Breaking News: China Ready to Build a More Stable Strategic Partnership with Australia – Premier of the State Council of China

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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

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct. 27 (Xinhua) — Chinese Premier Li Qiang said Monday that China is willing to maintain strategic ties with Australia, expand mutually beneficial cooperation, and continue to work together to build a more mature and stable China-Australia comprehensive strategic partnership.

He made the statement during a meeting with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on the sidelines of meetings on East Asian cooperation. Li Qiang also noted that it was gratifying to see that China-Australia relations are currently showing a positive trend.

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.

A development by NSU scientists will speed up the search for the most effective cancer drugs

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Source: Novosibirsk State University –

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Russian scientists have developed a new combined approach aimed at identifying the binding sites of drugs used in photodynamic oncotherapy with the protein responsible for drug transport in the human body. This approach will accelerate the search for the most effective cancer drugs and minimize side effects on patients. This study was conducted by a team of scientists from Novosibirsk State University, the International Tomography Center of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and staff from the Russian Technological University MIREA.

The results of the study were published in Journal of the American Chemical SocietyThe mere fact of publication in such a prestigious and highly cited journal is already considered a success for young researchers, and this article was accepted for publication in the "Editor's Choice" section, demonstrating the recognition of the research by the international professional community. The publication's lead author, Mikhail Kolokolov, a second-year graduate student in the Department of Chemical and Biological Physics at the NSU Physics Faculty and a junior researcher at the Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Laboratory of the International Tomography Center, received the prestigious youth award from the International Society for EPR Spectroscopy for best scientific paper. The young scientist conducted his research with fourth-year graduate student Natalia Sannikova from the same department, under the supervision of Olesya Krumkacheva, Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Sciences.

When medications enter the human body, they primarily bind to proteins in the blood. The effectiveness of a particular drug depends on its binding to serum albumin, a protein found in blood plasma responsible for transporting substances within the body. The degree of binding to this protein significantly influences the drug's action. If binding is too strong, the drug's concentration in the blood will be reduced, while if binding is weak, the drug may be unevenly distributed throughout the body or even destroyed without achieving its intended effect.

“To create an effective drug and control its binding to the transport protein, it is important to know where on the protein its molecules will attach. Identifying such sites will lead to understanding the mechanism of action of drugs, predicting side effects and identifying the causes of drug resistance in some patients. However, traditional methods of structural biology are not effective enough if there are several binding sites or the interaction of the drug with the protein surface is unstable. Then researchers use the molecular modeling method, but its results are not enough, since drugs often bind to the protein in several places. Thus, several small drug molecules can be attached to one protein simultaneously and at different sites. Thus, many variants of the structure of such complexes are obtained, which becomes difficult to take into account by molecular modeling. We proposed our own combined approach that allows us to measure the distance between various elements of the complex and use them to obtain its structure. Previously used methods produce average values, but in our case it is possible to achieve atomic precision in measuring the distribution of distances between binding sites, “see” all possible conformations (that is, the spatial arrangements of atoms in a molecule of a certain configuration) and find places where small molecules of a substance bind to a protein. This is the most important element of our work. In our approach, we measure distances within the complex using spin labels. A special small molecule containing an unpaired spin is selectively introduced into a region of the protein that we know. After binding the protein to the drug, we can measure the spin-spin distances between the spin label and the drug molecules on the protein,” explained Mikhail Kolokolov.

In their approach, the scientists combined molecular modeling methods with experimental data obtained using electron paramagnetic resonance, which allows the structure of compounds to be determined based on their microwave absorption. They first identified potential drug-protein binding sites using calculations, then conducted EPR spectroscopy studies, and then applied the experimental results and computer calculations to refine the configuration of these sites. This work was carried out by Mikhail Kolokolov and Natalia Sannikova, graduate students from the NSU Physics Department and junior research fellows at the EPR Laboratory of the International Tomography Center. It was discovered that binding for various types of photosensitizers can occur at non-standard sites on albumin and at several sites simultaneously.

