China announced export controls on rare earth element-related technologies.

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

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

Beijing, October 9 (Xinhua) — China's Ministry of Commerce announced Thursday the introduction of export control measures against rare earth element-related technologies. These measures are effective upon publication.

Foreign organizations and individuals must obtain a dual-use export license before exporting certain rare earth element-related goods to countries and regions outside China, according to a statement from China's Ministry of Commerce.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Israel and Hamas signed the first phase of the peace plan, according to Donald Trump.

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

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

WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (Xinhua) — US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday on the social media platform TruthSocial that Israel and Hamas have signed the first phase of his proposed peace plan.

“This means that all hostages will be released very soon, and Israel will withdraw its forces to the agreed upon lines as the first steps toward a strong, lasting and everlasting peace,” Trump wrote.

He thanked the mediators from Qatar, Egypt and Turkey for this “historic and unprecedented event.”

Speaking to reporters earlier in the day at the White House, Trump said he might travel to the Middle East "later this weekend."

Israel and Hamas began indirect ceasefire talks in Gaza on Monday in Egypt's Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

Since the war began on October 7, 2023, Israeli airstrikes have devastated the Gaza Strip, causing widespread famine and displacement. According to Gaza health authorities, at least 67,183 people have been killed and 169,841 wounded.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

The city of Kucha is an open-air museum.

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

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

The city of Kucha, designated a historical and cultural city of national significance, is located in the central part of the southern foothills of the Tien Shan, on the northern edge of the Tarim Basin. As an important transportation hub on the ancient Silk Road, it became a place where diverse cultures merged, giving birth to a vibrant and distinctive civilization.

Cave temples, ancient castles, beacon towers… Of the 180 cultural relics in Kucha, two are listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites, 11 are national monuments, and 41 are regional monuments. In 2023, Kucha was included in the second list of national pilot zones for the protection and utilization of cultural heritage.

The entire city resembles an open-air museum, and its centuries-old culture can be felt at every step.

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Breaking: Final draft of Gaza ceasefire agreement under development – mediators

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

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

Cairo, October 9 (Xinhua) — An agreement covering all provisions and mechanisms for implementing the first phase of the ceasefire in Gaza has been reached. The final draft of the agreement is currently being drafted, Egypt's Al-Qahera News TV reported Thursday, citing mediators in the negotiations between Israel and Hamas.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Moscow Metro – Maxim Liksutov spoke about the achievements of Moscow industry

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Source: Moscow Metro

According to the Moscow Government's Department of Transport, the capital has become the largest consumer and producer of electric vehicles. The city's industry closely cooperates with the transport sector. It produces 57% of all Russian electric vehicles and is home to two companies in the passenger electric vehicle segment—Moskvich and Atom.


Maxim Liksutov spoke about the achievements of Moscow industry.

Moscow is a leader in transport engineering, not only in Russia but also globally. For example, the SVARZ plant in Sokolniki is developing production of the most advanced KAMAZ electric buses. Final assembly of the eco-friendly vehicles is carried out here.

All complex microelectronics for suburban rolling stock are produced in the capital.

Moscow companies produce high-tech equipment for traffic management systems, smart road signs, and traffic lights.

At the behest of Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, the Technopolis Moscow Special Economic Zone is focusing on developing social infrastructure. Employees have access to a variety of sports facilities and services.

The city is successfully developing a joint project with Rosatom to create a modern Gigafactory. The plant will produce traction batteries for electric vehicles, electric buses, and electric vessels.

The UN Pathfinder Award: When the World Doesn't End Behind Prison Walls

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Source: United Nations – United Nations –

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38-year-old Kemi, as her family calls her, decided to consult with her family and called home.

"I talked to my husband," she recalls, "and he said, 'Why are you asking? Go! Agree!'"

His enthusiasm encouraged Kemi, but she wasn't sure he could manage at home alone with two children, aged seven and ten.

After listening to her concerns, her husband disarmed her with a counter-question: "Do you know our children's last name? It's my last name. I'll take care of them."

