break the cycle of conflict.

    Earlier this year, Australia voted in this General Assembly in support of Palestinian aspirations for full membership of the UN.

    We have sanctioned Israeli extremist settlers and will deny anyone identified as an extremist settler a visa to travel to Australia.

    But individual country actions alone are not moving the dial.

    The international community must work together to pave a path to lasting peace.

    The world cannot keep hoping the parties will do this themselves; we cannot allow any party to obstruct the prospect of peace.

    As I have said for many months, Australia no longer sees Palestinian recognition as the destination of a peace process, but a contribution of momentum towards peace.

    Australia wants to engage on new ways to build momentum, including the role of the Security Council in setting a pathway for two-states, with a clear timeline for the international declaration of Palestinian statehood.

    Because a two-state solution is the only hope of breaking the endless cycle of violence – the only hope to see a secure and prosperous future for both peoples.

    To give the Palestinian people the opportunity to realise their aspirations through self-determination.

    To strengthen the forces for peace across the region and undermine extremism.

    A two-state solution, Israel and Palestine, is the opposite of what Hamas wants.

    Hamas does not want peace, and it does not want security for the State of Israel.

    Any future Palestinian state must not be in a position to threaten Israel’s security.

    There can be no role for terrorists. And it will need a reformed Palestinian Authority.

    Right now, the suffering across the region must end. Hostages must be released. Aid must flow.

    We have provided more than $80 million in humanitarian aid to support civilians who have been devasted by this conflict.

    But humanitarian aid is not a long-term answer.

    It is now nearly 300 days since Australia and 152 other countries voted for a ceasefire.

    Today I repeat that call.

    Just as I repeat Australia’s call for a ceasefire in Lebanon, and for parties to fully implement Resolution 1701. Lebanon cannot become the next Gaza.

    We know Australia is not a central player in the Middle East, but we seek to be a constructive voice for peace and the upholding of international law, including the protection of civilians.

    In order to protect civilians, we must also protect aid workers who deliver the food, water and medicine civilians need to survive.

    Aid workers are the best of humanity. Their selfless devotion to improving the lives of others should not cost them their own.

    Yet 2023 was the deadliest year on record for aid workers, and 2024 is on track to be even worse.

    Gaza is the most dangerous place on earth to be an aid worker.

    Australia felt this deeply with the IDF’s strike against World Central Kitchen vehicles, which killed Australian Zomi Frankcom and her colleagues.

    This was not a one-off incident. More than 300 aid workers have been killed since the start of this conflict.

    This week, Australia has convened a group of ministers to pursue a new Declaration for the Protection of Humanitarian Personnel.

    The Declaration will be developed over the coming months, to demonstrate the unity of the international community’s commitment to protect aid workers and to channel that commitment into action in Gaza, in Sudan, in Ukraine and in all current and future conflicts.

    All countries will be invited to join the Declaration.

    I want to thank my fellow ministers from Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia, Japan, Jordan, Sierra Leone, Switzerland and the United Kingdom – and the humanitarian leaders who have partnered with us in this.

    As Zomi Frankcom’s family said this week:

    “People like Zomi are rare and their bravery and selflessness should be not only celebrated but protected. They can’t be brave at any cost.”

    The world’s peoples are counting on all of us here to rededicate ourselves to international humanitarian law, and the rest of the rules we have agreed to preserve peace and security.

    Russia continues its vicious assault on the people and sovereignty of Ukraine, in flagrant violation of the UN Charter.

    Aside from terrible damage and loss of life in Ukraine, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is also propelling the global crisis in food and energy security…

    Raising the cost of living for working people all over the world.

    This year we saw Russia end the mandate of the Security Council’s Panel of Experts on the DPRK after fourteen years of unanimous support.

    The DPRK continues its unlawful activities with impunity, conducting illegal arms transfers to Russia and threatening our region, including the Republic of Korea and Japan.

    We are concerned that Russia is sharing nuclear and space information and technology with Iran.

    Rules are being blurred, undermined, and at times, blatantly violated.

    We must rally to defend these rules that protect all of us; these rules that form the character of the world that we want.

    A world where Australia and other countries have the freedom to decide our own futures, without interference and intimidation.

    A world where we can find collective solutions to our toughest problems.

    These problems are evolving and changing, but the commitment of some states to the rules underpinning the international system has not evolved for the better.

    Whether cyberattacks, interference, disinformation or economic coercion – some states circumvent the rules, putting further out of reach collective approaches to counter new and emerging threats.

    Pressing challenges like climate change, technology, poverty, reform of financial architecture – and increasingly necessary peacebuilding work.

    We need reform of the UN system to better serve us all.

    But reform cannot become a means for disruptors to dismantle protections for smaller countries.

    No state should pretend the rules don’t apply to them;

    Ignoring international rulings;

    Using might over multilateralism;

    Ruling by power alone, not by law;

    Favouring impunity rather than facing accountability;

    Forcing outcomes by economic coercion or military muscle, rather than on the level playing field we established so carefully.

    We see some states trying to set us against each other, when the challenges demand that we come together – that we stand together in support of the security, prosperity and sovereignty of all countries.

    Australia has a different vision for the world. One where no country dominates, and no country is dominated.

    When disputes inevitably arise, we insist those differences are managed through dialogue, and according to the rules, not simply by force or raw power.

    It’s why we have consistently pressed China on peace and stability in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.

    And why we have welcomed the resumption of leader and military level dialogue between the US and China.

    Some countries may dismiss the rules as a Western construct. Our Asia-Pacific region tells a different story.

    Take the agreement between Vietnam and Indonesia to delimit their Exclusive Economic Zone after twelve years of negotiations – an example of how long-standing maritime disputes can be resolved in accordance with international law.

    Take Vanuatu’s landmark International Court of Justice initiative on climate change.

    Or Fiji and Solomon Islands maritime boundary agreements.

    Take the Bay of Bengal Arbitration where states peacefully resolved long-standing and sensitive claims under UNCLOS: the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

    Or Australia and Timor-Leste initiating the first ever compulsory conciliation under UNCLOS, leading to the resolution of our maritime boundary dispute.

    We see it in the Philippines’ decision to go to the Arbitral Tribunal, constituted under the UNCLOS – and its unanimous, clear, ruling in the South China Sea arbitration between the Philippines and China, which is final and binding on the parties.

    These cases in our region illustrate how international law has been built, defended and promoted by small and medium countries from different traditions.

    The countries of our region have embedded the rules that serve us all, and we make an ongoing contribution to maintaining and promoting them.

    Together we want to pursue peaceful ways to resolve disputes.

    We know that this doesn’t happen on its own. All of us help make it happen.

    Australia is doing this by being active, by exercising agency, and by contributing our efforts to the balance of power in our region and our world.

    Our candidacy for a non-permanent seat on the Security Council for the term 2029-2030 reflects our deep commitment to contributing to international peace and security.  

    The Security Council is a foundation of our collective peace and security. But we must reform it.

    Australia wants greater permanent and non-permanent representation for Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Asia-Pacific.

    This body must represent the world as it is in the 21st century.  

    We must also reform the peacebuilding and conflict prevention architecture. It is not working.

    That will be the focus of our coming term on the Peacebuilding Commission.

    Australia will support national prevention strategies in our term, essential for local peacebuilding.    
     
    We are providing additional resources and staff to the PBC’s support and secretariat bodies.     

    And we will increase our voluntary contribution to the UN Peacebuilding Fund to $15 million per year.

    We are committed to doing all we can to de-escalate and prevent conflict.

    We do this by responding when we, or our neighbours, are coerced or have sovereignty threatened.

    We do this by supporting our region’s security – as we did at the Pacific Islands Forum this month, when we stood side-by-side with Pacific leaders to announce a Pacific-led, Australia-backed Pacific Policing Initiative.

    We do this by backing the call of Fiji’s President for a cessation of ballistic missile testing in the Pacific.

    We do this by combining reassurance and deterrence – by working with our friends and partners, openly and transparently, so no potential aggressor thinks the pursuit of conflict is worth the risk.

    But there is so much more to do.   

    For peace to be truly durable it must be built by, and for, all of society.

    That includes women.

    Yet here, in the world’s premier peace forum, only around one in ten speakers at this dais so far this week have been women.

    Gender equality is a primary predictor of peace, even more so than a state’s wealth or political system.

    That is why Australia champions the Women, Peace and Security agenda.  

    We support initiatives that we know are working, like the Southeast Asia Women Peace Mediators, who link stakeholders to enhance the potential for constructive dialogue.

    Like the Pacific Women Mediator’s Network, a locally led, vibrant and inclusive platform to support women’s political leadership.    

    And earlier this week, with Germany, Canada and the Netherlands, Australia invoked Afghanistan’s responsibility under international law for violations of the rights of women and girls.

    The Taliban have erased women from Afghanistan’s self-portrait.

    Effectively imprisoning half their society’s population immediately halves their country’s potential.

    Depleting the soul and prospects of a nation.