"In theory, you can even determine where a molecule binds to a protein without any experiments, simply using computational methods. However, in practice, it turns out that these methods lead to significant inaccuracies and even errors because the calculation algorithms are relatively simplified. For this reason, scientists are often unsure of their results. Furthermore, computational methods can yield several possible binding sites and their locations. And often, from a calculation standpoint, these options are equally likely. The question is which one is correct. For this reason, the computational method is not precise enough and should not be relied upon entirely. However, it is still useful because it provides direction for experimental research, allowing us to narrow the range of possible binding sites. Thanks to this, we can use our experimental distances, which we are confident in, along with the computational methods, to determine the presence of a molecule on a protein with sufficient accuracy," explained Mikhail Kolokolov.

The scientists tested their combined approach by studying the binding of albumin to photosensitizers.

Photosensitizers are natural or synthetic substances that are used in medicine, for example in photodynamic therapy (PDT), where they accumulate in pathological cells and are activated when irradiated with light, causing their death.

Photodynamic oncotherapy is considered a very promising method because, unlike traditional chemotherapy, it targets only the tumors that are exposed to light. However, this cancer treatment method is currently not widely used due to the imperfections of photosensitizers. Scientists are faced with the challenge of improving their light absorption, diffusion throughout the body, and accumulation in tumors. This study of the albumin-binding sites of photosensitizers is important for further improving their diffusion throughout the body and increasing their concentration in tumors, which will contribute to increased therapeutic efficacy. Therefore, work in this area has significant clinical significance.

Scientists have identified the locations of binding sites for seven compounds whose structural interactions with albumin were previously unclear. The new approach demonstrated that binding can occur at non-standard sites on albumin and at multiple sites simultaneously for different types of photosensitizers.

The scientists tested the effectiveness of their combined approach using several photosensitizers. To demonstrate different binding mechanisms, they used compounds whose molecules had different electrical charges—negative, positive, and neutral. It turned out that, depending on this charge, they bind differently to the protein, which in this case was negatively charged. Molecules with a positive or neutral charge "sit" on the negatively charged surface of the protein and form an unstable bond—they can temporarily detach and reattach.

Negatively charged molecules behave differently—they penetrate pockets on the protein surface and remain there stably. However, in this case, their size plays a key role. Relatively small molecules fit completely into these pockets and formed very effective binding, while larger molecules behave differently.

Experiments have shown that the smaller the molecule and the more completely it fits into these pockets, the higher the site population. Experiments with larger molecules that fit less freely into these pockets yield lower populations and less effective binding. The researchers observed these processes directly in experiments. This molecular behavior is logical, but computational methods don't account for it. While they can determine how a molecule binds to a protein, they don't determine how this affects the protein itself. If small molecules fit freely into the pocket, no significant changes occur. However, large molecules can alter the protein structure. Computational methods often don't capture this, but the researchers corrected these errors and inaccuracies through experiments.

"Throughout all our experiments in this study, we demonstrated with atomic precision where the molecules of these compounds bind to albumin, which is undoubtedly a novelty in terms of photostabilizer development. The combined approach we developed will make the analysis of anticancer compounds significantly more accurate, and the development of new oncotherapy drugs simpler and faster. By combining computer analysis and electron paramagnetic resonance data, we were able to significantly reduce the number of labor-intensive calculations and experiments, simplifying the determination of interactions between albumin and photosensitizers. We believe our work will enable us to predict the most promising compounds for photodynamic anticancer therapy. We now plan to apply our approach to study how photosensitizers bind to DNA molecules," explained Mikhail Kolokolov.

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.

As a result of the attacks on Kyiv, civilians, including children, were killed and injured.

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Source: United Nations – United Nations –

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October 26, 2025 Humanitarian aid

The attacks on Kyiv over the past two nights have killed and injured civilians, including children. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported this on its X social media page.

According to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), seven children were injured. The child casualty toll is rising amid ongoing "brutal attacks on populated areas across Ukraine," the fund notes.

“Protect the children. Stop the attacks,” UNICEF said.