Attention to detail

By 2020, Kemi was already an indispensable figure in many ways within the Nigerian Prison Service. A leaky roof, a crack in a wall, a new prison block project—it all came down to her. In Lagos State, she oversaw five facilities housing nearly 9,000 inmates.

The work required meticulous attention to detail, but this was precisely the trait characteristic of the determined Kemi, a geologist by training. She knew: no glass windows or ceramic sinks that could be broken and the shards used as weapons. Bars—the strongest, letting in enough light, but impossible to crawl through.

"We seek a balance between respect for human dignity and safety," says Kemi, emphasizing that even in a prison cell, the toilet must provide privacy. "We use stalls where the feet are visible, but everything else is covered up to the neck—so we can tell if a person is attempting suicide."

"Competence has no gender"

Security and respect for human dignity—this is the balance the UN required to implement its projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo. "Competence has no gender," Kemi emphasizes.

In Kinshasa, the capital of the DRC, Kemi was to participate in prison system reform, which included rethinking the architecture and design of prisons.

Reform begins with drawings

The peacekeeping mission's leadership urged the DRC authorities to implement international standards—the Mandela Rules and the UN Bangkok Rules—which call for humane and gender-sensitive treatment of prisoners, but the proposals met with resistance.

"They didn't understand why a prison needed a library, a gym, or a workshop," Kemi recalls. Then she changed her approach: she explained that a gym meant healthy prisoners, and a library meant books instead of escape plans.

The arguments, though not immediately effective, were effective. The UN team drew up a plan for the construction of new buildings and a list of existing ones, indicating which needed to be renovated and which needed to be closed.

Kemi insisted on building separate women's prisons. "Setting up a women's block in a men's prison isn't enough," she insisted, arguing that this paved the way for sexual violence. If complete separation couldn't be achieved, fences and separate corridors were necessary.

© MONUSCO

Olukemi Ibikunle organizes a sewing workshop for female prisoners in eastern DRC.

Breaking stereotypes

While working in the DRC, Kemi repeatedly encountered sexism: some short girl demanding to see receipts, checking the strength of rebar, asking questions about the sand content in cement?!

Speaking her native dialect and Nigerian English didn't help much. She learned technical terms in French and learned how to combat inflated budgets. "This is clearly too much," she said bluntly. "We'll have to cut the budget."

Contractors called Kinshasa with complaints, but were always told: "Discuss it with Kemi."

Time of Troubles

In 2023, Kemi worked in Kabare, South Kivu province, overseeing the construction of a maximum-security prison with a budget of $850,000. The facility housed dangerous prisoners associated with armed groups.

By that time, the UN mission had already withdrawn its peacekeepers from South Kivu, leaving only a team of prison guards. When the militants approached the outskirts of the city, Kemi found herself alone.

The evacuation was chaotic. "We left through land corridors, without UN logistics, everyone found their own way," she recalls.

Lake Kivu was under M23 control, and the waterway was closed. She managed to escape the danger zone with a backpack, along with two fellow human rights activists, just hours before the city fell.

Her worried husband texted her on WhatsApp: "Where are you? Is everything okay?" She replied evasively: "Everything is fine." Only now does she admit it was scary: "We who managed to escape are now like one family."

At the Rwandan border, her documents aroused suspicion. "You're from the police," they told her. Kemi said she was from the prison service. "It's the same thing," the border guards insisted.

They detained her, then called somewhere, checked something for a long time – and finally let her through.

She now works in the city of Beni, North Kivu, which the DRC government retains control over. The project in Kabara is on hold.

UN Photo/E. Schneider

UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed presents Olukemi Ibikunle with the Pathfinder Award.

"Pioneer"

This week, Kemi was named the recipient of the UN Trailblazer Award, given to women who are "changing the face of justice" and contributing to prison reform. She received the award on Wednesday at UN Headquarters in New York, where she has already become a local celebrity. On her way to the interview, a UN security guard, himself originally from Nigeria, recognized her and approached her to congratulate her.

Uvira: Fuel from waste

Kemi's most vivid memories aren't of the war, but of projects that transform everyday life. One of them is especially dear to her: a biogas system launched in 2021 at the Uvira prison. Human waste is converted into gas for cooking. Forests are no longer cut down for firewood. The sewage system functions without interruption. "And there's no more smell," she emphasizes.