    Any country that wants to develop fully must encourage the full participation of all its people.

    So we can’t pursue only parts of the 2030 Agenda: we must achieve all of the Sustainable Development Goals.

    And yet, with just over five years to 2030, over a third of the SDG’s are stalled or regressing, and finance targets are not being met. 

    In times of scarcity, we need every development dollar to count.

    This is why we need to strengthen the global financial architecture.

    This is why Australia is backing the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index and the Bridgetown initiative.

    This is why Australia is championing reforms that make Multilateral Development Banks more responsive to global shocks, and build sustainability and resilience, particularly in the smallest and most vulnerable countries.

    This year, Australia committed 492 million Australian dollars to the Asian Development Fund, working with Japan to unlock a record 5 billion US dollars in new assistance to the region’s most vulnerable countries over the next decade.

    Financial pressures are further strained by the trend of trade being used as a point of leverage rather than an opportunity, as economic interdependence is misused for strategic and political ends.

    Nearly every country in this room depends on open trade with transparent and predictable rules.

    We must keep working together to uphold these trade rules that underpin our economic growth and the livelihoods of our peoples.

    Of course it’s not just finance and unfair trade arrangements that threaten development.

    Climate change is causing more disasters, reversing years of development gains overnight.

    Extreme weather threatens food and water security, with grave implications for global stability.

    Australia is acting at home, enshrining our ambitious emissions reduction targets into legislation: 43 per cent by 2030 and net zero by 2050.

    We are transforming our economy.

    Within this decade, 82 per cent of Australia’s electricity generation will be renewable, up from around 32 per cent when I first addressed you two years ago.

    We are building new industries to accelerate our economic transition and to export reliable, renewable energy to the world.

    And we are acting internationally, to respond to our partners.

    By the end of 2025, Australia will offer Climate Resilient Debt Clauses in our sovereign loans.

    And the groundbreaking Australia-Tuvalu Falepili Union Treaty entered into force on 28 August.

    It is the first time two nations have recognised, in a legally binding treaty, continuing statehood and sovereignty, notwithstanding the impacts of sea-level rise. 

    This agreement supports Tuvaluans to live and thrive at home through land reclamation and investments in infrastructure, education and health.

    At the same time, Tuvaluans have the choice to live, study and work in Australia.

    ‘Mobility with dignity’ means ensuring people have a genuine choice to stay.   

    Pacific voices have demonstrated sustained, clear and innovative leadership, as well as tremendous resilience.

    This is why we are bidding to host COP31 in partnership with the Pacific.

    We want to show the world the unique climate challenges facing our region and amplify the voices of Small Island Developing States, the custodians of our world’s oceans.

    President, we know that along with climate change, technology will define the multilateral system and development goals for decades to come.

    We want safe, accessible technology that is used for the global good – not as a tool for censorship, surveillance, exclusion and division.

    From the start of negotiations for the Global Digital Compact, Australia has advocated that all states should boost access to digital technologies that offer benefits to our world.

    We know that if countries don’t have digital infrastructure, they will miss out.

    This is why we are building sustainable south-south connectivity, including submarine cables across the Pacific.

    We also know not all knowledge is new.

    First Nations’ people’s deep knowledge must be preserved and protected.

    Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have been innovators, inventors and knowledge-holders for over 65,000 years.

    Whether it is firestick farming used to sustainably manage Country, or the engineering of great stone fish traps across rivers and seas.

    That unbroken line of innovation has continued to this day.

    Earlier this year, Australia’s Ambassador for First Nations People helped bring countries together to finalise the World Intellectual Property Organization Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge. 

    The treaty acknowledges the link between traditional knowledge, innovation and intellectual property.

    It helps First Nations communities identify and protect the use of their knowledge by others, which will in turn spur collaboration between researchers, innovators and communities, opening up new opportunities for First Nations entrepreneurship.

    This treaty is remarkable for another reason.

    It serves as a source for optimism.

    193 member states have agreed on new rules to the world’s intellectual property system.

    That is an extraordinary achievement.

    As I said at the outset, the international outlook is framed by entrenched division.

    Where consensus often seems a lost cause.

    But we collectively moved the intellectual property system a step forward.

    Just as we collectively moved forward this week with the Pact for the Future.

    And these recent wins remind us of the gains we’ve made we that need to protect.

    Of the ways our lives are better because of the United Nations.

    Of the ways our world is better because of our collective contribution to the international system.

    It promotes economic development and makes trade more fair – together supporting job creation, overcoming poverty, and enabling small and medium countries to resist coercion.

    It guards against the spread of nuclear weapons.

    It sets the standards that keep food safe.

    It assigns the satellite orbits that take the internet to the most remote reaches.

    It sets the standards that keep 120,000 flights and 12 million passengers safely in the sky every day.

    It is resolving and preventing conflicts in 53 peacekeeping and political missions.

    Each year it saves more than 350 million children from malnutrition.

    And most of all – let us always remember – we are collectively descended from people who lived in a harsher, more dangerous world…

    Who built this UN system to confine horrors of the past to history, and to give us a better life.

    We have no option and no excuse but to find a way through our challenges today, immense and intractable as they are.

    We must work together.

    We must drive change where it is needed, transparently, together.

    We must drive change to include all the world’s peoples.

    To deploy the collective agency that this forum provides, so we combat climate change, poverty and coercion…

    So we negotiate peace.

    President, friends –

    We must not allow others to divide us for their own gain…

    To dilute the protections that are inherent in the UN Charter, that are codified in the Geneva Conventions.

    Rather, we have to reinforce those protections, in the interests of all states and civilians.

    That is what Australia is for.

    A peaceful, stable and prosperous world for all.

    Where sovereignty is respected.

    Where civilians are protected.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Brown Announces New Investment to Prevent Human Trafficking in Ohio

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Ohio Sherrod Brown

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) announced a $334,996 investment to the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) to help efforts to locate potential victims and prevent human trafficking in the state, as part of PUCO’s oversight of commercial motor vehicle safety. This investment was awarded by the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA).

    “We have a collective responsibility to protect and support survivors of trafficking and this is a vital investment in the safety and well-being of Ohioans,” said Brown. “This investment will help identify and put a stop to human trafficking activity.”

    The investment was made possible by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law – legislation that Brown helped write and pass – and is provided from FMCSA’s High Priority-Commercial Motor Vehicle program.

    If you or someone you know is a victim of human trafficking, call the National Human Trafficking hotline at 1-888-373-7888 or text 233733. If you are in immediate danger, call 911.

    Report missing children to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) at 1-800-THE-LOST (843-5678).

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: 2024 New Energy Industry Development Conference & Invest in Changzhou Conference took place

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHANGZHOU, China, Sept. 27, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —

    On September 26, the 2024 New Energy Industry Development Conference & Invest in Changzhou Conference kicked off, gathering academicians, experts, domestic and international business representatives, and financial institutions to discuss collaboration and development.

    A Media Snippet accompanying this announcement is available by clicking on this link.

    A total of 42 representative projects were signed, with a total investment of 39.7 billion yuan, including 9 foreign-funded projects worth 1.16 billion USD. Ten provincial financial institutions signed key financing projects with a credit amount reaching 120 billion yuan.

    Changzhou has pioneered the establishment of a complete industrial ecosystem encompassing generation, storage, transmission, application, and networking in the new energy sector. From January to August this year, Changzhou produced nearly 680,000 new energy vehicles, ranking first in investment enthusiasm nationwide. The solar photovoltaic industry is among the largest in the country, and the completeness of the power battery industry chain stands at 97%, the highest in China, significantly contributing to the high-quality development of the new energy industry.

    Changzhou has been recognized as “China’s Capital of New Energy.” This title reflects the city’s commitment to building a world-class new energy industry cluster while adapting to new circumstances, enhancing its hard and soft power, and accelerating the progress of new industrialization. It represents the future of China’s new energy industry and showcases a green, efficient, innovative, and collaborative industrial image, shaping a vibrant “New Changzhou.”

    Since 2022, Hurun Research Institute has consistently published the list of cities with high concentration in the new energy industry. At the conference, the 2024 Hurun China New Energy Industry Concentration Cities list was released, with Changzhou ranking third, maintaining the top position in investment enthusiasm for three consecutive years. Four new energy enterprises from Changzhou made it to the global unicorn list.

    In the latest Hurun World 500, five companies related to new energy were included, three of which are from China: CATL, BYD, and Li Auto, all of which have chosen to invest in Changzhou. South Korea is a key source of foreign investment for the city, with 326 well-known Korean enterprises established in Changzhou. Major projects, including the ArcelorMittal soft magnetic project and the 3 billion yuan Li Auto component base project, are being launched, with Changzhou attracting a total of 10.59 billion yuan in foreign investment since 2020.

    During the conference, 30 enterprises were awarded for their significant contributions to Changzhou’s social development, industrial upgrading, foreign trade, and technological innovation. To foster an open environment, Changzhou also released a multilingual guide for foreign personnel.