The UNHCR also reports that residential buildings and civilian infrastructure were damaged as a result of the attacks on Kyiv.

“Civilians and civilian infrastructure are not targets,” the Directorate emphasized.

With the onset of cold weather, the situation for the population of Ukraine is only worsening, the OCHA notes.

In Kherson, which was subjected to intense shelling, humanitarian teams provided affected civilians with essential supplies, materials for home repairs, and medical and psychological support.

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.

Representatives from China and Kyrgyzstan discussed investment opportunities and legal norms in Central Asia.

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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

Bishkek, October 26 (Xinhua) — As part of China Arbitration Week 2025, a meeting entitled "Analyzing the Legal Environment and Responding to Investment Risks in Central Asia" was held in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, on Sunday. Around 100 representatives from political, business, and legal circles in China and Kyrgyzstan attended the event, discussing investment opportunities and legal norms in Central Asia.

Temir Sariev, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Kyrgyz Republic, stated that Kyrgyzstan is open to all forms of partnership. "We are ready to further strengthen cooperation with Chinese and international legal institutions, develop the institution of arbitration, and work together to build a reliable legal infrastructure for business in our region," he emphasized.

Kyrgyz Deputy Minister of Justice Saira Yzakova noted that Chinese investment is playing an increasingly significant role in the development of infrastructure, industry, and energy. "Our goal is to create conditions where every investor feels legally protected, and each party feels confident in a fair decision," she added.

As Chinese-Kyrgyz cooperation deepens and expands, businesses increasingly need a stable, transparent, and predictable legal environment, Liu Jie, executive director of the Shaanxi Provincial Entrepreneurs Association of the Revolutionary Committee of the Kuomintang of China and director of the Xi'an and Bishkek branches of Beijing Haotian Law Firm, said in an interview with Xinhua. "We hope that our event will allow more Chinese companies to become familiar with Kyrgyzstan's investment opportunities, and that cooperation between the two countries will become more stable and sustainable within the rule of law," Liu Jie said.

The meeting program included keynote addresses and two roundtable discussions. Chinese and Kyrgyz experts exchanged views on topics such as Kyrgyzstan's investment experience, the market environment in Central Asia, mediation development trends in the region, as well as general legal risks in the investment sector and dispute resolution strategies.

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 has given permission for Red Cross and Egyptian teams to search for hostage bodies in Gaza.

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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

Jerusalem, October 26 (Xinhua) — Red Cross and Egyptian teams have been granted permission to enter the Gaza Strip to search for hostage bodies, Israeli government spokesperson Shosh Bedrosian announced on Sunday.

Speaking at a briefing, Sh. Bedrosyan reported that Israel has allowed teams assisting in search operations to move beyond the "yellow line," which marks the border of the Israeli troop withdrawal zone in accordance with the current ceasefire agreement.

Sh. Bedrosyan noted that the Palestinian movement Hamas has yet to return the bodies of 13 hostages. According to the agreement, Hamas is obligated to hand over the remains of 28 dead hostages in addition to the 20 living hostages released earlier this month.

The statement came after Hamas announced it was expanding its search for the bodies of the dead hostages and a day after an Egyptian team of experts with heavy equipment entered Gaza to assist in the search efforts.

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.

China has created the world's most sophisticated maritime justice system, according to a report.

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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 26 (Xinhua) — China has created the world's most advanced maritime judicial system, with the largest number of such cases and the broadest range of judicial procedures, according to a report from the Supreme People's Court of China.

A report on maritime cases in China's people's courts was submitted for discussion on Sunday at the 18th session of the Standing Committee of the 14th National People's Congress (NPC).

According to the report, China established its first group of maritime courts based on a relevant decision of the NPC Standing Committee in November 1984. Over the past four decades, the country has established 11 maritime courts with inter-regional jurisdiction and 42 mobile courts.