Guards and prisoners were trained to operate the new system. After the UN peacekeeping mission left, the water supply stopped, so a well was drilled. In 2024, Kemi drove eight hours to check on site: everything was working. The prison staff said, "This is the best thing you've done for us."

Women from Bukavu

Kemi has another vivid memory of a prison in Bukavu, where 80 women and over 1,400 men were held. Every morning, the male prisoners received their legal rations, while the women received nothing. Prison officials explained this by saying that the women received food parcels from their families, and also received some donations from charities. Why else would they spend money from the prison budget?

The kitchen was a sad sight: soot on the walls, broken stoves, and the women cooking on a single coal burner. Kemi wasn't happy about this: she scooped up two thousand dollars from the meager prison budget, bought the cookware, hired technicians, and stood by, overseeing the work until the kitchen came back to life.

The main obstacle was bureaucracy. Kemi argued with the prison warden that food was owed to all prisoners, not just men. For two weeks in a row, she arrived at seven in the morning and oversaw the food distribution—until fairness became the norm: women received food equally with men.

If the prisoners couldn't thank her out loud, they did so silently—with a short, silent thumbs-up every time she entered the yard.

© MONUSCO

The price of separation

During her business trips, Kemi never forgets about her family – she communicates with her husband and children on the phone.

“We talk on WhatsApp,” she says. “The kids always call on the way to school. When I flew here [to New York – ed.], there was Wi-Fi on the plane, so I could talk to them there too.”

When Kemi first left Nigeria for Congo, her seven-year-old son feigned indifference: "Leaving tomorrow? Okay, see you later." Her eldest daughter hugged her and asked her to stay "just five more minutes."

After the chaos of the evacuation from the DRC, the boy—now a teenager—cries every time his mother leaves: "Don't go. You don't have to work. Daddy will take care of us."

In response, she assures: "It's not just about the money. I'm doing this for myself—and for all of us."

This Wednesday, in New York City, Kemi took the stage to accept the Trailblazer Award. A few celebratory minutes—applause, a photo op, congratulations… And then she'll return to her work routine: drawing up plans, filling out forms, morning checks—and the long, hard fight to prove that the world doesn't end behind prison walls.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Top Stories of the Day | Wednesday: Gaza, Madagascar, Haiti, Yemen

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Source: United Nations – United Nations –

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October 8, 2025 UN

The top news of the day at the UN and around the world: 83 percent of buildings in Gaza City were damaged, the Secretary-General spoke about the violence in Madagascar, more than 3 million children in Haiti need aid, and the detention of UN employees in Yemen.

The Gaza crisis

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reports that Israeli military operations are continuing in Gaza City, making the already dire humanitarian situation even more dangerous. The UN Satellite Centre published a preliminary analysis on Wednesday, according to which 83 percent of all structures in the city have been damaged, including approximately 81,000 housing units. Meanwhile, humanitarian agencies on the ground warn that many people are unable to leave the northern enclave due to security conditions.

Protests in Madagascar

Secretary General Antonio Guterres The UN Secretary-General's press service stated today that he is closely monitoring the situation in Madagascar. Guterres is deeply saddened by the loss of life and destruction that have occurred since the youth protests in the country began on September 25. He expresses his sincere condolences to the families of the victims and calls on the authorities to uphold international human rights standards. The Secretary-General also emphasizes that protests must proceed peacefully, with respect for human life, property, and the rule of law. The UN chief called for dialogue to develop a constructive path forward.

Children of Haiti

The number of children forced from their homes by violence in Haiti has nearly doubled in the past year. Currently, 680,000 young people are internally displaced, according to a new report from the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). A total of 3.3 million children—the highest number ever recorded—require humanitarian assistance. Cases of acute malnutrition, underage recruitment by armed groups, gender-based violence, and other child rights violations have increased.