    In today’s world, green, low-carbon, and sustainable development are paramount. Changzhou is implementing a series of strategic collaborations, innovation platforms, and national events to promote industrial integration and innovation. The second Energy Electronics Industry Innovation Competition was launched on-site, alongside the signing of a strategic cooperation agreement to support Changzhou’s new industrialization. The Jiangsu Advanced Power and Energy Storage Battery Technology Innovation Center was also inaugurated.

    To promote investment and development in future industries, Changzhou established the largest new energy mother fund in Jiangsu Province, totaling 5 billion yuan. Additionally, several other funds were signed, including a 2 billion yuan Yangtze River Delta Hard Technology Scientists Fund and a 1.68 billion yuan Yuanzheng Venture Capital Fund, amounting to a total of 6.305 billion yuan.

    Changzhou aims to enhance its industrial development capabilities and cultural soft power, actively promoting the integration of “Vehicle, Energy, Road, and Cloud.” The city is rolling out pilot projects for near-zero carbon parks and smart microgrids, encouraging the development of new business models such as virtual power plants and load aggregators, striving to become a national carbon peak pilot city.

    Looking ahead, Changzhou will expand its new energy landscape, accelerate entry into smart networking and low-altitude economy industries, and unveil investment opportunities in nine fields, including synthetic biology, new energy vehicles, and hydrogen energy.

    Source: The Organizing Committee of 2024 New Energy Industry Development Conference & Invest in Changzhou Conference

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Ron DeSantis Issues Updates on Response and Recovery Efforts to Hurricane Helene

    Source: US State of Florida

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla.—Today, Governor Ron DeSantis was joined by Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM) Executive Director Kevin Guthrie in Perry and Cedar Key to provide updates on recovery efforts after Hurricane Helene impacted Florida’s Big Bend region. As of this afternoon, approximately 828,548 Floridians are without power. The State of Florida has already restored 1,573,907 accounts.

    Governor DeSantis issued Executive Order 24-209 on September 24, amending EO 24-208 and declaring a state of emergency for 61 counties.

    To learn more, residents can visit FloridaDisaster.org/Guide. For updates on county resources available visit FloridaDisaster.org/Counties for a list of all 67 county emergency management contacts.

    State Preparedness Effort

    • The Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM) activated the State Emergency Operations Center to Level 1 on Tuesday, September 24, and is leading coordination efforts for the State Emergency Response Team.
    • The State Emergency Response Team is engaged in over 1,500 missions to assist counties in their preparation efforts. These missions accomplish vital tasks like staging response resources, protecting critical infrastructure facilities like hospitals and utility stations, and coordinating personnel statewide.
    • Seven Urban search and rescue task forces are deployed.
    • The Florida National Guard (FLNG) has mobilized nearly 3,900 Soldiers and Airmen in preparation for Hurricane Helene.
    • The FLNG has rescued 30 residents throughout the impacted area. We have mobilized 15 route clearing teams and have 13 rotary wing aircraft prepared to provide SAR and/or damage assessment support. Mississippi is providing an additional 3 rotary wing aircraft later today.
    • The FLNG is providing logistics support, law enforcement support, route clearance, search and rescue, commodity distribution, flood mitigation, aviation and other support as needed by the state.
    • The Florida State Guard (FSG) is standing by with the following:
      • 250+ Soldiers ready to deploy.
      • 10 shallow water vessel boat teams
      • 7 flat-bottom-flood rescue skiffs
      • 2 amphibious rescue vehicles
      • 2 K-9 search and rescue teams
      • 12 UTV’s
      • 15 Cut and toss crews
      • 7 search and rescue teams
      • 2 UH-60 Blackhawk for daytime aerial assessment and logistics missions
    • The Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) Mutual Aid team is coordinating law enforcement missions including search and rescue and fuel for first responders.
    • FDLE is conducting status calls with DMS to ensure State SLERS radio communications systems are operative for law enforcement.
    • FDLE’s Aviation Unit conducted an aerial survey of impacted counties in coordination with the Air Operations Branch. FDLE has flown seven missions with five aircraft.
    • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) has more than 100 officers and support staff responding to areas of Florida impacted by Hurricane Helene.
    • Two Special Operations Group (SOG) teams, totaling 15 officers, from the NW Region responded to western coastal areas of the impacted area such as Franklin and Gulf counties, assisting residents in need and moved onto harder hit areas once areas were clear.
    • FWC officers are conducting welfare checks and search and rescues in coastal communities in Dixie, Levy and Taylor Counties with shallow draft vessels and specialized high-water vehicles.
    • A team of officers from the Southwest region assisted Pasco County law enforcement with high water evacuations due to storm surge conditions on Thursday night. Approximately seven people were rescued by FWC teams. Additionally, FWC officers rescued eleven people and six pets in Charlotte County due to high water conditions.
    • The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) has over 2,100 FDOT team members working directly on storm response.
    • Damage assessment teams are active in the field and are surveying impacts.
    • 61 Cut and Toss crews have worked since 3 a.m. and have completely cleared I-10.
    • Cut and Toss Operations
      • 577 crews are active in the field and have already cleared over 8,300 miles of roadway.
      • 129 Bridge Inspectors have inspected 1,200 bridges across the impacted areas.
      • FDOT is directly coordinating Cut & Toss Crews with Utility Response Crews to aid in swift utility restoration.
    • Westbound Gandy Bridge has reopened. One lane of eastbound Gandy Bridge has reopened.
    • Southbound Howard Frankland Bridge has reopened.
    • Sunshine Skyway Bridge is now open in both directions.
    • A 10-mile stretch of State Road 789 in Sarasota County and Manatee County has experienced extreme damage and the roadway is inaccessible. Crews are working to assess the entire corridor and have implemented an emergency contract to quickly perform repairs.
    • State Road 24 heading into Cedar Key was heavily damaged earlier this morning. Crews have completed repairs and reopened the roadway.
    • Crews are working to repair damage from erosion at Courtney Campbell Causeway.
    • Crews are working to clear sand and debris from the roadway on Gulf Blvd in Pinellas County.
    • Crews have reviewed over 7,000 traffic signals statewide. 255 signals across the impacted areas are not operational, however, crews are actively working to restore power to these locations.
    • Debris pick up has begun in South Florida- 42 crew members are FDOT has committed to perform debris pick up within fiscally constrained counties.
    • FDOT Secretary issued FDOT Emergency Order on September 23, 2024.
      • FDOT has lifted weight restrictions and is allowing bypass of weigh stations for emergency response vehicles, including utility vehicles staging for rapid response.
    • FDOT’s Post-Storm Statewide Response Efforts include:
    • Road Ranger service has been expanded to assist motorists along critical roadways.
    • Resources deployed in the field or available as needed:
      • Over 858 generators
      • Nearly 49 pumps
      • Over 70 pieces of heavy equipment and trucks are actively in the field for response efforts
      • 43 Drone team members staged to make assessments where needed
      • 5 ITS trailers
    • FDOT encourages drivers to download the FL511 app or visit FL511.com for road/bridge closures and potential detours that may be activated.
    • Remember to never drive through flooded areas. The area of the roadway beneath the water may be washed out or may conceal debris or even power lines. Turn Around; Don’t Drown.

    Transportation Modes
    Seaports

    • Port Panama City, Port of Port St. Joe, Port Tampa Bay, SeaPort Manatee, Port St. Pete, Port of Fernandina, and JAXPORT are closed waterside while awaiting Coast Guard Channel survey.

    Airports

    • All airports have reopened.
    • Please check with airlines directly on the specific status of flights.

    Rail

    • Passenger Rail:
      • Amtrak is operating. Please check with Amtrak directly for service impacts.
      • SunRail service has resumed with some service delays due to power outages.
    • Freight Rail:
      • Railroads in the impacted areas are assessing damage and conducting inspections.