The report emphasizes that the number of maritime cases has increased significantly over the period, and their typology has expanded significantly. The annual number of cases heard has increased from 18 in 1984 to 34,400 in 2024. The typology of cases has expanded from traditional disputes related to maritime trade and shipping to include areas such as marine resource development, environmental protection, port and terminal construction, maritime culture, and tourism.

Furthermore, China played a key role in shaping international maritime law. As the report notes, the Beijing Convention on the Judicial Sale of Ships, based on Chinese jurisprudence, became the first international maritime convention named after a Chinese city adopted by the UN General Assembly.

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China will resolutely promote high-level opening-up and continuously optimize the business environment – Li Qiang

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

Singapore, October 26 (Xinhua) — China will resolutely advance high-level opening-up, further facilitate market access, continuously optimize the business environment, and actively address the concerns of enterprises. Chinese Premier Li Qiang announced this on Sunday at a symposium attended by representatives of the Chinese and Singaporean business communities during his official visit to Singapore.

He attended the symposium together with Singapore's Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong.

After hearing speeches from representatives of enterprises from both countries, Li Qiang noted that over the past 35 years, thanks to the joint efforts of China and Singapore, friendly interstate cooperation has achieved significant progress and yielded fruitful results.

According to him, experience convincingly demonstrates that the development of each country provides an important opportunity for the other. He emphasized that if both sides adhere to the principles of mutual respect, trust, openness, and cooperation, they will be able to prosper together and create a bright future through mutual success.

As Li Qiang recalled, the visa-free regime agreement between China and Singapore officially entered into force last year, and the free trade agreement was also updated, which provided new important opportunities for cooperation and development between the two countries.

Speaking about prospects, the Premier noted that China-Singapore cooperation will continue to continuously improve and acquire new distinctive features. This will not only require the joint efforts of both countries' business communities but will also bring new opportunities for the development of enterprises in both countries and around the world, he added.

First, Li Qiang called for raising the qualitative level of bilateral cooperation, moving from "complementary factors" to "coordinated innovation." He argued that China's comprehensive industrial system, diverse application scenarios, and growing number of cutting-edge scientific and technological achievements, combined with Singapore's highly internationalized innovation ecosystem and advanced financial services, could unleash even more powerful drivers of innovation development.

Secondly, Li Qiang emphasized the need to move from "bilateral cooperation" to "trilateral cooperation." He stated that China supports companies from both countries in exploring more flexible approaches to cooperation, actively leveraging platforms such as new land-sea corridors to actively engage with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Africa, and jointly exploring a broader market space.

Third, Li Qiang called on both sides to move from "participating in the international division of labor" to "jointly leading the development of rules." He noted that China and Singapore can take more proactive and constructive steps to more closely align standards and regulations in emerging areas such as the digital and green economies, actively guiding the development and transformation of the global industrial system.

According to the Premier of the State Council, at the recently concluded 4th Plenary Session of the 20th CPC Central Committee, proposals for drafting the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030) were reviewed and adopted, outlining a general strategic program for China's development over the next five years.

China's economy has a solid foundation for stable operation, its growth rate is among the fastest among major economies in the world, and the flows of people, goods, information, and capital remain dynamic, while new growth drivers are becoming increasingly powerful, which will provide enterprises with greater market opportunities in the future, Li Qiang emphasized.

He assured that China will adhere to equal treatment of domestic and foreign enterprises and support Chinese and Singaporean companies to achieve greater progress.

For his part, Gan Kim Yong stated that thanks to the painstaking efforts of several generations of leaders of the two countries, the current Singapore-China relations are distinguished by a solid foundation and close cooperation, with each side having become an important trade and investment partner for the other.

Gan Kim Yong emphasized that Singapore is committed to jointly advancing a high-quality, future-oriented comprehensive partnership with China and looks forward to using the 35th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations this year as an opportunity to expand trade and investment, explore cooperation opportunities in emerging areas such as the digital and green economies, strengthen coordination in multilateral fora, and achieve common development based on the spirit of mutual respect and mutual benefit.