UN staff in Yemen

UN Spokesman Stéphane Dujarric announced today at a press briefing in New York that, following the confirmation of another UN employee's detention in Yemen the previous day, the country announced his release today. According to the UN, the total number of UN staff members currently detained by the Houthis stands at 53. Some of them have been held since 2021.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

INTERVIEW | Father of Israeli hostage calls for end to war, two-state solution

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Source: United Nations – United Nations –

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October 8, 2025 Peace and security

Two years after his son was taken hostage in a Hamas terrorist attack on Israel, Yehuda Cohen continues to fight tirelessly for his release and for a lasting political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

On October 7, 2023, Corporal Nimrod Cohen was guarding an area near Kibbutz Nirim, near the Gaza border, when his tank malfunctioned. Nimrod was captured, and his unit comrades were killed. His father received reliable information, including from some of the freed hostages, that his son was still alive and in Gaza. He was last seen in the Khan Yunis area.

"An Ordinary Boy"

"Nimrod is an ordinary boy," Yehuda told the United Nations News Service.

"We're not talking about Nimrod because he's a rock star, a pop star, or a sports star. He's an ordinary guy who did his duty to his country and served in the army, and he was unlucky," he adds.

The attackers killed more than 1,250 Israelis and foreign citizens. More than 250 people were taken hostage, including women, children, and the elderly. Eyewitnesses to the events of October 7 described rape, sexual torture, and inhumane treatment.

"The Hamas attack was not carried out to liberate any territory or to do anything for the benefit of the Palestinian people. It was a vile attack aimed at breaking Israeli morale," Cohen said.

After the incident, Yehuda, his wife Vicky, and son Yotam joined the families of other hostages. They called on international leaders to pressure Hamas and the Israeli government to reach a ceasefire and release the hostages. The Cohen family met with the UN Secretary-General. Antonio Guterresand other high-ranking UN officials in New York and Geneva. The hostages' families also appealed to countries such as France and the United States.

Two-state solution

Cohen stated that it was a constant struggle: marches, rallies, demonstrations on the streets of Israel, appearances in local and international media. All aimed at reaching out to world leaders and telling them that "pressure must be applied to both sides" of the conflict—the Israeli government and the militants.

“I even talk to the Palestinians,” he continued, emphasizing that the release of the hostages and the end of the conflict would benefit both Israel and the entire Middle East.

Israelis and Palestinians alike aspire to a normal life, which is not consistent with the extremist views of some members of the Israeli government or Hamas, he added.

"We want to live a normal life side by side, and the only way to achieve that is by reaching an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians so that in the future we can say 'Israel and Palestine'; that's a two-state solution. There is no other way," Cohen added.

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Financial news: 08.10.2025, 14-23 (Moscow time) the values of the upper limit of the price corridor and the range of market risk assessment for the security RU000A0JWV89 (Akron B1P1) were changed.

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Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

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October 8, 2025, 2:23 PM

In accordance with the Methodology for determining the risk parameters of the stock market and deposit market of PJSC Moscow Exchange by the National Credit Center (JSC) on October 8, 2025, 14:23 (Moscow time), the values of the upper limit of the price corridor (up to 96.07) and the range of market risk assessment (up to 996.66 rubles, equivalent to a rate of 12.0%) for security RU000A0JWV89 (Akron B1P1) were changed.

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Financial News: Over 1 million people voted for the symbols for the 500-ruble banknote.

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Source: Central Bank of Russia

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More than 1.1 million people have already participated in the online vote for symbols for the 500-ruble banknote dedicated to the North Caucasus Federal District.

The leading Pyatigorsk landmarks chosen for the banknote's front side include the Academic (Elizabeth) Gallery, a sculpture of an eagle tearing a snake, Mount Beshtau, and the Lermontov Gallery. Among the symbols of the North Caucasus Federal District's regions chosen for the back side, Mount Elbrus, Grozny City, and the Derbent Fortress received the most votes.

"We're not choosing a single main symbol," explains Sergey Belov, Deputy Chairman of the Bank of Russia. "It's important for us to understand people's favorite places and monuments in the North Caucasus Federal District, what they associate with this land, so we can use these symbols in the banknote design. The vote winners could either be the centerpiece or a secondary decoration."

The Bank of Russia will announce the final results on October 14 at 12:00 Moscow time.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.