    Transit

    • Transit agencies in the impacted areas are assessing conditions and resuming service where possible. Please check directly with local agency providers for service impacts.
    State-Owned Roads Closures (As of 2:30 p.m., 9/27/24) 
    State Road closures listed below. For real-time updates, Check FL511.com. 
    Bridge Closures
    • Closures
      • Northbound Howard Frankland
      • Courtney Campbell Causeway
      • One lane of eastbound Gandy Bridge
    • Alachua County
      • Debris on Roadway on NW 34th Blvd Northbound at NW 24th Ter. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-222 Both Directions from NE 27th Ave to NE 52nd St. All lanes closed.
      • Object on roadway on SR-26 / Newberry Rd East, at NW 66th St. 2 Right lanes blocked.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-121 Northbound at NW 24th Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-26 Both Directions at NE 27th Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on us-441 Northbound at NW 104th Ln. 1 Right Lane closed.
    • Baker County 
      • Debris on Roadway on US-90 Both Directions at Tiger Lake Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-90 Eastbound at Arnold Rhoden Rd. All lanes closed.
    • Charlotte County  
      • Flooding on E Olympia Ave Eastbound at Nesbit St. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on E Marion Ave Westbound at Cooper St. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on US-41 North, before West Marion Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on US-17 East, at Nesbit St. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on US-17 West, at Cooper St. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on McCall Rd Northbound at Myakka River. All lanes closed.
      • High Winds on Tamiami Trl Southbound at Main St. All lanes closed.
      • High Winds on Tamiami Trl Northbound at Harborside Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on SR-776 North, before El Jobean Bridge. All lanes closed.
    • Columbia County 
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-247 Both Directions at Oyster Shell Lane. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-47 Both Directions at US-41. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-441 Both Directions at NE Sunny Brook St. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-441 Both Directions at NW Ernest Greene Gln. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-10A Westbound at US-41. All lanes closed
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-247 Both Directions at SW Tamarack Loop. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-47 Both Directions near CR-240. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-47 Both Directions at SW Marvin Burnett Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-441 Both Directions from I-10 Eastbound to Georgia State Line. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-100 Both Directions at SE Douglas Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-247 Both Directions at SW Norris Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-247 Both Directions at SW Dairy St. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-47 Both Directions at SW Watson Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on S US Highway 441 Northbound at CR-240. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-90 Westbound at SW Koonville Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Object on roadway on US-90 / Lake City East, at Sisters Welcome Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Object on roadway on US-90 / Lake City West, at Sisters Welcome Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Object on roadway on I-75 North, before MM 416. Right shoulder blocked.
      • Debris on Roadway on S US Highway 441 Both Directions at CR-18. All lanes closed.
    • Dixie County 
      • Debris on Roadway on US-19 Southbound at NE 824th St. All lanes closed.
    • Duval County 
      • Debris on Roadway on Emerson St Westbound at Rosemary St. All lanes closed.
    • Gilchrist County 
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-26 Eastbound at TL Johnson Blvd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-47 Northbound at NE 40th Ct Rd. All lanes closed.
    • Hillsborough County 
      • Flooding on SR-618 West, ramp to 22nd St.
      • Flooding on SR-618 East, at 22nd St.
      • Bridge Closed in Hillsborough County on SR-60 West, at Ben T Davis Beach. All lanes closed.
    • Jackson County
      • Flooding on Caverns Rd Both Directions at Russell Rd. All lanes closed.
    • Jefferson County
      • Debris on Roadway on Still Rd Southbound near N Jefferson St.
      • Debris on Roadway on W Washington Hwy Both Directions near Creekside Ct. All lanes closed.
    • Lafayette County 
      • Debris on Roadway on E US 27 Northbound near CR-450. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on S SR-51 Both Directions at SW Van Buren Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on W US 27 Both Directions at CR-536. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on W US 27 Both Directions at NW Griffin Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on W US 27 Eastbound near SW Gary L Thomas Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on W US 27 Northbound at CR-350. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-27 Northbound at SW Truman Ln. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on E Main St Southbound at NE Willis Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-349 Northbound at SR-27. All lanes closed.
        Debris on Roadway on SR-349 Northbound at CR-500. All lanes closed.
    • Lee County  
      • Flooding on US-41 Business North, at Edison Bridge. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on Edison Bridge Northbound 0.48 Miles Beyond 2nd St. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on SR-80 / First St West, before Park Avenue. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding in Lee County on SR-865/ San Carlos Blvd North, at Matanzas Pass Bridge. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding in Lee County on SR-865/ San Carlos Blvd South, at Matanzas Pass Bridge. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on US-41 South, beyond N Key Dr.. All lanes closed.
    • Levy County 
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-345 Both Directions near NW 53rd Ln.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-345 Both Directions at SE 4th St. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on NE Highway 27 Alt Both Directions at CR-339. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-19 Northbound at NW 140th St. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-41 Southbound at NE 75th St. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-121 Northbound at NE 50th St. All lanes closed.
    • Madison County 
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-53 Both Directions near SR-14. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-53 Northbound at SR-10. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-221 Both Directions at I-10 Eastbound. All lanes closed.
    • Manatee County 
      • Flooding in on SR-684 / Cortez Rd W East, at Gulf Dr. N (SR-789).
      • Flooding on SR-684 / Cortez Rd W West, at Gulf Dr N (SR-789). All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on SR-64 / Manatee Ave East, at Gulf Dr.. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on SR-64 / Manatee Ave West, at Gulf Dr.. All lanes closed.
    • Pinellas County 
      • Emergency vehicles on I-275 North, at Roosevelt Blvd. All lanes closed.
      • Emergency vehicles on I-275 North, ramp from EB Ulmerton Rd. On-ramp closed.
      • Emergency vehicles on I-275 North, ramp from NB 4th St N. On-ramp closed.
      • Bridge Closed on SR-60 East, at Dr. Kiran C. Patel Blvd. All lanes blocked.
      • Bridge Closed on SR-600/Gandy Blvd East, beyond MM 3. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on I-275 South, ramp from EB Ulmerton Rd.
      • Flooding on N Pinellas Ave Both Directions at Anclote Rd.
      • Flooding on S Pinellas Ave Southbound at W Lime St.
      • Flooding on S Pinellas Ave Northbound at E MLK Dr.
      • Flooding on Bayshore Blvd Northbound at San Christopher Dr. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on Bayshore Blvd Southbound at Causeway Blvd. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on Pasadena Ave Southbound at Sunset Dr S. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on 75th Ave Northbound near Mangrove Ave. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on Edgewater Dr Southbound from President St to Locklie St. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on S Pinellas Ave Southbound at Meres Blvd. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on I-275 North, beyond 4th St N.
      • Flooding on I-275 South, ramp to 54th Ave S.
      • Flooding on SR-688 East, beyond Roosevelt Blvd N.
      • Flooding on SR-688 West, before Roosevelt Blvd N.
      • Debris on Roadway on Pinellas Bayway Southbound at Palma del Mar Blvd S. All lanes closed.
    • Sarasota County  
      • Flooding on SR-789 North, at Sunset Drive. All lanes closed.
      • Flooding on SR-789 South, at Sunset Drive. All lanes closed.
    • Suwannee County 
      • Debris on Roadway on US-90 Eastbound at 149th Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-90 Both Directions at CR-137. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-90 Westbound at 185th Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-90 Westbound at 63rd Dr. All lanes closed.
    • Taylor County 
      • Debris on Roadway on S Jefferson St Both Directions at S Byron Butler Pkwy. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on SR-51 Both Directions near US-19 Southbound. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-19 Both Directions at Kelly Grade. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-27 Westbound at Granger Rd. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-27 Eastbound at CR-296. All lanes closed.
      • Debris on Roadway on US-98 Westbound at Dice Rd. All lanes closed.
    • The Florida Department of Veterans’ Affairs (FDVA) The VISN 8 Clinical Contact Center is operational 24/7/365 for virtual care and tele-emergency care and support to Veterans enrolled for VA Health Care in Florida. 1-877-741-3400. Visit https://department.va.gov/integrated-service-networks/visn-08 for more information.
    • Robert H. Jenkins Jr. Veterans’ Domiciliary Home in Lake City lost power and is currently on generator.
    • Volunteer Florida: Disaster Legal Hotline is open to assist and refer callers: 833-514-2940
    • Samaritan’s Purse hotline: 1-833-747-1234 free assistance for homeowners affected by the disaster. Volunteers may be able to assist with removal of personal property and furniture, flood cleanup, sanitizing with shockwave treatment, chainsaw work and Debris Clean-up, temporary roof tarping.
      • 2-1-1 is open and ready to receive calls. Individuals can call for up-to-the-
      • Red Cross Hotline is open to assist: 1-800-Red Cross
      • Florida Baptists Disaster Relief Public Assistance: 904-253-0502 or text Helene to 27123. Free Assistance for homeowners affected by the disaster. Volunteers may be able to assist with Storm Debris Cleanup, Temporary Roof Tarping, Chainsaw work, and muckouts.
      • Crisis Cleanup number: 844-965-1386

     