Business representatives attending the event noted that trade and economic cooperation between China and Singapore contributes to the development and prosperity of both countries and the entire region. Singaporean businesses expressed optimism about China's development prospects and expressed their intention to continue investing in the country, confident that the process of Chinese-style modernization will open up even more opportunities for countries around the world, including Singapore.

Business representatives from both countries expressed their willingness to further strengthen interaction and deepen cooperation in areas such as finance, investment, digital economy, green development, infrastructure, logistics, and healthcare, in order to achieve new fruitful results in practical cooperation between China and Singapore.

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UN Archives: Voices and Faces That Shaped the Modern World

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Source: United Nations – United Nations –

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October 26, 2025 Culture and education

Every year on October 27, the world remembers and honors what is in danger of disappearing without a trace – our audiovisual heritage. World Day for Audiovisual Heritage The World Heritage Site was established by UNESCO in 2005. Its main goal is to draw attention to the fragility of these materials and the need to preserve them. Preserving audiovisual heritage means preserving our identity, our history, and the opportunity to learn from the past.

The United Nations collections are among the world's largest audiovisual archives. Since the UN's founding in 1945, they have housed thousands of hours of video and audio recordings and hundreds of thousands of photographs capturing key events in international diplomacy. This is more than just a chronicle of meetings—it is living testimony to an era in which global principles of peaceful coexistence, human rights, and international cooperation were shaped.

UN photo, 1948

The UN holds more than 37,000 records containing recordings of its meetings.

A special place in these archives is occupied by the speeches of the first people to conquer space – Yuri Gagarin and Valentina Tereshkova – as well as Soviet politicians and diplomats who played a crucial role in the creation of the UN. Among them are speeches by Andrei Gromyko, Vyacheslav Molotov, and other Soviet representatives who participated in the 1945 San Francisco Conference and the first meetings of the General Assembly. Their voices, intonations, and arguments – all can be heard and seen thanks to the careful preservation and digitization of the materials.

Today these recordings are available online through the platform UN Audiovisual Library and are used by researchers, journalists, students, and anyone interested in the history of international relations. This is a striking example of how audiovisual heritage becomes not just an archive, but a living tool for education and dialogue between generations.

Read also:

What secrets do the UN audiovisual archives hold?

Fragile evidence of the past

While at the dawn of civilization people immortalized history in stone, capable of surviving millennia, as was the case with ancient Egyptian and Roman tablets, in modern times much more fragile materials are used to preserve memory.

Films, radio broadcasts, television programs, and musical works—everything that contains living emotions, voices, faces, and current events—are often preserved on film and vinyl. Film deteriorates, records scratch, cassettes demagnetize, and digital formats become obsolete. Without special efforts, we risk losing unique evidence of the past: chronicles, interviews, documentaries, and recordings of endangered and already extinct languages and cultures.

Once lost and found again

Humanity has managed to save much, but some is lost forever. After the 1973 military coup in Chile, thousands of hours of television broadcasts, interviews, and documentaries were destroyed. Some of the archives were saved thanks to the efforts of the National Library and international partners. Today, these recordings help younger generations understand what Chilean democracy looked like before the dictatorship.

Unique films of the Soviet Arctic, shot at polar stations between the 1950s and 1970s, were long considered lost. Some were later discovered in private collections and restored in digital format. These images not only have scientific value but also provide visual evidence of life in extreme conditions.

In Indonesia, scientists recorded interviews with speakers of rare languages that are now practically unused in everyday life. Without these audio files, entire cultures could have disappeared without a trace. They are now stored in a digital archive and are available to linguists worldwide.

Photo by UN

Relatively recently, the UN used such equipment to edit news footage.

The digital era – new challenges

On the one hand, digital technologies offer the opportunity to preserve more and for longer. On the other hand, they require constant updating and protection from data loss and cyberthreats. Therefore, preserving audiovisual heritage requires not only the painstaking work of archivists, but also the implementation of cutting-edge digital solutions, improved legislation on access rights and intellectual property, and extensive international cooperation.

The Mosfilm film library contains over 2,500 titles. Despite advanced preservation methods, film inevitably loses quality over time, so since the early 2000s, the studio has been actively engaged in digital restoration. Today, this process includes not only digitization but also the restoration of the author's original vision, image enhancement, and preservation of films in 4K format.

Many countries are celebrating October 27 with specialized events, including screenings of archival films, exhibitions, lectures, and digitization campaigns for old recordings. Museums, libraries, television companies, archives, universities, and individual enthusiasts are participating. UNESCO's "Digitalizing Our Shared History" project, for example, helps resource-poor countries preserve their audiovisual treasures. International organizations such as AMIA and the International Council on Archives are coordinating efforts worldwide.

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Representatives of the SPbGASU construction faculty took part in a joint meeting at the Siberian Federal University

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Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering –

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Andrei Nikulin (third from right) at a joint meeting

On October 22–24, Siberian Federal University (Krasnoyarsk) hosted a joint meeting of the board of the Association of Construction Universities (ACU), the presidium of the Federal Educational and Methodological Association (FEMA) for the enlarged group of specialties and areas of training (UGSN) 08.00.00 "Construction Engineering and Technology" and the council of the Industry Consortium "Construction and Architecture".

The participants discussed training personnel for the Russian construction industry. According to Denis Paramonov, Deputy Chairman of the Board of the Russian Student Teams, it is the construction teams and their successful experience working on national construction sites and abroad that enable students not only to master blue-collar jobs but also to become part of the construction industry while still studying.

Andrey Nikulin, Dean of the Faculty of Construction at SPbGASU, presented a report on the topic "Justification of the Need to Train Restoration Engineers in UGSN 16 "Construction and Housing and Public Utilities" as Part of the Implemented Reform of Higher Engineering Education" and noted that in 2026, SPbGASU will host the first recruitment of applicants in the training program 08.03.01 Construction, profile "Restoration of Buildings and Structures."

"Russia has over 150,000 architectural and cultural heritage sites, and St. Petersburg boasts the largest concentration of them in the country—9,035. The Leningrad and St. Petersburg Schools of Restoration have eighty years of experience in restoring and preserving architectural heritage sites. New methods, materials, and technologies require restorers to possess engineering expertise, which will enable them to make professionally sound decisions at every stage of the restoration cycle and, most importantly, to establish a lifecycle management system for the restoration site for decades and even centuries to come, based on digital solutions," noted Andrey Nikulin.

Participants in the joint meeting noted the undeniable importance of reviving the training of restoration engineers at SPbGASU, which was already underway at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries and provided the Northern Capital with high-level specialists, including Andrei Mikhailov, Chairman of the Committee for the State Use and Protection of Historical and Cultural Monuments (KGIOP), and his deputy, Elena Kozyreva, who are both qualified restoration engineers.

The meeting included a seminar for heads of university information modeling technology centers, including a presentation by Denis Nizhegorodtsev, Director of the Digital Competencies Educational Center at SPbGASU. He presented an innovative methodology for developing digital competencies at the secondary, vocational, higher, and continuing education levels, including key components such as digital construction classes, TIM championships, an elective course on project work, a TIM elective, and comprehensive defenses of TIM projects as final qualifications.

According to Denis Nizhegorodtsev, "the key to the growth of the TIM sector in Russia should be a more intensive transition of large customer companies to working with domestic software, which would significantly increase the speed of adaptation of SPbGASU graduates in design organizations."

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3 people killed, 32 injured in attacks on Kyiv – mayor

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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

Kyiv, October 26 (Xinhua) — Three people were killed and 32 others were injured in airstrikes in Kyiv, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko announced on Telegram Sunday morning.

According to the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, the Desnyansky district, located in northeastern Kyiv, suffered the most damage during the attack, where a drone strike caused a fire in a nine-story residential building and damaged the windows of a 16-story residential building.

Another drone reportedly hit an apartment building in the Obolonsky district in the northern part of the city.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated that over the past week, approximately 1,200 attack drones, more than 1,360 guided bombs, and over 50 missiles of various types were launched into the country. –0–

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.