    Health and Human Services

    • The Agency for Persons with Disabilities (APD) has shifted to recovery efforts and has begun post storm calls and wellness checks with clients, providers, partners, and staff in affected areas verifying status and ask about immediate needs caused by the storm and develop plans to resolve.
    • APD operated facilities in Marianna and Chattahoochee maintained power through the storm, while the Gainesville facility is without power and operating on generators. All residents, clients, and staff have reported they are safe.
    • 14 evacuated APD licensed Group Homes have also reported they are safe, and APD will continue to work with providers to see about storm damage and potential needs.
    • APD is mapping Group Homes, clients in Supported Living Facilities, and clients living in family homes in affected areas for priority follow up and wellness checks by APD teams and provider staff.
    • APD is working with partners and the State Emergency Response Team to ensure the functional and access needs of disaster survivors are met.
    • APD Hope Florida Navigators and APD emergency recovery teams standby ready for deployment to affected areas to serve disaster distribution centers as needed.
    • The Florida Department of Health’s (DOH) is deploying over 470 emergency response vehicles. Staging is currently in Leon, Liberty, Osceola, Pinellas, and Polk counties.
    • At this time, one Boil Water Notice has been reported for Marion County as a result of Hurricane Helene.
    • DOH has Special Needs Shelters available in areas impacted by Hurricane Helene. A press release has been sent statewide for additional information on special needs shelters. To find a shelter near you, please visit the county emergency management page here.
    • DOH and the Agency for Health Care Administration initiated Patient Movement Mission to support medical transport and evacuations of health care facilities.
    • The State Surgeon General signed Emergency Order 24-002, which:
      • Waives competitive procurement requirements in order to procure commodities, goods, and services expeditiously in response to the emergency.
      • Permits emergency medical transportation services to operate across county lines.
      • Permits Paramedics, Emergency Medical Technicians, and Medical Directors, as defined by Chapter 401, Florida Statutes, licensed in other U.S. states, territories, or districts to practice in Florida in response to the emergency without penalty.
      • Authorizes a reporting extension for the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program.
      • Authorizes an extension of the upcoming licensure renewal deadlines for Nursing Home Administrators, Radiological Personnel, and Athletic Trainers until October 31, 2024.
    • DOH and the Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) sent information regarding early prescription refills permitted under Executive Order 24-209. This information was sent to the public, health insurers, managed care organizations, pharmacy benefit managers, pharmacy chains, and health care providers.
    • The Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) has activated reporting in the Health Facility Reporting System (HFRS) and has requested that all health care providers report their census, available beds, evacuation status, and generator status information. This information allows AHCA to assist health care providers in transferring patients if needed and ensure that health care providers in impacted areas have the necessary resources and adequate power.
    • AHCA has made 40 phone calls to health care facilities in the impacted area, to check their status.
    • As of 3 p.m., 92 health care facilities have reported evacuations. This includes:
      • 46 assisted living facilities
      • 29 nursing homes
      • 6 hospitals
      • 1 hospital emergency department
      • 5 residential treatment facilities
      • 2 residential treatment centers for children and adolescents
      • 2 adult family care home, and 2 intermediate care facility for developmentally disabled
    • 100% of operating long-term care facilities have a generator on-site. The Generator Status Map for long-term care facilities is available here.
    • As 3 p.m., there are 158 health care facilities on generator power across the state. This includes:
      • 3 hospitals
      • 77 assisted living facilities
      • 43 nursing homes.
      • 5 adult family care home
      • 2 hospices
      • 5 hospital emergency department
      • 5 intermediate care facility for the developmentally disabled
      • 10 residential treatment facilities
      • 1 residential treatment centers for children and adolescents
      • 7 crisis stabilization and short-term rtf
    • The Agency has waived all prior authorization requirements for critical Medicaid services until further notice.
    • AHCA has conducted 39 onsite post-incident assessment visits.

    Infrastructure, Roads and State Closures

    • The Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) cut teams and FDOT road clearing teams are providing aid to areas impacted by the storm.
    • FHP continues to mobilize drone assets to help assess post-storm damage and assist with rescue and recovery efforts in areas impacted by the storm.
    • FHP Troopers are assisting with escorting critical restoration and recovery vehicles from around the state to areas impacted by the storm.
    • FHP is mobilizing Quick Response Force team members to deploy to affected areas of Florida to assist with recovery efforts.
    • FHP and FDOT cut teams cleared all trees and debris from Interstate 10 and Interstate 75 and traffic flow has been restored.
    • FHP drone assets and fixed-wing aircraft are actively assisting with search and rescue efforts and storm damage assessment.
    • FHP mobilized high-water vehicles to areas affected by the storm to assist with search and rescue efforts.
    • FHP is providing security at storm response fuel sites.
    • FLHSMV has 3 Florida Licensing on Wheels (FLOW) mobiles on standby to provide mobile credentialing services in impacted areas and to those affected by the storm.
    • Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (FLHSMV) issued Emergency Order 24-05, in support of Executive Order 24-209 which: waives specific requirements for commercial motor vehicles providing emergency relief; and waives the replacement fees for driver’s license and identification credentials, vehicle registrations and titles, vessel registrations and titles and temporary parking permits for impacted individuals.
    • The Department of Children and Families (DCF) has contacted over 2,000 families and group homes to ensure all children and families served are safe and to determine needs.
    • The HOPE LINE has been activated at 8 a.m. today to assist those in need of resources or other assistance after the storm. It is now available 24/7 for the next two-plus weeks at 833-GET-HOPE.
    • Activate Hope has been deployed to help connect Floridians impacted by the storm with needed resources like food, supplies, home repairs, and more. Serving as the emergency response component of the Hope Florida initiative, Activate Hope connects the private sector, nonprofits, and government to help Floridians get back on their feet following a natural disaster. Fill out the form here to get help.
    • DCF has contacted over 5,500 licensed providers in impacted areas to check for needs after the storm.
    • The State Mental Health Treatment Facilities are fully operational.
    • Through ESF 6, DCF provided staffing and emergency supplies to 32 shelters and meals to 1,000 first responders.
    • The Department of Elder Affairs (DOEA) continues to contact all Area Agencies on Aging partners to receive updates. Post storm call downs to clients are ongoing and there are currently no unmet needs.
    • The Florida Department of Education (FDOE) has been contacting school districts and state colleges following Hurricane Helene and is addressing needs to reopen as quickly as possible. Districts, colleges, and universities are conducting damage assessments following the storm. Currently, 48 school districts, 19 state colleges, and 8 universities remain closed as of Friday, September 27, 2024.
    • The Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is actively working to provide assistance to drinking water, wastewater and hazardous waste facilities. Outreach to these facilities to determine operational status is ongoing.
    • DEP’s online portal WaterTracker is now live for drinking and wastewater facilities to report their operational status.
    • DEP published a storm updates webpage to keep state park visitors updated: FloridaStateParks.org/StormUpdates. Visitors with existing camping and cabin reservations at closed parks have been notified of their reservation status.
    • DEP is working with Florida’s Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (FlaWARN), the Florida Rural Water Association and other response agencies to dispatch generators, fuel and pump trucks and other resources to assist drinking and wastewater facilities.
    • DEP and response agencies are working 1-on-1 with partially- and non-operational drinking and wastewater facilities to get them back to operational status as quickly as possible to meet the immediate service needs of the communities they serve. Areas under boil water advisories can be found at https://www.floridahealth.gov/environmental-health/drinking-water/boil-water-notices/index.html.
    • DEP is working in conjunction with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the U.S. Coast Guard to identify oil spills and hazardous material releases in coastal and inland waterways.
    • 94 Disaster Debris Management Sites have been authorized to operate for Hurricane Helene. These sites are a critical component of expediting clean-up and reducing environmental and public health impacts post-storm and meeting federal reimbursement requirements.
    • 12 Florida State Parks strike teams have been assembled to assist with assessment and recovery efforts at impacted parks.
    • More than 60 state parks have reopened following Hurricane Helene. DEP published a storm updates webpage to keep state park visitors updated of closures: FloridaStateParks.org/StormUpdates. Visitors with existing camping and cabin reservations at closed parks have been notified of their reservation status.

    Resources for Employees, Businesses and Consumers

    • The Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) has partnered with the Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association to encourage more than 71,000 Florida-licensed lodging establishments to relax pet policies and waive pet fees for evacuees.
    • DBPR has proactively communicated with more than 137,000 restaurant and lodging licensees to provide storm preparation and food safety resources.
    • DBPR has proactively contacted more than 2,300 prescription wholesale stakeholders to provide information on emergency provisions under Governor DeSantis’ Executive Order 24-211 that will help mitigate supply chain difficulties with prescription drugs and medical gas.
    • The Florida Disaster Contractors Network has been activated to connect homeowners with licensed contractors and suppliers to perform emergency repairs.
    • DBPR encourages Florida’s licensed contractors who provide post-storm construction-related services to register with its Florida Disaster Contractors Network at DCNOnline.org.
    • DBPR has distributed FloridaCommerce’s Business Damage Assessment Survey to nearly 1,000,000 licensees in impacted counties and encouraged them to report damages using the survey.
    • DBPR’s Division of Hotels and Restaurants has begun disaster assessments in impacted areas. Emergency Response Teams across the state are completing outreach to impacted businesses to reinforce food safety protocols after the storm.
    • FloridaCommerce activated the private sector hotline at (850) 815-4925, open daily 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Inquiries may also be emailed to ESF18@em.myflorida.com.
    • Updates on business closures and business resources are updated at FloridaDisaster.biz/CurrentDisasterUpdates.
    • FloridaCommerce and the State Emergency Response Team (SERT) activated the Business Damage Assessment Survey in response to Hurricane Helene. Business owners can self-report physical and economic damage caused by Hurricane Helene. Survey responses will allow the state to expedite Hurricane Helene recovery efforts by gathering data and assessing the needs of impacted businesses. Businesses can complete the survey online by visiting FloridaDisaster.biz and selecting “Hurricane Helene” from the dropdown menu.
    • FloridaCommerce is working with the Florida Chamber, the Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association and other private sector partners to consistently update business open/close status on FloridaDisaster.biz. FloridaCommerce staff have made more than 300 calls to rural and small businesses to help with this effort.
    • Walmart has donated $500 gift cards to shelters in Hamilton, Madison and Suwannee Counties for the purchase of pet food.
    • Lowes has deployed their Tool Rental Truck to assist in recovery efforts providing a rental option for power tools from chainsaws and pressure washers, to fence post augers and compressors. The truck is also staffed with small engine mechanics to support local communities with power.
    • VISIT FLORIDA Emergency Accommodation Modules on Expedia, Priceline and Booking.com will remain available to provide real-time hotel availability and lodging resources for impacted Floridians and visitors.
    • Visit website for CareerSource openings: careersourceflorida.com
    • Comcast has opened more than 52,000 public Xfinity WiFi hotspots in Florida. The free and public hotspots are open for all, including non-Xfinity customers. For more information, click here.
    • CVS Health created pop-up pharmacies in impacted areas.
    • The Florida Department of State, Division of Elections, has contacted the United States Postal Service (USPS) about election information and vote-by-mail ballots. The Division of Elections recommended that Supervisors of Elections t contact their local district USPS to discuss a mitigation plan for ballot mailing, delivery, and return.
    • The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) worked with Florida’s ports and fuel industry partners to ensure adequate fuel supplies are available, and with Florida’s agricultural partners so producers have adequate resources. The Florida Forest Service staged equipment, like high-water vehicles.
    • The Commissioner of Agriculture, Wilton Simpson, has approved an Emergency Order temporarily suspending the intrastate movement requirements for animal transportation. In addition, the following states have waived their interstate import requirements for Florida pets, horses, and livestock leaving the state: Alabama, Georgia (does not include livestock), Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
    • Commissioner Wilton Simpson has approved an emergency rule authorizing out-of-state licensed security guards to protect people and property in Florida and has approved an emergency rule to aid the distribution of liquefied petroleum gas to disaster response and recovery operations.
    • Fuel inspectors are responding to impacted areas to ensure retail fuel dispensers are working properly and testing the quality of fuel.
    • Floridians are encouraged to visit complaints.fdacs.gov or call 1-800-HELP-FLA to report water-contaminated fuel issues to the department.
    • Food safety inspectors are responding to impacted areas to conduct damage assessments and ensure the safe operation of over 12,000 potentially impacted food establishments.
    • Agricultural partners can request critical assistance for  livestock and animals in critical need, please complete this form then send it to DAIOPSAssessment@FDACS.gov, or call 863-993-5460.
    • UF/IFAS is studying the agricultural losses and damages resulting from Hurricane Helene. Producers can share information about impacts experienced at your farm, ranch, or aquaculture operation here.
    • Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson and the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) launched the Agriculture and Aquaculture Producers Natural Disaster Recovery Loan Program for Florida farmers, ranchers, and growers impacted by Hurricane Helene to apply for low-interest and interest-free loans. Loans can be used by eligible agriculture and aquaculture producers to restore, repair, or replace essential physical property – including fences, equipment, greenhouses, and other buildings – or to remove vegetative debris.
    • FDACS is securing and providing critical resources to our agricultural producers, such as generators, fencing, feed/water, and veterinary supplies.
    • The Department of Revenue (FDOR) has issued Emergency Order 24-001: Taxing Authority Millage and Budget Hearings to assist local taxing authorities with altering their plans for annual budget hearings because of Helene. Department of Revenue bulletin PTO 20-07 provides further instructions for local taxing authorities during declared emergencies.
    • The Florida Department of Corrections (FDC) is posting updates publicly and in real-time at FDC.myflorida.com/weather-updates.
    • The Florida Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) have finalized storm preparations to ensure the safety and security of staff and youth in our care. This includes fueling all vehicles, moving vehicles in low-lying and flood-prone areas to higher ground, testing and ensuring adequate fuel supplies for generators in the event of loss of power, and ensuring food, medicine, and emergency supplies are stocked and ready.

      For previous updates see below:
      9/24/2024
      9/25/2024
      9/26/2024

      Follow FDEM on X, Instagram, and Facebook for updates and visit FloridaDisaster.org/Updates for information relating to Hurricane Helene.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: China aims for smooth travel during National Day holiday

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

    BEIJING, Sept. 27 — China is making multipronged efforts to ensure safe and smooth trips for passengers during the upcoming National Day holiday, the Ministry of Transport said on Friday.

    In the country, the annual National Day holiday is marked by mass family reunions and a surge in travel. This year, the country’s transport sector is expected to handle over 1.9 billion passenger trips nationwide during the week-long holiday starting on Oct. 1, said Vice Minister Li Yang during a press conference.

    This translates to a daily average of 277 million passenger trips during the holiday, a 19.4 percent increase compared to the same period in 2019, according to Li.

    Specifically, Li noted that over 80 percent of these trips are expected to be made by private vehicles, while also anticipating a rising demand for mid- and long-distance travel.

    Since 2012, China has waived tolls for passenger cars during major holidays, including the Spring Festival, the Tomb-Sweeping Day, the Labor Day and the National Day. The policy has significantly stimulated demand for holiday road trips.

    This policy will remain effective during this year’s National Day holiday to enhance passengers’ travel experience, Li said, adding that efforts will also be made to improve facilities and services at highway rest areas.

    For instance, transport authorities nationwide are accelerating the installation of charging facilities to accommodate the country’s growing number of new-energy vehicles.

    A case in point is the southwest province of Sichuan, where 98.3 percent of highway rest areas had been equipped with charging poles as of August 2024, providing an overall capacity of 190,000 kilowatts.

    Given the length of the holiday, cross-regional travel is expected to be prevalent during the period, with popular destinations including Beijing, Shanxi, Sichuan and Xinjiang, Li said.

    Fueled by the recent blockbuster video game “Black Myth: Wukong,” north China’s Shanxi has seen a phenomenal travel boom as it is home to many of the stunning locations featured in the game. Highway travel routes encompassing many of these locations, including ancient temples, towers and pagodas, have gone viral online.

    To ensure safe and smooth road transport, the local transport department has overhauled roads and transport facilities around popular tourist spots to eliminate safety risks. It has also worked with traffic bureaus to create contingency plans in case of congestion.

    At the national level, Li said that the transport ministry has provided targeted instructions for local departments nationwide on developing strategies to maximize transport capacity ahead of the tourist influx.

    In terms of public transport, efforts are underway to further streamline the ticket purchasing process, especially for the elderly and foreign passengers, Li added.

    China’s passenger transport has been robust since the beginning of this year, with nearly 44 billion passenger trips recorded during the first eight months. The figure marked a 6.1 percent increase from the same period last year, according to data from the transport ministry.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: 600-year-old Kunqu Opera revives in modern life

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    In Kunshan City, east China’s Jiangsu Province, the melodies of Kunqu Opera, one of China’s most ancient and treasured art forms, are not confined to the stages of grand theaters, but ring out in unexpected scenes – school bells, fitness routines and even bus stop illustrations where lively cartoon figures greet passersby every day.

    Kunshan is the birthplace of Kunqu, which blends poetry, music, intricate costumes and graceful performances. The 600-year-old Chinese tradition earned its place on UNESCO’s list of World Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2001.

    But Kunqu is far from a relic. In the bustling streets of Kunshan, this ancient art form continues to find new life, delicately balancing between preserving its timeless beauty and embracing the demands of modernity.

    For performers like You Tengteng, an actress at the Kunshan Contemporary Kunqu Theater, the act is both a challenge and a passion. After a long day of rehearsal, You and her colleagues discussed their latest performance strategies, not in a traditional theater but on Douyin, a Chinese video-sharing platform.

    In partnership with the platform, You and seven other performers livestream their Kunqu shows for at least 20 hours each month. The goal is simple yet ambitious: to reach a new generation of audiences who might hesitate to sit through two or three hours-long performance in an opera house.

    One of the challenges for them is interpretation – not from language to language, but from centuries-old art to the flickering screens of smartphones.

    To draw audiences in the digital age, the performers have condensed the intricate art form into digestible one-hour segments, inviting viewers to experience Kunqu in more relaxed settings, whether over tea at a café or within the walls of a museum.

    The strategy seems to be working, particularly among Chinese youth. After performances, it is not uncommon to see young fans eagerly lining up for selfies and autographs with the performers, their newfound enthusiasm for this ancient art is a testament to its evolving relevance.

    You was not so surprised to see the heartening trend. “The aesthetics of Chinese culture, ancient and modern, are continuous,” she said. “What we strive to inherit is not just the technique, but the pursuit of beauty that has always existed.”

    “And Kunqu is a reflection of societal values, many of which were born in the feudal era. This tension between the past and present is where we find space for innovation, reimagining the stories of old to resonate with modern audiences,” she added.

    One such innovation was seen in the Kunshan Contemporary Kunqu Theater’s production of The Story of Washing Gauze, a play originally written in the 16th century. The story centers on Xi Shi, a legendary beauty from ancient China, who sacrifices her personal happiness to serve her country.

    In the original ending, after years of separation and war, Xi Shi reunites with her lover and they live happily ever after. However, the modern production altered the ending, leaving it open and tinged with sorrow. The reimagining struck a chord with audiences, many of whom praised the new ending for its emotional depth and realism, noting that it made Xi Shi’s character more relatable to modern viewers.

    Kunshan’s commitment to preserving and promoting Kunqu goes beyond the stage. Over the last few years, the Kunshan Kunqu theater has held more than 2,500 performances and tours, drawing over 20 million visitors from China and abroad.

    In addition, the local government has invested 177 million yuan (about 25.2 million U.S. dollars) to fund new productions, support rehearsal spaces, and subsidize performances since 2018.

    Kunshan’s commitment extends to preserving not only Kunqu but the diverse operatic traditions of China. Since 2018, the annual Chinese Opera Gala (Kunshan) has been hosted by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism and provincial government. The gala showcases 348 traditional operas, including puppetry and shadow plays, bringing these art forms – many of which are endangered – into the spotlight and providing a platform for artistic exchange.

    Wang Wei, an actor of Liuzi Opera from Shandong Province, performed the role of General Zhang Fei to the gala, who is a famous character from the classic Chinese novel “The Romance of the Three Kingdoms.”

    To play the role more impressively, Wang often learns from other versions of this character to enrich his performance and finally he creates a brave and lovable General Zhang Fei. “This gala is such a good opportunity to learn from each other, I am very glad to stand on this stage to let more people know our Liuzi Opera,” Wang said.

    In addition to performances, the gala includes training workshops for performers of minor or endangered operatic forms. Xu Min, a composer and performer of tea-picking opera from Jiangxi Province, has attended these workshops for years.

    “If you focus only on your own art, you become isolated,” she said. “But here, I’m exposed to so many different plays, rhythms, and techniques. I feel like a sponge, absorbing everything.”

    Kunshan’s role as the birthplace of Kunqu Opera has positioned the city as a guardian of traditional Chinese opera, said Zhou Wei, Party chief of Kunshan. Through the construction of a museum dedicated to local operas and the host of annual national event, Kunshan endeavors to offer a space for art exchange and growth.

    “We want to create a broad stage for different operas to flourish and to integrate traditional culture with the modern world,” Zhou said. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: New tech at digital trade expo signals China’s foreign trade momentum

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

    HANGZHOU, Sept. 28 — The third Global Digital Trade Expo, currently unfolding in Hangzhou, capital of east China’s Zhejiang Province, is offering a glimpse into avant-garde technologies that are unlocking the country’s burgeoning potential in foreign trade.

    Over the span of five days, the exhibition is featuring 446 new products and technologies, ranging from robots performing remarkable tasks like opening bottles and sorting waste to AI-driven digital humans engaging in debate competitions.

    “I was impressed most by medical AI displayed at the exhibition, such as robotic surgical arms and screening clinics,” said Kgaladi Melia Thema, a consultant for innovation and technology of Small Enterprise Development Agency, South Africa.

    “Nurses can use chronic disease management screening products for patients, which can be applied both at home and in clinics. This reduces costs and enables remote patient monitoring, offering great potential,” she added.

    Digital technologies such as big data, cloud computing and blockchain are taking center stage at the expo, underscoring how China is harnessing these innovations to propel its foreign trade.

    At the booth of iFLYTEK Co., Ltd., a front-runner in China’s AI and speech technology industry, several African visitors were immersed in real-time conversations with staff through a state-of-the-art multilingual AI-powered translation screen. Despite the bustling environment, the screen, equipped with advanced voice recognition technologies, accurately captured and responded to human voices.

    “Overseas business is poised to become a significant growth engine for us in the coming years. Our aspiration is for it to constitute one-third of our business segments in the future,” said Liu Qingfeng, chairman of iFLYTEK.

    Chinese cultural exports are also stealing the show at the exhibition. In the digital entertainment zone, innovative exhibits such as an AI-powered representation of Su Dongpo, a celebrated poet from the Song Dynasty (960-1279), a virtual museum of traditional Chinese music, as well as a 3D display of the four bronze animal heads from the Old Summer Palace (Yuanmingyuan), are offering visitors a fascinating glimpse into the richness of Chinese culture.

    “The fusion of digital technology with the splendor of traditional Chinese culture has not only expanded our export opportunities, but also invigorated the growth of China’s culture industry,” said Wu Shuang, a staff member of Zhejiang Kayou Animation Co., Ltd., a domestic card game creator.

    Visitors are also being treated to futuristic transportation solutions, including autonomous boat taxis and the electric Vertical Take-off and Landing (eVTOL) vehicles, all being showcased for the first time at this year’s expo.

    “China is rightly regarded as a global leader in digital technologies and innovations,” said Zhaslan Madiyev, minister of Digital Development, Innovations and Aerospace Industry of the Republic of Kazakhstan, adding that China’s advancement in digital trade is not only creating new avenues for cooperation, but also enhancing global trade infrastructure, fostering sustainable development worldwide.

    “Chinese technologies and innovations are enhancing supply chains, making them faster and more efficient, while also improving access to goods and services,” Madiyev noted.

    According to the Global Digital Trade Development Report 2024 released during the event, global digital trade soared to around 7.13 trillion U.S. dollars (about 1.02 trillion yuan) in 2023, up from 6.02 trillion U.S. dollars in 2021, marking an average annual growth rate of 8.8 percent.

    The report also highlighted that the import and export scale of China’s cross-border e-commerce reached 2.37 trillion yuan last year, up 15.3 percent year on year.

    Mercado Libre, a leading Latin American e-commerce platform, witnessed a 70-percent increase in online Chinese sellers and a 75-percent surge in their sales on its platform in 2023.

    The company has opened its cross-border e-commerce services to Chinese sellers in Mexico, Brazil, Chile and Colombia, according to its representative at the expo, who also emphasized the escalating significance of the Chinese market.

    As China’s sole national-level event focusing on the theme of digital trade, the expo has drawn over 1,500 enterprises, including more than 300 international companies, and over 30,000 purchasers this year.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: 75th National Day Farm and Gourmet Festival opens today (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    75th National Day Farm and Gourmet Festival opens today (with photos)
    75th National Day Farm and Gourmet Festival opens today (with photos)
    *********************************************************************

         The 75th National Day Farm and Gourmet Festival runs for four consecutive days between today (September 28) and October 1 at Fa Hui Park in Mong Kok to showcase a variety of local agricultural and fisheries products, offer authentic Hong Kong style cuisine and share the joy of National Day with members of the public.           Officiating at the opening ceremony, the Secretary for Environment and Ecology, Mr Tse Chin-wan noted that this year marks the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. By co-organising the Festival, the departments bring together local agricultural, fisheries, and catering industries to promote local agricultural and fisheries products and authentic cuisine. Members of the public can share the joy by indulging in this sumptuous feast for the eyes, ears and palate at the Festival.           The Festival is co-organised by the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department (FEHD); the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD); the Vegetable Marketing Organization (VMO); and the Fish Marketing Organization (FMO). Themed “Celebrating National Day Together, Vibrant Farm and Gourmet Exhibition, Intangible Cultural Heritage Adds Charm, Celebrities Perform for All”, a total of 60 agricultural and fisheries stalls will be on-site offering an array of agricultural and fisheries products for sale, including premium agricultural products (such as eggplants, mushrooms, dragon fruits, corn, sweet potatoes and various hydroponic vegetables) produced by local organic, accredited and hydroponic farms. Fresh fisheries products (such as spiny lobsters, pompanos, grey mullets, jade perches and speckled blue grouper) cultured and produced by local accredited fish farms, as well as premium local dried fisheries products, are also on offer.     ???The FMO and the VMO have also set up stalls to sell premium local agricultural and fisheries products, along with several newly launched signature products (including cherry wood smoked cobia fillet, four different flavors of collagen jelly and Shanghai smoked fish) for members of the public to choose from. In addition, there are 26 gourmet stalls on-site offering a variety of delicate dim sum, desserts and street food, as well as authentic cuisine made from local agricultural and fisheries products for members of the public to enjoy.           Meanwhile, with a view to allowing members of the public to learn more about the latest developments in local agricultural and fisheries industries, the Hong Kong agricultural and fisheries technology exhibition has been set up at the Festival. The exhibition area demonstrates how the industry boosts productivity, enhances the quality of local produce and promotes the sustainable development of the industries with the use of technology. The exhibition area provides an opportunity for members of the public to experience controlled environment hydroponic technology, farm mechanisation, smart greenhouse technology and a modern mariculture demonstration farm through virtual reality. Additionally, the exhibition area showcases a recirculating aquaculture system featuring newly cultivated local fisheries species. Visitors can also participate in agriculture and fisheries workshops to experience organic seedling planting and Gyotaku printing, as well as acquiring agricultural and fisheries knowledge and winning prizes by participating in booth games. Furthermore, a photo-taking spot displaying seasonal local crops and mascots of the Agriculture Hall and the Fisheries Hall is set up in the exhibition area for the public to take photos.           The FEHD will also set up a food and environmental hygiene exhibition area at the venue to introduce various livelihood-related services provided by the Department, including public cleansing services, and information relating to food business licenses. The Centre for Food Safety of the FEHD will also disseminate food safety information and introduce its collaboration with the food trade in safeguarding food safety. Apart from watching videos, members of the public may also participate in quiz games on interactive electronic devices in the exhibition area. The FEHD’s publicity vehicle, the Mobile Education Centre, will also be parked at the venue to allow members of the public to learn about food, personal and environmental hygiene in a fun and educational way. In addition, a photo-taking spot featuring Keep Clean Ambassador Ah Tak will be set up in the exhibition area to publicise the message of “Keep Hong Kong clean, we can do it”.           The Festival features an array of exhibitions related to intangible cultural heritage of the Mainland and Hong Kong. These exhibitions highlight the inheritance and transformation of Chinese culture for family enjoyment. The Festival also offers a variety of entertaining performances, including singing and cultural performances, as well as cooking demonstrations. Moreover, souvenirs will be given out while stocks last to visitors who answer simple questions related to the 75th National Day and the Festival.           Other officiating guests at the opening ceremony include Legislative Council Members Mr Tommy Cheung, Mr Steven Ho, Mr Yang Wing-kit; the Permanent Secretary for Environment and Ecology (Food), Miss Vivian Lau; the Under Secretary for Environment and Ecology, Miss Diane Wong; the Director of Food and Environmental Hygiene, Ms Irene Young; and the Director of Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation, Mr Mickey Lai.           The Festival is open from 10am to 8pm, with a free shuttle bus service provided by the organisers available to and from Shek Kip Mei MTR Station Exit C. Admission is free. Members of the public are welcome. Details of the event can be found at www.afcd.gov.hk/english/The75thNationalDayFarmandGourmetFestival/Main.html and on the Festival’s social media pages.           The Farm and Gourmet Festival is one of the highlight events in celebration of the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. For the latest information regarding other events, please visit the dedicated website (www.nationalday75.gov.hk/en).

     
    Ends/Saturday, September 28, 2024Issued at HKT 15:38

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: California Man Charged in Complaint Alleging He Injured Five People in Bomb Attack in Lobby of County Courthouse

    Source: US State of California

    A California man was charged today in a federal criminal complaint alleging he committed a bomb attack at a courthouse in Santa Maria, California, on Wednesday, in which at least five people were injured.

    Nathaniel James McGuire, 20, of Santa Maria, is charged with maliciously damaging a building by means of explosive.

    McGuire, who was arrested Wednesday shortly after the attack, is expected to make his initial appearance today in U.S. District Court in downtown Los Angeles.

    “This defendant will now face justice in federal court for his alleged attack that injured at least five people and struck fear across a county courthouse and an entire community,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Attacks on our public institutions and on public servants threaten the safety of our communities and the rule of law itself. Such attacks will not be tolerated by the Justice Department.”

    According to an affidavit filed with the complaint, on Sept. 25, McGuire entered a courthouse of Santa Barbara County Superior Court and threw a bag into the lobby. The bag exploded and McGuire left the courthouse on foot. The explosion injured at least five people who were present at the courthouse at that time.

    Shortly thereafter, McGuire was apprehended and detained by law enforcement officials as he was trying to access a red Ford Mustang car parked outside the building. McGuire allegedly yelled that the government had taken his guns and that everyone needed to fight, rise up, and rebel.

    Inside the car, a deputy saw ammunition, a flare gun, and a box of fireworks. A search of the car revealed a shotgun, a rifle, more ammunition, a suspected bomb, and 10 Molotov cocktails. Law enforcement later rendered the bomb safe.

    A search of McGuire’s residence revealed an empty can with nails glued to the outside, a duffel bag containing matches, black powder, used and unused fireworks, and papers that appeared to be recipes for explosive material.

    “This defendant’s alleged misconduct was chilling,” said U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada for Central District of California. “Not only did he injure five people and traumatize many more, but he possessed a cache of weapons that would have allowed him to wreak even greater destruction had he not been stopped. Attacks on our courts, law enforcement officers, and other public servants are unacceptable, and it is critical that those who carry out such assaults be prosecuted to the fullest extent.”

    “The idea of intentionally setting off an explosive device to do harm and avoid justice in the process shocks the conscience,” said Assistant Director in Charge Akil Davis of the FBI Los Angeles Field Office. “Make no mistake, we are committed to holding McGuire accountable for this blatant act of violence. As always, we encourage the public to remain vigilant and to promptly report suspicious activities which could represent a threat to public safety.”

    “This was a shocking and unprecedented crime in our county, but, in spite of its audacity, the security of the Santa Maria courthouse was maintained,” said Sheriff Bill Brown of Santa Barbara County. “The suspect was swiftly apprehended by a court security officer, a sheriff’s deputy, two California Highway Patrol officers, and a district attorney’s investigator; we are proud of their resolute actions that almost certainly prevented further violence. We are also grateful for the substantial investigative assistance that has been provided by our colleagues with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and from U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada and his office.”

    If convicted, McGuire faces a mandatory minimum penalty of seven years in prison and a maximum penalty of 40 years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    The FBI and Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office are investigating the case.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mark Takla and Kathrynne N. Seiden for the Central District of California are prosecuting this case with substantial assistance from Trial Attorney Patrick Cashman of the Justice Department’s National Security Division.

    A complaint is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: California Man Charged in Complaint Alleging He Injured Five People in Bomb Attack in Lobby of County Courthouse

    Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

    A California man was charged today in a federal criminal complaint alleging he committed a bomb attack at a courthouse in Santa Maria, California, on Wednesday, in which at least five people were injured.

    Nathaniel James McGuire, 20, of Santa Maria, is charged with maliciously damaging a building by means of explosive.

    McGuire, who was arrested Wednesday shortly after the attack, is expected to make his initial appearance today in U.S. District Court in downtown Los Angeles.

    “This defendant will now face justice in federal court for his alleged attack that injured at least five people and struck fear across a county courthouse and an entire community,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Attacks on our public institutions and on public servants threaten the safety of our communities and the rule of law itself. Such attacks will not be tolerated by the Justice Department.”

    According to an affidavit filed with the complaint, on Sept. 25, McGuire entered a courthouse of Santa Barbara County Superior Court and threw a bag into the lobby. The bag exploded and McGuire left the courthouse on foot. The explosion injured at least five people who were present at the courthouse at that time.

    Shortly thereafter, McGuire was apprehended and detained by law enforcement officials as he was trying to access a red Ford Mustang car parked outside the building. McGuire allegedly yelled that the government had taken his guns and that everyone needed to fight, rise up, and rebel.

    Inside the car, a deputy saw ammunition, a flare gun, and a box of fireworks. A search of the car revealed a shotgun, a rifle, more ammunition, a suspected bomb, and 10 Molotov cocktails. Law enforcement later rendered the bomb safe.

    A search of McGuire’s residence revealed an empty can with nails glued to the outside, a duffel bag containing matches, black powder, used and unused fireworks, and papers that appeared to be recipes for explosive material.

    “This defendant’s alleged misconduct was chilling,” said U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada for Central District of California. “Not only did he injure five people and traumatize many more, but he possessed a cache of weapons that would have allowed him to wreak even greater destruction had he not been stopped. Attacks on our courts, law enforcement officers, and other public servants are unacceptable, and it is critical that those who carry out such assaults be prosecuted to the fullest extent.”

    “The idea of intentionally setting off an explosive device to do harm and avoid justice in the process shocks the conscience,” said Assistant Director in Charge Akil Davis of the FBI Los Angeles Field Office. “Make no mistake, we are committed to holding McGuire accountable for this blatant act of violence. As always, we encourage the public to remain vigilant and to promptly report suspicious activities which could represent a threat to public safety.”

    “This was a shocking and unprecedented crime in our county, but, in spite of its audacity, the security of the Santa Maria courthouse was maintained,” said Sheriff Bill Brown of Santa Barbara County. “The suspect was swiftly apprehended by a court security officer, a sheriff’s deputy, two California Highway Patrol officers, and a district attorney’s investigator; we are proud of their resolute actions that almost certainly prevented further violence. We are also grateful for the substantial investigative assistance that has been provided by our colleagues with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and from U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada and his office.”

    If convicted, McGuire faces a mandatory minimum penalty of seven years in prison and a maximum penalty of 40 years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    The FBI and Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office are investigating the case.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mark Takla and Kathrynne N. Seiden for the Central District of California are prosecuting this case with substantial assistance from Trial Attorney Patrick Cashman of the Justice Department’s National Security Division.

    A complaint is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. 

    MIL Security OSI